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Incredible Valor of Eric Wood (by R. Ernest Dupuy, Col. USA, ret.) |
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| When I visited the area of Meyerode I came across
a sign that said "to the Monument of Eric Fisher Wood". I knew that I
had read about the actions of E. Wood, but it was gone far back in my
memories. I visited the area of where it all happened and because we
should not forget the single actions of each person in the Bulge fought
in those deep misty woods, and you must have been there to see how it
really is down there between the snow covered trees, foggy, misty, not
knowing what is behind the next tree, I recall here an article written
down in the Saturday Evening Post of December 20th 1947 (sent me by
John Schaffner) by R. Ernest Dupuy, Col. USA, Ret. |
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Told for the first time, the
story of a young lieutenant who almost single-handedly saved the right
flank of an American army in the Battle of the Bulge, "the most amazing
example of heroism in World War II."
DARING indeed would be he who named one individual as the epitome of
human heroism. Through the ages, men of all nations and all races have
fought well and died well. Once in a great while, however, a man
emerges who, under extraordinary circumstances, flings down the
gauntlet to death, defies fate, says farewell to the conflict only when
breath leaves his body. Since chance - and chance alone - decides
whether or not there be witnesses to such an exploit, let us say of
what follows only that it is the most amazing example of heroism as yet
to come out of World War II.
The man was a first lieutenant, Field Artillery, AUS, one of thousands
bearing identical labels. The cannons were squatty, humped-up, wicked
looking pieces towed by great six-by-six trucks- three of thousands of
the same type carried on Ordnance records aa "Howitzer, 105 mm., M1."
There the resemblance of this man and these cannons to others of their
respective kinds ceases. For the cannons saved the right flank of an
American army in the Ardennes. And had it not been for the man, they
wouldn't have been available to do it. After the cannons bad been lost
with honor when howling waves of the Nazi 2nd SS Panzer Division washed
over both them and the remnants of the field artillery battalion
serving them, the man continued to wage single handed warfare against
the 6th SS Panzer Army. So the man, as always, is the important
element. And his tale is worth the telling.
It begins on December 16,1944, when the Battle of the Bulge broke
furiously on the Ardennes front. The howitzers - there were four of
them to start with - of Battery A, 589th Field Artillery Battalion,
106th Infantry Division, emplaced in rear of the little village of
Schlausenbach on the north- western slopes of the Schnee Eifel, were,
with the rest of the battalion, supporting the 422nd Infantry Regiment
of the same division. 1st Lt. Eric F. Wood, Jr., from Bedford,
Pennsylvania, twenty-five year- old Princeton fullback, five feet
eleven, 195 pounds in weight and catlike in reflexes, was executive
officer of the battery. His skipper, Capt. Aloysiua J. Menke, up at a
forward OP, was silent. He would continue to be silent, for the first
kraut wave had overrun the OP, and Menke, a prisoner, will not enter
this story again. Wood was then acting battery commander.
Up the forest through a gaping hole torn in the northern sector of the
106th Division's recently inherited cordon defense positions, the
Germans were swarming around the left flank and rear of the infantry,
and into the artillery positions. Three German tanks pushed along the
road, one leading on the road and two others off the road in the draw
behind the leader. Lt. Wood, from his command position, shouted
commands to his No. 1 piece gunner, John Gatens, who with two shots
destroyed the lead tank by direct fire. No. 1, incidentally, was the
only piece in the entire battalion which could reach any of the
defilade tanks. Lt. Wood, the previous day, had arranged for No. 1 gun
to be placed so that it could sweep the road. The lead tank destroyed
by No. 1 gun, Wood then ordered all four guns to fire on the remaining
tanks that were below the hill. He did this with high elevation fire,
using one powder bag instead of seven. The remaining two tanks were
disabled by this "indirect fire." He then swept the woods around him
with short-cut fuse, breaking up the enemy's infantry support. All this
was but a temporary respite.. By nightfall the battalion was ordered to
fall back; the krauts were crowding in from all sides. But getting out
was easier said than done. In the Battery A positions the big tow
trucks churned the icy muck to a paste in which the howitzers sank
almost hub deep. Hostile fire, small arms and artillery was sweeping
the area. Snow blew patchily into sweating faces in the night. The wind
howled through trees each of which might be hiding an infiltrating
enemy soldier. Hostile flares flickered over the snow drooped pines. It
was not nice. But Eric Wood tore around, and the men of Battery A tore
and tugged with him. He was that kind of guy. At last they got the
howitzers on the road one by one, with two trucks grinding at each
piece and with little clumps of men pushing, like ants tussling with
twigs. The howitzers could shoot again, once they dropped trails, for
Eric Wood had packed eighty-three rounds of ammunition for each piece
in the trucks. In the rest of the battalion Battery C never got out.
