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101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), XVIII Airborne Corps
Posted on Sep 18, 2017
Lieutenant-Colonel Robert G. Cole - Carentan - 24/06/1944 - 1/2 - DDay-Overlord
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Lt-Col. Robert G. Cole
502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment - 101st Airborne Division
Robert G. Cole was born on 19 March 1915 at Fort Sam Houston in Houston, Texas. As a son of an army Colonel, Robert decided to join the army to become a career soldier. So that’s what he did on 1 July 1934. A year later he was honorably discharged to join the military academy of Westpoint where he graduated in 1939. After graduation he got home to marry the love of his life Allie Mae Wilson.
He then moved to Fort Lewis, where he was appointed to the 15th Infantry Division as a Second-Lieutenant. He served in the 15 infantry division together with Dwight D. Eisenhouwer, who would later become the Supreme Commander of the Allied forces in Western Europe. Robert Cole and Dwight Eisenhouwer became good friends during their time in the division. Robert Cole worked as an officer in the 15th infantry division until he joined the paratroops in 1941. He was assigned to the 501 Parachute Infantry Battalion to earn his jump wings.
In the early ‘40’s, the American army changed its command structure. The parachute battalions changed into regiments, and Robert Cole transferred to 3rd battalion of the 502 Parachute Infantry Regiment (3-502 PIR) to take command. Ranking up in the army from a Second-Lieutenant to a Lieutenant-Colonel.
In 1943 the 101st Airborne Division was sent to England to prepare for the invasion of fortress Europe. A year later, 6 June 1944, the invasion started and the paratroopers went to war.
The 101st and 82nd Airborne Divisions were the first to jump into occupied France and cease certain important areas. An important part of the invasion, was to capture Carentan. Carentan the link between Utah and Omaha beach.
On 10 June Cole and his 3-502 PIR were moving up the causeway in between St. Come-du-Mont and Carentan. Trying to capture territory over the Germans. Close to the outskirts of Carentan, the Germans had a well defended position in the hedgerows near the Ingouf farm. While moving up the causeway, Cole’s men had to move through intense enemy fire, causing a lot of casualties in their ranks. The causeway is now nicknamed ‘Purple heart lane’.
At the end of the causeway, the Germans placed some obstacles, which acted as a bottleneck for Cole’s paratroopers. Slowly advancing, the paratroopers finally got into positions at the last bridge over the Madeleine river leading up to Carentan. Only 265 men of the initial 400 from third battalion were left and prepared for an assault on the farm. With the Germans in well defended positions and their fire still suppressing the paratroopers, Robert Cole had to make a difficult decision. He ordered his men to fix bayonets and prepare for a bayonet charge.
Robert Cole, like many other Airborne commanders, led from the front and ran with his men towards the hedgerows. The attack didn’t start out to well, but some of the men from H-502 PIR started running to the German positions together with Cole, getting more men from other companies moving too. More and more men got motivated to participate in the push. While Cole kept firing his .45 pistol in the direction of the German defenders, the attacking force reached the German lines and got into hand-to-hand combat, finally overpowering the enemy. Cole’s charge proved costly, leaving him with 130 of the 265 men. Cole set up defensive positions at the Ingouf farm and called for 1-502 PIR to support his exhausted troops. For the bayonet charge and his efforts that day Cole was to receive the Medal of Honor, the highest American medal a soldier can earn. Sadly, Cole did not live to see it.
CITATION FOR THE CONGRESSIONAL MEDAL OF HONOR
Lieutenant Colonel Robert G. Cole
Commander 3rd Battalion 502 Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division
Place and date: Carentan, France, 11 June 1944
For gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his own life, above and beyond the call of duty on 11 June 1944, in France. Lt-Col. Cole was personally leading his battalion in forcing the last 4 bridges on the road to Carentan when his entire unit was suddenly pinned to the ground by intense and withering enemy rifle, machine gun, mortar, and artillery fire placed upon them from well-prepared and heavily fortified positions within 150 yards of the foremost elements. After the devastating and unceasing enemy fire had for over 1 hour prevented any move and inflicted numerous casualties, Lt-Col. Cole, observing this almost hopeless situation, courageously issued orders to assault the enemy positions with fixed bayonets. With utter disregard for his own safety and completely ignoring the enemy fire, he rose to his feet in front of his battalion and with drawn pistol shouted to his men to follow him in the assault. Catching up a fallen man's rifle and bayonet, he charged on and led the remnants of his battalion across the bullet-swept open ground and into the enemy position. His heroic and valiant action in so inspiring his men resulted in the complete establishment of our bridgehead across the Douve River. The cool fearlessness, personal bravery, and outstanding leadership displayed by Lt-Col. Cole reflect great credit upon himself and are worthy of the highest praise in the military service.
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Lt-Col. Robert G. Cole
502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment - 101st Airborne Division
Robert G. Cole was born on 19 March 1915 at Fort Sam Houston in Houston, Texas. As a son of an army Colonel, Robert decided to join the army to become a career soldier. So that’s what he did on 1 July 1934. A year later he was honorably discharged to join the military academy of Westpoint where he graduated in 1939. After graduation he got home to marry the love of his life Allie Mae Wilson.
He then moved to Fort Lewis, where he was appointed to the 15th Infantry Division as a Second-Lieutenant. He served in the 15 infantry division together with Dwight D. Eisenhouwer, who would later become the Supreme Commander of the Allied forces in Western Europe. Robert Cole and Dwight Eisenhouwer became good friends during their time in the division. Robert Cole worked as an officer in the 15th infantry division until he joined the paratroops in 1941. He was assigned to the 501 Parachute Infantry Battalion to earn his jump wings.
