The Liberation Trilogy Box Set

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The Liberation Trilogy Box Set Page 176

by Rick Atkinson

Chandler Alfred Chandler, ed., The Papers of Dwight David Eisenhower: The War Years

  CINCLANT Commander-in-Chief, Atlantic Fleet

  CJB Clay and Joan Blair collection, MHI

  CM L. K. Truscott, Jr., Command Missions

  CMH U.S. Army Center of Military History, Fort McNair, Washington, D.C.

  co company

  Coakley Robert W. Coakley and Richard M. Leighton, Global Logistics and Strategy, 1943–1945

  Col U OHRO Columbia University Oral History Research Office

  corr correspondence

  CSI U.S. Army Combat Studies Institute, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas

  ct combat team

  CtoA Ernest F. Fisher, Jr., Cassino to the Alps

  DA Department of the Army

  Danchev Alex Danchev and Daniel Todman, eds., War Diaries, 1939–1945: Field Marshal Lord Alanbrooke

  DDE Dwight David Eisenhower

  DDE Lib Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library

  Destruction I.S.O. Playfair and C.J.C. Molony, The Mediterranean and the Middle East, vol. IV

  diss dissertation

  div division

  DSC Distinguished Service Cross

  DTL Donovan Technical Library, now Donovan Research Library

  E entry

  EJD Ernest J. Dawley, including papers at Hoover Institution Archive

  ENH Ernest N. Harmon, including papers at U.S. Army Military History Institute

  ETO European Theater of Operations

  FA field artillery

  FAJ Field Artillery Journal

  FCP Forrest C. Pogue, including background material for The Supreme Commander

  FDR Lib Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library

  FLW Fred L. Walker

  FMS Foreign Military Studies

  FOIA Freedom of Information Act

  FRUS Foreign Relations of the United States: The Conferences at Washington and Quebec, 1943

  Ft. K Fort Knox, Ky.

  Ft. L Fort Leavenworth, Kans.

  Garland Albert N. Garland and Howard McGaw Smyth, Sicily and the Surrender of Italy

  GCM Lib George C. Marshall Library, Lexington, Va.

  GK Geoffrey Keyes, including diary, author’s possession

  GS IV Michael Howard, Grand Strategy, vol. IV

  GS V John Ehrman, Grand Strategy, vol. V

  GSP George S. Patton, Jr., including papers at the Library of Congress

  Hansen draft of Omar Bradley’s A Soldier’s Story, C. B. Hansen, MHI

  HCB Harry C. Butcher, including papers

  HIA Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University

  Hill/O’Neill “Report of Col. William H. Hill and Col. E. J. O’Neill on Conference Held in Marrakech, March 10, 1994, JPL papers, MHI, box 4, 1

  HKH Henry Kent Hewitt Papers

  Hq headquarters

  ID infantry division

  IJ Infantry Journal

  inf infantry

  intel intelligence

  Iowa GSM Iowa Gold Star Museum, Fort Dodge, Iowa

  IS Infantry School, Fort Benning, Ga.

  IWM Imperial War Museum, London

  JAG U.S. Army judge advocate general

  JCS Joint Chiefs of Staff

  JJT John J. Toffey, IV, “A Game for the Young,” author’s possession

  JMG James M. Gavin papers

  JPL John P. Lucas, including diary, “From Algiers to Anzio,” MHI

  LH Basil Henry Liddell Hart

  LHC Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives, King’s College, London

  lib library

  LKT Jr. Lucian K. Truscott, Jr.

  LOC MS Div Library of Congress Manuscript Division

  MAAF Mediterranean Allied Air Forces

  MBR Matthew B. Ridgway

  MCC Mina Curtiss Collection

  MEB Magna E. Bauer

  Med Mediterranean

  MHI U.S. Army Military History Institute, Carlisle, Pa.

  micro microfilm

  Molony V C.J.C. Molony et al., The Mediterranean and Middle East, vol. V

  Molony VI C.J.C. Molony, The Mediterranean and Middle East, vol. VI, part 1

  MP military police

  MR Military Review

  MRC FDM McCormick Research Center, First Division Museum, Cantigny, Ill.

  msg message

  mss manuscript

  MTOUSA Mediterranean Theater of Operations, United States Army

  MWC Mark Wayne Clark, including papers at the Citadel, S.C., Archives and Museum

  N Af North Africa

  n.d. no date

  NARA National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, Md.