The pieces, too deeply mired, had to be blown up. That left eight
howitzers out of twelve. Battery B got out ahead of A, and the outfit
went swaying and fumbling in the dark over a narrow corduroy trail,
while the enemy, with white phosphorus shells, hunted for them.
They got to their new positions by dawn. A field on the right of the
road that runs north from Bleialf into Schonberg on the Our. They were
about a mile and a quarter from Schonberg itself. Battery B got in
first. Wood got three of his howitzers in. The last one, lagging, its
tow truck partly crippled, he held on the road as antitank defense. The
Germans were really bursting through in force that second morning. From
the north they were coming down the Our valley into Schönberg;
from the south they were coming up this road from Bleialf. But all that
Eric Wood knew was that the world seemed full of krauts. The enemy from
the south washed nearer, overrunning their neighbors. The acting
battalion commander - the original was cut off behind them with Battery
C - ordered the outfit out, to push through Schönberg and west
toward St. Vith. Wood got two pieces rolling and sent the crippled
third howitzer back with them. "I'll meet you west of Schönberg,"
he told the section chief, Sgt. Barney M. Alford, " if I get there."
For Wood's last howitzer was stuck. Once again the perversity of
inanima to objects was working against him. So he stayed to get it out,
with its crew. They worked at it while more krauts began to overrun
Battery B, and its howitzers were abandoned. That, of course, left four
howitzers in the battalion, out of twelve. When Wood at long last got
his last piece on the road and swung over the tail gate of the truck,
the last man out, the main body of the 589th Field Artillery Battalion
consisting now of Wood's three other howitzers and some truckloads of
men of both batteries, was way ahead of him. This bedraggled outfit hit
Schönberg to find the krauts coming in from the north. The three
piece "battalion" beat them to the Our River bridge by seconds, and got
away. It got away to fight again, beginning on December nineteenth, at
a dreary crossroads far to the west on the hastily forming and still
somewhat nebulous right flank of the United States 1st Army. How these
three howitzers for four days saved the right flank of the 82nd
Airborne Division and of the Army at "Parker's Crossroads" is another
story.
When Eric Wood and the twelve men with him in the truck now came
rolling down the steep hill into Schönberg the howitzer bounding
behind, a kraut tank poked its nose out of the southern entrance of the
village. Brake bands screamed as the truck pulled up in front of it.
Wood and his men piled out to attack it. Pfc. Campagna had a bazooka,
the others their carbines. But the tank wasn't having any - God knows
why! It scuttled crab like back across the bridge and disappeared into
the town with Wood and his gang in pursuit. They crossed the bridge and
pointed west in Schönberg's one street, with snipers pecking at
them. And they slowed down while Sergeant Scannapico and Pfc. Campagna,
still hugging his bazooka, ran ahead to see where that tank had holed
up. They found it tucked in an alley. Scannapico fired his carbine at
it. Campagna, climbing into the truck, let fly with his bazooka as they
rolled past. Again the tank wasn't having any. The truck slowed to let
Scannapico catch up, but a sniper got him cold. So the section rolled
on. They gathered speed as they left the village and met, over a rise
in the road, another kraut tank. A medium, this, with its cannon and
machine guns trained directly on them. Wood's reflexes worked
instantaneously. He pitched his men and himself out into the ditch an
instant before the tank's artillery blasted the truck to scrap iron.
That was that, so far as getting the howitzer back safely was
concerned. It left the battalion's score at three out of twelve. But
what about Wood and his men? The enemy was firing at them now from
across the river on the right. Kraut infantry were firing from the
trees beyond the meadow across the road to the right rear. More kraut
infantry was pouring out of Schönberg behind them. And that tank
squatted in front of them a stone's throw away. To the ordinary man,
the situation seemed hopeless. And all but one of the group were
ordinary men. They raised their hands to surrender. They were through.
But Eric Wood wasn't through. Leaping the ditch, he ran, dodging
northwards the trees. The others could see kraut bullets sending little
squirts of snow puffing up in the meadow at his heels, until he
disappeared from sight in the shelter of the forest.