In the early ‘40’s, the American army changed its command structure. The parachute battalions changed into regiments, and Robert Cole transferred to 3rd battalion of the 502 Parachute Infantry Regiment (3-502 PIR) to take command. Ranking up in the army from a Second-Lieutenant to a Lieutenant-Colonel.
In 1943 the 101st Airborne Division was sent to England to prepare for the invasion of fortress Europe. A year later, 6 June 1944, the invasion started and the paratroopers went to war.
Lieutenant Colonel Robert G. Cole
Commander 3rd Battalion 502 Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division
Place and date: Carentan, France, 11 June 1944
For gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his own life, above and beyond the call of duty on 11 June 1944, in France. Lt-Col. Cole was personally leading his battalion in forcing the last 4 bridges on the road to Carentan when his entire unit was suddenly pinned to the ground by intense and withering enemy rifle, machine gun, mortar, and artillery fire placed upon them from well-prepared and heavily fortified positions within 150 yards of the foremost elements. After the devastating and unceasing enemy fire had for over 1 hour prevented any move and inflicted numerous casualties, Lt-Col. Cole, observing this almost hopeless situation, courageously issued orders to assault the enemy positions with fixed bayonets. With utter disregard for his own safety and completely ignoring the enemy fire, he rose to his feet in front of his battalion and with drawn pistol shouted to his men to follow him in the assault. Catching up a fallen man's rifle and bayonet, he charged on and led the remnants of his battalion across the bullet-swept open ground and into the enemy position. His heroic and valiant action in so inspiring his men resulted in the complete establishment of our bridgehead across the Douve River. The cool fearlessness, personal bravery, and outstanding leadership displayed by Lt-Col. Cole reflect great credit upon himself and are worthy of the highest praise in the military service.
CITATION FOR THE CONGRESSIONAL MEDAL OF HONOR
After Normandy, the 101 Airborne Division returned to England to prepare for the next operation. Robert Cole is known within the 502 PIR to rule his battalion with an iron fist and after receiving replacements for his battalion, his troops were soon ready for a new challenge. It wouldn’t take a long time before the next challenge was presented. The 101st Airborne Division was soon to be deployed in the Netherlands, in an operation called ‘Market Garden’. The goal for the airborne troops during Market Garden was to seize every bridge over rivers and canals from Eindhoven all the way up to Arnhem. The 502 PIR jumped over drop zone B in Son on 17 September 1944 at around 13.30 hours. Cole’s battalion was supposed to have an easy mission. Their task was to secure the drop zones for the entire division so the rest of the division could safely land by glider or parachute in the days after the 17th.
After landing on the drop zone Robert Cole was able to quickly organize and assemble his battalion. One company of Cole’s third battalion, H-502 PIR, strengthened by a platoon from the 326 thAirborne Engineers Battalion and a machine gun section from headquarters, was sent to seize the bridge over the Wilhelmina canal in Best. While these troops were heading for the Best bridge, Cole ordered his other company commanders to put their men in positions all across the drop and landing zones. Within hours everything was organized and the men believed this mission would turn out as a success.
Soon radio messages reached battalion HQ and Cole received news that H company was in trouble at Best and that they had serious German opposition. Cole immediately swung the rest of third battalion into action and made his way towards Best. Upon arrival third battalion walked into enemy opposition and Robert Cole had great difficulty putting his battalion in place. Enemy artillery now hit their lines which made movement even more difficult. Cole hadn’t linked up with H-502 PIR yet and sent runners to see where the company was. The battalion dug in and was pinned down by enemy forces, the Germans seemed to have the upper hand for now. At 13.00 hours a glider landing was planned on landing zone W in Son, carrying elements of the 327th GIR and supporting elements of the 101st Airborne Division. The glider landings were supported by P47 Thunderbolts fighter planes and Cole ordered his radio man and friend Robert Doran to call for air support. The call was answered and the airplanes circled over third battalions positions. At the moment the fighter planes were about to attack, enemy artillery intensified and one of the shells landed on the edge of Robert Doran’s foxhole killing him instantly. Robert Cole was shocked. Just like Normandy, his battalion was stuck at Best, the Germans had the upper hand and his best friend died in front of his eyes. To make matters even worse the airplanes circling over head started to fire into American lines. Cole was outraged and ordered some of his men to place airplane recognition panels. The men around call didn’t respond quickly enough so Cole ran into the field in front of him and placed the panels there himself. The airplanes saw the panels and now started firing into the German lines, with full effect. The Germans stopped firing. For a moment Robert Cole placed his hand over his eyes, shielding them from the sun, while he looked for the planes with his eyes. While looking up a single shot rang out across the field, the bullet hit Cole in his temple. He died on the spot.
Losing Robert Cole was the biggest blow for the third battalion of the 502 PIR during the war. Robert Cole was seemed to be invincible, a great battalion commander and a great military leader. Two weeks after his death on a field in Best, the medal of honor was awarded to Cole for his actions at causeway number 4 near Carentan. The medal was awarded posthumously to his wife and two-year-old son on the parade grounds at Fort Sam in Houston Texas.
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502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment - 101st Airborne Division
Robert G. Cole was born on 19 March 1915 at Fort Sam Houston in Houston, Texas. As a son of an army Colonel, Robert decided to join the army to become a career soldier. So that’s what he did on 1 July 1934. A year later he was honorably discharged to join the military academy of Westpoint where he graduated in 1939. After graduation he got home to marry the love of his life Allie Mae Wilson.
He then moved to Fort Lewis, where he was appointed to the 15th Infantry Division as a Second-Lieutenant. He served in the 15 infantry division together with Dwight D. Eisenhouwer, who would later become the Supreme Commander of the Allied forces in Western Europe. Robert Cole and Dwight Eisenhouwer became good friends during their time in the division. Robert Cole worked as an officer in the 15th infantry division until he joined the paratroops in 1941. He was assigned to the 501 Parachute Infantry Battalion to earn his jump wings.
