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Lt. Colonel Ellis: May
it please the court.
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In order that the court
may better understand
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00:00:07,674 --> 00:00:10,577
the presentation of the
evidence in this case,
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we will briefly
outline the evidence
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and what we expect it to show.
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Hitler held a meeting
of his army commanders
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at Bad Nauheim on the 11th
or 12th of December, 1944,
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where he spoke for
some three hours.
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In this speech, Hitler
stated that the decisive hour
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for the German
people had arrived.
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This fight will be
conducted stubbornly
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00:00:31,831 --> 00:00:35,301
with no regard for
Allied prisoners of war
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00:00:35,301 --> 00:00:39,205
who will have to be shot if the
situation makes it necessary.
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All troops were warned that
in the event of capture,
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the existence of these orders
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must not be made
known to the enemy.
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That night, the troops gathered
around their campfires,
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awaiting zero hour ...
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(music playing)
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Voiceover: By mid-December 1944,
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the extreme western front
in the Belgian Ardennes
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had grown eerily quiet.
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00:01:05,999 --> 00:01:09,869
Many allied commanders
called it the ghost front.
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Supply problems in the wake
of Operation Market Garden
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had left this weakly-defended
sector virtually on its own.
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In a last desperate attempt
to strike back at the Allies,
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Hitler, against the advice of
many of his senior commanders,
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initiated his ultra-secret
Ardennes offensive.
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The operation would
employ half a million men
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in over 2,000
pieces of artillery.
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Spearheading the offensive
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were Hitler's hand-chosen
and fanatical Waffen-SS,
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00:01:48,675 --> 00:01:52,946
which were ordered to spread
a wave of terror and fright,
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00:01:52,946 --> 00:01:56,382
unrestricted by
human inhibitions.
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Squarely in the path
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00:02:01,354 --> 00:02:03,756
of Hitler's most
experienced storm troopers,
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just 6 kilometers
from the border,
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00:02:05,992 --> 00:02:11,731
were men of the African-American
333rd field artillery battalion.
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00:02:14,400 --> 00:02:17,003
Fighting on the front
lines since late June,
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00:02:17,003 --> 00:02:18,538
they were about to
come face to face
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00:02:18,538 --> 00:02:20,373
with soldiers from
the Third Reich,
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the most ruthless regime
the world has ever known.
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(crowd cheering)
44
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(Hitler shouting in German)
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Nazi officer: Sieg heil!
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(crowd chanting 'sieg heil')
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(drums playing)
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George: The SS Troopers
were the cream of the crop.
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00:02:49,936 --> 00:02:51,938
They hated our guts.
50
00:02:52,338 --> 00:02:57,510
Inferior, called you
monkeys, whatever,
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00:02:58,044 --> 00:03:00,747
or you weren't as
good as a monkey.
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00:03:00,747 --> 00:03:03,850
Most of them were blond
hair and blue eyes.
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They were the pure,
pure people, so-called,
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00:03:10,757 --> 00:03:15,395
but I've seen SS Troopers
shoot their own people down.
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They didn't want to fight.
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That's the way they were.
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Fanatics.
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(wind blowing)
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(footsteps)
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Nazi officer: (in German)
Soldiers of the West front.
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00:03:36,049 --> 00:03:38,785
Your great hour has arrived.
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00:03:39,986 --> 00:03:44,057
Large attacking armies
have started against
the Anglo-Americans.
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00:03:45,959 --> 00:03:50,396
I do not have to tell you
anything more than that.
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You feel it yourself.
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00:03:56,202 --> 00:03:58,705
We gamble everything.
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00:03:59,272 --> 00:04:02,175
You carry with you
the holy obligation
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to give everything,
to achieve things
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00:04:03,676 --> 00:04:05,912
beyond human possibilities.
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00:04:06,913 --> 00:04:11,251
For our Fatherland
and our F█hrer.
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Heil, Hitler
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SS Trooper: Heil, Hitler.
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(bombs launching)
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(shouting in German)
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00:04:26,899 --> 00:04:28,301
Voiceover: Just before dawn,
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00:04:28,301 --> 00:04:31,671
the morning of 16 December 1944,
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00:04:31,671 --> 00:04:34,707
Adolf Hitler's Ardennes
Offensive swung the full might
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of the German war
machine against
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00:04:36,376 --> 00:04:39,679
unsuspecting British
and American troops.
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00:04:40,079 --> 00:04:42,749
(wailing sounds)
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00:04:42,749 --> 00:04:44,717
Soldier: What the!
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Voiceover: In those
pre-dawn hours of the 16th,
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00:04:46,919 --> 00:04:50,189
observers from the 333rd
field artillery battalion
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00:04:50,189 --> 00:04:53,493
were the first to report
German artillery engagement.
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Soldier: King, this
is King Charlie three.
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00:04:55,461 --> 00:04:57,096
Got heavy artillery
to our front.
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00:04:57,096 --> 00:05:00,233
Repeat, heavy concentrated
enemy artillery to our front,
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00:05:00,233 --> 00:05:02,302
and a hell of a lot of it!
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00:05:02,302 --> 00:05:04,270
Voiceover: The Germans were
throwing everything they had
89
00:05:04,270 --> 00:05:06,539
at the lightly-defended
American lines.
90
00:05:06,806 --> 00:05:08,908
Five-tubed Nebelwerfer
batteries blasted
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00:05:08,908 --> 00:05:12,945
high explosive rockets 8,500
yards across the border.
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00:05:12,945 --> 00:05:15,481
Soldiers called the
terrorizing sound they made
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00:05:15,481 --> 00:05:17,417
"Screaming Mimis".
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00:05:17,417 --> 00:05:23,656
(rockets launching,
making wailing sounds)
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(loud boom)
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(loud boom)
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00:05:31,364 --> 00:05:35,001
But their most devastating
weapon was the 88 gun
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Nazi soldier: Fire!
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00:05:35,735 --> 00:05:37,470
(loud booms)
100
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Voiceover: With a range
of well over 16,000 yards.
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(boom)
102
00:05:43,176 --> 00:05:44,277
George: The eighty-eight,
103
00:05:44,277 --> 00:05:46,813
that was the baddest
weapon in Germany.
104
00:05:46,813 --> 00:05:47,947
You didn't have to see it.
105
00:05:47,947 --> 00:05:50,083
You heard it and felt it.
106
00:05:50,083 --> 00:05:53,953
They used it for anti-personnel,
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00:05:53,953 --> 00:05:57,557
anti-tank, anti-everything.
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They didn't miss much with it.
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00:05:59,759 --> 00:06:01,394
Voiceover: Americans
trapped by thousands
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00:06:01,394 --> 00:06:05,098
of falling 88 shells
had almost no chance.
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00:06:05,098 --> 00:06:06,866
Soldier: Keep your head low!
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00:06:06,866 --> 00:06:09,268
(bombs exploding)
113
00:06:09,268 --> 00:06:11,104
(man screams)
114
00:06:11,170 --> 00:06:12,572
Soldier: Get over here!
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(explosion)
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00:06:28,454 --> 00:06:29,722
Voiceover: Today, four men,
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including descendents
of the 333rd,
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00:06:32,392 --> 00:06:34,026
have come to the
Ardennes to honor
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00:06:34,026 --> 00:06:36,195
the Americans who
fought in this place.
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00:06:36,195 --> 00:06:40,099
They are led by executive
producer, Joseph Small.
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00:06:42,168 --> 00:06:45,104
Joseph: The 333rd, I have
read several accounts,
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00:06:45,104 --> 00:06:49,008
were considered one of the
best field arterial battalions
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00:06:49,409 --> 00:06:52,044
in the Army in Europe
during the war.
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00:06:53,146 --> 00:06:55,681
Voiceover: The 333rd
field artillery battalion
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00:06:55,681 --> 00:06:59,752
was one of nine all
African-American field
artillery battalions
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00:06:59,752 --> 00:07:01,854
deployed to the European
theater of operations
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00:07:01,854 --> 00:07:04,157
in World War II.
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00:07:06,559 --> 00:07:09,562
Their wartime service began
at Camp Gruber, Oklahoma,
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00:07:09,562 --> 00:07:11,998
in March 1943, under the command
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00:07:11,998 --> 00:07:14,700
of Colonel Harmon S. Kelsey.
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00:07:15,401 --> 00:07:17,069
George: First time I saw Kelsey
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00:07:17,069 --> 00:07:19,005
was in Camp Gruber, Oklahoma,
133
00:07:19,005 --> 00:07:21,340
and he made his little speech,
134
00:07:21,340 --> 00:07:25,344
and the only way you get out of
this outfit is die out of it.
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00:07:25,344 --> 00:07:27,647
There's no transfers.
136
00:07:27,647 --> 00:07:31,451
You had one street where
you were allowed to walk on,
137
00:07:31,451 --> 00:07:33,219
and that was it.
138
00:07:33,219 --> 00:07:36,422
As a black soldier in
the United States Army,
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00:07:36,422 --> 00:07:38,825
you wasn't as good as a dog,
140
00:07:38,825 --> 00:07:41,694
especially in the South.
141
00:07:41,694 --> 00:07:43,529
I was sitting on a barrack step,
142
00:07:43,529 --> 00:07:45,598
reading a comic book,
143
00:07:46,499 --> 00:07:49,635
and a state-side
officer come by,
144
00:07:49,635 --> 00:07:51,604
told me to cut the grass.
145
00:07:51,604 --> 00:07:53,706
I stood up slowly and told him
146
00:07:53,706 --> 00:07:56,642
that as a
non-commissioned officer,
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00:07:56,642 --> 00:07:59,145
I'm not required
to do manual labor.
