America at war! (1941–) – Part 3

Supreme HQ Allied Expeditionary Force (July 18, 1944)

Communiqué No. 85

Sporadic fighting from LESSAY to NOYERS has brought further gains of important and commanding ground for the Allies.

North of REMILLY-SUR-LOZON, we overran the villages of LA SAMSONNERIE and L’ABBAYE and they are now firmly in our hand.

On the west bank of the VIRE River, there was a mile-deep advance south of LE MESNIL-DURAND.

MARTINVILLE on one of the approaches to SAINT-LÔ has been taken.

There has been heavy fighting north of NOYERS and ÉVRECY. HAUT DES FORGES has been captured.

Enemy airfields, troops, gun positions, rail centers, and fuel and ammunition dumps were targets yesterday afternoon and evening for Allied aircraft which ranged through comparatively clear skies southward to the LOIRE and eastward to the SOMME.

In operations in close support of our ground forces, fighters and fighter-bombers hit many pin point targets in the path of our troops near SAINT-LÔ and blocked a highway in use by the enemy south of the town. Others successfully attacked guns and an ammunition dump near PÉRIERS. Airfields at LE MANS and at CORNE and VALADE, on the outskirts of ANGERS, were bombed and strafed with good results. Railway tracks were cut at SABLE-SUR-SARTHE and near CHARTRES and a railway bridge northeast of MANERS was severed.

Our fighters attacked an enemy headquarters south of CAEN, destroyed motor transport south of HOTTO, and made a number of sweeps deep into FRANCE.

Medium bombers in the afternoon attacked a fuel dump on the outskirts of ALENÇON and bombed trains and a transformer station near ARGENTAN.


Communiqué No. 86

Allied forces have broken through the enemy positions east of the river ORNE.

In an attack which commenced early this morning, supported by a terrific and accurate air bombardment, our troops have driven along the east bank of the river into the open country southeast of CAEN, where armored and mobile forces are now in action against strong enemy forces.

Along the ORNE, our troops are steadily clearing the enemy out of the area, including the town of VAUCELLES on the south bank of the river opposite CAEN. Heavy fighting continues.

In preparation for the advance, the massive weight of Allied airpower was concentrated in the heavily-defended CAEN sector at dawn today.

Waves of escorted heavy medium and light bombers, numbering more than 2,200, showered enemy troops, artillery and strongpoints south and southeast of CAEN with 7,000 tons of high explosive and fragmentation bombs.

The attack continued for almost four hours with the bomb line moving gradually southward ahead of our troops on prearranged schedule.

Fighter-bombers operating in great strength, in even more direct support of our advancing troops, sought out individual targets which might have impeded their progress. Others stabbed to the east and southeast of the target area to interfere with enemy air and ground movement.

No enemy aircraft appeared during the entire bombardment. Nine of our bombers are missing.

On the western sector, Allied troops have made another important advance at SAINT-LÔ. The high ground to the east of the town was captured by our forces this morning after very stiff resistance. Fighting continues in the vicinity of SAINT-LÔ itself.

U.S. Navy Department (July 18, 1944)

CINCPAC Press Release No. 478

For Immediate Release
July 18, 1944

Guam Island was shelled at close range by battleships, cruisers, and destroyers of the Pacific Fleet on July 16 (West Longitude Date). Spotting aircraft directing the fire of our heavy units encountered some anti-aircraft fire, and these anti-aircraft positions were in turn neutralized by our light units.

On Saipan Island a few remaining snipers are being hunted down. As of July 16, our forces had captured 1,620 enemy troops who have been made prisoners of war, and have interned 13,800 civilian residents of Saipan, the majority being Japanese. Neutralization of enemy defenses on Tinian Island by Saipan‑based aircraft and field artillery continues. Our destroyers shelled selected targets on Tinian during July 16 and during the night of July 15‑16.

Dauntless dive bombers and Corsair fighters of the 4th Marine Aircraft Wing and Ventura search planes of Group One, Fleet Air Wing Two, attacked enemy positions in the Marshalls on July 16.

The Pittsburgh Press (July 18, 1944)

HUNDREDS DIE AS ARMS SHIPS BLOW UP
Blast at Navy depot rocks 50-mile area in San Francisco Bay

Two vessels explode; toll of injured heavy; most of victims servicemen
By Edwin Emery, United Press staff writer

Saint-Lô seized by Yanks

Showdown struggle on in Normandy as Germans reel back
By Virgil Pinkley, United Press staff writer

map.071844.up
The Yanks capture Saint-Lô in their bitterest battle of the Normandy campaign. The Americans seized Saint-Lô (3) today after U.S. vanguards had driven into the town yesterday and then been driven out. There was no official word of the fighting in the Lessay–Périers area, although the Nazi radio said the Yanks had started an expected attack against Lessay(1). The Americans seized a ridge overlooking the Saint-Lô–Périers highway halfway between the two towns (2). Fierce fighting continued around Noyers and Évrecy (4), towns which the British entered yesterday.