Late in the afternoon of the next day, December eighteenth, Peter
Maraite, woodsman, left his home in the mountain village of Meyerode,
Belgium, about four miles north of where that tank had smashed Eric
Wood's truck. There were Germans all around. There had been fighting;
doubtless there would be more. But Maraite had something else to think
about. He was going to Cut a Christmas tree - there had always been a
tree in the Maraite house for Christmas; there always would, as long as
Peter could provide one. They are like that, in the Ardennes, war
washed for generations. So Peter plodded for a mile through the woods,
moving southeast in the general direction of Schönberg. It was
cold; clammy mist cloaked the woods. The snow powdered his head as he
brushed low branches. Then two armed men loomed in front of him at a
six way trail crossing - Americans. Peter knew Americans when he saw
them; they had held this sector for more than two months now. One was a
big man with single silver bars on the shoulders of his short overcoat.
He had a pistol. The other was smaller and wore no insignia of rank. He
was armed with an infantryman's rifle, not an artillery man's carbine.
Peter Maraite is insistent on this point. Now, like most of the
Belgians of this border country, Peter Maraite spoke only German. The
Americans could not speak German. But Peter managed to convey the idea
that he was a friend; he invited them home. Cold, wet and tired, they
accepted. Because of the Germans, they came home cautiously, slipped
into the warm stone house where astonished Anna Maria, Peter Maraite's
wife, and wide eyed Eva, their daughter, rushed to pour hot coffee. The
Americans gulped it down while Eva slipped out to bring back Peter's
trusted friend, and neighbor, Jean Schroder, who spoke English. The
watchdog was put outside to guard the door. The Americans relaxed,
steaming their soggy clothes before the fire. The big young officer,
with a confident, smiling face, told how he had escaped from a
detachment surrounded near Schönberg. He and his companion were
going to St. Vith. He was concerned about the fate of his men, "all
very good and loyal men," as Peter Maraite remembers the conversation.
The villagers warned that the country between Meyerode and St. Vith was
full of Germans. The young officer wasn't a bit disturbed by their
shaking heads. "I'll either fight my way back to my outfit," he told
them, "or I'll collect American stragglers. I've seen some in the woods
around here and I'll start a small war of my own." What he wanted now
was information about the Germans. He pulled out a map. So, while the
woman and the girl bustled to get supper, the young American officer
and the two droopy- mustached woodsmen pored over the map. The
Americans couldn't go that night, the villagers said; they would. So
the two Americans ate and drank with their hosts. The officer cracked
jokes "said funny things which made us laugh," is the way Peter and
Anna Maria Maraite put it. He seemed to have no fears. After they
cleaned their weapons, the Americans repaired to the big soft feather
bed while their clothes dried. They slept the sleep of tired but
confident men, not waking even when a V bomb crashed in the outskirts
of Meyerode with its hideous thunder.
The Maraites at first wondered if their American visitors had been
among those captured on the Ades Berg. Perhaps - but odd things were
happening in those woods southeast and east of the village, deep behind
the German lines in the dense Omerscheid area of the Bullingen Forest.
Daily, bursts of small arms fire came from the hills, and sometimes the
"wham" of a mortar. These sounds were in addition to the crashes of
bombs and pom-pomming of flak guns along the highways to the west. The
weather had cleared and the Allied air forces were taking toll of
German columns. Fighter bombers continually strafed the roads. The
Germans had had to reroute their daylight movements through the
secondary roads in the eastern woods leading to the Our Valley and
thence through the Losheim Gap. It was from this area that those
unexplained small arms bursts were coming over the cold air to the
peasants huddled in their homes. Meyerode people began to notice that
while large forces came and went at will through the hills, never did a
small body of Germans or a supply column pass into the pine woods but
that one of those mysterious bursts of fire followed. And the krauts
issued orders strictly forbidding civilian movement in the forests.
Chance words dropped by the Germans, unguarded bursts of wrath from
officers of the staff billeted in the village, plus the evidence of
their own eyes and ears, gradually were pieced together by the Maraites
and their neighbors. In a community like Meyerode the grapevine travels
fast. Most of the burghers knew of the Americans who had stayed at the
Maraite dwelling. Sepp Dietrich himself, quartered in the home of Jean
Pauels, the burgomaster - a relative of Anna Maria Maraite - began to
thunder about American "criminal scoundrels and bandits." The krauts
were getting nervous, itchy. Daily, wounded men came in from the
easterly woods, some hobbling, some carried. Kraut orderlies gossiped.