148
00:07:59,145 --> 00:08:02,114
You can put me in
charge of a detail,
149
00:08:02,615 --> 00:08:04,784
but I'm not gonna
cut that grass.
150
00:08:04,784 --> 00:08:08,588
He hollered, "Jail that nigger!"
151
00:08:09,589 --> 00:08:10,923
There I go.
152
00:08:10,923 --> 00:08:14,126
Then, them MPs dropped out
of the sky from somewhere.
153
00:08:14,527 --> 00:08:15,495
Voiceover: Serving under Kelsey
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00:08:15,495 --> 00:08:17,396
was Captain William McLeod,
155
00:08:17,396 --> 00:08:21,133
who established a special
relationship with the men.
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00:08:23,069 --> 00:08:25,671
George: Shortly after
we got to Camp Gruber,
157
00:08:25,671 --> 00:08:27,874
there was a lot of
grumbling about, you know,
158
00:08:27,874 --> 00:08:29,442
the guys wanting
to kick his butt.
159
00:08:29,442 --> 00:08:33,079
He called the company
together and says,
160
00:08:33,079 --> 00:08:35,681
"Anybody that wants to fight me,
161
00:08:35,681 --> 00:08:38,951
"I'll take off my shirt,
you take off yours,
162
00:08:38,951 --> 00:08:42,588
"and we'll have a go
at it, man to man.
163
00:08:42,588 --> 00:08:45,024
"If you beat me,
I'll shake your hand.
164
00:08:45,024 --> 00:08:48,361
"If I beat you, I expect
you to shake my hand,
165
00:08:48,361 --> 00:08:49,962
"and it's off the record."
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00:08:49,962 --> 00:08:52,398
Nobody made another sound.
167
00:08:52,398 --> 00:08:57,670
That's when I guess I fell
in love with my captain.
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00:08:59,639 --> 00:09:04,644
Voiceover: The 333rd were
issued the 155mm howitzer M1,
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00:09:05,511 --> 00:09:07,813
one of the most accurate
pieces of artillery
170
00:09:07,813 --> 00:09:11,117
made during the
Second World War.
171
00:09:11,517 --> 00:09:13,352
George: They'd do
things with them guns
172
00:09:13,352 --> 00:09:17,323
that other outfits
couldn't with the same gun.
173
00:09:20,393 --> 00:09:22,995
Voiceover: Once the
333rd arrived in France,
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00:09:22,995 --> 00:09:26,766
they quickly gained a reputation
for their deadly accuracy.
175
00:09:29,035 --> 00:09:31,103
During the battle
of La Haye du Puits,
176
00:09:31,103 --> 00:09:33,906
the 82nd airborne struggling
with a Tiger tank,
177
00:09:33,906 --> 00:09:37,610
called on the 333rd
to take it out.
178
00:09:39,579 --> 00:09:42,782
Battery C fired 4
rounds from 4 guns.
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00:09:42,782 --> 00:09:45,418
(rockets launching)
180
00:09:46,118 --> 00:09:49,388
(explosions)
181
00:09:49,388 --> 00:09:52,558
Two of the shells were
direct hits on the tank.
182
00:09:52,558 --> 00:09:55,394
The distance from Battery
C's guns to the Tiger tank
183
00:09:55,394 --> 00:09:58,197
was 9 miles.
184
00:09:59,198 --> 00:10:04,170
George: They used to
write things on the shells
185
00:10:04,170 --> 00:10:06,405
detrimental to Mr. Hitler.
186
00:10:06,405 --> 00:10:07,740
(laughs)
187
00:10:07,740 --> 00:10:09,875
But, you know, that's the
way you get after a while.
188
00:10:09,875 --> 00:10:11,310
Once you hit them beaches
189
00:10:11,310 --> 00:10:15,081
and you get out of that cold
water of the English Channel,
190
00:10:15,081 --> 00:10:17,550
you're a different person.
191
00:10:17,550 --> 00:10:19,285
It's kill or be killed.
192
00:10:19,285 --> 00:10:21,253
You know this.
193
00:10:22,655 --> 00:10:24,390
Voiceover: A company
executive producer,
194
00:10:24,390 --> 00:10:28,194
Joseph Small, at the 333rd's
former Battery C location
195
00:10:28,194 --> 00:10:30,930
in Schoenberg, Belgium,
is Robert Hudson,
196
00:10:30,930 --> 00:10:33,699
whose father fought
in the 333rd.
197
00:10:33,699 --> 00:10:35,034
Joseph: Your dad was here,
198
00:10:35,034 --> 00:10:38,804
probably having his morning
coffee, his breakfast,
199
00:10:38,804 --> 00:10:42,708
and why don't you tell me
what your dad shared with you
200
00:10:42,708 --> 00:10:45,711
about that fateful morning.
201
00:10:46,145 --> 00:10:48,347
Robert H.: My dad
was 24 years old.
202
00:10:48,347 --> 00:10:49,849
He's from St. Louis, Missouri.
203
00:10:49,849 --> 00:10:51,317
I think coming over
here might have been
204
00:10:51,317 --> 00:10:53,052
his first time out of town,
205
00:10:53,052 --> 00:10:54,654
let alone out of the country.
206
00:10:54,654 --> 00:10:57,857
He said that all the
armored cover had been moved
207
00:10:57,857 --> 00:11:02,561
and they were awakened
by trees falling,
208
00:11:02,561 --> 00:11:04,263
the earth rumbling,
209
00:11:04,263 --> 00:11:07,099
and they knew they
were in trouble.
210
00:11:08,734 --> 00:11:10,703
Voiceover: Hundreds of
thousands of German troops
211
00:11:10,703 --> 00:11:12,972
along with tanks,
half-tracks and artillery
212
00:11:12,972 --> 00:11:15,441
streamed across the border.
213
00:11:19,311 --> 00:11:22,281
Leading the main effort
was the 6th Panzer Army,
214
00:11:22,281 --> 00:11:25,251
commanded by one of Germany's
most decorated soldiers,
215
00:11:25,251 --> 00:11:27,553
World War I and
Russian front veteran,
216
00:11:27,553 --> 00:11:30,256
General Sepp Dietrich.
217
00:11:34,160 --> 00:11:35,895
Hitler's former bodyguard,
218
00:11:35,895 --> 00:11:39,398
Dietrich was despised by most
of the higher officer class
219
00:11:39,398 --> 00:11:41,934
who thought he had no
great intelligence,
220
00:11:41,934 --> 00:11:44,904
but he had a hard-won
reputation for bravery,
221
00:11:44,904 --> 00:11:47,773
and was known as a
brutal commander.
222
00:11:49,775 --> 00:11:52,244
His arduous assignment
was to move his divisions
223
00:11:52,244 --> 00:11:55,247
across the mountainous
Schnee Eifel region.
224
00:11:55,815 --> 00:11:57,416
Once through, they
would do battle
225
00:11:57,416 --> 00:12:00,352
in the towns of
Schoenberg and St. Vith.
226
00:12:03,456 --> 00:12:04,857
Supporting the 6th Panzer Army
227
00:12:04,857 --> 00:12:07,560
was the fearsome
1st SS division,
228
00:12:07,560 --> 00:12:09,261
which included
Colonel Max Hansen's
229
00:12:09,261 --> 00:12:11,030
Panzer grenadier regiment,
230
00:12:11,030 --> 00:12:15,334
followed by Major
Gustav Knittel's
reconnaissance battalion.
231
00:12:15,334 --> 00:12:18,070
They followed the path cut
by Colonel Joachim Peiper,
232
00:12:18,070 --> 00:12:22,374
who was greatly admired by
Hitler for his fanaticism.
233
00:12:22,374 --> 00:12:24,143
He was a charismatic leader
234
00:12:24,143 --> 00:12:26,612
who inspired fierce
loyalty in his men.
235
00:12:26,612 --> 00:12:28,080
His orders were simple.
236
00:12:28,080 --> 00:12:30,883
Move as rapidly as possible
to the Meuse River,
237
00:12:30,883 --> 00:12:33,319
and take no prisoners.
238
00:12:35,821 --> 00:12:37,790
By daybreak on the 17th,
239
00:12:37,790 --> 00:12:40,292
General Sepp Dietrich's
6th Panzer Army
240
00:12:40,292 --> 00:12:44,430
reached the 333rd's position
at Schoenberg, Belgium.
241
00:12:44,997 --> 00:12:47,633
Robert H.: They had been shelled
for the better part of 2 days,
242
00:12:47,633 --> 00:12:50,770
so they had no sleep, no food,
243
00:12:50,770 --> 00:12:54,273
and they were just basically
told to make a stand here.
244
00:12:54,273 --> 00:12:56,876
No better place to die.
245
00:12:59,512 --> 00:13:01,680
Voiceover: Battery C,
forward-most exposed,
246
00:13:01,680 --> 00:13:05,317
had entered its 2nd day
of continuous combat.
247
00:13:06,619 --> 00:13:08,120
Soldier: Counter-battery, fire.
248
00:13:08,120 --> 00:13:12,324
Shell HE, charge 5, fuse quick!
249
00:13:12,324 --> 00:13:17,763
Voiceover: Face deflection
right, 2 9 5 S I 3 0 2.
250
00:13:17,763 --> 00:13:22,034
Soldier: Number 2 1
round, elevation 3 7 1.
251
00:13:22,034 --> 00:13:23,369
Soldier: Round ready, sir!
252
00:13:23,369 --> 00:13:24,136
Soldier: Fire!