In the early ‘40’s, the American army changed its command structure. The parachute battalions changed into regiments, and Robert Cole transferred to 3rd battalion of the 502 Parachute Infantry Regiment (3-502 PIR) to take command. Ranking up in the army from a Second-Lieutenant to a Lieutenant-Colonel.
In 1943 the 101st Airborne Division was sent to England to prepare for the invasion of fortress Europe. A year later, 6 June 1944, the invasion started and the paratroopers went to war.
The 101st and 82nd Airborne Divisions were the first to jump into occupied France and cease certain important areas. An important part of the invasion, was to capture Carentan. Carentan the link between Utah and Omaha beach.
On 10 June Cole and his 3-502 PIR were moving up the causeway in between St. Come-du-Mont and Carentan. Trying to capture territory over the Germans. Close to the outskirts of Carentan, the Germans had a well defended position in the hedgerows near the Ingouf farm. While moving up the causeway, Cole’s men had to move through intense enemy fire, causing a lot of casualties in their ranks. The causeway is now nicknamed ‘Purple heart lane’.
At the end of the causeway, the Germans placed some obstacles, which acted as a bottleneck for Cole’s paratroopers. Slowly advancing, the paratroopers finally got into positions at the last bridge over the Madeleine river leading up to Carentan. Only 265 men of the initial 400 from third battalion were left and prepared for an assault on the farm. With the Germans in well defended positions and their fire still suppressing the paratroopers, Robert Cole had to make a difficult decision. He ordered his men to fix bayonets and prepare for a bayonet charge.
Robert Cole, like many other Airborne commanders, led from the front and ran with his men towards the hedgerows. The attack didn’t start out to well, but some of the men from H-502 PIR started running to the German positions together with Cole, getting more men from other companies moving too. More and more men got motivated to participate in the push. While Cole kept firing his .45 pistol in the direction of the German defenders, the attacking force reached the German lines and got into hand-to-hand combat, finally overpowering the enemy. Cole’s charge proved costly, leaving him with 130 of the 265 men. Cole set up defensive positions at the Ingouf farm and called for 1-502 PIR to support his exhausted troops. For the bayonet charge and his efforts that day Cole was to receive the Medal of Honor, the highest American medal a soldier can earn. Sadly, Cole did not live to see it.
CITATION FOR THE CONGRESSIONAL MEDAL OF HONOR
Lieutenant Colonel Robert G. Cole
Commander 3rd Battalion 502 Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division
Place and date: Carentan, France, 11 June 1944
For gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his own life, above and beyond the call of duty on 11 June 1944, in France. Lt-Col. Cole was personally leading his battalion in forcing the last 4 bridges on the road to Carentan when his entire unit was suddenly pinned to the ground by intense and withering enemy rifle, machine gun, mortar, and artillery fire placed upon them from well-prepared and heavily fortified positions within 150 yards of the foremost elements. After the devastating and unceasing enemy fire had for over 1 hour prevented any move and inflicted numerous casualties, Lt-Col. Cole, observing this almost hopeless situation, courageously issued orders to assault the enemy positions with fixed bayonets. With utter disregard for his own safety and completely ignoring the enemy fire, he rose to his feet in front of his battalion and with drawn pistol shouted to his men to follow him in the assault. Catching up a fallen man's rifle and bayonet, he charged on and led the remnants of his battalion across the bullet-swept open ground and into the enemy position. His heroic and valiant action in so inspiring his men resulted in the complete establishment of our bridgehead across the Douve River. The cool fearlessness, personal bravery, and outstanding leadership displayed by Lt-Col. Cole reflect great credit upon himself and are worthy of the highest praise in the military service.
OPERATION MARKET GARDEN
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ARTICLES
THEIR STORY
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Lt-Col. Robert G. Cole
502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment - 101st Airborne Division
Robert G. Cole was born on 19 March 1915 at Fort Sam Houston in Houston, Texas. As a son of an army Colonel, Robert decided to join the army to become a career soldier. So that’s what he did on 1 July 1934. A year later he was honorably discharged to join the military academy of Westpoint where he graduated in 1939. After graduation he got home to marry the love of his life Allie Mae Wilson.
He then moved to Fort Lewis, where he was appointed to the 15th Infantry Division as a Second-Lieutenant. He served in the 15 infantry division together with Dwight D. Eisenhouwer, who would later become the Supreme Commander of the Allied forces in Western Europe. Robert Cole and Dwight Eisenhouwer became good friends during their time in the division. Robert Cole worked as an officer in the 15th infantry division until he joined the paratroops in 1941. He was assigned to the 501 Parachute Infantry Battalion to earn his jump wings.
In the early ‘40’s, the American army changed its command structure. The parachute battalions changed into regiments, and Robert Cole transferred to 3rd battalion of the 502 Parachute Infantry Regiment (3-502 PIR) to take command. Ranking up in the army from a Second-Lieutenant to a Lieutenant-Colonel.
In 1943 the 101st Airborne Division was sent to England to prepare for the invasion of fortress Europe. A year later, 6 June 1944, the invasion started and the paratroopers went to war.
