Showing posts with label World War II. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World War II. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 27, 2017

December 27, 1944 Battle of the Bulge Death

Tucked between two tall bushes at Lake View cemetery is a simple military headstone. While it seems to be hidden away, each year a small American flag is placed at the site.
The stone marks the final resting place of the only known soldier or sailor from Interlaken who died in World War II and buried at the cemetery.
William D. Rappleye Military Headstone
Lake View Cemetery, Interlaken
Photo from the author's collection
Recognizing the 26th Division notation and the death date it was likely Sgt. Rappleye died as a result of the Battle of the Bulge. This was confirmed by the notice in the January 19, 1945 Interlaken Review.
“William Rappleye, son of Snyder Rappleye, the former being a great, great, great grandson of William Rappleye, one of the original settlers of this country, was killed while in action under General Patton on December 27, [1944].”
Looking online additional information on this pivotal battle is quickly found.
On this day, General George S. Patton employs an audacious strategy to relieve the besieged Allied defenders of Bastogne, Belguim, during the Battle of the Bulge…Food, medical supplies and other resources eroded as bad weather and relentless German assaults threatened the Americans’ ability to hold out…
Enter “Old Blood and Guts,” General Patton. Employing a complex and quick-witted strategy wherein he literally wheeled his 3rd army a sharp 90 degrees in a counter-thrust movement,Patton broke through the German lines and entered Bastogne, relieving the valiant defenders and ultimately pushing the Germans east across the Rhine.
One source notes that 20,000 Americans died over the course of this siege and battle.
Sgt. William Ditmars Rappleye was born April 6, 1925, son of Daisy Rose Denis and Snyder Charles Rappleye. They are buried beside their son at Lake View Cemetery.
After the close of the war the task remained of transporting war casualties to their final resting place. Interlaken Review July 23, 1948, under the heading, “World War II Dead Returned.”
“The remains of Sgt. William D. Rappleye, consigned to Raymond Hurlbut, Interlaken, N. Y., for delivery to Snyder C Rappleye, 350 Main St., West Orange, N. J., will be shipped July 21, 1948, escorted by T-Sgt. Arnold N. Stensland, of the U. S. Military Escort Detachment.”
Military Headstone Request, William D. Rappleye
Ancestory.com

Dewitt’s Diary, Wednesday, December 27, 1944
About 6 above, cloudy and cold south wind all day. Snow again tonight.
I went down to the east woods on my skis this afternoon. Scared out a fox.
There is a heavy crust on most of the snow. Hard walking except on skis.