253
00:13:24,136 --> 00:13:28,741
(loud boom)
254
00:13:28,741 --> 00:13:29,642
Fire!
255
00:13:29,642 --> 00:13:31,844
(loud boom)
256
00:13:34,914 --> 00:13:36,649
Voiceover: 900
meters to their left,
257
00:13:36,649 --> 00:13:39,451
the Volksgrenadier still
undetected by Battery C
258
00:13:39,451 --> 00:13:41,554
had the Americans
in their sights.
259
00:13:41,554 --> 00:13:43,522
They planned a flanking
move with their armor,
260
00:13:43,522 --> 00:13:46,258
mortars, and machine guns
to encircle the battery
261
00:13:46,258 --> 00:13:49,361
and take out the guns.
262
00:13:50,896 --> 00:13:53,232
(loud bangs)
263
00:13:54,233 --> 00:13:58,804
(shouting in German)
264
00:14:01,040 --> 00:14:04,510
(rockets launching)
265
00:14:04,510 --> 00:14:06,212
Soldier: Incoming!
266
00:14:06,212 --> 00:14:09,548
(explosions)
267
00:14:09,748 --> 00:14:14,320
(machine guns firing)
268
00:14:15,454 --> 00:14:18,691
(loud explosions)
269
00:14:18,691 --> 00:14:21,994
(screams)
270
00:14:23,229 --> 00:14:24,630
Voiceover: Battery C,
which had been ordered
271
00:14:24,630 --> 00:14:26,532
to stay behind and
provide covering fire
272
00:14:26,532 --> 00:14:28,868
for the advancing 106th infantry
273
00:14:28,868 --> 00:14:32,972
had no choice but
to stand and fight.
274
00:14:32,972 --> 00:14:38,744
(tank rolling closer)
275
00:14:38,744 --> 00:14:41,847
(loud boom)
276
00:14:42,648 --> 00:14:45,784
Battalion commander, Harmon
Kelsey, returned from HQ
277
00:14:45,784 --> 00:14:48,787
to Battery C to evacuate
as many men as he could
278
00:14:48,787 --> 00:14:50,456
onto three trucks,
279
00:14:51,590 --> 00:14:54,727
leaving behind Captain
McLeod and just a few men.
280
00:14:56,962 --> 00:14:59,932
George: The rest of the outfit
tried to pull out to safety.
281
00:14:59,932 --> 00:15:02,701
We had to stay behind.
282
00:15:09,842 --> 00:15:14,213
We fired until we ran
out of ammunition.
283
00:15:14,914 --> 00:15:18,484
Can't kill but just so
many with trench knives,
284
00:15:19,485 --> 00:15:22,855
and they had, I'd say the
Germans had to walk over
285
00:15:22,855 --> 00:15:26,058
piles of their
dead to get to us.
286
00:15:30,262 --> 00:15:32,698
Voiceover: Hitler's strategy
for success in the offensive
287
00:15:32,698 --> 00:15:35,234
hinged on two main assumptions.
288
00:15:35,234 --> 00:15:37,236
First, that the poor
weather would ground
289
00:15:37,236 --> 00:15:39,238
Allied fighter planes
and allow his troops
290
00:15:39,238 --> 00:15:41,674
to penetrate the
Allied line quickly,
291
00:15:41,674 --> 00:15:44,510
and second, that American
defenses would crumble
292
00:15:44,510 --> 00:15:48,213
under the weight of his
more than 25 divisions.
293
00:15:48,213 --> 00:15:51,483
It would be his last
gamble of the war.
294
00:15:56,889 --> 00:16:01,460
(loud boom)
295
00:16:01,460 --> 00:16:04,096
Joseph: Mortars were coming in.
296
00:16:04,096 --> 00:16:09,034
Right back here was
their ammunition depot,
297
00:16:09,034 --> 00:16:13,339
and a mortar came in and landed
right in the middle of it.
298
00:16:14,173 --> 00:16:15,908
(loud bang)
299
00:16:16,041 --> 00:16:18,110
It didn't blow up,
for some reason.
300
00:16:18,110 --> 00:16:21,480
When I spoke with Sergeant
Willie Alfonso down in Alabama,
301
00:16:21,480 --> 00:16:24,416
he said that's the
reason he's alive today.
302
00:16:24,683 --> 00:16:26,251
(rapid gunshots)
303
00:16:26,251 --> 00:16:27,987
(bullets flying)
304
00:16:28,187 --> 00:16:33,792
(gunshots continue)
305
00:16:35,794 --> 00:16:39,898
The 333rd Battery
C was located here.
306
00:16:39,898 --> 00:16:42,501
Soldier: Bring him!
Don't leave him there!
307
00:16:42,501 --> 00:16:44,203
Joseph: And instead of fleeing,
308
00:16:44,203 --> 00:16:45,838
Soldier: Keep your head low!
309
00:16:45,838 --> 00:16:47,239
Joseph: They manned their guns.
310
00:16:47,239 --> 00:16:50,609
Soldier: This way, in the hole!
311
00:16:50,609 --> 00:16:53,746
Joseph: And manned
whatever rifles they had.
312
00:16:53,746 --> 00:16:54,813
Soldier: Over here!
313
00:16:54,813 --> 00:16:57,449
Joseph: And took them on,
314
00:16:57,449 --> 00:17:00,753
and made a heroic stand
on this very spot.
315
00:17:00,753 --> 00:17:04,556
Soldier: Stay on the
line, grab that rifle!
316
00:17:04,623 --> 00:17:06,492
(gun shots)
317
00:17:08,961 --> 00:17:11,263
Keep your head low!
318
00:17:11,897 --> 00:17:16,168
(rapid gunshots)
319
00:17:21,774 --> 00:17:23,575
(machine gunfire)
320
00:17:25,577 --> 00:17:26,979
(gunshot)
321
00:17:29,148 --> 00:17:34,620
(reloading rifle)
322
00:17:34,620 --> 00:17:35,754
(machine gun fires)
323
00:17:35,754 --> 00:17:37,790
I don't got enough ammo!
324
00:17:37,790 --> 00:17:42,194
(gun shots)
325
00:17:44,196 --> 00:17:47,066
(rapid gunshots)
326
00:17:47,066 --> 00:17:48,600
(cocks rifle)
327
00:17:49,234 --> 00:17:50,436
(gunshot)
328
00:17:50,803 --> 00:17:51,904
(bullet flies by)
329
00:17:52,471 --> 00:17:53,505
(gunshot)
330
00:17:53,505 --> 00:17:54,873
Got him!
331
00:17:55,274 --> 00:18:10,022
(gunshots continue)
332
00:18:12,124 --> 00:18:13,659
(man shouts)
333
00:18:19,832 --> 00:18:21,467
Aah!
334
00:18:23,869 --> 00:18:25,304
George: That's a
hard thing to do
335
00:18:25,304 --> 00:18:28,240
when a man's got a
rifle coming at you,
336
00:18:28,240 --> 00:18:31,477
and you know all you've
got is a trench knife.
337
00:18:32,077 --> 00:18:33,412
Well, I got a couple,
338
00:18:33,412 --> 00:18:35,781
and some of the other
guys got a couple of them.
339
00:18:35,781 --> 00:18:38,851
That was the least of my
thoughts, being captured.
340
00:18:38,851 --> 00:18:41,520
Killed, yes. Captured, no.
341
00:18:41,520 --> 00:18:46,992
I think the real reason
why McLeod surrendered
342
00:18:46,992 --> 00:18:49,761
was to save lives
343
00:18:49,761 --> 00:18:53,398
because there was
nothing else he could do.
344
00:18:53,398 --> 00:18:57,002
We could have all died,
just fought with what we had
345
00:18:57,002 --> 00:19:01,173
hand-to-hand combat until
every man was killed,
346
00:19:01,173 --> 00:19:02,474
but he didn't want that.
347
00:19:02,474 --> 00:19:06,345
He wanted to try to save
as many lives as he could,
348
00:19:06,345 --> 00:19:10,149
and that's what he
did by surrendering.
349
00:19:17,289 --> 00:19:20,492
(coughing)
350
00:19:20,492 --> 00:19:23,095
Voiceover: Captain McLeod
and the men who could walk
351
00:19:23,095 --> 00:19:25,264
were taken prisoner.
352
00:19:28,033 --> 00:19:30,903
The wounded were not.
353
00:19:31,303 --> 00:19:32,638
(gunshot)
354
00:19:38,777 --> 00:19:42,447
On the spot, where the 333rd
made their heroic stand,
355
00:19:42,447 --> 00:19:45,384
descendant Robert Deshay
recalls the anguish
356
00:19:45,384 --> 00:19:48,120
his father carried
throughout his lifetime.
357
00:19:48,120 --> 00:19:51,657
Robert D.: I think
our father passed
358
00:19:51,657 --> 00:19:53,859
thinking of himself
as a failure.
359
00:19:53,859 --> 00:20:00,532
Regardless of the heroic stand
that he made here that day,
360
00:20:00,532 --> 00:20:03,635
I think because of
the men, the friends,
361
00:20:03,635 --> 00:20:04,803
the connectedness.
362
00:20:04,803 --> 00:20:06,572
He was a very
people-oriented person.
363
00:20:06,572 --> 00:20:10,309
It was very important
for him to stand together
364
00:20:10,309 --> 00:20:12,211
with his comrades in arms
365
00:20:12,211 --> 00:20:15,080
in the face of the
German onslaught.
