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Originally
organized in November 1918, the
101st was demobilized the following
month, and later reconstituted in
June 1921 as an Organized Reserve
unit. The division was organized
that September at Milwaukee, Wisconsin,
with reservists, most of whom were
individually called into federal
service after the outbreak of the
war. The reserve division was disbanded
15 August 1942, and concurrently
reconstituted in the Army of the
United States as the 101st Airborne
Division.
The airborne
division was activated at Camp Claiborne,
Louisiana, with recently promoted
Maj. Gen. William C. Lee commanding.
The airborne capability was to be
provided by two glider infantry
regiments (GIRs), the 327th and
401st, and one parachute infantry
regiment, the 502nd, though the
latter was still stationed at Fort
Benning, Georgia. This mix of glider
and parachute regiments was a matter
of great debate, and these units
were augmented in the coming months
by the 506th and 501st Parachute
Infantry.
With
the 101st designated as an airborne
division, all that remained was
to train its soldiers to qualify
for their new mission. In October
1942 the division moved to Fort
Bragg, North Carolina, and joined
by the 502nd PIR, began its training
under the Airborne Command. Rivalry
between the division's parachute
and glider elements developed rapidly.
The paratroopers were considered
to be elite troops and received
extra money or "parachute pay" for
their hazardous missions. The glider
troops, however, had duties just
as dangerous but were authorized
no extra pay. This situation continued
through 1944, with unit commanders
doing their best to keep the peace
within their ranks. Throughout these
difficulties the 101st continued
to train and to reorganize, attempting
to acquire airborne qualified personnel
for the necessary positions.
By the
spring of 1943 the division was
ready to face its first test in
local maneuvers. Immediately following
these maneuvers, the 101st left
to take part in the Tennessee maneuvers,
a larger scale operation. Preceding
the exercise, on 10 June 1943, the
506th Parachute Infantry was attached
to the division. The SCREAMING EAGLES'
performance throughout the maneuvers
was impressive as they demonstrated
the capabilities of U.S. airborne
forces. During these maneuvers,
however, General Lee was injured
in a glider. He later remarked,
"Next time I'll take a parachute,"
which provided the overlooked glider
troops with some measure of satisfaction,
if not extra pay.
The division
returned to Fort Bragg, continuing
to train and perform various airborne
demonstrations for visiting officials
until mid-August, when it received
orders for transfer overseas. Arriving
in England, the 101st was quartered
in Wiltshire and Berkshire, where
it continued to train. The early
months of 1944 were a time of change
for the 101st Airborne Division.
In January
the 101st received its third parachute
regiment, the 501st Parachute Infantry.
On 5 February General Lee, who had
championed the airborne cause from
the beginning, suffered a heart
attack. Although he had brought
the division from its initial organization
through training for the fight in
Europe, General Lee was not to be
part of the 101st's baptism of fire.
He was relieved of his command and
returned to the United States. Brig.
Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, former commander
of the 82d Airborne Division Artillery,
assumed command of the 101st on
14 March. The division underwent
another organizational change that
month, when the 2d Battalion, 401st
Glider Infantry, was permanently
transferred to the 82d Airborne
Division. The 1st Battalion was
attached to the 327th Glider Infantry
to operate under that regiment as
a third battalion. The 1st Battalion,
401st GIR, was made an official
element of the 327th GIR in April
1945.
Training
in England, the 101st participated
in three formal exercises: BEAVER,
TIGER, and EAGLE. During Operation
BEAVER at Slapton Sands on the Devonshire
coast, elements of the division
jumped from trucks instead of planes
with the mission of capturing the
causeway bridges that crossed the
estuary behind the beach. The division
performed much the same mission
during the second exercise, Operation
TIGER. Operation EAGLE, held during
the second week of May, was the
division's dress rehearsal for its
role in the coming Normandy invasion.
The 101st, this time jumping from
actual planes, was once again assigned
to capture the causeways leading
away from a simulated beach. Although
a misunderstanding caused most of
the division to jump at the wrong
coordinates, the mission was accomplished
and the exercise was considered
a success. The division then returned
to its stations to continue preparation
for the coming battles on the continent.
D-Day
- Operation Neptune
The 101st Airborne
Division first saw combat during
the Normandy invasion - 6 June 1944.