Thursday, December 7, 2017

December 7, 1941 Pearl Harbor

Today is the last in the series from the Interlaken Historical Society’s Between the Lakes Newsletter Vol 18, #3 June 1992.
Pearl Harbor and Islands of the Pacific by Richard Worrell, Interlaken
January 30, 1940 - I enlisted in the U. S. Army at Olean, N. Y. and was assigned to active duty in, at that time, the Territory of Hawaii. Upon completion of documentation and physical, I was sent to St. Bonaventure University to be sworn into the Army by a Captain in their R.O.T.C. unit. I then boarded a train bound for Fort Slocum at New Rochelle, New York.
Following a week's stay there where uniforms and supplies were obtained along with orientation, I traveled by boat to the Brooklyn Army Base and from there to the coast of Panama aboard the U.S.S.A.T. Republic. As we sailed around Cape Hatteras, a severe winter storm confronted us, lasting many hours.
Going through the Canal was a slow process after which we anchored in Gatum Lake to take on fresh water, continuing on through the locks to the Pacific Ocean, exiting at Balboa--a ten-day trip. We then traveled up the Central American coast, past Mexico and southern California to San Francisco where we encountered very rough seas off the bay.
Several days were spent at Fort McDowell on Angel Island before we continued on to Honolulu, Hawaii. There we traveled by train to Schofield Barracks where we were assigned to M Company - 27th Infantry. There we spent eight (8) weeks of recruit training followed by more rigorous training which brought promotions through the ranks, and I was promoted to Staff Sergeant in September 1941.
December 7, 1941—I was standing on the second-floor gallery of our barracks on this Day of Infamy when a large number of low-flying fighter planes came into the area, strafing a building nearby. Bullets were flying in all directions, pelting the concrete off the columns of all buildings in the quadrangle. Disbelief and confusion ran amok as bombs were dropped at the Wheeler Field Hanger and on the planes parked on the runways.
It was some time before we were able to head to the Pearl Harbor channel, our defensive sector.
We had to go through Hickam Field and Fort Kam to reach our destination, encountering smoke and flames all the way. Needless to say, Pearl Harbor was a disaster area with heavy black smoke engulfing the entire harbor. Following several days’ occupation there, we moved into Honolulu where we underwent anti-sabotage duty.
March, 1942 - We moved back to the upper post at Schofield Barracks, where we began eight (8) weeks of intensive jungle training. Upon completion, a division review was given by our commander, Major General Lawton C. Collins. We were sent to a docking area boarding a transport ship bound for the South Pacific, landing at Suva, the capital of the Fiji Islands. There we departed the ship via cargo nets, marched through the city, around a racetrack, and back aboard in the same fashion. Leaving Suva we met a small group of ships at sea, stopping for a rendezvous. Their officers came aboard our ship via Breeches Buoy (a cable with a seat). Following their departure a meeting with our command was held and we were ordered to proceed to Guadalcanal to relieve a Marine unit which had landed there in August. We landed unopposed early in the morning, moving into temporary positions.
December 10, 1942 - A drive was begun to eliminate the Japanese from Guadal Canal and by February 1943, the last stronghold at Kukum Bona was captured. Patrol was continued for some time in order to round up any remaining Japanese.
June 1943 - My division moved on to New Georgia where we captured the airfield at Munda in October of 1943. From there we island-hopped the Solomon Chain, deporting at Kolumbangara where we were relieved and told to report back to Guadalcanal. Having no formal transportation, we were forced to hitch a ride aboard a destroyer which was escorting a fleet of smaller ships back to the Canal.
In late October we were sent to New Zealand for a rest period, training, and re-equipment. We landed at Auckland, N.Z. in November; from there on to Warkworth, a small town, by train. I contracted a severe case of pneumonia after being there two weeks and was sent to Queen's Hospital in Auckland for two months.
February 1944 - Our unit boarded a ship for New Caledonia, landing at the capital, Noumea. Upon arrival, we were moved up into the mountains where we began training for re-capture of the Philippines.
June 1944 - My name was selected from our unit via the rotation plan for order to report back to the U.S. to a post near my home. I was relieved of all duties and given charge of the camp until a ship was ready for transport.
September 1944 - I boarded a ship bound for San Diego, California. From there I was sent to Camp Anza near Riverside, California. Following several days there, I was sent by troop train to Fort Dix, N.J., where I was given a 21-day pass and went to Hornell, N.Y. From Hornell I was sent to Lake Placid, N.Y. for rehab and re-assignment.
January 1945 - I reported to the 1249th Service Unit in Trenton, N.J. as a Military Policeman assigned to Penn Railroad Station as a desk sergeant.
August 14, 1945 - V.J. Day! All police were on duty. The following day I visited the 1249th Commander and was informed that I and sixteen others from our unit were to report to the Fort Dix Separation Center at the end of the week. On Monday I reported to the Post Chapel where I received my Honorable Discharge.
Returning to Trenton for a few hurried farewells, I boarded a train in New York City bound for Hornell, N.Y.; arriving there the next day, I was a HAPPY unemployed CIVILIAN.

Dewitt’s Diary, Sunday, December 7, 1941
Japan went to war against the US today by attacking the Hawaiian Islands without warning. Heavy loss to us as we were not on guard. 