"Damned bandits," it seemed, flitted like ghosts through the trees out
there, hid in snow banks. A German traveling those woods never knew
when a bullet might come singing his way. Larger and larger detachments
were assigned to guard working parties who from time to time took a six
horse snowplow out to clear those wood roads. Searching patrols went
daily into the forest, but no American prisoners ever were brought
back. So the weeks rolled on, with the daily crack of small arms on the
winter air, and the burghers of Meyerode built up their theory. They
conjectured that out in the forest a small but organized group of
Americans roamed. They had plenty of arms, they had at least one medium
mortar, and they were taking a steady toll of the Germans. And all the
stories added up one way: that these American guerrillas were led by
the young officer who had visited the Maraites, a man "very big and
powerful of body and brave of spirit." He kept his wolf pack going, it
was said, by sheer will power. There could not have been many of them -
the Meyerode woodsmen later found no evidences of large bivouacs other
than those known to be German. How they existed through those bone
chilling winter weeks no one knows. Probably horse meat was their diet
- there were several horse drawn kraut artillery units in the
neighborhood, and horse drawn transport was daily passing through.
Perhaps the Americans found rations in abandoned dumps. There was an
ammunition dump at a trail crossing just a mile south of Meyerode
where, after the Germans had gone, villagers found quantities of mortar
ammunition still remaining.
Anyway, the daily firing in the woods continued until the middle of
January. It was stilled just a few days before the counterattack ebbed
and the Americans began slashing back into the neighborhood - perhaps
about January twenty-second. When the Germans left, the people of
Meyerode combed those woods. The burgomaster first sent two competent
woodsmen - his cousin August Pauels and Servatius Maraite - to search.
They found German graves and some unburied German dead. And they found
a few American dead, also unburied. In a dense thicket southeast of
Meyerode, not far from the six way trail crossing, Servatius Maraite
found the body of an American officer, a big young man, "with single
silver bars on his shoulders." Near him lay the bodies of seven German
soldiers. All had been dead about the same length of time - as well as
could be judged, perhaps ten days before the Germans were driven out.
American Graves Registration people later would fix the date as
probably January twenty-second. That no living Germans had later
visited this spot, the villagers agree. This was evidenced by the fact
that the American officer still had in his clothing his papers and 4000
Belgian francs, a sum no kraut looter would overlook. So the American
had died as he had lived a free man, taking with him when he went the
last of his pursuers.
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That American officer, Graves Registration
attests, was 1st Lt. Eric F. Wood, Jr. And the people of Meyerode say
that he was the man befriended by Peter Maraite and his family - the
leader of the American guerrillas, whose description by wounded
Germans, according to Burgomaster Jean Pauels, fits "like a police
description" with that of Eric Wood. Records and statements of
eyewitnesses prove that the only officer of the 106th Infantry Division
unaccounted for from December sixteenth onward - that is, neither dead
nor alive as free man or prisoner of war - was 1st Lt. Eric F. Wood,
Jr.
That's the story. Powerfulll........ and brave of spirit.
"The details of the killing of the German tanks
were updated from actual accounts (1999) of those that participated in
the battle at the time. The additions of these actual accounts do not
change the overall description of the original author."
Update March 2007.
The Story of John Gatens:
My name is John
Gatens. Section Chief and Gunner on the No. 1, Howitzer.
Eric Wood was my Battery Exc. and a very good Officer. Liked by every
one. Dec.16,1944, was a very important day in Eric and my life, as well
as thousands of other GI's. As stated in the story below, our Battery
was a very active firing Battery on that and other days.
We did what had to be done on that day. Very early the next morning, we
were ordered to move to a new position. Because of the weather and
roads condition, we had a very hard time getting to that position. We
were there a very short time, when Eric got the word that German Tanks
were on there way up the road. In his booming voice, he was yelling to
all sections to get out there as fast as you can and I'll see you on
the other side of Schoonburg. That was the last order, that I received
from Eric. Thank God, Three of the sections made it out and through
Schoonburg. Eric and the fourth section, didn't make it. They were met
by a German Tank in Schoonburg. He fired and killed two of my good
friends. Eric Escaped into the woods alone. The other members were all
captured.
Now that is as much as anyone that I know, has any knowledge of what
happened to Eric. I know that there are many stories written and I have
read most of them, all I can say is, knowing the kind of Officer that
Eric was, he could have accomplished what is written. However, none
have any first hand knowledge as to fact. I'm on Eric's side and hope
that it is true.
May he rest in Peace. John Gatens
PS: If you want to know, what good, came of Eric getting three Sections
out on time, go to WEB. and Bring up "Parker's Crossroads."
Story compliments of the 106th Infantry Division Association. For
further displays on the 106th Inf. Div. go to 106th Infantry Division in World
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