Hello everyone, I was looking for information on the Malmedy massacre and found this site. A little about myself, I come from a military family with six uncles, one aunt, four great uncles and my dad who served in the military along with seven cousins and myself. Most retired from the Army, like my dad One uncle is a retired Marine One cousin was in the Air Force Two great uncles, two uncles and myself spent time in the Navy. I was a TAR in the Navy, That's to say I was in the reserves but was on active duty for six years. I am and always have been interested in WWII, a defining time in American history.
Trip-Rod -- Welcome and thanks for your service and the service of all of your family members! It seems that your family has the 38th largest military force in the World! This is a great place and you will enjoy your time here. Jump right in! Cheers!
Hope this data is of some value to you THE MALMÉDY MASSACRE (December 17, 1944) During the Ardennes Offensive (Battle of the Bulge) the Combat Group of the 1st SS Panzer Division, led by SS Major Joachim Peiper, was approaching the crossroads at Baugnes near the town of Malmédy. There they encountered a company of US troops (Battery B of the 285th Field Artillery Observation Battalion) from the US 7th Armoured Division. Realizing that the odds were hopeless, the company's commander, Lieutenant Virgil Lary, decided to surrender. After being searched by the SS, the prisoners were marched into a field adjacent to the Cafe Bodarwé. The SS troops moved on except for two Mark IV tanks Nos. 731 and 732, left behind to guard the GIs. A couple of GIs tried to flee to the nearest woods and an order was given to fire. SS Private Georg Fleps of tank 731 drew his pistol and fired at Lary's driver who fell dead in the snow. The machine guns of both tanks then opened fire on the prisoners. Many of the GIs took to their heels and headed for the woods. Incredibly, 43 GIs survived, but 84 of their comrades lay dead in the field, being slowly covered with a blanket of snow. No attempt was made to recover the bodies until the area was retaken by the 30th Infantry Division on January 14, 1945, when men from the 291st Engineers used metal detectors to locate the bodies buried in the snow. (The US troops in the area were issued with an order that for the next week no SS prisoners were to be taken) At the end of the war, Peiper, and 73 other suspects (arrested for other atrocities committed during the offensive) were brought to trial. When the trial ended on July 16, 1946, forty three of the defendants were sentenced to death, twenty two to life imprisonment, two to twenty years, one for fifteen years and five to ten years. Peiper and Fleps were among those sentenced to death, but after a series of reviews the sentences were reduced to terms in prison. On December 22, 1956, SS Sturmbannführer Peiper was released. He settled in the small village of Traves (population 63) in northern France in 1972 and earned a living by translating military books from English into German. Four years later, on the eve of Bastille Day, July 14, 1976, he was murdered and his wooden house burned down by a French communist group known as the 'Avengers'. His charred body was recovered from the ruins and transferred to the family grave in Schondorf, near Landsberg in Bavaria. Most of the remains of the murdered GIs were eventually shipped back to the US for private burial but twenty-one still lie buried in the American Military Cemetery at Henri-Chappelle, about forty kilometres north of Malmédy. Today, the American flag flies over the Malmédy Memorial, built at the Baugnes crossroads, about 60 metres from where the actual killings took place Sgtleo
Sgtleo, Yes it does. What got me interested in this was watching the movie the Battle of The Bulge. I don't know if there has been another movie that has touched on the massacre but, I didn't know enough about it and wanted to know more.
Welcome to the Forum, Trip-Rod. I hope you enjoy reading the threads - you will find a lot of information. It sounds like you and your family have a history of service to your country which I am certain your countrymen on the Forum appreciate.