366
00:20:17,182 --> 00:20:19,184
Robert H.: These guys
put their country first
367
00:20:19,184 --> 00:20:22,721
at a time when perhaps the
country didn't put them first.
368
00:20:25,123 --> 00:20:26,592
All these guys were friends.
369
00:20:26,592 --> 00:20:27,893
They mostly came from the South,
370
00:20:27,893 --> 00:20:31,063
many of them knew each
other for some time.
371
00:20:34,132 --> 00:20:35,567
They fought for their country.
372
00:20:35,567 --> 00:20:36,635
They fought bravely.
373
00:20:36,635 --> 00:20:38,604
They delayed the
Germans to help us
374
00:20:38,604 --> 00:20:41,406
turn the tide of the war.
375
00:20:42,274 --> 00:20:45,143
George: I heard that
most of the outfit
376
00:20:45,143 --> 00:20:48,513
we were supporting, the
106th Infantry Division
377
00:20:48,513 --> 00:20:50,849
surrendered without
firing a shot.
378
00:20:50,849 --> 00:20:52,084
I can believe it
379
00:20:52,084 --> 00:20:55,554
because they were nothing
but cooks, clerks,
380
00:20:55,554 --> 00:20:59,124
and they knew
nothing about combat.
381
00:20:59,391 --> 00:21:02,794
When we first saw some of
them, their shoes were shined,
382
00:21:02,794 --> 00:21:05,797
pants with creases
in them, neckties on,
383
00:21:05,797 --> 00:21:08,367
you don't fight a war like this.
384
00:21:08,367 --> 00:21:10,936
You aren't a SS trooper.
385
00:21:10,936 --> 00:21:12,004
The SS troopers,
386
00:21:12,004 --> 00:21:13,705
they're the ones
that dressed all up
387
00:21:13,705 --> 00:21:16,208
in fancy uniforms
and everything.
388
00:21:16,208 --> 00:21:17,709
When I first saw them,
389
00:21:17,709 --> 00:21:20,145
we thought the war was over.
390
00:21:21,513 --> 00:21:23,081
Hey, pass the word.
391
00:21:23,081 --> 00:21:24,316
We're going home!
392
00:21:24,316 --> 00:21:25,117
(laughs)
393
00:21:25,117 --> 00:21:26,885
It's all over!
394
00:21:26,885 --> 00:21:29,955
Yeah, it was all
over, all right.
395
00:21:33,358 --> 00:21:36,194
All of us that were left alive,
396
00:21:36,194 --> 00:21:38,330
they moved us out on the road
397
00:21:38,330 --> 00:21:40,932
and started walking.
398
00:21:40,932 --> 00:21:45,904
(trumpet music)
399
00:21:47,939 --> 00:22:00,485
(video narrated in German)
400
00:22:05,824 --> 00:22:08,427
Voiceover: In this German
propaganda footage,
401
00:22:08,427 --> 00:22:12,297
American POWs of the 333rd
field artillery battalion
402
00:22:12,297 --> 00:22:15,033
are herded east towards
an uncertain fate.
403
00:22:15,033 --> 00:22:18,603
Many could only imagine the
horrors that awaited them.
404
00:22:19,571 --> 00:22:20,906
Among those prisoners
405
00:22:20,906 --> 00:22:25,110
was a stubborn staff
sergeant, George Shomo.
406
00:22:26,578 --> 00:22:29,081
George: I saw them when they
were taking the pictures.
407
00:22:29,081 --> 00:22:30,515
That was propaganda,
408
00:22:30,515 --> 00:22:33,485
especially when they
captured black troops.
409
00:22:34,586 --> 00:22:38,223
They parade you all
through these little towns,
410
00:22:38,890 --> 00:22:43,362
and like I said, the die
hard Germans were beatin' ya,
411
00:22:43,362 --> 00:22:45,097
and you couldn't do
nothing about it.
412
00:22:45,097 --> 00:22:47,366
You'd just keep walking
and look straight ahead.
413
00:22:47,366 --> 00:22:49,000
That's all.
414
00:23:03,982 --> 00:23:05,217
Voiceover: The
residents of Schoenberg,
415
00:23:05,217 --> 00:23:08,253
including Joseph Bach,
just a boy at the time,
416
00:23:08,253 --> 00:23:11,456
witnessed the
American surrender.
417
00:23:11,990 --> 00:23:13,892
Joseph: Yes, out there.
418
00:23:13,892 --> 00:23:16,728
There is an old heavy
fir tree standing.
419
00:23:16,728 --> 00:23:19,297
That has lived
through the whole war.
420
00:23:19,297 --> 00:23:21,099
They came all down from there,
421
00:23:21,099 --> 00:23:23,802
and when they came out
of that forest up there,
422
00:23:23,802 --> 00:23:26,538
in front was one
with a white flank.
423
00:23:26,538 --> 00:23:28,540
They took up their steel helmets
424
00:23:28,540 --> 00:23:31,109
and you can see it goes
down a hill up there
425
00:23:31,109 --> 00:23:32,477
from that street.
426
00:23:32,477 --> 00:23:35,313
So the helmets came
rolling down the hill,
427
00:23:35,313 --> 00:23:36,548
one after the other,
428
00:23:36,548 --> 00:23:38,650
came down that hill.
429
00:23:38,650 --> 00:23:41,586
I would say 500 to 600 Americans
430
00:23:41,586 --> 00:23:43,555
were standing on the meadow.
431
00:23:43,555 --> 00:23:45,924
That was a long line
along the street.
432
00:23:45,924 --> 00:23:48,693
We were always running
through that line.
433
00:23:48,693 --> 00:23:50,028
they were laughing,
434
00:23:50,028 --> 00:23:52,864
and when they began to take
out those chocolate bars
435
00:23:52,864 --> 00:23:54,366
out of their bags.
436
00:23:54,366 --> 00:23:57,536
That's what we were
excited about as children,
437
00:23:57,536 --> 00:24:00,505
and then mid-day,
at around 1 PM,
438
00:24:00,505 --> 00:24:03,308
the whole line was going
up there to Manderfeld,
439
00:24:03,308 --> 00:24:08,380
to Germany, probably going
into confinement or captivity.
440
00:24:10,816 --> 00:24:14,453
Not far from where we were
positioned on top of the hill,
441
00:24:14,453 --> 00:24:18,156
there were Americans on
one side and behind us,
442
00:24:18,156 --> 00:24:20,692
and at that time, we
saw an American soldier
443
00:24:20,692 --> 00:24:22,794
who had fallen down the hill.
444
00:24:22,794 --> 00:24:23,995
He was wounded.
445
00:24:23,995 --> 00:24:26,731
He was lying down the
bottom of the hill
446
00:24:26,731 --> 00:24:28,533
where the brook was.
447
00:24:28,533 --> 00:24:30,969
He was lying half in the water.
448
00:24:30,969 --> 00:24:32,571
There was a woman
who was kneeling
449
00:24:32,571 --> 00:24:34,406
next to the American soldier,
450
00:24:34,406 --> 00:24:38,944
and she said the soldier
was badly wounded and dying.
451
00:24:38,944 --> 00:24:42,814
She was wiping his face
with water from the stream.
452
00:24:42,814 --> 00:24:45,083
The German SS troops
who were there
453
00:24:45,083 --> 00:24:47,219
started to shout at the woman
454
00:24:47,219 --> 00:24:49,654
that she shouldn't be
touching the soldier.
455
00:24:49,654 --> 00:24:51,723
The woman got mad
456
00:24:51,723 --> 00:24:54,359
and started to scream
at the SS troops,
457
00:24:54,359 --> 00:24:57,062
that they should be
ashamed of themselves,
458
00:24:57,062 --> 00:25:00,632
that she had to take
care of the soldier.
459
00:25:01,199 --> 00:25:03,635
Voiceover: Although combat
was over for Captian McLeod
460
00:25:03,635 --> 00:25:06,738
and the men left behind to
hold Battery C's position,
461
00:25:06,738 --> 00:25:08,273
Colonel Kelsey still had hope
462
00:25:08,273 --> 00:25:11,676
as he raced his rescued
men back towards St. Vith.
463
00:25:11,676 --> 00:25:13,345
He did not realize, however,
464
00:25:13,345 --> 00:25:16,548
that the Germans had
already pushed past him.
465
00:25:16,548 --> 00:25:22,754
(shouting in German)
466
00:25:22,754 --> 00:25:25,390
The convoy was surrounded
on the Schoenberg Road,
467
00:25:25,390 --> 00:25:28,293
and the men were
forced to surrender.
468
00:25:34,099 --> 00:25:35,800
Kelsey's men were turned around
469
00:25:35,800 --> 00:25:37,202
and pointed in the direction
470
00:25:37,202 --> 00:25:38,970
of other American
prisoner columns
471
00:25:38,970 --> 00:25:41,840
headed back towards Germany.
472
00:25:42,073 --> 00:25:50,248
(airplane flying)
473
00:25:51,316 --> 00:25:54,519
Joseph: Then the planes
came again nearby.
474
00:25:54,519 --> 00:25:55,854
One of them took out a carbine
475
00:25:55,854 --> 00:26:01,793
and shot at the American plane.
476
00:26:01,793 --> 00:26:05,397
One of the colonels saw
that and went to him,
477
00:26:05,397 --> 00:26:09,634
and told him, "10 minutes and
you will be ready to travel,
478
00:26:09,634 --> 00:26:13,238
"and you can come with us."
479
00:26:13,238 --> 00:26:16,741
The Germans were at
Crombach behind St. Vith.
480
00:26:16,741 --> 00:26:17,842
"You come along.