Lieutenant Colonel Robert G. Cole
Commander 3rd Battalion 502 Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division
Place and date: Carentan, France, 11 June 1944
For gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his own life, above and beyond the call of duty on 11 June 1944, in France. Lt-Col. Cole was personally leading his battalion in forcing the last 4 bridges on the road to Carentan when his entire unit was suddenly pinned to the ground by intense and withering enemy rifle, machine gun, mortar, and artillery fire placed upon them from well-prepared and heavily fortified positions within 150 yards of the foremost elements. After the devastating and unceasing enemy fire had for over 1 hour prevented any move and inflicted numerous casualties, Lt-Col. Cole, observing this almost hopeless situation, courageously issued orders to assault the enemy positions with fixed bayonets. With utter disregard for his own safety and completely ignoring the enemy fire, he rose to his feet in front of his battalion and with drawn pistol shouted to his men to follow him in the assault. Catching up a fallen man's rifle and bayonet, he charged on and led the remnants of his battalion across the bullet-swept open ground and into the enemy position. His heroic and valiant action in so inspiring his men resulted in the complete establishment of our bridgehead across the Douve River. The cool fearlessness, personal bravery, and outstanding leadership displayed by Lt-Col. Cole reflect great credit upon himself and are worthy of the highest praise in the military service.
CITATION FOR THE CONGRESSIONAL MEDAL OF HONOR
After Normandy, the 101 Airborne Division returned to England to prepare for the next operation. Robert Cole is known within the 502 PIR to rule his battalion with an iron fist and after receiving replacements for his battalion, his troops were soon ready for a new challenge. It wouldn’t take a long time before the next challenge was presented. The 101st Airborne Division was soon to be deployed in the Netherlands, in an operation called ‘Market Garden’. The goal for the airborne troops during Market Garden was to seize every bridge over rivers and canals from Eindhoven all the way up to Arnhem. The 502 PIR jumped over drop zone B in Son on 17 September 1944 at around 13.30 hours. Cole’s battalion was supposed to have an easy mission. Their task was to secure the drop zones for the entire division so the rest of the division could safely land by glider or parachute in the days after the 17th.
After landing on the drop zone Robert Cole was able to quickly organize and assemble his battalion. One company of Cole’s third battalion, H-502 PIR, strengthened by a platoon from the 326 thAirborne Engineers Battalion and a machine gun section from headquarters, was sent to seize the bridge over the Wilhelmina canal in Best. While these troops were heading for the Best bridge, Cole ordered his other company commanders to put their men in positions all across the drop and landing zones. Within hours everything was organized and the men believed this mission would turn out as a success.
Soon radio messages reached battalion HQ and Cole received news that H company was in trouble at Best and that they had serious German opposition. Cole immediately swung the rest of third battalion into action and made his way towards Best. Upon arrival third battalion walked into enemy opposition and Robert Cole had great difficulty putting his battalion in place. Enemy artillery now hit their lines which made movement even more difficult. Cole hadn’t linked up with H-502 PIR yet and sent runners to see where the company was. The battalion dug in and was pinned down by enemy forces, the Germans seemed to have the upper hand for now. At 13.00 hours a glider landing was planned on landing zone W in Son, carrying elements of the 327th GIR and supporting elements of the 101st Airborne Division. The glider landings were supported by P47 Thunderbolts fighter planes and Cole ordered his radio man and friend Robert Doran to call for air support. The call was answered and the airplanes circled over third battalions positions. At the moment the fighter planes were about to attack, enemy artillery intensified and one of the shells landed on the edge of Robert Doran’s foxhole killing him instantly. Robert Cole was shocked. Just like Normandy, his battalion was stuck at Best, the Germans had the upper hand and his best friend died in front of his eyes. To make matters even worse the airplanes circling over head started to fire into American lines. Cole was outraged and ordered some of his men to place airplane recognition panels. The men around call didn’t respond quickly enough so Cole ran into the field in front of him and placed the panels there himself. The airplanes saw the panels and now started firing into the German lines, with full effect. The Germans stopped firing. For a moment Robert Cole placed his hand over his eyes, shielding them from the sun, while he looked for the planes with his eyes. While looking up a single shot rang out across the field, the bullet hit Cole in his temple. He died on the spot.
Losing Robert Cole was the biggest blow for the third battalion of the 502 PIR during the war. Robert Cole was seemed to be invincible, a great battalion commander and a great military leader. Two weeks after his death on a field in Best, the medal of honor was awarded to Cole for his actions at causeway number 4 near Carentan. The medal was awarded posthumously to his wife and two-year-old son on the parade grounds at Fort Sam in Houston Texas.
http://www.ww2marketgarden.com/ltcolrobertgcole.html
https://www.fieldsofhonor-database.com/index.php/en/american-war-cemetery-margraten-c/44493-cole-robert-g
@ col mikel COL Mikel J. Burroughs @ ltc stephen LTC Stephen C. @ ltc stephen LTC Stephen F. @ ltc frank LTC (Join to see) @ ltc john LTC John Mohor @ maj william Maj William W. "Bill" Price @ maj stephen LTC (Join to see) @ capt tom Capt Tom Brown @ capt marty Maj Marty Hogan @ smsgt doc SMSgt Minister Gerald A. "Doc" Thomas @ tsgt joe TSgt Joe C. @ sra christopher SrA Christopher Wright MSG Andrew White @ sfc joe SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL @ sgt david SGT (Join to see) @ sgt david SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth @ sp5 mark SP5 Mark Kuzinski @ spc margaret SPC Margaret Higgins SCPO Morris Ramsey Alan K.
Posted 7 y ago
Responses: 8
Edited 7 y ago
Posted 7 y ago
Thanks SGT John " Mac " McConnell for honoring LTC Robert G. Cole who was assigned to the 502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 101st Airborne Division who was a recipient of the Medal of Honor for his actions at Carentan, France which was a strategic crossroads location between Omaha and Utah beaches.