SHAEF, London, England –
The U.S. 1st Army captured bitterly defended Saint-Lô today and the British 2nd Army broke through below Caen behind a screen of almost 8,000 tons of bombs as the German line long containing the Normandy beachhead buckled in two vital sectors.

The showdown Battle of Normandy was in full swing, and Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery’s Allied armies had scored two significant victories in the massive onslaught aimed at breaking out of the German ring for a concerted sweep inland.

Soon after field dispatches announced the fall of Saint-Lô at the climax to the toughest U.S. battle in France, Gen. Montgomery announced that his armor had achieved a major breakthrough across the Orne below Caen.

A statement from Gen. Montgomery’s headquarters said:

The town of Vaucelles, lying on the south side of the Orne opposite Caen, is being cleared of the enemy, and strong armored and mobile forces are operating in the open country further to the southeast and south.

The most concentrated air bombardment in history paved the way for the British-Canadian breach in the German lines which broke the stalemate following the capture of Caen and sent the Allied armor careening forward toward the interior of France across the flat farmlands to the south and southeast.

8,000 tons of bombs

Fifteen hundred heavy bombers, 500 medium and light bombers, and hundreds of lighter plans pounded the German positions within a semicircle lying roughly seven miles around Caen between 6:00 and 9:00 a.m., cascading nearly 8,000 tons of explosives into a 75-square-mile area.

Four thousand Halifax and Lancaster heavy bombers of the Royal Air Force alone delivered 5,000 tons of bombs in 45 minutes. Six hundred U.S. Liberators swarmed in later to unload another great weight on the crumbling German positions.

Supreme Headquarters refused for the time being to delineate the breakthrough. The concentration of airpower indicated, however, that the attack was probably aimed across the Orne northeast of Caen, and broke out of the bridgehead maintained across the lower Orne since D-Day.

Nazi collapse threatened

The simultaneous reports from the front that Saint-Lô had fallen and the Germans were falling back in apparent preparation to abandon Périers and Lessay meant that the Normandy front was aflame everywhere, rolling forward, and threatening to collapse the overall German defenses if the original impetus can be maintained.

The following statement was issued from Gen. Montgomery’s headquarters:

Early this morning, British and Canadian troops of the 2nd Army attacked and broke through into the area east of the Orne and southeast of Caen.

The attack was preceded and supported by a very great weight of airpower organized by the Allied Expeditionary Force.

The town of Vaucelles, lying on the south side of the Orne opposite Caen, is being cleared of the enemy, and strong armored and mobile forces are operating in open country further to the southeast and south.

Heavy fighting continues. Gen. Montgomery is well satisfied with the progress made in the first day’s fighting of this battle.

Gen. Montgomery’s flat statement that a breakthrough had been achieved and his forces were advancing across the ideal tank country below Caen showed that the 2nd Army had achieved a success of gigantic proportions, which was expected to have tremendous effects on the entire battlefront.

Complete surprise

Complete surprise was achieved in the early morning offensive, despite the fact that the Germans had observation facilities over the entire length of the Orne.

This was due largely to the fact, which can now be revealed, that the series of British-Canadian assaults southwest of Caen represented an elaborate scheme to outwit Marshal Erwin Rommel on the location of the main attack. Actually, these attacks were limited in scope, involving a relatively small part of the great mass of tanks and infantry pouring into the bridgehead for 44 days.

The Germans had been packed into the Vaucelles suburb of Caen in strength, facing the British and Canadians across the Orne in the city, for nine days. But tonight, they were being cleared out of this last large inhabited area in the southwest environs of Caen.

United Press writer Henry T. Gorrell reported the conquest of the ancient citadel anchoring the center of the German defense line in a dispatch filed from the battlefront at 6:30 p.m.

“Saint-Lô fell this afternoon,” Mr. Gorrell said in his flash disclosing the significant U.S. victory after a bloody, swaying battle which for ferocity outdid the earlier fight for Cherbourg.

Strongest Nazi position

With Saint-Lô fallen after an all-out defense, the Germans were deprived of their strongest position for a stand on the perimeter of the Allied beachhead.