481
00:26:17,842 --> 00:26:20,545
"I want to see you
here in 10 minutes.
482
00:26:20,545 --> 00:26:24,249
"You can shoot down there
to your heart's content."
483
00:26:24,816 --> 00:26:26,184
And he came back.
484
00:26:26,184 --> 00:26:27,786
He had to go into
the car with them,
485
00:26:27,786 --> 00:26:31,256
and they took off with him.
486
00:26:39,931 --> 00:26:44,336
(airplane flying)
487
00:26:44,336 --> 00:26:46,938
The American P-47s
continued to pound
488
00:26:46,938 --> 00:26:50,241
the German columns, which
included American POWs.
489
00:26:50,241 --> 00:26:54,212
One plane came upon the
column with Kelsey's men.
490
00:26:58,617 --> 00:27:00,418
(shouting in German)
491
00:27:00,418 --> 00:27:03,054
(gun shots)
492
00:27:03,054 --> 00:27:04,923
In the chaos and confusion,
493
00:27:04,923 --> 00:27:07,125
several of the
prisoners escaped.
494
00:27:07,626 --> 00:27:10,161
Before long, they met up
with other American escapees,
495
00:27:10,161 --> 00:27:11,997
and the group headed northward,
496
00:27:11,997 --> 00:27:14,666
straight into the path of
a rapidly-advancing patrol
497
00:27:14,666 --> 00:27:19,104
from Gustav Knittel's first
SS reconnaissance battalion.
498
00:27:24,676 --> 00:27:29,247
These soldiers would become
known as the Wereth 11.
499
00:27:30,582 --> 00:27:34,019
(truck drives past)
500
00:27:39,324 --> 00:27:40,859
(distant bell rings)
501
00:27:40,859 --> 00:27:43,628
Joseph: I came through this
area a couple years ago,
502
00:27:43,628 --> 00:27:46,665
following in the footsteps
in my Uncle Bill Nahari,
503
00:27:46,665 --> 00:27:51,002
who fought here with the
5th Infantry Division,
504
00:27:51,002 --> 00:27:56,007
and I literally stumbled across
the story of the Wereth 11.
505
00:27:56,007 --> 00:28:00,712
Really turned my life upside
down and fascinated me,
506
00:28:00,712 --> 00:28:04,549
so I started doing all the
research I could do on it,
507
00:28:04,549 --> 00:28:07,118
and find out everything
that I could.
508
00:28:08,186 --> 00:28:09,688
Voiceover: The
Wereth 11 included
509
00:28:09,688 --> 00:28:12,457
Private Curtis Adams
of South Carolina,
510
00:28:12,457 --> 00:28:14,459
Technical Sergeant
James Aubrey Stewart
511
00:28:14,459 --> 00:28:16,661
of Piedmont, West Virginia,
512
00:28:17,462 --> 00:28:19,531
and Private First
Class George Davis,
513
00:28:19,531 --> 00:28:21,866
of Bessemer, Alabama.
514
00:28:22,801 --> 00:28:26,871
Davis was drafted in
1942 at the age of 24.
515
00:28:26,871 --> 00:28:30,075
An only son, he was known as
'Little Georgie' around town
516
00:28:30,075 --> 00:28:32,911
due to his 5'5" in stature.
517
00:28:32,911 --> 00:28:34,846
(bell rings)
518
00:28:34,846 --> 00:28:37,382
He attended a Julius
Rosenwald black school
519
00:28:37,382 --> 00:28:39,784
set up by northern
philanthropist to help educate
520
00:28:39,784 --> 00:28:42,353
African-Americans during
the Great Depression,
521
00:28:42,353 --> 00:28:44,189
and was popular
amongst his peers,
522
00:28:44,189 --> 00:28:47,058
especially the women.
523
00:28:48,393 --> 00:28:49,661
James Aubrey Stewart,
524
00:28:49,661 --> 00:28:52,397
one of the oldest of
the Wereth 11 at 38,
525
00:28:52,397 --> 00:28:54,432
shared the same birthplace
as Harvard professor
526
00:28:54,432 --> 00:28:58,803
Henry Lewis Gates, Jr.,
Piedmont, West Virginia.
527
00:29:00,138 --> 00:29:01,873
Stewart was the
first black employee
528
00:29:01,873 --> 00:29:03,441
of Westvaco paper mill,
529
00:29:03,441 --> 00:29:06,244
where he worked as a brick
layer and a carpenter.
530
00:29:07,112 --> 00:29:09,180
He also excelled in
athletics as a pitcher
531
00:29:09,180 --> 00:29:12,484
for the all-Black Piedmont
Giants baseball team.
532
00:29:12,484 --> 00:29:16,454
Around town, he was
regarded as kind and gentle.
533
00:29:16,921 --> 00:29:19,657
Private Curtis Adams
was an 8-month newlywed
534
00:29:19,657 --> 00:29:21,760
when he was drafted and
sent to Fort Jackson
535
00:29:21,760 --> 00:29:23,928
in Columbia, South Carolina.
536
00:29:24,829 --> 00:29:27,532
Moving on to Camp
Gruber, Oklahoma,
537
00:29:27,532 --> 00:29:29,834
Curtis was surprised shortly
before he shipped out
538
00:29:29,834 --> 00:29:32,937
to see his wife [Katherine]
arrive on a greyhound bus
539
00:29:32,937 --> 00:29:36,307
to show him his new son, Jesse.
540
00:29:36,307 --> 00:29:39,377
Robert H.: I had the extreme
pleasure of meeting Jesse Adams,
541
00:29:39,377 --> 00:29:42,447
the son of Curtis Adams,
about two weeks ago.
542
00:29:42,447 --> 00:29:44,849
He was only 2 years
old when his dad died.
543
00:29:45,850 --> 00:29:48,052
Here's a man 68 years old,
544
00:29:48,052 --> 00:29:51,556
knew virtually
nothing about his dad,
545
00:29:51,556 --> 00:29:54,592
and to be able to talk to him
about how his dad was a hero
546
00:29:54,592 --> 00:29:56,528
and talk to him
about the recognition
547
00:29:56,528 --> 00:29:57,929
that he was going to get
548
00:29:57,929 --> 00:30:00,131
really created a bond
with this gentleman
549
00:30:00,131 --> 00:30:01,599
that I'll have the
rest of my life.
550
00:30:01,599 --> 00:30:02,367
really created a bond
with this gentleman
551
00:30:02,433 --> 00:30:05,069
Just to see him smile.
552
00:30:10,041 --> 00:30:10,875
My dad made it.
553
00:30:10,875 --> 00:30:11,876
He was a prisoner of war.
554
00:30:11,876 --> 00:30:12,744
He was shot twice,
555
00:30:12,744 --> 00:30:13,978
but he came back.
556
00:30:13,978 --> 00:30:15,580
He put me through college.
557
00:30:15,580 --> 00:30:17,515
He put me through grad school.
558
00:30:18,283 --> 00:30:20,218
These guys made the
ultimate sacrifice,
559
00:30:20,218 --> 00:30:22,787
and they provided a
better life for all of us,
560
00:30:22,787 --> 00:30:24,322
and we've got to do
everything we can
561
00:30:24,322 --> 00:30:28,026
to make sure they get the
recognition that they deserve.
562
00:30:28,593 --> 00:30:30,662
Voiceover: The other men
comprising the Wereth 11
563
00:30:30,662 --> 00:30:32,797
mainly hailed from
the rural South,
564
00:30:32,797 --> 00:30:36,234
including Mississippi,
Arkansas, and Texas.
565
00:30:41,639 --> 00:30:44,475
Joseph Small along with Robert
Hudson and Robert Deshay
566
00:30:44,475 --> 00:30:48,046
have made the trip to Belgium
to retrace the 10-mile journey
567
00:30:48,046 --> 00:30:51,616
the Wereth 11 took in
their flight to freedom.
568
00:30:53,051 --> 00:30:55,253
As the men made
their way northwest,
569
00:30:55,253 --> 00:31:00,124
American POWs were
beginning to be brutalized.
570
00:31:01,459 --> 00:31:06,397
George: I found out one
thing about the human body.
571
00:31:07,265 --> 00:31:12,203
You can take just so much,
then everything blacks out.
572
00:31:12,203 --> 00:31:14,672
Mother Nature takes over,
573
00:31:14,672 --> 00:31:17,475
and they could beat you
'til hell froze over,
574
00:31:17,475 --> 00:31:19,344
and you wouldn't feel it.
575
00:31:19,344 --> 00:31:22,413
I spent the night
in Nuremberg stadium
576
00:31:22,413 --> 00:31:24,282
underneath a great big swastika
577
00:31:24,282 --> 00:31:26,684
that you've seen in pictures.
578
00:31:26,684 --> 00:31:29,554
That's where we slept on
the snow on the ground.
579
00:31:29,554 --> 00:31:32,957
They used to call us
niggers and stuff like that,
580
00:31:32,957 --> 00:31:37,962
but this is stuff that
I had heard in the South
581
00:31:37,962 --> 00:31:41,566
way before I went overseas.
582
00:31:41,566 --> 00:31:43,801
My shoulder's
messed up right now
583
00:31:43,801 --> 00:31:47,639
from an SS trooper's rifle.
584
00:31:47,639 --> 00:31:48,940
He asked me questions,
585
00:31:48,940 --> 00:31:52,877
and I kept saying my name
and my serial number,
586
00:31:52,877 --> 00:31:55,113
which under the
Geneva convention,
587
00:31:55,113 --> 00:31:56,514
that's what you're
supposed to do.