  NATOUSA North African Theater of Operations, United States Army

  NHC Naval Historical Center, Washington, D.C.

  NSA National Security Agency

  NWAf George F. Howe, Northwest Africa: Seizing the Initiative in the West

  NWC Lib National War College Library

  NYT New York Times

  obit obituary

  OCMH Office of the Chief of Military History

  OCNO Office of the Chief of Naval Operations

  OCS Office of the Chief of Staff

  OH oral history

  OPD Operations Division, War Department

  OSS Office of Strategic Services

  OW Orlando Ward Papers

  Para parachute

  pm provost marshal

  PMR Paul McD. Robinett papers

  PP Martin Blumenson, The Patton Papers, 1940–1945

  PP-pres Papers, Pre-presidential

  Proceedings U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings

  Pyle Ernie Pyle, Brave Men

  qm quartermaster

  regt regiment

  RG record group

  RN Royal Navy

  ROHA Rutgers University Oral History Archives of World War II

  s.p. self-published

  SC Signal Corps

  SEM Samuel Eliot Morison Office Files

  SM Sidney T. Matthews, including papers at MHI

  SMH Society for Military History

  SOOHP Senior Officer Oral History Program

  SOS Services of Supply

  SSA Samuel Eliot Morison, Sicily-Salerno-Anzio, vol. IX, History of United States Naval Operations in World War II

  SSI working papers for Sicily and the Surrender of Italy, National Archives

  SSt Omar N. Bradley, A Soldier’s Story

  StoC Martin Blumenson, Salerno to Cassino, USAWWII

  td tank destroyer

  TdA Terry de la Mesa Allen, including papers

  Texas Fred L. Walker, From Texas to Rome

  Texas MFM Texas Military Forces Museum, Austin

  Three Years Harry C. Butcher, My Three Years with Eisenhower

  TR Theodore Roosevelt III Papers

  ts typescript

  UK NA National Archive, Kew, United Kingdom (formerly Public Record Office)

  USAF HRC U.S. Air Force Historical Research Center

  USAF U.S. Air Force

  USAWWII United States Army in World War II

  USMA Arch U.S. Military Academy Archives, West Point

  USMC U.S. Marine Corps

  USN U.S. Navy

  USNA U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md.

  USNAd “U.S. Naval Administration in World War II”

  USNI OHD U.S. Naval Institute, Oral History Department, Annapolis, Md.

  UTEP University of Texas at El Paso

  UT-K University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Center for the Study of War and Society

  VHP Veterans’ History Project, National Folklife Center, Library of Congress

  WD War Department

  WP Washington Post

  WSC Winston S. Churchill

  WTF Western Task Force

  WWII World War II

  XO executive officer

  YU Yale University Library, Manuscripts and Archives

  EPIGRAPH

  Virgil, The Aeneid, trans. Robert Fagles (New York: Viking, 2006), book 7 l
ines 747–51.

  PROLOGUE

  She could be heard: NYT, Cunard Line advertising supplement, Apr. 2004, ZM1; David Williams, Liners in Battledress, 114 (Western Approaches); Harold Larson, “Troop Transports in WWII,” ts, March 1945, CMH, 4-13.1 AA12, 21–22.