Coincident with their grudging surrender of Saint-Lô under the heaviest American pressure, the Germans carried out a general withdrawal along most of the line for between a little more than a mile and nearly two miles, Gorrell reported.

The Germans appeared to be straightening out their lines preparatory to taking up defense positions along the east-west ridges in Normandy, Mr. Gorrell said.

Fall foreshadowed

The fall of Saint-Lô was foreshadowed by the disclosure that U.S. assault forces had stormed back into the town hub of seven main roads radiating to all parts of Normandy, and the admission by the German radio that the furious battle was nearing a climax as U.S. troops closed in from three sides.

Lt. Gen. Omar N. Bradley’s army drove within a mile and a half of Saint-Lô July 12. Since then, the Americans and Germans had been slugging it out around the town.

Yesterday, the U.S. vanguard crashed into Saint-Lô, which is 175 miles west of Paris, only to be driven out and to forge back through its outskirts for violent fighting with bayonet and grenade in its battle-scarred streets.

Suburb captured

Shortly before Mr. Gorrell reported the capture of Saint-Lô, it was disclosed that the Americans had seized suburban Sainte-Croix-de-Saint-Lô, a mile from the heart of the wrecked town.

Allied headquarters announced that U.S. shock troops had brought the arterial highway northwestward to Périers under small-arms fire from a ridge 200 yards above it and about midway between the towns.

Premier Tōjō out as chief of Jap Army

Tokyo crisis brewing in wake of defeats
By the United Press

Allies threaten two Italian ports

Close to Livorno and Ancona to the east
By Clinton B. Conger, United Press staff writer

U.S. battleships hammer Guam

Former U.S. Navy base blasted 13th day

Trapped Japs kill civilians, selves in cave of horrors

Marines waiting outside hear screams of doomed babies, women and old men

‘Darn sight longer’ war predicted by air official

Stimson’s assistant says fighting in Europe is ‘awfully tough for Allies

Washington (UP) –
An “awfully tough” war in Europe that will last “a darn sight longer than anyone back home thinks except the military” is predicted by Robert A. Lovett, Assistant Secretary of War for Air.

Mr. Lovett, just back from a three-week visit to Britain and a tour of the Normandy beachhead, hit sharply at what he called “the unreasoning optimism that is prevailing back here.”

Although the German Air Force had been temporarily knocked out as a serious threat to Allied air supremacy, he said, a comeback “may eventually be expected.” And, he added:

I see the German Air Force revamping itself to play a new role, with such things as pilotless aircraft.

Mr. Lovett said difficult weather over France was hampering Allied aerial activities almost constantly, while the terrain on Normandy, cut up by hedges and walls into innumerable small fields about the size of six tennis courts each, was difficult for the ground forces.

He told how a six-day period of good weather last February, unprecedented for 30 years, had given the Allied Air Force an opportunity to smash German plane production in preparations for the June 6 invasion.

“That was the end of the Luftwaffe as a first-class striking force,” he said.

Warning of the danger of a comeback, however, he said the Germans could replace major factories in five or six months. He said since D-Day, German aircraft production had enjoyed a comparative respite from attack and it would be necessary to return and destroy the rebuilt plants again in the next four months.

Wallace given farewell pat by Roosevelt

Vice President going to Chicago to face foes
By Lyle C. Wilson, United Press staff writer

Caucus votes 41–21 –
State Democrats split on Wallace

Even Cabinet members on opposite sides
By Kermit McFarland

War materials hit by strike in Bradford

Army, Navy officers seek to end walkout

Dewey charges plot against soldier vote

Demands ‘campaign of deceit be exposed’

Stokes: New Deal’s control of party at stake in Wallace dispute

Gleeful conservatives see chance to move in and regain rule
By Thomas L. Stokes, Scripps-Howard staff writer

Arizona, Montana vote in primaries

Taylor: Democrats really afraid of trend in critical states

By Henry J. Taylor, Scripps-Howard staff writer

Perkins: Democrats to heed labor demands ahead of white-collar plea

It’s safe bet the organized 15 million will get more than the unorganized 20 million
By Fred W. Perkins, Pittsburgh Press staff writer


Wallace denounced by Smith followers

Allen: Running mate for Roosevelt means VP – not Eleanor

And as long as No. 2 spot is wide open race, how about George Burns for the job?
By Gracie Allen

At Democratic conclave –
Liberal benefits to veterans urged

NAM pleads for private employment

Fate of Wallace delivered in a pale green envelope

Anonymous messenger hands letter, dated July 14, to Senator Jackson


Texas delegation battle shifted