The division, as part of the VII
Corps assault, jumped in the dark
morning before H-Hour to seize positions
west of Utah Beach. Given the mission
of anchoring the corps' southern
flank, the division was also to
eliminate the German's secondary
beach defenses, allowing the seaborne
forces of the 4th Infantry Division,
once ashore, to continue inland.
The SCREAMING EAGLES were to capture
the causeway bridges that ran behind
the beach between St. Martin-de-Varreville
and Pouppeville. In the division's
southern sector, it was to seize
the la Barquette lock and destroy
a highway bridge northwest of the
town of Carentan and a railroad
bridge further west. At the same
time elements of the division were
to establish two bridgeheads on
the Douve River at le Port, northeast
of Carentan.
As
the assault force approached the
French coast, it encountered fog
and antiaircraft fire, which forced
some of the planes to break formation.
Paratroopers from both the 82d and
101st Airborne Divisions missed
their landing zones and were scattered
over wide areas. For many the first
struggle of combat was to find their
units; 1500 soldiers from the division
were killed or captured. When units
or soldiers finally assembled, they
had difficulty in identifying their
locations relative to their objectives.
The paratroopers of the 101st were
promised reinforcements at dawn,
when 51 of the division's gliders
were scheduled to land. The gliders,
however, had problems of their own.
Many of the gliders crashed, and
several soldiers of the division
were killed, including Brig. Gen.
Don F. Pratt, the assistant division
commander. A second glider landing
at dusk that day produced even more
casualties.
The men
of the division, however, persevered
and proceeded with their assigned
missions as best they could. By
nightfall soldiers from the 101st
had secured the beach exits in their
zone and contacted the landing forces
of the 4th Division. The SCREAMING
EAGLES also controlled the la Barquette
lock, but could not secure crossings
on the Douve River. The following
day 101st elements attempted to
advance in the division's southern
sector, but made little progress
against heavy enemy resistance near
the village of St. Côme-du-Mont.
That same day General Eisenhower
directed that American efforts be
focused on closing the gap between
the V and VII Corps. The VII Corps
received orders to capture the town
of Carentan, and the 101st, already
in position outside St. Côme-du-Mont
to the northwest, was given the
task.
On 8 June
elements of the 501st and 506th
Parachute Infantry, along with the
1st Battalion, 401st Glider Infantry,
engaged a German force in the town
of St. Côme-du-Mont. The 3d Battalion,
501st PIR, took positions south
of the town, along the highway to
Carentan where it encountered the
enemy. The 1st Battalion, 401st
Glider Infantry, was called to aid
the 3d Battalion, but the enemy
withdrew before the glider troops
arrived. Both of the 101st battalions
pursued the retreating enemy, but
there was no additional contact.
The Germans had abandoned the town,
and the SCREAMING EAGLES moved in
to plan the next step in the drive
on Carentan.
The attack
on Carentan was to be two pronged.
The right arm of the drive was to
cross the causeway northwest of
Carentan, bypass the town, and continue
to the southwest to occupy La Billonerie,
also called Hill 30, which, it was
thought, covered potential escape
routes available to the Germans.
The left arm of the assault was
to cross the Douve River near Brevands,
with the main body of that force
continuing on to Carentan, while
a smaller portion of the force moved
east to the Vire River to contact
the V Corps.
The 3d
Battalion, 502d PIR, led the right
drive along the causeway. Progress,
however, was extremely slow. The
men of the 502d advanced along the
causeway with no cover, facing steady
fire as they moved forward. The
battalion inched along until it
reached the bridge on the Madeleine
River and ran into a strong enemy
position concentrated in an old
farmhouse and the adjoining hedgerows.
Lt. Col. Robert G. Cole, the battalion
commander, called for artillery
fire on the position, but it did
no good. Pinned down, he ordered
a charge with fixed bayonets. Colonel
Cole leapt up to lead the charge,
but not all his men had gotten the
word. The executive officer prodded
the men along, and Cole continued
with the soldiers that had followed.
The Germans withdrew from the farmhouse,
and the charging soldiers cleared
the hedgerow positions. Cole was
awarded the Medal of Honor for his
efforts that day. Unfortunately,
he was killed in a later division
operation before receiving his medal.
Having
suffered heavy casualties in its
trek along the causeway, and being
in some disarray after the bayonet
charge, the battalion could not
pursue the withdrawing enemy. The
1st Battalion, 502d PIR, came up
through the line to follow the Germans.