  She slid: corr, Lovetta Kramer, exec. dir, RMS Queen Mary Foundation and Archive, Long Beach, Calif., to author, Aug. 16, 2004; corr, Lorna Williams, Special Collections and Archives, University of Liverpool, to author, Aug. 2004; William J. Duncan, RMS Queen Mary: Queen of the Queens, 78–79, 106 (New York warehouse); Steve Harding, Gray Ghost, 49 (WW #21 W); admin memo, Offices of the War Cabinet, May 3, 1943, UK NA, PREM 4/72/2 (Scottish cages); John Mason Brown, To All Hands, 203 (“barbarities”); Louis E. Keefer, Italian Prisoners of War in America, 35, 41; “Enemy POW Camps in the USA in World War II,” CMH, Historical Resources Branch, Nov. 5, 1942, 2 (272,000); “Office of the Provost Marshal General: World War II, a Brief History,” ts, 1946, CMH, 4-4 AA (forty degrees); Arnold P. Krammer, “German Prisoners of War in the United States,” Military Affairs, Apr. 1976, 67+ (piano lessons); Gregory Kupsky, UT-K, paper, SMH, Bethesda, Md., May 21, 2004 (Sears Roebuck).

  But it was on the upper decks: Danchev, 402 (Officers crowded); “Notes for Mr. Aubrey Morgan,” May 13, 1943, UK NA, PREM 4/72/2 (suite number 105).

  To mislead potential spies: Duncan, 117–18 (Wilhelmina); Winston S. Churchill, The Hinge of Fate, 783; Alexander S. Cochran, Jr., “Spectre of Defeat: Anglo-American Planning for the Invasion of Italy in 1943,” Ph.D. diss, U of Kansas, 296 (wheelchair ramps); John Kennedy, The Business of War, 293 (“well and fat and pink”).

  Like the Queen Mary: Harold Evans, “Roy Jenkins’ ‘Churchill: His Finest Hour,’” NYT Book Review, Nov. 11, 2001, 1 (“largest human being”); Charles Richardson, From Churchill’s Secret Circle to the BBC, 189 (trombone); Churchill Museum and Cabinet War Rooms, Whitehall, London (one of the eight); Arthur Bryant, The Turn of the Tide, 587 (scented handkerchief); admin memo, War Cabinet, May 3, 1943 (ten-pound tip and Mumm’s Cordon Rouge); Paul Fussell, Wartime, 183 (“gangster clergyman”).

  “We are all worms”: Churchill Museum; Martin Gilbert, Winston Churchill’s War Leadership, 14 (to be awakened), 74 (“pester, nag”); Danchev, 451 (“temperamental like a film star”); Merle Miller, Ike the Soldier, 512 (“He shouts me down”).

  “In great things”: Kennedy, 315; Winston S. Churchill, Closing the Ring, 658, 685, 660, 662 (small things); Martin Gilbert, Winston Churchill’s War Leadership, 19 (“There is no defeat”).

  Sea voyages always reinvigorated: Richardson, 187 (“Master”); Gilbert, 10 (silent Remington); Churchill Museum (Johnnie Walker); W. Averell Harriman and Elie Abel, Special Envoy to Churchill and Stalin, 204–5 (“I won’t be captured”), 207 (“splitting infinitives”); Lord Moran, Churchill: Taken from the Diaries of Lord Moran, 101 (“all hunched up”); W. H. Thompson, I Was Churchill’s Shadow, 114–15 (discussing seamanship); admin memo, War Cabinet, May 3, 1943 (watching films); NYT, May 12, 1943, 24 (Radio Berlin); Churchill, Closing the Ring, 91 (“Who in war”).

  Churchill had proposed: Harriman and Abel, 202 (“One can always”); “Notes for Mr. Aubrey Morgan” (entire company stood).

  Packed into the Magellan: Churchill Museum (colored yarn); Arthur Bryant, The Turn of the Tide, 595, 652 (six thousand miles).

  Victory in North Africa: Ralph Bennett, “Ultra and Some Command Decisions,” in Walter Laqueur, ed., The Second World War, 218 (“cryptologists had cracked”); GS IV, 450 (forty-seven U-boats); David M. Kennedy, Freedom from Fear, 590 (more than 3,500 and submariner casualty rate); C.B.A. Behrens, Merchant Shipping and the Demands of War, 368 (every eight hours).

  Elsewhere in this global war: Gerhard L. Weinberg, A War at Arms, 590, 632–33, 637.