Saturday, November 11, 2017

November 11, 1918 Armistice Day The End of World War I

At the 11th hour, on the 11th day of the 11th month, World War One came to an end. The “War to end all wars,” or “the Great War” as some called it, was over.
Celebrations were held in villages and cities alike. Three pictures show the parade through Interlaken.
Parade on Main Street, Armistice Day, 1918
Interlaken Historical Society Photo collection #334

Armistice Day Parade 1918, Main Street, the Goodman Hotel is on the right center
Interlaken Historical Society photo collection #436

Armistice Day Parade, 1918 West Avenue at Knight Street
Interlaken Historical Society photo collection #437
“When President Eisenhower signed the bill proclaiming November 11 Veterans Day, he called for Americans everywhere to rededicate themselves to the cause of peace.” [Interlaken Review, October 1970] The presidential proclamation also included that the day be one for honoring Veterans of all wars.
A side note on trying to take history away from its official date. In 1968 the 90th U.S. Congress passed legislation to create several three-day holiday weekends. Among others, Memorial Day, Columbus Day and Veterans Day were moved to Monday holidays. According to the legislation, Veterans Day was to be celebrated on the fourth Monday in October.
“The Veterans Day long weekend, though, was resisted by many states, localities, and veteran’s groups. By 1978 Veterans Day was again rescheduled for annual observance on November 11.” https://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2009/11/091111-veterans-day-events-ceremonies-2009.html
In honor of the date, please, thank a veteran.

Dewitt’s Diary November 11, 1945—1948
Sunday, November 11, 1945
Rain today. Saw a big buck deer on Oldenburg south line today.
Hard rain at dark tonight. Temperature 32 this morning and 40 tonight. Shingling on house this afternoon.
Monday, November 11, 1946
Armistice Day. Rain and mild this morning.
Husking out a little corn in barn.
Clearing tonight. Bob A, Ed Hayward, Leland and I went coon hunting, one coon.
Tuesday, November 11, 1947
South wind and raining.
Put a little paint on the south porch floor.
Thursday, November 11, 1948
A fine day after the rain.
We began husking corn again this morning. We took in a load of corn tonight when we quit husking.
West wind and corn got dry fast.
Temperature 20 tonight and clear.

Armistice Day.