588
00:31:56,514 --> 00:31:59,684
Name, rank, and serial number.
589
00:31:59,684 --> 00:32:02,921
He swore because
I was a sergeant,
590
00:32:02,921 --> 00:32:06,391
that I knew more, or knew
a whole lot of information
591
00:32:06,391 --> 00:32:08,393
that they could use.
592
00:32:08,393 --> 00:32:10,495
I didn't know
anymore than they did
593
00:32:10,495 --> 00:32:13,998
so he hit me with a rifle
butt and knocked me down.
594
00:32:13,998 --> 00:32:16,301
I got up and I laughed at him.
595
00:32:16,301 --> 00:32:18,236
I got hit again.
596
00:32:19,771 --> 00:32:21,439
Erwin: Okay.
597
00:32:21,439 --> 00:32:23,908
We are here now on the
other side of the Our River,
598
00:32:23,908 --> 00:32:26,477
on the other side of Schoenberg,
599
00:32:26,477 --> 00:32:31,983
and this is the way the
11 men went through.
600
00:32:33,885 --> 00:32:39,424
Joseph: Well, I just got a
feel for what the men endured.
601
00:32:39,424 --> 00:32:42,827
I'm wearing this
World War II era gear,
602
00:32:42,827 --> 00:32:47,065
and I'm hot, I'm winded,
603
00:32:47,065 --> 00:32:49,834
and these guys were out
here in the elements,
604
00:32:49,834 --> 00:32:55,540
and to come up that
hill and not really have
605
00:32:55,540 --> 00:32:56,874
a sense of direction,
606
00:32:56,874 --> 00:33:00,144
and just going through
these woods alone,
607
00:33:00,979 --> 00:33:04,115
you really start
to feel for them.
608
00:33:05,149 --> 00:33:06,250
Voiceover: The
weather conditions
609
00:33:06,250 --> 00:33:08,920
the Wereth 11
endured were brutal.
610
00:33:08,920 --> 00:33:10,421
The temperatures kept dropping,
611
00:33:10,421 --> 00:33:12,123
and it began to sleet.
612
00:33:12,123 --> 00:33:14,192
The Battle of the Bulge
itself would be fought
613
00:33:14,192 --> 00:33:17,962
during one of the coldest
European winters on record.
614
00:33:17,962 --> 00:33:20,331
Hands and feet
became frostbitten,
615
00:33:20,331 --> 00:33:22,333
and everything from
the water in canteens
616
00:33:22,333 --> 00:33:25,269
to the water-cooled
machine guns froze.
617
00:33:25,269 --> 00:33:27,538
Men were lucky if they
had a single blanket
618
00:33:27,538 --> 00:33:30,074
to share between three
men in a foxhole.
619
00:33:30,074 --> 00:33:33,144
For many, staying
alive became secondary
620
00:33:33,144 --> 00:33:35,980
to staying warm.
621
00:33:43,054 --> 00:33:44,255
Erwin: This is the halfway point
622
00:33:44,255 --> 00:33:48,760
between the village of
Schoenberg and Wereth.
623
00:33:48,760 --> 00:33:53,598
To the right, there's the
village of Herresbach,
624
00:33:53,598 --> 00:33:56,234
and this is also a
reason that the soldiers
625
00:33:56,234 --> 00:33:57,468
had to take this road
626
00:33:57,468 --> 00:33:59,237
because they were convinced
627
00:33:59,237 --> 00:34:02,373
that was already
taken by the Germans.
628
00:34:03,674 --> 00:34:06,778
Joseph: It was the
largest battle fought
629
00:34:06,778 --> 00:34:10,915
in the history of
modern warfare.
630
00:34:12,116 --> 00:34:15,920
German unit here, an
American unit here,
631
00:34:16,521 --> 00:34:20,958
fighting it out with
tanks and artillery.
632
00:34:20,958 --> 00:34:24,128
(drums)
633
00:34:43,448 --> 00:34:45,316
It was just so brutal
634
00:34:45,316 --> 00:34:49,320
and the 333rd was
a big part of it.
635
00:34:49,320 --> 00:34:54,725
Specifically, the 11 men that
just walked down this road
636
00:34:54,725 --> 00:34:58,329
to Wereth, which is where
we're going to go to next.
637
00:35:03,601 --> 00:35:06,137
Voiceover: Herman Langer
was just 12 years old
638
00:35:06,137 --> 00:35:10,108
when the 11 men arrived at
his family farm in Wereth.
639
00:35:13,077 --> 00:35:15,813
Herman: That was on 17 December
640
00:35:15,813 --> 00:35:19,150
in the afternoon at 4 o'clock
641
00:35:19,817 --> 00:35:22,553
when the 11 Black
American soldiers
642
00:35:22,553 --> 00:35:26,090
came down from the
woods towards our house.
643
00:35:29,961 --> 00:35:34,098
They were wet and
cold and were hungry,
644
00:35:34,098 --> 00:35:37,168
and they asked if they could
possibly have something to eat,
645
00:35:37,168 --> 00:35:40,171
upon which they
came into our house,
646
00:35:40,171 --> 00:35:42,273
where my mother and my sister
647
00:35:42,273 --> 00:35:45,042
put bread and water on
the table for each of them
648
00:35:45,042 --> 00:35:47,678
so they could eat something.
649
00:35:51,883 --> 00:35:53,818
My father tried
to explain to them
650
00:35:53,818 --> 00:35:57,221
that they should quickly take
the path behind the house
651
00:35:57,221 --> 00:36:00,024
to look towards St. Vith,
652
00:36:00,024 --> 00:36:04,028
but my father was unable
to make them understand.
653
00:36:04,028 --> 00:36:07,031
He tried to point
them in that direction
654
00:36:07,031 --> 00:36:11,002
so that they would be in safety.
655
00:36:12,637 --> 00:36:18,476
A woman whose husband also
was an SS man met the SS.
656
00:36:18,876 --> 00:36:22,547
She must have told
him, one tells oneself,
657
00:36:24,282 --> 00:36:27,418
there are still black people.
658
00:36:27,418 --> 00:36:30,922
Then, suddenly, the
SS vehicle drove up
659
00:36:30,922 --> 00:36:34,992
and stopped directly
in front of the house.
660
00:36:44,368 --> 00:36:47,205
(shouting in German)
661
00:36:48,172 --> 00:36:49,674
(cocks gun)
662
00:36:51,108 --> 00:36:54,612
I cannot say whether they
carried the white flag
663
00:36:54,612 --> 00:36:57,181
when they had gone out,
664
00:36:57,181 --> 00:36:58,683
but when they went out,
665
00:36:58,683 --> 00:37:02,119
they had their hands
up and walked out.
666
00:37:02,119 --> 00:37:05,223
They never wanted to
get into a shoot out.
667
00:37:05,223 --> 00:37:07,158
(SS officer shouts in German)
668
00:37:09,894 --> 00:37:12,597
It was wet and cold there.
669
00:37:12,597 --> 00:37:20,471
They were freezing and
trembling from the cold.
670
00:37:20,471 --> 00:37:24,542
So my father suggested to
the chief of the SS group
671
00:37:24,542 --> 00:37:28,079
that they should let the
prisoners go in the shed
672
00:37:28,079 --> 00:37:32,383
because we had a shed to
shelter for wagons and carts
673
00:37:32,383 --> 00:37:35,386
and you could have easily
put the prisoners in there
674
00:37:35,386 --> 00:37:39,090
because it was sleeping.
675
00:37:39,090 --> 00:37:41,359
One soldier said that
they would get warm again
676
00:37:41,359 --> 00:37:45,329
walking in front of the car.
677
00:37:51,702 --> 00:37:53,571
When it started to get dark,
678
00:37:53,571 --> 00:37:56,841
they set off, and they had
to walk in front of the cars
679
00:37:56,841 --> 00:38:01,012
down to here, and
then to this spot.
680
00:38:01,712 --> 00:38:04,215
Voiceover: This part of
Belgium before World War I
681
00:38:04,215 --> 00:38:05,983
was still a part of Germany.
682
00:38:05,983 --> 00:38:08,019
Herman Langer's father
had taken a great risk
683
00:38:08,019 --> 00:38:10,788
sheltering the
American soldiers.
684
00:38:10,788 --> 00:38:13,190
Three of the nine homes
in the town at the time
685
00:38:13,190 --> 00:38:16,794
were still loyal to Germany.
686
00:38:17,762 --> 00:38:19,830
The 11 men were led down a path
687
00:38:19,830 --> 00:38:24,669
and told to sit on a wet
slope in a pasture and wait.
688
00:38:25,303 --> 00:38:29,674
(music playing)
689
00:38:44,221 --> 00:38:49,593
(car engine)
690
00:38:52,163 --> 00:38:58,169
(footsteps in snow)
691
00:38:59,904 --> 00:39:01,806
(gun clicks)
692
00:39:03,774 --> 00:39:06,344
George: These were
guys out of my outfit.
693
00:39:06,344 --> 00:39:10,815
They just mutilated
them and murdered them
694
00:39:28,632 --> 00:39:31,702
and left them laying
out there in the field.
695
00:39:31,702 --> 00:39:36,006
When spring thaw come,
they found their bodies.
696
00:39:43,347 --> 00:39:45,583
Herman: I believe that
we went to church,
697
00:39:45,583 --> 00:39:50,388
which was, I think,
on second February,
698
00:39:54,225 --> 00:39:59,029
and we saw the bodies
that had been left there.