  On the Eastern Front: GS V, 2; Matthew Cooper, The German Army, 451–52 (lost thirty divisions), 448 (“absolutely sick”); Ray S. Cline, Washington Command Post: The Operations Division, 220 (Soviet counteroffensive).

  And yet: the Red Army remained: GS V, 2; Martin Gilbert, The Second World War, 421 (1.3 million forced laborers).

  The next Anglo-American blow: SSA, 10; David Hunt, A Don at War, 184 (a postscript); Maurice Matloff, Strategic Planning for Coalition Warfare, 1943–1944, 25–26.

  Beyond Sicily: Anthony Eden, The Reckoning: The Memoirs of Anthony Eden, Earl of Avon, 390, 403; Warren F. Kimball, ed., Churchill and Roosevelt: The Complete Correspondence, vol. II, 184 (“Great possibilities”); Coakley, 63 (“a chill of loneliness”); Churchill to H. Hopkins, May 2, 1943, UK NA, PREM 3/443/2 (“serious divergences”); Churchill to George VI, Apr. 30, 1943, UK NA, PREM 3/443/2.

  “We did not come here”: UK NA, PREM 3/44/2.

  Beneath his brass: Douglas Porch, The Path to Victory, 454; G.A. Shepperd, The Italian Campaign, 1943–45, 82; John Ellis, World War II: A Statistical Survey, 254 (More than 12 percent); Gilbert, The Second World War, 426 (British battle deaths); Martin Gilbert, Winston S. Churchill, vol. VII.

  Salvation lay here: “Monthly Strength of the Army,” May 31, 1943, CMH (a thousand generals); Forrest C. Pogue, George C. Marshall: Organizer of Victory, 280 (aircraft carriers); Alan Gropman, ed., The Big L: American Logistics in World War II, 1n, 73 (just fifty days), 89–93; Behrens, 366 (British merchant fleet); NYT, May 12, 1943, 1 (“production of airplanes”).

  “the greatest American problem”: NYT, May 11, 1943, 1.

  Yet at home: Gropman, ed., 35, 54–55, 89–93, 367 (full mobilization); NYT, May 10, 1943 (Wurlitzer); The Big Change-Over, film, Office of Emergency Management, NARA, 208.211 (lipstick).

  So, too, had the war: James Ward Lee et al., eds., 1941: Texas Goes to War, 76–78 (“Use it up”); Fussell, 197–98 (plastic buttons); John Morton Blum, V Was for Victory, 95; Kennedy, Freedom from Fear, 645 (the bikini); Smithsonian Institution Museum of American History, exhibit, “The Price of Freedom: Americans at War” (Regulation L-85).

  German prisoners: Lee et al., eds., 82–83 (paint-on hosiery); Fussell, 197 (“victory speed”); Dennis B. Worthen, “Pharmacists in World War II,” Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association, vol. 41, no. 3 (May–June 2001), 479+ (toothpaste tubes); Salvage, film, Office of War Information, 1942, NARA, 208.118 (10 old pails).

  No place in America: Scott Hart, Washington at War: 1941–1945, 40 (“frenzied capital”).

  To this panoply: memo, May 11, 1943, Secret Service records, file 103-1: President Roosevelt, 1943, box 5, FDR Lib. (at 6:45 P.M.); William D. Leahy, I Was There, 158 (gray pallor).

  But first the visitors: David Brinkley, Washington Goes to War, epigraph (“bust right out”), 188, 232, 238; William H. Cartwright, Jr., “The Military District of Washington, 1942–1945,” 1946, CMH, 8-2.4 AA, 190 (twelve thousand hotel rooms); “Notes for Mr. Aubrey Morgan” (sixteen Royal Marines); Hart, 108 (“tropical post pay”).

  Churchill could sense: Cartwright, “The Military District of Washington, 1942–1945,” 116–18 (“largest feeding operation”); Hart, 92, 135 (“Madhouse”); NYT, May 2, 1943, 3 (twelve thousand men); Washington Evening Star, May 15, 1943, 1 (draft dodgers).