The 1st Battalion, however, had
advanced along the same causeway,
under the same fire as the 3d Battalion,
and was also unable to make the
pursuit. The two battalions, instead,
dug in to defend the newly taken
position. Their defenses were put
to the test the next morning when
the Germans launched a strong counterattack.
Throughout the day the battalions
held their ground until they were
finally relieved by the 2d Battalion.
Elements of the 506th Parachute
Infantry relieved the beleaguered
battalions of the 502d on 12 June.
By that evening the 506th had completed
the drive past Carentan and occupied
Hill 30.
While
the 502d struggled along the causeway,
the 327th Glider Infantry, with
the battalion of the 401st, had
led the left wing attack. On 10
June elements of the force crossed
the Douve River and occupied the
town of Brevands. Company A, 401st
Glider Infantry, continued southeast
towards the town of Auville-sur-le-Vey
to contact the V Corps. Encountering
stiff German resistance outside
the town, the company broke through
the enemy line to make contact with
elements of the 29th Infantry Division,
part of the V Corps. The 327th,
after crossing the Douve, had orders
to seize both the railroad bridge
and the highway bridge that crossed
the Vire-Taute Canal, blocking the
eastern escape routes from Carentan.
The regiment succeeded in capturing
and holding the highway bridge,
but the railroad bridge was blown
in the fight. The men of the 327th
crossed the canal and continued
their fight toward Carentan until
enemy resistance halted their progress
about a half mile from the town.
At General
Taylor's direction, Brig. Gen. Anthony
C. McAuliffe, commander of the 101st's
artillery, coordinated the final
drive for Carentan, which took place
on 12 June. Throughout the night
of the 11th, the town was placed
under heavy fire, but, unknown to
the U.S. forces, the main body of
Germans withdrew under cover of
darkness. The following morning
the 2d Battalion, 506th PIR, entered
Carentan from the southwest and
connected with the 1st Battalion,
401st GIR, which approached from
the northeast. Once the two battalions
had linked up they proceeded to
clear the town of the remaining
enemy stragglers. Under orders to
secure the approaches to the town,
the 501st and 506th moved along
the roads to the southwest, while
the 327th advanced to the east.
Both groups, however, met enemy
opposition, and their progress was
limited. On 13 June the Germans
launched a fierce counterattack
in an attempt to retake the town.
The U.S. First Army directed elements
of the 2d Armored Division to support
the 101st in defending Carentan.
Together the Americans stopped the
enemy thrust and held the town.
Two days
later the VIII Corps became operational,
and the 101st was reassigned to
the new headquarters. With the mission
of establishing defensive positions
across the Cotentin Peninsula, the
VIII Corps gave the SCREAMING EAGLES
responsibility for securing the
left flank of the VII Corps. On
27 June the 83d Infantry Division
arrived and relieved the 101st.
Two days later the 101st was relieved
from the VIII Corps and sent to
Cherbourg to relieve the 4th Infantry
Division. The 101st remained as
a First Army reserve until mid-July,
when it returned to England for
rest and training.
The division
had suffered considerable personnel
and equipment losses during the
Normandy battles. The 101st spent
the summer replacing equipment,
training new soldiers, and waiting
for its next mission. At about the
same time General Eisenhower called
for a headquarters that would oversee
the Allies' airborne troops. In
August 1944 he established the First
Allied Airborne Army, controlling
elements of the American and British
(and Polish) Armies. The new army
was put to the test in September
1944 during the Allied thrust in
northern Europe: Operation MARKET-GARDEN.
Operation
Market Garden
MARKET-GARDEN
was planned as a two phase operation.
Operation MARKET was the airborne
phase of the assault, with Operation
GARDEN being the ground attack.
The paratroopers of First Allied
Airborne Army were to jump into
the Netherlands and secure a corridor
from Eindhoven north to Arnhem,
through which the ground forces
of the British 30 Corps could advance
and push on to the IJesselmer (Zuider
Zee). The eventual goal was to cross
the Rhine River and breach the German
West Wall defenses. The Dutch countryside,
criss-crossed by innumerable dikes,
drainage ditches, rivers, and canals,
however, would prove difficult to
traverse if the ground troops could
not advance by road. For the plan
to be a success the paratroopers
had to keep the roadway open and
the bridges along the route intact
and secure.