The narrative for the justification of his Medal of Honor citation concludes:
"The glider landings were supported by P47 Thunderbolts fighter planes and Cole ordered his radio man and friend Robert Doran to call for air support. The call was answered and the airplanes circled over third battalions positions. At the moment the fighter planes were about to attack, enemy artillery intensified and one of the shells landed on the edge of Robert Doran’s foxhole killing him instantly. Robert Cole was shocked. Just like Normandy, his battalion was stuck at Best, the Germans had the upper hand and his best friend died in front of his eyes. To make matters even worse the airplanes circling over head started to fire into American lines. Cole was outraged and ordered some of his men to place airplane recognition panels. The men around call didn’t respond quickly enough so Cole ran into the field in front of him and placed the panels there himself. The airplanes saw the panels and now started firing into the German lines, with full effect. The Germans stopped firing. For a moment Robert Cole placed his hand over his eyes, shielding them from the sun, while he looked for the planes with his eyes. While looking up a single shot rang out across the field, the bullet hit Cole in his temple. He died on the spot."
Images:
1. 1944-10 Map, The Attack on Carentan;
2. 1944-06-14 Passing the bodies of Germans and men from their own unit killed in earlier fighting by German snipers, troops of the 101st Airborne Division;
3. 1944-06-15 101st Airborne Division, Carentan;
4. 1944-06-10 German Paratroopers at Carentan
Below is an excerpt for the 101st Airborne page
"Capturing Carentan
Allied bombers destroyed the German long-range guns the division was ordered to neutralize as one of its first objectives in Normandy. Over the next five days and nights, the Screaming Eagles fought countless skirmishes, consolidated forces, and pushed southward.
“What sticks in my mind was the 11th of June, and that was on a Sunday,” Bowser explains. “That’s when we moved toward Carentan.”
Capturing the small Normandy town of Carentan with about 4,000 inhabitants was a high-priority assignment given to the Screaming Eagles. If left in German hands, it could be used as a corridor for a counterattack against American ground forces of the 4th and 90th Infantry Divisions moving inland from Utah Beach. Also, its main highway and railroad connected the strategic seaport of Cherbourg to the northwest, St. Lo to the southeast, and Caen to the east. Whoever controlled Carentan could conceivably control the entire Cotentin Peninsula.
While the 101st was an untested fighting force, German troops in the Carentan area included battle-experienced men of the 6th Fallschïrmjager Regiment (airborne) under the command of Major Friedrich von der Heydte. He was given orders to defend the area to the last man.
Purple Heart Lane
The main path of attack for the Screaming Eagles was a one-mile stretch of roadway that began at the south of St. Come du Mont and ended at the outskirts of Carentan. Today, this unassuming stretch of highway has been modernized, still straight and narrow, and rises only a few meters above the boggy marshes located on either side of it. But for two days in 1944, June 10 and 11, many Screaming Eagles died there and many more were wounded. So inspiring was the battle that two soldiers from Headquarters Company of the 502nd, Raymond D. Cready and Robert H. Bryant, wrote a dramatic poem of the attack that they titled “Purple Heart Lane” in memory of those who perished.
The causeway featured four stone bridges crossing canals and the Douve and Madeleine Rivers before leading into Carentan. The terrain on either side of the road prevented troops from digging in, which exposed them to direct enemy fire. Part of the plan to seize the town called for the 3rd Battalion of the 502nd, led by Lt. Col. Robert G. Cole, to attack from the north straight down the causeway, in the open and without cover.
This modern view of Purple Heart Lane looking south from Dead Man's Corner at St. Comte du Mont bellies the violent fighting that took place near the town of Carentan in June 1944.
This modern view of Purple Heart Lane looking south from Dead Man’s Corner at St. Comte du Mont bellies the violent fighting that took place near the town of Carentan in June 1944.
After crossing Bridge No. 1 on June 10, paratroopers found the second bridge destroyed by retreating Germans. Airborne engineers tried for hours to repair it but could not, stymied by enemy fire from mortars and 88mm cannons, one of the most feared weapons the Germans used during the war. Frustrated at their lack of progress, Cole and three others jury-rigged a footbridge with material left by the engineers. It enabled the men to cross the waterway in single file.
What followed was a slow and methodical progression down Purple Heart Lane. Screaming Eagles were extended in long columns hugging both sides of the road and were under sporadic fire from enemy artillery. That changed dramatically when the men reached Bridge No. 4, blocked by a massive iron and concrete Belgian gate that the troopers could open only about 18 inches, allowing just one man through at a time.
Here, German fire increased greatly. Snipers and machine guns opened up from the front and on both sides of the causeway. For several hours, 3rd Battalion men, clinging to both sides of the road, were mauled badly and picked off at an alarming rate. Only a handful managed to squeeze through the Belgian gate, cross the bridge, and flop in a ditch, pinned down with a 200-yard open field facing them.
This fourth bridge, built of stone, still stands today, located just off of the road that leads into Carentan.
The American attack petered out, and mercifully division artillery and the Normandy darkness halted the carnage, that is until around midnight when two enemy planes from seemingly out of nowhere bombed and strafed the battalion huddled along the causeway. The bleeding and dying troopers were left where they had fallen. The destroyed second bridge prevented wounded from being taken out and reinforcements from being brought in.
Colonel John H. Michaelis, 502nd regimental commander, was quick to order Cole to renew the attack on Carentan. The antsy Cole, always eager for a fight, gladly obliged. At 4 am on June 11, under cover of darkness and during a break in enemy fire, paratroopers began moving through the Belgian gate and across the fourth bridge. The men made it to an open expanse of farmland when German fire erupted again. It came from a farmhouse and outbuildings owned by the Ingouf family, which were being used by Major von der Heydte as his headquarters. The Americans who crossed the bridge were hung out to dry along the field and unable to advance. Cole called for division artillery to target known enemy positions. It had little effect, and the German guns continued to fire.