  Among other signs: NYT, May 2, 1943 (“rumor clinics”); NYT, May 9, 1943, 26 (“White or Colored”); Brinkley, 185 (forty-six errors); NYT, May 12, 1943 (blond hair).

  Amid the mania: Hart, 178.

  They got to work: William Seale, The President’s House, vol. II, 918, 937–76; Danchev, 403 (massive desk).

  Five months earlier: Matloff, 123; Cline, 219; Garland, 17 (“grand design”).

  The president’s brain trust: FRUS, 19 (“The man from London”); Coakley, 62 (“No closed minds”).

  “What should come next?”: FRUS, 25–26.

  The prime minister had used the phrase: Cline, 218; GS IV, 145 (“underbelly”); FRUS, 25–26; Churchill, The Hinge of Fate, 794 (“occupation of Italy”). Churchill, in a conversation with Joseph Stalin in August 1942, also used the phrase “soft belly” while sketching a crocodile intended to represented
Axis-occupied Europe. Churchill, The Hinge of Fate, 481.

  There it was, the British strategy: FRUS, 30; Churchill, The Hinge of Fate, 794; John S. D. Eisenhower, Allies: Pearl Harbor to D-Day, 63 (“cigarette-holder gesture”).

  This impasse persisted: Kenneth S. Davis, Experience of War, 393; FRUS, 223 (“Global Strategy of the War”).

  A tall, austere man: Eric Larrabee, Commander in Chief, 102–3 (a clean-desk man), 99, 112; OH, Gen. Lord Ismay, Oct. 18, 1960, FCP, transcript, tape 40, GCM Lib (“a little aloof”); OH, Andrew J. Goodpaster to author, Washington, D.C., Aug. 17, 2004 (“Are you confident”); author visit, Dodona Manor (Marshall home), Leesburg, Va., Apr. 1998. Churchill’s “greatest Roman” accolade came in 1945.

  Invading Italy: FRUS, 44–45.

  Arguments spilled: Stephen E. Ambrose, Eisenhower, vol. I, 242; Garland, 17 (twelve million tons); Albert C. Wedemeyer, Wedemeyer Reports!, 134 (lacked sufficient ports); GS V, 115 (“side-shows”); Maurice Matloff, Strategic Planning for Coalition Warfare, 1943–1944, 74 (“unremunerative scatterization”).

  “Mediterranean operations”: Wedemeyer, 218.

  Listening attentively: Danchev, 247 (“great gentleman”), 448, xvi, xiv (“Froggie”), 400; Moran, 121 (“a year off my life”); Bryant, 685 (“the night work”); David Fraser, Alanbrooke, 341 (Southeran’s shop); Kennedy, 290 (Birds of the Ocean).

  Now he quarreled: FRUS, 225.

  Brooke pressed the point: FRUS, 41–45, 269; Coakley, 64–65.

  A stack of studies: Cochran, “Spectre of Defeat,” 297 (“If Italy collapses”); Coakley, 64 (“breaking the Axis”).

  But, Brooke warned: FRUS, 43, 45.

  Momentary silence fell: Wedemeyer, 211 (“no intention”); Coakley, 65 (“divert our forces”).

  At Marshall’s suggestion: Danchev, 403.

  Washington lacked: GS IV, 410 (endless meetings); “Notes for Mr. Aubrey Morgan” (black-tie affairs).

  Fans at a Washington Nationals: “Memoirs of Sir John Dill, 1942–1944,” Reginald Winn Collection, GCM Lib, 36; FRUS, 39 (Helen with Paris); corr, Anna Roosevelt Boettiger to John Boettiger, May 15, 1943, Boettiger Papers, box 5, FDR Lib (Churchill sat transfixed).

  To escape both official Washington: Pogue, 202–3.

  If Washington had been atwitter: Gerald Horton Bath, “A Report on the Visit of the British High Command to Colonial Williamsburg, May 15th and 16th, 1943,” ts, n.d., Frank McCarthy Collection, box 27, folder 29, GCM Lib.

  Sunday morning: ibid.; Danchev, 423 (Gould’s Birds).

 

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