D-Day
was set for 17 September 1944, and
the 101st, along with the 82d Airborne
Division, the British 1st Airborne
Division and 52d Lowland Division
(Airportable), and the 1st Polish
Parachute Brigade were set to jump.
Unlike the Normandy jumps, this
operation, by order of Lt. Gen.
Lewis H. Brereton, commander of
the First Allied Airborne Army,
was to be carried out in daylight.
Shortages in transport planes, however,
prevented the three divisions from
dropping all their troops on D-Day,
and the commanders had to decide
which units would go in first. The
101st Airborne Division was to anchor
the British Airborne Corps' southern-most
flank and secure a 15-mile sector
between Eindhoven and Veghel. Taking
this into consideration, General
Taylor decided that the three parachute
infantry regiments would jump on
the 17 September. The 327th Glider
Infantry was to arrive on D+1, and
the artillery units were scheduled
for D+2, the 19th.
The planes
carrying the 101st encountered heavy
antiaircraft fire as they approached
their targets, but the pilots were
able to hold formation, and the
paratroopers, for the most part,
were delivered to the correct drop
zones. These were located to the
west of the main highway and in
the center of the division's sector,
near the villages of Zon, St. Oedenrode,
and Best. The 506th Parachute Infantry
dropped near Zon, with the mission
of securing the highway bridge over
the Wilhelmina Canal, south of the
village. Once the bridge was secure
the regiment was to advance further
south and seize Eindhoven. The 502d's
zone was north of the 506th, and
its mission was to guard both regiments'
drop zones for later use by the
gliders. It was also to capture
the road bridge over the Dommel
River at St. Oedenrode. Additionally,
General Taylor ordered the regiment
to dispatch a company to the south
of Best to capture the bridges there
that crossed the Wilhelmina Canal.
The 501st Parachute Infantry jumped
north of the 502d, near the town
of Veghel. Elements of the regiment
were to gain control of the rail
and road bridges over the Willems
Canal and the Aa River.
The 501st
accomplished its mission, capturing
Veghel and the surrounding bridges
against only limited enemy resistance.
The 502d also completed its main
assignment of securing St. Oedenrode
and the bridge over the Dommel River.
The company that had moved south
of Best, however, had great difficulty
and could not take the bridges over
the Wilhelmina Canal. The 2d and
3d Battalions, 506th PIR, methodically
cleared Zon, while the 1st Battalion,
accompanied by General Taylor, moved
around the village to the south
to seize the bridge crossing the
Wilhelmina Canal. The progress of
the battalions in the village was
slow, but enemy fire stopped the
1st Battalion completely as it approached
the bridge. When the two battalions
emerged from Zon and the 1st Battalion
also appeared to advance, the Germans
blew the bridge.
Elements
of the 506th managed to cross the
river, neutralizing the enemy force
that had destroyed the bridge, and
a footbridge was improvised to allow
the remainder of the 506th to cross.
The following day the regiment liberated
Eindhoven, clearing the enemy from
the town. The local citizens were
ecstatic, and that evening when
the Guards Armoured Division, the
spearhead of the British 30 Corps'
Operation GARDEN, passed through
the town, it was like a carnival.
British engineers replaced the blown
bridge over the canal, and the ground
forces continued north. With the
exception of the bridges south of
Best, the division had achieved
all its D-Day objectives. The next
mission was to hold what it had
taken and keep Hell's Highway, as
the road north became known, open
despite German counterattacks.
In the
days following the link between
the airborne and ground forces the
101st, now in defensive positions,
faced enemy counterattacks as the
Germans attempted to cut the road
and stop the flow of Allied forces
north. General Taylor received information
that the Germans were planning a
large scale offensive, coming from
both the east and west sides of
the road in the vicinity of Veghel
and Uden, to the northeast. Ordered
to Uden on 22 September, elements
of the 506th arrived to defend the
village moments ahead of the Germans,
but the main assault came at Veghel.
Taylor dispatched the 327th Glider
Infantry to reinforce the 2d Battalion,
501st PIR, at Veghel when he received
intelligence about the attack. As
luck would have it, General McAuliffe
was also in Veghel on the 22d. He
had been searching for a new division
command post when the word came,
and General Taylor gave his artillery
commander responsibility for the
defense of the town.