Faced with the destruction of his battalion, Cole made a desperate decision and ordered a bayonet charge on the farmhouse, a rarity in World War II. His order was relayed to Major John P. Stopka, 3rd Battalion’s executive officer. Under cover of a smoke screen, Cole blew his whistle and rose to his feet. Some accounts report he held and fired his .45-caliber pistol as he charged. Others say he picked up a fallen man’s M1 Garand rifle and affixed a bayonet during the assault. Of the approximate 250 paratroopers who should have followed him, only about 20 did so because of confusion and poor communication. Some 50 followed Major Stopka. The attack became known as Cole’s Charge, and according to author and military historian John C. McManus, the bloodshed was horrendous.
“Cole and the others at the front of the charge had made it across the open area (roughly the length of two football fields), closed with the Germans in the Ingouf farm and either killed them or put them to flight. The Americans howled like demons as they charged. It was grisly—warfare at its most elemental. Dead and dismembered Germans lay everywhere—in foxholes, behind embankments, outside the farm buildings and behind hedgerows. Very few of them had been bayoneted, although some had. Most had been killed by rifle fire or grenades at close range. The rest were retreating west, in the direction of the Cherbourg-Paris railroad. First Sergeant Kenneth Sprecher [who would be awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his actions] and Private George Roach shot the lock off the door of the main farmhouse and charged inside, only to find the place abandoned. Cole followed and used the place as his command post.”
“Fix Bayonets”
Warfare is fraught with the mixing of units, and Bowser, a member of 2nd Battalion, found himself with Major Stopka and 3rd Battalion during the charge. His crossing of Bridge No. 4 was not through the Belgian gate. He crossed the Madeleine River underneath the span.
“We had a column on each side of the road, and we went to the fourth bridge and that’s where we stopped,” he says. “The Germans were covering the bridge with small arms. We went down under the bridge, and there was a jump rope. Someone ahead of us put that jump rope there, and I was the first one to use it. I threw my rifle over my shoulder and jumped and went head over heels into the water. The river was deeper than we figured.
“We stayed under that bridge on the bank. What stands out is there was an 88 that came whistling over us. I was assistant squad leader, and I had positioned myself over this machine gun. Another 88 came and I said, ‘That one’s carrying the mail.’ So we hit the ground, and I landed between the gunner, [Joseph] Malliawski, and the assistant gunner, who was a German-born barber from New York. Then Malliawski said, ‘There’s something in my shoulder.’ I looked, and I said, ‘Yea, there’s a piece a steel.’ He said to pull it out. So I pulled it out. It was about an inch long, but he wasn’t bleeding much. I never reported it, so he never got a Purple Heart. Malliawski was the only man who saw every day of combat in our company. If I had known, I would’ve let the medic take care of it, and he would’ve gotten the Purple Heart.”
Shortly afterward, Cole gave his order to charge.
“The units were badly mixed up, but it was mostly Cole’s outfit. We started to advance, and the Germans had us pinned down in an open field and the only place I could get to was a dead furrow, a deep ditch,” recalled Bowser. “They pinned us down there, and I was head to head to my squad leader, Sergeant [Robert E.] Pope, and I said, ‘What do we do now?’ He said, ‘I don’t know. Let’s have a smoke.’ So he lit a cigarette and tore it in two. My half was all soaking wet. And the first thing I can recall is that an order came down the line, all the way from Cole: ‘Fix bayonets.’ So we fixed bayonets, and on Cole’s command, ‘Everybody up and at ’em.’ And we went in. But the Germans didn’t stay to fight. They left. Then we kept driving into Carentan. To this day I don’t know whether we got credit for taking Carentan, or if the 506 (Parachute Infantry Regiment) did.”
Recalling his participation in Cole’s Charge reminds Bowser of an incident that had taken place two years earlier. “I remember in basic training, it was hot and everybody was tired. We were training for a bayonet charge. I made the mistake of saying that was from World War I, why do we have to take bayonet training? For that I went down and did push-ups.”
WORLD WAR II: FRANCE, 1944. American paratroopers move through a field in Carentan, France, passing members of their own unit killed by German snipers. Photographed 14 June 1944.
Passing the bodies of Germans and men from their own unit killed in earlier fighting by German snipers, troops of the 101st Airborne Division approach the village of Carentan on June 14, 1944.
Carentan was liberated by the 101st on June 12. For his heroic actions on June 11, Cole was recommended for the Medal of Honor, but he did not live to receive it. On September 18 in Holland, he was on the radio with an Allied pilot who requested that orange panels be placed in front of American lines near Best to indicate airborne positions. Cole did it himself and was shot dead by a German sniper. His family was presented his Medal of Honor posthumously. Cole’s body is interred at the American Cemetery in Margraten, Netherlands.
Stopka was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his actions at Carentan. He replaced Cole as commanding officer of 3rd Battalion. Stopka was killed on January 14, 1945, near Michamps, Belgium, during the Battle of the Bulge, when American planes bombed his position by mistake. His body is buried at the Luxembourg American Cemetery near Hamm, Luxembourg."
http://warfarehistorynetwork.com/daily/wwii/a-101st-airborne-paratroopers-combat-journey/
FYI Maj William W. "Bill" Price Capt Seid Waddell 1stSgt Eugene Harless SSgt Robert Marx Capt Seid Waddell SFC William Farrell SSgt Robert Marx SSgt (Join to see) SPC (Join to see) SrA Christopher Wright Maj Marty Hogan PO1 William "Chip" Nagel SP5 Robert Ruck SCPO Morris Ramsey SGT Michael Thorin SPC Margaret Higgins SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
The narrative for the justification of his Medal of Honor citation concludes:
"The glider landings were supported by P47 Thunderbolts fighter planes and Cole ordered his radio man and friend Robert Doran to call for air support. The call was answered and the airplanes circled over third battalions positions. At the moment the fighter planes were about to attack, enemy artillery intensified and one of the shells landed on the edge of Robert Doran’s foxhole killing him instantly. Robert Cole was shocked. Just like Normandy, his battalion was stuck at Best, the Germans had the upper hand and his best friend died in front of his eyes. To make matters even worse the airplanes circling over head started to fire into American lines. Cole was outraged and ordered some of his men to place airplane recognition panels. The men around call didn’t respond quickly enough so Cole ran into the field in front of him and placed the panels there himself. The airplanes saw the panels and now started firing into the German lines, with full effect. The Germans stopped firing. For a moment Robert Cole placed his hand over his eyes, shielding them from the sun, while he looked for the planes with his eyes. While looking up a single shot rang out across the field, the bullet hit Cole in his temple. He died on the spot."