Thursday, November 2, 2017

November 2, 1944 Flood at the Arno River

 Today is another of the articles published in the Interlaken Historical Society newsletter, June 1992 Volume 18, number 3.
The Mediterranean Theatre from an Evacuation Hospital
Lt. Annette Heaton
38th Evacuation Hospital
From the author's collection
Annette M. Heaton of Detroit, Michigan joined the Army Nurse Corps as a Second Lieutenant on 2 February 1942. After several stateside locations, she returned to Camp Kilmer following a Washington, DC weekend to find her bags packed and ready for deployment overseas. 2nd Lt Annette and four other nurses from the Midwest were assigned to the 38th Evacuation Hospital, where, except for the death of one, they would stay together for the duration of the war.
The 38th Evacuation Hospital was a unit from Charlotte, North Carolina with the nursing staff equally divided between the North and the South. This mixture of personnel would often result in reenactments of the Civil War.
When the ship carrying the 38th Evac arrived at Arzew, Oran on 9 November 1942, they were ordered to wait at sea until completion of military action to reclaim Oran. Once landed, they began operations, and on 11 November 1942 a hospital unit with the American flag flying over the administration tent was opened. Until 2 September 1943 the 38th Evac was moving across the northern coast of Africa, establishing Evac Hospitals at Arzew, St Cloud, El Guerrah, Telergma, Bega and Tunis. It was while in Africa that Annette would have her picture taken with Ernie Pyle, a newspaper picture seen across the US.
Photo and caption from an undated article written by Ernie Pyle in North Africa. Ann kept the original article with her military papers. Now in the author's collection. 
These evacuation tent hospitals were often 10 miles or less behind the front line. Ambulatory patients would arrive by truck transport while stretcher cases were brought in by whatever method was available. The 38th Evac had approximately 250 beds split between medical and surgical units. Annette was a charge nurse on the medical unit, having three or four 30-bed tents to supervise and patients with all types of viral infections, malaria and battle fatigue.
As the front line moved, the Evac Hospital unit would follow.
Ward tents would be taken down as patients were returned to duty or sent to the Station Hospitals. The nurses might find a full ward at the start of their shift along with orders to begin packing up before truck transports awaited them at the day's end.
On 2 August 1943 in recognition of service, Annette received the African campaign ribbon. A month later the 38th Evac left Tunis to begin their train trek back to Oran. The memories of those five days would be of a slow train that seemingly dated to the Civil War, K-rations for food, and Arabs looking in at every town.
They left Oran on 15 September 1943 and arrived at Pasteum, Italy 21 September. Military transport on open waters means one went over the side into a landing craft. Annette learned to do this with the best of them.
In reflecting on the time in Italy, the Battle at Caserta is one Annette remembers well, with the German army on the Hill overlooking the valley where the Americans were stationed. Later at Anzio in April 1944, the medical units and living quarters were sandbagged to shoulder height due to the ongoing battles and the general location of the unit.
For her 33rd birthday at Vairano, Annette received among other things, shoelaces, a bar of soap and an egg. An egg was always treasured, and with the help of the unit dietitian who was among those present, the yolk became mayonnaise, and the “egg white turned the available sugar into a batch of divinity.”
Age set Annette and her four primary companions apart from the rest of the nursing staff. Most were only recent graduates from training and therefore close in age to their patients.
It was in an olive grove outside Rome that the 38th Evac listened on field radios to the reports coming out of Normandy about D-Day.
By word of mouth news traveled of Roosevelt's death. Other hospital locations along the Italian route were Carinola, Massa, St. Luce, Pisa and Montecatini.
All day on 2 November 1944 trouble was brewing for the 38th Evac, and work was underway to prepare for an anticipated flood of the Arno River. Patients were given early discharge to their units, medical supplies were being moved out, and personal gear put up on boxes with the hope that the water wouldn't get that high. Annette received a citation following the flood for leadership in evacuating her patients in time of peril.
The citation Annette received following the flood tells much of the story of that event.
Headquarters, Fifth Army Commendation
Medal received with her
commendation.
Author's collection.
To all whom it may concern
Annette M. Heaton
is hereby commanded for outstanding performance of duty Annette M. Heaton, N30622, First Lieutenant, Army Nurse Corps, United States Army. On the night of 2-3 November 1944, when a hospital area was flooded by an overflowing river, First Lieutenant Heaton, as supervisor of the Medical Section, assisted in the direction of the safe evacuation of all her patients, many of whom were litter cases, and directed the recovery of necessary medical equipment so that treatment could be continued. Her selfless performance in the face of an emergency reflects great credit upon herself and the military service. Entered military service from Detroit, Michigan.
Signed L. K. Truscott, Jr. Lieutenant General, U.S. Army, Commanding.

Seniority has its privileges and Annette had a US furlough for the 1944 holidays, returning in March 1945. The last duty stations for the 38th Evac would be Marzabotto, Fidenza, and Salsomaggiore, Italy. Even when a building might have been available, the 38th Evac would set up their tent city, knowing that great numbers of bed bugs would inhabit the building. The one time they did try using a building, they were in and out before the equipment was even settled.
With the end of the European war, concern still existed for transfer to the Pacific front. Finally, on 3 July 1945, the duties of the 38th Evac were completed and they could look forward to the return home in September. On 16 December, Annette received her final promotion to Captain. When Capt. Annette M. Heaton signed her separation qualification record at Fort Dix on 17 December 1945, the list of decorations included the European Theatre Ribbon with six battle stars, a Meritorious Service Plaque, and the 5th Army Citation.
Following her return to civilian life, Annette married Franklin Bassette and moved to Interlaken, N.Y. where she continued her nursing career. Here they raised three daughters and continued to be active with their grandchildren and civic affairs.

Dewitt’s Diary November 2, 1941, 1943, 1944
Sunday, November 2, 1941
Pete and I tried the hunting. Pete shot one partridge. Helped him put his boat in and brought up his electric saw.
Mild and cloudy.
Tuesday, November 2, 1943
Election day. I began shingling again this morning but soon rained me off.
Edna went to the Burg [Trumansburg] and got 100 feet eave trough for barn.
I took Spotty down to lower woods. Got a 15 pound coon in no time.
Lorraine W. was in a minute.
We voted.
Thursday, November 2, 1944
Southwest wind and very mild. Clear, temperature 60 to 70 most of the day.
Very dry weather lately. Went to town.