The SCREAMING
EAGLES turned back the first attack
on Veghel, which came from the village
of Erp to the east. The Germans,
however, swung to the northwest
and cut the highway between Veghel
and Uden, then turning south, the
enemy force attacked. As the German
armored column approached Veghel,
McAuliffe ordered an antitank gun
brought up, and although there is
debate over which unit fired, the
American defenders knocked out the
lead tank, and the enemy column
turned back. Additional battalions
of the 327th arrived, as did other
elements of the 506th, along with
British tank squadrons. The enemy
continued attacking Veghel through
the afternoon, including several
heavy artillery bombardments, but
McAuliffe and his forces held. The
next important step was to reopen
the highway; men and equipment badly
needed further north were backing
up on the closed road.
The British
30 Corps commander Lt. Gen. Brian
Horrocks, agreed to send the 32d
Guards Brigade back south on 23
September to help reopen the road.
At the same McAuliffe sent two battalions
of the 506th north to confront the
enemy position on the highway. When
the American soldiers arrived they
found that most of the Germans had
withdrawn. The 101st soldiers cleared
the remaining opposition and proceeded
northeast towards Uden, where they
met the British tankers. Hell's
Highway was open for business once
again.
The Germans
continued their attack on Veghel
the following day, but to no avail.
They did, however, cut the road
once again, this time near the village
of Koevering, between Veghel and
St. Oedenrode. On 25 September elements
of the 506th, ordered south from
Uden, the 1st Battalion, 502d PIR,
and units of the British 50th Division,
moving north from St. Oedenrode,
enveloped the enemy position on
the road. During the night, after
mining the road, the Germans withdrew.
The following day Allied engineers
were called in to clear the road
of mines, and the highway was open
once again. While the enemy continued
to harass the SCREAMING EAGLES along
their sector of Hell's Highway,
the division's positions remained
intact and kept the road open. Allied
operations had forced the Germans
to spend precious resources on the
defense of the Netherlands. Although
MARKET-GARDEN did not achieve its
original goals, successes in Holland
provided the Allies with a foothold
from which to launch future drives.
In early
October the British moved their
8 and 12 Corps into position along
the highway, and it was thought
the 101st could be better used elsewhere.
On 5 October the division moved
north to take up defensive positions
in the British line, in an area
known as the island. This area,
a narrow strip of land north of
Nijmegen, situated between the lower
Rhine and Waal Rivers, was subjected
to numerous German attacks. The
division suffered heavy casualties
in defense of this "island". Shortly
after the 101st assumed its positions
in the line, the British Corps returned,
without either of its American divisions,
to England. The 82d joined the 101st
on the island later in October.
It was not until November that the
two divisions were released to prepare
for the next airborne mission. The
101st, in late November, moved back
to Mourmelon, France, for a well-deserved
rest. There the men of the 101st
received replacement equipment and
new clothes and trained for the
next jump. Events in the Ardennes
forest, however, interrupted their
rest, and the next jump never came.
Battle
of the Bulge - The Ardennes Offensive
The
Germans launched their last great
offensive in Belgium on 16 December,
driving west through thinly held
positions, and catching the Allies
unprepared. Maj. Gen. Troy Middleton's
VIII Corps was giving way, and he
desperately needed reinforcements.
The VIII Corps had its headquarters
in Bastogne, a city at the center
of the highway system spanning the
southern portion of the Ardennes.
Middleton believed the Germans would
need the road network to move their
armored forces rapidly further west.
As an important road junction, control
of Bastogne was vital to the German
advance, but the VIII Corps had
been hit hard, and Middleton could
not hold the position. Lt. Gen.
Courtney Hodges, commander of First
Army, appealed to the Supreme Headquarters,
Allied Expeditionary Forces (SHAEF),
for reinforcements. The only units
that SHAEF held in reserve were
the two American airborne divisions,
and Eisenhower released them both
to First Army. General Taylor, however,
was on leave in the U.S., and General
McAuliffe received temporary command
of the division.
The 101st
Airborne Division, travelling by
truck, reached Bastogne on 18 December,
and McAuliffe met with General Middleton,
who had received orders to pull
the VIII Corps headquarters out
of the city. When Middleton left
the following morning he gave McAuliffe
only one order, "Hold Bastogne."