Images:
1. 1944-10 Map, The Attack on Carentan;
2. 1944-06-14 Passing the bodies of Germans and men from their own unit killed in earlier fighting by German snipers, troops of the 101st Airborne Division;
3. 1944-06-15 101st Airborne Division, Carentan;
4. 1944-06-10 German Paratroopers at Carentan
Below is an excerpt for the 101st Airborne page
"Capturing Carentan
Allied bombers destroyed the German long-range guns the division was ordered to neutralize as one of its first objectives in Normandy. Over the next five days and nights, the Screaming Eagles fought countless skirmishes, consolidated forces, and pushed southward.
“What sticks in my mind was the 11th of June, and that was on a Sunday,” Bowser explains. “That’s when we moved toward Carentan.”
Capturing the small Normandy town of Carentan with about 4,000 inhabitants was a high-priority assignment given to the Screaming Eagles. If left in German hands, it could be used as a corridor for a counterattack against American ground forces of the 4th and 90th Infantry Divisions moving inland from Utah Beach. Also, its main highway and railroad connected the strategic seaport of Cherbourg to the northwest, St. Lo to the southeast, and Caen to the east. Whoever controlled Carentan could conceivably control the entire Cotentin Peninsula.
While the 101st was an untested fighting force, German troops in the Carentan area included battle-experienced men of the 6th Fallschïrmjager Regiment (airborne) under the command of Major Friedrich von der Heydte. He was given orders to defend the area to the last man.
Purple Heart Lane
The main path of attack for the Screaming Eagles was a one-mile stretch of roadway that began at the south of St. Come du Mont and ended at the outskirts of Carentan. Today, this unassuming stretch of highway has been modernized, still straight and narrow, and rises only a few meters above the boggy marshes located on either side of it. But for two days in 1944, June 10 and 11, many Screaming Eagles died there and many more were wounded. So inspiring was the battle that two soldiers from Headquarters Company of the 502nd, Raymond D. Cready and Robert H. Bryant, wrote a dramatic poem of the attack that they titled “Purple Heart Lane” in memory of those who perished.
The causeway featured four stone bridges crossing canals and the Douve and Madeleine Rivers before leading into Carentan. The terrain on either side of the road prevented troops from digging in, which exposed them to direct enemy fire. Part of the plan to seize the town called for the 3rd Battalion of the 502nd, led by Lt. Col. Robert G. Cole, to attack from the north straight down the causeway, in the open and without cover.
This modern view of Purple Heart Lane looking south from Dead Man's Corner at St. Comte du Mont bellies the violent fighting that took place near the town of Carentan in June 1944.
This modern view of Purple Heart Lane looking south from Dead Man’s Corner at St. Comte du Mont bellies the violent fighting that took place near the town of Carentan in June 1944.
After crossing Bridge No. 1 on June 10, paratroopers found the second bridge destroyed by retreating Germans. Airborne engineers tried for hours to repair it but could not, stymied by enemy fire from mortars and 88mm cannons, one of the most feared weapons the Germans used during the war. Frustrated at their lack of progress, Cole and three others jury-rigged a footbridge with material left by the engineers. It enabled the men to cross the waterway in single file.
What followed was a slow and methodical progression down Purple Heart Lane. Screaming Eagles were extended in long columns hugging both sides of the road and were under sporadic fire from enemy artillery. That changed dramatically when the men reached Bridge No. 4, blocked by a massive iron and concrete Belgian gate that the troopers could open only about 18 inches, allowing just one man through at a time.
Here, German fire increased greatly. Snipers and machine guns opened up from the front and on both sides of the causeway. For several hours, 3rd Battalion men, clinging to both sides of the road, were mauled badly and picked off at an alarming rate. Only a handful managed to squeeze through the Belgian gate, cross the bridge, and flop in a ditch, pinned down with a 200-yard open field facing them.
This fourth bridge, built of stone, still stands today, located just off of the road that leads into Carentan.
The American attack petered out, and mercifully division artillery and the Normandy darkness halted the carnage, that is until around midnight when two enemy planes from seemingly out of nowhere bombed and strafed the battalion huddled along the causeway. The bleeding and dying troopers were left where they had fallen. The destroyed second bridge prevented wounded from being taken out and reinforcements from being brought in.
Colonel John H. Michaelis, 502nd regimental commander, was quick to order Cole to renew the attack on Carentan. The antsy Cole, always eager for a fight, gladly obliged. At 4 am on June 11, under cover of darkness and during a break in enemy fire, paratroopers began moving through the Belgian gate and across the fourth bridge. The men made it to an open expanse of farmland when German fire erupted again. It came from a farmhouse and outbuildings owned by the Ingouf family, which were being used by Major von der Heydte as his headquarters. The Americans who crossed the bridge were hung out to dry along the field and unable to advance. Cole called for division artillery to target known enemy positions. It had little effect, and the German guns continued to fire.