699
00:40:25,956 --> 00:40:27,691
Voiceover: Six weeks after
the American soldiers
700
00:40:27,691 --> 00:40:29,460
were brutalized and killed,
701
00:40:29,460 --> 00:40:31,695
word reached command
HQ that a grizzly scene
702
00:40:31,695 --> 00:40:33,931
had been discovered at Wereth.
703
00:40:33,931 --> 00:40:35,733
A war crime investigative team,
704
00:40:35,733 --> 00:40:38,702
including a surgeon,
an army photographer,
705
00:40:38,702 --> 00:40:41,071
quickly descended
upon the sight.
706
00:40:41,071 --> 00:40:42,473
Soldier: That man appears
to have been allowed
707
00:40:42,473 --> 00:40:45,342
to dress his own wounds.
708
00:40:45,342 --> 00:40:46,844
Voiceover: It was
clear that all had been
709
00:40:46,844 --> 00:40:50,414
savagely tortured
before they died.
710
00:40:51,515 --> 00:40:53,484
The men's contorted
faces exhibited
711
00:40:53,484 --> 00:40:55,786
multiple face and jaw fractures.
712
00:40:55,786 --> 00:40:58,489
Fingers were severed
and legs were broken.
713
00:40:58,489 --> 00:41:02,226
Bayonet wounds were present
through the eye sockets.
714
00:41:07,431 --> 00:41:08,899
Soldier: War crime
does not begin
715
00:41:08,899 --> 00:41:12,236
to be a strong
enough term for this.
716
00:41:22,179 --> 00:41:23,814
Voiceover: By the time
the bodies were discovered
717
00:41:23,814 --> 00:41:27,017
in mid-February 1945 at Wereth,
718
00:41:27,017 --> 00:41:32,022
the Battle of the
Bulge was over.
719
00:41:32,022 --> 00:41:34,225
After the rapid German
gains in mid-December,
720
00:41:34,225 --> 00:41:36,327
the enemy offensive bogged down.
721
00:41:36,327 --> 00:41:39,330
(explosions)
722
00:41:39,797 --> 00:41:42,867
Stiff American resistance
by various isolated units
723
00:41:42,867 --> 00:41:45,803
had given time for the
US 1st and 9th Armies
724
00:41:45,803 --> 00:41:48,606
to shift against the
German northern flank.
725
00:41:48,606 --> 00:41:51,175
The British had sent reserves
to secure the Meuse River
726
00:41:51,175 --> 00:41:53,143
and Patton's 3rd Army shut down
727
00:41:53,143 --> 00:41:56,480
the enemy attack in the south.
728
00:41:57,414 --> 00:41:59,583
The cost of victory was heavy.
729
00:41:59,583 --> 00:42:03,120
Nearly 50,000 American
soldiers were casualties,
730
00:42:03,120 --> 00:42:06,490
including 19,000 dead.
731
00:42:07,958 --> 00:42:10,528
No headlines had trumpeted
the battle's end.
732
00:42:10,528 --> 00:42:13,030
The Allies continued
their march into Germany
733
00:42:13,030 --> 00:42:15,666
and for American
prisoners of war,
734
00:42:15,666 --> 00:42:19,270
their nightmare
was finally over.
735
00:42:25,910 --> 00:42:27,244
Moosburg, Germany.
736
00:42:27,244 --> 00:42:30,681
That's where I was finally
liberated at in that camp.
737
00:42:30,681 --> 00:42:32,983
That was the last camp I was in.
738
00:42:32,983 --> 00:42:37,354
We saw the German guards
pulling off their uniforms
739
00:42:37,354 --> 00:42:38,722
and this was something.
740
00:42:38,722 --> 00:42:41,792
The American troops
never done that.
741
00:42:41,792 --> 00:42:44,128
You could be shot as a spy
742
00:42:44,128 --> 00:42:48,599
if you've got civilian clothes
underneath your uniform.
743
00:42:49,300 --> 00:42:52,336
These cats would pull
off them old baggy ...
744
00:42:52,336 --> 00:42:54,805
I was wondering why that
German soldiers' uniforms
745
00:42:54,805 --> 00:42:56,006
were so baggy.
746
00:42:56,006 --> 00:42:57,341
Now I knew,
747
00:42:57,341 --> 00:43:00,244
because they had civilian
clothes underneath them.
748
00:43:01,679 --> 00:43:05,516
Patton come through and
said we were out of the war.
749
00:43:05,516 --> 00:43:07,418
As soon as the
weather permitted,
750
00:43:07,418 --> 00:43:10,788
we'd be flown back to France.
751
00:43:21,565 --> 00:43:25,869
Herman: I had left here in 1961.
752
00:43:25,869 --> 00:43:30,040
I now live 65 kilometers [west].
753
00:43:30,040 --> 00:43:32,276
When I came up here,
754
00:43:37,181 --> 00:43:43,053
it always bothered me that
there was nothing to remember
755
00:43:43,053 --> 00:43:45,122
what we have seen years before,
756
00:43:45,122 --> 00:43:48,425
and 50 years later,
I was retired.
757
00:43:48,425 --> 00:43:52,062
I had more time, and I
had the idea to build up
758
00:43:52,062 --> 00:43:56,734
a three-meter high
wooden cross here.
759
00:43:58,669 --> 00:44:00,971
I had the wood cut already,
760
00:44:00,971 --> 00:44:03,140
but my father-in-law's grave
761
00:44:03,140 --> 00:44:12,616
who had died in 1939 and had
to be cleared away in 1994.
762
00:44:12,616 --> 00:44:15,152
I had the stone cross available,
763
00:44:15,152 --> 00:44:18,689
and I thought stone
lasts longer than wood,
764
00:44:18,689 --> 00:44:22,393
and so I did this instead.
765
00:44:22,393 --> 00:44:24,828
Anne-Marie No█l-Simon
is in charge of
766
00:44:24,828 --> 00:44:26,664
the Wereth Memorial in Belgium.
767
00:44:26,664 --> 00:44:30,934
Anne-Marie: This is Ada
Rikken, our president.
768
00:44:30,934 --> 00:44:34,972
For Ada it was really
a big important thing,
769
00:44:34,972 --> 00:44:40,911
and overall she talked
about the Wereth Memorial,
770
00:44:40,911 --> 00:44:45,783
and the US Memorial
Wereth was her baby.
771
00:44:45,783 --> 00:44:53,490
In 2002, we have no money
to realize the memorial,
772
00:44:53,490 --> 00:44:59,129
and Louis, Jonckeau,
Ada, and myself,
773
00:44:59,129 --> 00:45:04,668
we put money on the
table to buy the ground,
774
00:45:04,668 --> 00:45:09,606
to pay the land surveyor,
to pay the notary
775
00:45:09,606 --> 00:45:14,845
and to pay all that we must pay.
776
00:45:14,845 --> 00:45:20,050
It was with the help
of Ada's friend,
777
00:45:20,050 --> 00:45:22,319
Norman Lichtenfeld in America,
778
00:45:22,319 --> 00:45:27,858
and with the help
of the Landstuhl
Regional Medical Center
779
00:45:27,858 --> 00:45:29,159
in Germany
780
00:45:29,159 --> 00:45:33,397
and the ROCKS Corporation,
European Chapter,
781
00:45:33,397 --> 00:45:46,210
that finally we can have
50,000 euros to make this small
782
00:45:46,210 --> 00:45:49,546
but fine, I think, Memorial.
783
00:45:49,880 --> 00:45:54,351
(serene music)
784
00:46:13,637 --> 00:46:15,939
Joseph: Today, we're
here in Wereth, Belgium,
785
00:46:15,939 --> 00:46:21,645
to honor 11 members of the
333rd field artillery battalion
786
00:46:21,645 --> 00:46:23,847
that were brutally
massacred on this site
787
00:46:23,847 --> 00:46:28,786
December 17, 1944.
788
00:46:28,986 --> 00:46:32,689
The names of the 11
members are as follows:
789
00:46:32,756 --> 00:46:36,093
Technical Sergeant
William Edward Pritchett.
790
00:46:36,093 --> 00:46:39,296
Technical Sergeant
James A. Stewart.
791
00:46:39,296 --> 00:46:42,699
Staff Sergeant Thomas J. Forte.
792
00:46:42,699 --> 00:46:45,469
Corporal Mager Bradley.
793
00:46:45,469 --> 00:46:50,007
Private First
Class George Davis.
794
00:46:50,007 --> 00:46:53,744
Private First Class
James Leatherwood.
795
00:46:53,744 --> 00:46:57,848
Private First Class
George W. Moten.
796
00:46:57,848 --> 00:47:02,386
Private First Class
Due W. Turner.
797
00:47:02,386 --> 00:47:04,888
Private Curtis Adams.
798
00:47:04,888 --> 00:47:06,924
Private Robert Green.
799
00:47:06,924 --> 00:47:10,594
Private Nathanial Moss.
800
00:47:14,865 --> 00:47:19,903
I was really moved and
saddened by this story.
801
00:47:19,903 --> 00:47:25,776
I thought that the men's
dignity was taken from them,
802
00:47:25,776 --> 00:47:29,213
and that really bothered me.
803
00:47:30,514 --> 00:47:34,718
I set out on a
mission to make sure
804
00:47:34,718 --> 00:47:37,654
the citizens of America
805
00:47:37,654 --> 00:47:39,456
and the citizens of Europe,
806
00:47:39,456 --> 00:47:42,192
they knew what happened
to those 11 men,
807
00:47:42,192 --> 00:47:45,495
and make sure they
knew the contribution
808
00:47:45,495 --> 00:47:51,468
of the 333rd field artillery
battalion during World War II.