To accomplish this task, in addition
to 101st Division assets, McAuliffe
controlled, Combat Command B, 10th
Armored Division; the remnants of
the Reserve Command, 9th Armored
Division, which had been ravaged
by the German offensive; the 705th
Tank Destroyer Battalion; the 755th
and 969th Field Artillery Battalions;
and miscellaneous stragglers from
other units.
During
the morning of 19 December the 501st
Parachute Infantry moved east to
contact the American forces deployed
to protect approaches to the city.
German resistance from the town
of Neffe stopped the 501st's advance,
but American forces in the area
were able to consolidate their positions.
The U.S. soldiers east of the city
faced determined attacks and could
not advance their lines against
the German onslaught. By 20 December
the Americans had fallen back to
a defensive perimeter outside Bastogne.
As the German divisions pushed west,
encircling the city, McAuliffe pulled
back his troops to solidify the
defenses on the northern and eastern
outskirts of Bastogne. The 502d
lined up in the north, in the Longchamps
area. The 506th took positions between
Foy and the Bourcy-Bastogne Railroad.
The 501st took its place in the
line on the 506th's right, facing
east, with its southern flank near
Neffe, while the 2d Battalion, 327th
GIR, held positions at Marvie.
The Germans
first attempt to break the defenses
at Bastogne came in the 501st's
sector at Neffe. The paratroopers,
however, held their line against
repeated attacks, and the enemy
attention eventually turned to another
section of the perimeter, further
south. On the 21st German soldiers
probed the line at Marvie, in the
327th's sector. The enemy penetrated
the glider regiment's defenses,
which rallied and repelled the assault.
After continued skirmishes, four
German soldiers approached the 327th's
defenses on 22 December carrying
a flag of truce. The Germans brought
an ultimatum for the Allied commander
of Bastogne to surrender within
two hours or face annihilation from
a massed German artillery bombardment.
McAuliffe's now famous response
"NUTS!" provided a boost to the
sagging morale of the Americans.
The following
day the weather cleared and GIs
in Bastogne received some needed
supplies from an air drop. The weather
also allowed the Allied air forces
to provide support against the German
forces massing around Bastogne.
That same day the enemy attacked
the western perimeter in the 327th's
zone, and on Christmas Day a German
assault force penetrated the line
near Hemroulle. Once through the
defenses the German force split,
half pressing on towards Hemroulle
(defended by elements of the 10th
Armored Division and 705th Tank
Destroyer Battalion) and the rest
swinging left to attack the 502d
at Champs. The defenders cut off
both columns, killing or capturing
the enemy soldiers. The Germans
launched their final effort to eliminate
the American garrison on the 26th,
but artillery eradicated the assault
force.
That afternoon
elements of the 4th Armored Division
advancing from the south broke through
the line and reached their trapped
comrades. Though the Germans attempted
to close the breach, the siege was
broken. The successful defense of
Bastogne had slowed the German advance
and absorbed enemy resources urgently
needed elsewhere during the Battle
of the Bulge. With the outcome of
the enemy offensive no longer in
doubt, elements of the 101st remained
in the Bastogne area during the
next few weeks, helping to clear
the area of the remaining enemy
forces and reduce the bulge in the
Allied lines.
On 18
January the 101st moved to the Alsace
region as part of the Seventh Army
line, holding defensive positions
through late February. The 101st
then returned to Mourmelon, where
it reverted to First Allied Airborne
Army control.
On 1
March the new organizational structure
for airborne divisions reached the
101st, and the 506th PIR became
an organic element of the division.
Two weeks later, General Eisenhower
visited Mourmelon and awarded the
SCREAMING EAGLES the Distinguished
Unit Citation (now the Presidential
Unit Citation) for its stand at
Bastogne. The division went back
to training, this time for a proposed
air assault on Berlin. Instead,
the division, minus the 501st PIR
which remained at Mourmelon, moved
to positions near the Rhine during
the first week in April.
Germany
During
the last days of the war the 101st
Airborne Division was in Berchtesgaden,
Adolph Hitler's vacation retreat.
The airborne soldiers spent their
days hunting members of the Nazi
leadership that had gone into hiding.
On 1 August the 42d Infantry Division
relieved the 101st, which moved
back to France to train for a possible
airborne assault on Japan. These
plans were canceled after the Japanese
surrender, and the division was
deactivated 30 November 1945 in
France. |