Faced with the destruction of his battalion, Cole made a desperate decision and ordered a bayonet charge on the farmhouse, a rarity in World War II. His order was relayed to Major John P. Stopka, 3rd Battalion’s executive officer. Under cover of a smoke screen, Cole blew his whistle and rose to his feet. Some accounts report he held and fired his .45-caliber pistol as he charged. Others say he picked up a fallen man’s M1 Garand rifle and affixed a bayonet during the assault. Of the approximate 250 paratroopers who should have followed him, only about 20 did so because of confusion and poor communication. Some 50 followed Major Stopka. The attack became known as Cole’s Charge, and according to author and military historian John C. McManus, the bloodshed was horrendous.
“Cole and the others at the front of the charge had made it across the open area (roughly the length of two football fields), closed with the Germans in the Ingouf farm and either killed them or put them to flight. The Americans howled like demons as they charged. It was grisly—warfare at its most elemental. Dead and dismembered Germans lay everywhere—in foxholes, behind embankments, outside the farm buildings and behind hedgerows. Very few of them had been bayoneted, although some had. Most had been killed by rifle fire or grenades at close range. The rest were retreating west, in the direction of the Cherbourg-Paris railroad. First Sergeant Kenneth Sprecher [who would be awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his actions] and Private George Roach shot the lock off the door of the main farmhouse and charged inside, only to find the place abandoned. Cole followed and used the place as his command post.”
“Fix Bayonets”
Warfare is fraught with the mixing of units, and Bowser, a member of 2nd Battalion, found himself with Major Stopka and 3rd Battalion during the charge. His crossing of Bridge No. 4 was not through the Belgian gate. He crossed the Madeleine River underneath the span.
“We had a column on each side of the road, and we went to the fourth bridge and that’s where we stopped,” he says. “The Germans were covering the bridge with small arms. We went down under the bridge, and there was a jump rope. Someone ahead of us put that jump rope there, and I was the first one to use it. I threw my rifle over my shoulder and jumped and went head over heels into the water. The river was deeper than we figured.
“We stayed under that bridge on the bank. What stands out is there was an 88 that came whistling over us. I was assistant squad leader, and I had positioned myself over this machine gun. Another 88 came and I said, ‘That one’s carrying the mail.’ So we hit the ground, and I landed between the gunner, [Joseph] Malliawski, and the assistant gunner, who was a German-born barber from New York. Then Malliawski said, ‘There’s something in my shoulder.’ I looked, and I said, ‘Yea, there’s a piece a steel.’ He said to pull it out. So I pulled it out. It was about an inch long, but he wasn’t bleeding much. I never reported it, so he never got a Purple Heart. Malliawski was the only man who saw every day of combat in our company. If I had known, I would’ve let the medic take care of it, and he would’ve gotten the Purple Heart.”
Shortly afterward, Cole gave his order to charge.
“The units were badly mixed up, but it was mostly Cole’s outfit. We started to advance, and the Germans had us pinned down in an open field and the only place I could get to was a dead furrow, a deep ditch,” recalled Bowser. “They pinned us down there, and I was head to head to my squad leader, Sergeant [Robert E.] Pope, and I said, ‘What do we do now?’ He said, ‘I don’t know. Let’s have a smoke.’ So he lit a cigarette and tore it in two. My half was all soaking wet. And the first thing I can recall is that an order came down the line, all the way from Cole: ‘Fix bayonets.’ So we fixed bayonets, and on Cole’s command, ‘Everybody up and at ’em.’ And we went in. But the Germans didn’t stay to fight. They left. Then we kept driving into Carentan. To this day I don’t know whether we got credit for taking Carentan, or if the 506 (Parachute Infantry Regiment) did.”
Recalling his participation in Cole’s Charge reminds Bowser of an incident that had taken place two years earlier. “I remember in basic training, it was hot and everybody was tired. We were training for a bayonet charge. I made the mistake of saying that was from World War I, why do we have to take bayonet training? For that I went down and did push-ups.”
WORLD WAR II: FRANCE, 1944. American paratroopers move through a field in Carentan, France, passing members of their own unit killed by German snipers. Photographed 14 June 1944.
Passing the bodies of Germans and men from their own unit killed in earlier fighting by German snipers, troops of the 101st Airborne Division approach the village of Carentan on June 14, 1944.
Carentan was liberated by the 101st on June 12. For his heroic actions on June 11, Cole was recommended for the Medal of Honor, but he did not live to receive it. On September 18 in Holland, he was on the radio with an Allied pilot who requested that orange panels be placed in front of American lines near Best to indicate airborne positions. Cole did it himself and was shot dead by a German sniper. His family was presented his Medal of Honor posthumously. Cole’s body is interred at the American Cemetery in Margraten, Netherlands.
Stopka was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his actions at Carentan. He replaced Cole as commanding officer of 3rd Battalion. Stopka was killed on January 14, 1945, near Michamps, Belgium, during the Battle of the Bulge, when American planes bombed his position by mistake. His body is buried at the Luxembourg American Cemetery near Hamm, Luxembourg."
http://warfarehistorynetwork.com/daily/wwii/a-101st-airborne-paratroopers-combat-journey/
FYI Maj William W. "Bill" Price Capt Seid Waddell 1stSgt Eugene Harless SSgt Robert Marx Capt Seid Waddell SFC William Farrell SSgt Robert Marx SSgt (Join to see) SPC (Join to see) SrA Christopher Wright Maj Marty Hogan PO1 William "Chip" Nagel SP5 Robert Ruck SCPO Morris Ramsey SGT Michael Thorin SPC Margaret Higgins SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
A 101st Airborne Paratrooper’s Combat Journey
Corporal Bill Bowser of the 502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment fought throughout the European campaign with the 101st Airborne Division.
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Posted 7 y ago
Thank you John for the awesome read on LTC Robert G. Cole. Great video also.
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