AMERICANS FIGHTING IN CHERBOURG STREETS
Advance slowed by fierce Nazi resistance
Fighting renewed by British at Caen
SHAEF, England (AP) –
U.S. doughboys smashing yard-by-yard deep into the powerful outer shell of the Cherbourg line drove this morning within 2,000 yards – little more than a mile – of the port on the south, and “enemy defenses showed signs of crumbling,” a field dispatch declared.
An American spearhead punctured the stubborn, interlaced Nazi pillbox defenses southeast of Octeville, the fortress just southwest of Cherbourg, after a pulverizing air and artillery bombardment, Associated Press correspondent Don Whitehead said in a dispatch written at 9:15 a.m. (local time).
Headquarters said the doughboys fought forward slowly and had all but reached the sea on both sides of the besieged port in hand-to-hand struggle with Germans resisting fanatically. The assault troops are battling “within sight of the docks,” Supreme Headquarters said.
Whitehead wrote that 1,200 prisoners have been taken in the last 24 hours, and that the Cherbourg line had become a “deathtrap” for hundreds of Nazis who refused an Allied ultimatum to surrender and were forced to fight by German officers holding guns at their backs.
In bitter battle, the Americans have blasted a wedge deep into the German line, and “Cherbourg is doomed as an enemy stronghold,” he added.
20 tanks destroyed
On the eastern wing of the Normandy beachhead, Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery lashed out in a swift attack yesterday at the outer perimeter of Caen’s defenses, and 20 Nazi tanks were wrecked in day-long battle. British troops captured Sainte-Honorine-la-Chardronette, four miles northeast of Caen, and the Germans fell back to Cuverville, a mile to the southeast. Montgomery struck after a powerful build-up of his forces.
A field dispatch from this British sector declared the German command was moving up reinforcements from deep within France, and even drawing on strategic reserves in Germany itself “to replace forces thrown into the beachhead area.”
Clear, calm weather sped the flow of power into Normandy today from hundreds of landing craft, and sky trains of Allied bombers roared over France.
Cherbourg’s elaborate defenses buckled under the massive artillery and air bombardment, and so close were the doughboys to the Germans in the desperate struggle that Lt. Gen. Omar N. Bradley pulled his men back while the bombers came in to soften up the enemy pillboxes and trenches.