Can somebody tell me which American unit was located in the woods 4 km east of Bastogne-Braas on 04.01.1945? Thanks in advance, Timo
Somebody told me today that is was probably the 26th US Infantry Division. Does anybody here have details on this, perhaps from a unit history or from another source? Thanks in advance. Regards, Timo
This is a tough one, Timo. I've been checking the web and my Bulge 'library' and haven't got the answer ! But the 26th 'Yankee' Infantry Division were at Arnsdorf on Christmas Day and attacked westwards towards the Wiltz River. Fighting was heavy and the Division only managed to liberate Wiltz itself on January 21st. Bras is some way further west of Wiltz so not sure how they can have been there on the 4th....
I found this on the net if it is any help The 26th Infantry Division landed in France at Cherbourg and Utah Beach, 7 September 1944, but did not enter combat as a Division until a month later, 7 October. Elements were on patrol duty along the coast from Carteret to Siouville, 13-30 September, and the 328th Infantry saw action with the 80th Division to which it was attached, 5-15 October. On 7 October the 26th relieved the 4th Armored Division in the Salonnes-Moncourt-Canal du Rhine au Marne sector, and maintained defensive positions ; a limited objective attack was launched, 22 October, in the Moncourt woods. On 8 November the Division went on the offensive, took Dieuze, 20 November, advanced across the Saar River to Saar Union, and captured it, 2 December, after house-to-house fighting. Reaching Maginot fortifications, 5 December, it regrouped, entering Saareguemines 8 December. Rest at Metz was interrupted by the Von Rundstedt offensive. The Division moved north to Luxembourg, 19-21 December, to take part in the battle of the Ardennes break-through. It attacked at Rambrouch and Grosbous, 22 December, beat off strong German counterattacks, captured Arsdorf on Christmas Day after heavy fighting, attacked toward the Wiltz River, but was forced to withdraw in the face of determined enemy resistance; after regrouping, 5-8 January 1945, it attacked again, reached the Wiltz River, and finally crossed it, 20 January. The Division continued its advance, took Grumelscheid, 21 January, and crossed the Clerf River, 24 January. The 26th then shifted to the east bank of the Saar, and maintained defensive positions in the Saarlautern area, 29 January-6 March 1945. The Division's drive to the Rhine jumped off on 13 March 1945, and carried the Division through Merzig, 17 March, to the Rhine, 21 March, and across the Rhine at Oppenheim, 25-26 March. It took part in the house-to-house reduction of Hanau, 28 March, broke out of the Main River bridgehead, drove through Fulda, 1 April, and helped reduce Meiningen, 5 April. Moving southeast into Austria, the Division assisted in the capture of Linz, 4 May. It had changed the direction of its advance, and was moving northeast into Czechoslovakia, across the Vlatava River, when the cease-fire order, was received. This link chronicles their history http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/lineage/cc/026id.htm
Well, nice to learn more about US armed forces. Thanks. But even if you copied it from a web page. It is totally incorrect to say "Von Runstedt's offensive". Because as he clearly said it: "It was not my plan. I only performed it the best I could". And I agree with him. Being perhaps the ablest commander in the Wehramcht at that time he knew all about "Wacht am Rhein" and knew it couldn't succeed. Or beside it was a bit from his ego like "I could never do such a bad plan"...