809
00:47:51,468 --> 00:48:06,750
(sung) Amazing Grace,
810
00:48:06,750 --> 00:48:21,064
(sung) how sweet the sound
811
00:48:21,064 --> 00:48:38,982
(sung) that saved
a wretch like me.
812
00:48:38,982 --> 00:48:42,252
(sung) Oh, Lord.
813
00:48:42,252 --> 00:48:55,532
(sung) I once was lost
814
00:48:55,532 --> 00:49:08,178
(sung) but now I'm found.
815
00:49:08,178 --> 00:49:26,496
(sung) Was, I was
blind, but now I see.
816
00:49:37,841 --> 00:49:39,977
Voiceover: The murder of
the 11 Americans at Wereth
817
00:49:39,977 --> 00:49:42,079
was not the only
war crime committed
818
00:49:42,079 --> 00:49:45,315
on December 17, 1944.
819
00:49:46,817 --> 00:49:49,753
Just 25 kilometers to
the west, in Malmedy,
820
00:49:49,753 --> 00:49:52,856
in a more well-known atrocity,
821
00:49:52,856 --> 00:49:56,660
90 American soldiers of
the 285th Field Artillery
822
00:49:56,660 --> 00:49:58,662
Observation Battalion
were mowed down
823
00:49:58,662 --> 00:50:02,232
by men of the
Kampfgruppe Peiper,
824
00:50:02,232 --> 00:50:05,135
part of the 1st SS division.
825
00:50:19,449 --> 00:50:24,121
And the very next day,
December 18, 1944,
826
00:50:24,121 --> 00:50:27,657
the same SS unit of
Kampfgruppe Peiper
827
00:50:27,657 --> 00:50:32,329
systematically executed
130 Belgian civilians
828
00:50:32,329 --> 00:50:35,165
in the village of Stavelot.
829
00:50:41,204 --> 00:50:44,307
Charged with sheltering
American soldiers,
830
00:50:44,307 --> 00:50:53,116
67 men, 47 women, and 23
children were brutally executed.
831
00:50:56,219 --> 00:50:57,788
Lt. Col Ellis: Is
that your handwriting?
832
00:50:57,788 --> 00:51:00,290
Woman: (translates
in German) Yes.
833
00:51:00,290 --> 00:51:01,358
Lt. Col Ellis: That's
your signature?
834
00:51:01,358 --> 00:51:03,727
Woman: (translates
into German) Yes.
835
00:51:03,727 --> 00:51:05,128
Voiceover: These war
crimes committed by
836
00:51:05,128 --> 00:51:08,498
Joachim Peiper's battle group
were prosecuted vigorously
837
00:51:08,498 --> 00:51:12,502
at Dachau by lead investigator
Colonel Burton Ellis.
838
00:51:12,502 --> 00:51:14,671
Lt. Col Ellis: The 1st
SS Panzer regiment,
839
00:51:14,671 --> 00:51:16,006
commanded by the accused,
840
00:51:16,006 --> 00:51:19,676
Peiper passed on this order
to subordinate commands
841
00:51:19,676 --> 00:51:22,312
in words and substance
to the effect that,
842
00:51:22,312 --> 00:51:25,248
"This fight will be
conducted stubbornly
843
00:51:25,248 --> 00:51:29,019
"with no regard for
Allied prisoners of war,
844
00:51:29,019 --> 00:51:31,288
"who will have to be
shot if the situation
845
00:51:31,288 --> 00:51:34,958
"makes it necessary
and compellative."
846
00:51:36,927 --> 00:51:38,095
Voiceover: In what
became known as
847
00:51:38,095 --> 00:51:39,930
the Malmady Massacre Trial,
848
00:51:39,930 --> 00:51:43,433
Joachim Peiper, Gustav
Knittel, and Sepp Dietrich
849
00:51:43,433 --> 00:51:46,937
were found guilty of war crimes.
850
00:51:47,337 --> 00:51:48,872
Officer: It is a
bloody record indeed
851
00:51:48,872 --> 00:51:51,441
that the first SS Panzer
regiment set for itself
852
00:51:51,441 --> 00:51:53,110
in this one short week.
853
00:51:53,110 --> 00:51:56,680
These comrades all would
have been alive today
854
00:51:56,680 --> 00:51:59,983
if it had not been for the
1st SS Panzer regiment,
855
00:51:59,983 --> 00:52:03,220
and they must not
have died in vain.
856
00:52:04,321 --> 00:52:05,655
Judge: It is the members
present at the time
857
00:52:05,655 --> 00:52:07,290
the vote was taken concurring,
858
00:52:07,290 --> 00:52:10,360
sentences you to
life imprisonment.
859
00:52:18,001 --> 00:52:20,770
Sentences you to
life imprisonment.
860
00:52:23,707 --> 00:52:26,977
Present at the time the
vote was taken concurring,
861
00:52:26,977 --> 00:52:30,413
sentences you to
death by hanging.
862
00:52:43,760 --> 00:52:46,363
Voiceover: All
sentences, including
Peiper's death sentence
863
00:52:46,363 --> 00:52:49,900
were later reduced to
shortened prison terms.
864
00:52:50,667 --> 00:52:52,769
The last Nazi war
criminal to leave prison
865
00:52:52,769 --> 00:52:57,641
was Joachim Peiper in
late December 1956.
866
00:53:01,645 --> 00:53:03,446
Although an investigation
was launched
867
00:53:03,446 --> 00:53:05,081
into the massacre at Wereth,
868
00:53:05,081 --> 00:53:10,053
it was closed administratively
on February 19, 1947.
869
00:53:12,956 --> 00:53:15,458
In the final Congressional
report on the massacres
870
00:53:15,458 --> 00:53:17,627
committed by the
1st SS division,
871
00:53:17,627 --> 00:53:20,197
all locations of war
crimes committed in Belgium
872
00:53:20,197 --> 00:53:21,565
during the Battle of the Bulge,
873
00:53:21,565 --> 00:53:24,000
along with the approximate
number of persons murdered,
874
00:53:24,000 --> 00:53:27,470
both civilian and
military were listed.
875
00:53:27,470 --> 00:53:30,774
Wereth was absent.
876
00:53:50,694 --> 00:53:52,162
Through the efforts
of Herman Langer
877
00:53:52,162 --> 00:53:55,799
and other private citizens in
Belgium and the United States,
878
00:53:56,433 --> 00:54:00,170
the Wereth Memorial site
survives as hallowed ground,
879
00:54:00,170 --> 00:54:01,705
preserved in lasting remembrance
880
00:54:01,705 --> 00:54:03,974
to the final acts of
courage of the 11 men
881
00:54:03,974 --> 00:54:08,111
of the 333rd Field
Artillery Battalion.
882
00:54:09,579 --> 00:54:13,750
It is the only memorial in
Europe dedicated to the service
883
00:54:13,750 --> 00:54:17,721
of African-American
GIs in World War II.
884
00:54:17,721 --> 00:54:28,798
(sung) I see the glory,
the promised land.
885
00:54:31,801 --> 00:54:37,274
(sung) Promised land.
886
00:54:38,074 --> 00:54:49,419
(sung) Ooh, promised land.
887
00:54:53,623 --> 00:55:00,130
(sung) Seen the promised land.
888
00:55:00,563 --> 00:55:06,136
(sung) Seen the promised land.
889
00:55:07,003 --> 00:55:21,051
(sung) I've seen
the promised land.
890
00:55:33,063 --> 00:55:39,269
(music plays)
891
00:58:40,850 --> 00:58:43,453
George: Twenty-one days
at sea on the Liberty ship
892
00:58:43,453 --> 00:58:48,291
coming home in a storm
893
00:58:48,291 --> 00:58:52,328
with rivers popping up out
the ship and everything,
894
00:58:53,263 --> 00:58:58,601
then you get on land,
you see German POWs
895
00:59:00,103 --> 00:59:05,341
dressed in nice uniforms,
all clean and everything,
896
00:59:05,341 --> 00:59:09,913
well fed, and they're
calling us names.
897
00:59:11,080 --> 00:59:16,953
We came in at Fort
Devens, Massachusetts,
898
00:59:17,620 --> 00:59:20,657
and they had to call out the
National Guard and everybody
899
00:59:20,657 --> 00:59:24,994
to keep us from killing
them German POWs.
900
00:59:27,130 --> 00:59:29,198
I came out of the
army with nothing
901
00:59:29,198 --> 00:59:32,101
but the clothes on my back.
902
00:59:33,202 --> 00:59:36,639
That's what happened to
black troops down there.
903
00:59:36,639 --> 00:59:39,609
They hand me a train ticket,
904
00:59:39,609 --> 00:59:43,346
my separation
papers, that was it,
905
00:59:43,346 --> 00:59:54,791
and I rode in a washroom from
Alabama to Washington D.C.
906
00:59:55,825 --> 01:00:01,864
There was a whole empty
car in the back of where,
907
01:00:01,864 --> 01:00:04,534
you know, where I was
supposed to be sitting at.
908
01:00:04,534 --> 01:00:06,035
They wouldn't let
us go in there.
909
01:00:06,035 --> 01:00:08,705
It was just four of us
rode in the restroom.
910
01:00:08,705 --> 01:00:11,674
One of the guys
was a Lieutenant,
911
01:00:11,674 --> 01:00:15,445
but I didn't mind because
after combat and everything,
912
01:00:15,445 --> 01:00:19,716
hell, that was paradise
riding somewhere in the train.
913
01:00:20,049 --> 01:00:23,286
I just made the best of it.
66259
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