
One of the great honors and
pleasures of being the webmaster is that on occasion it puts me in touch with some very
remarkable people. This page is designed to share those experiences with all of you.
Whenever a former
"Cottonbaler" leaves a message in the guestbook or contacts me by e-mail, I
always send a return message. To thank them for stopping by the website and most
importantly for their service to our country.
While for the most part this website
is designed for the history of the7th prior to 1850, this particular page will be devoted
to those who saw service with the 7th after that date.
One such man is Russ W. Cloer of
Florida. I came in contact with Mr. Cloer after he had visited the website about a
year ago. We began an e-mail exchange and in the process he sent me the following
story. First printed in a private printing for his family, excerpts have appeared in
the 7th Infantry Regiment Association's magazine "The Cottonbaler".
Reprinted here with Mr. Cloer's permission is his story "Road to Rome".
Road to Rome
I had just turned 23
when I arrived on the Anzio Beachhead, 30 miles south of Rome, and was assigned to the 7th
Infantry, 3rd Division. It was February 1944 and I was a replacement Infantry
Lieutenant. Vivid memories of the combat which followed were etched in my memory
forever. At night, the constant rumble and flutter of artillery overhead, theirs
and ours. The rattle of machine gun fire, ours slow, theirs rapid. The
ricochet of brilliant tracers skyward;ours red, theirs green or white. The wavering
light of a parachute flare, lighting the flat and desolate landscape. The solid mass
of white searchlight beams and red antiaircraft tracers over the harbor during air attack.
Outnumbered by the
enemy two to one, with our backs to the sea. The sheer terror of incoming 88 mm fire
from a German Tiger tank. The haunting cry of "Medic!" echoing through the
night. And on a rare quiet night, the sound of the Krauts singing Lili Marlene.
Bloated corpses and black flies. The sickening odor of death. Cold C or
K rations. No sleep. Rain. Mud. Trench Foot. Malaria.
The incredible loneliness. The joy of a letter from home! Sixty-seven days
without a change of clothes. Horrendous casualties! More than 100% in the 7th
Infantry Regiment plus an equal number lost to malaria and trench foot. Thousands
of good men died there, three thousand in the 3rd Division alone.
And finally,
reinforcements and the "breakout" at dawn on May 23, 1944. My Division
lost three thousand men killed or wounded in the first three days. We fought our way
through the battered town of Cisterna at night. Fires were everywhere from artillery
and white phosphorous mortar fire. We choked on smoke,cordite, and cement dust from
the shattered concrete buildings. A Sherman tank supported us, obliterating enemy
strong points with its 75mm cannon at point blank range. The streets were littered
with corpses lying where they fell, abandoned weapons, destroyed vehicles and collapsed
buildings. This was what Hell must be like.
We fought our way north
through the mountain villages of Cori, Giulianello, Artena, Valmontone, to Pallestrina.
The fighting was savage. We left a scene of desolation behind us, burning
tanks and vehicles, dead men and horses bloated in the Italian sun, their eyes and wounds
covered with swarms of huge black flies, the odor indescribable. Fire, smoke and
collapsed buildings destroyed by tanks, artillery and fire. Abandoned weapons,
helmets, ammo and equipment of every description littered the landscape. Columns of
Kraut POWs trudged to our rear in shock, helmets and weapons gone, hands clasped above
heads bowed in submission. The residue of war.
Twelve days of bitter
fighting and on the night of June 4, 1944, I reported to Colonel Wiley O'Muhundro's
dugout, as ordered. "Lieutenant, there's a rumor that the Krauts have declared
Rome an open city and are pulling out. I want you to take a patrol into the city and
find out if it's true. And get back here fast. I'll have the 3rd
Battalion on trucks. I want my Regiment to be the first to enter Rome."
I took four jeeps with
50 caliber machine guns and headed toward Rome with 15 men. It was pitch dark.
Smoke made visibility worse. We passed burning American tanks and recon
vehicles, and dead soldiers along the Appian Way. We met no resistance. We saw
nothing alive.
After about 5 miles, we
entered the city which was ominously silent. No trace of light anywhere. We
saw no Krauts, no Americans, no civilians. In the total darkness, we expected to be
ambushed at every corner. It was deathly quite. Spooky. I had a street
map, but I dared show no light to read it. We pressed on but were soon lost amid the
narrow winding tunnel-like streets. Until we rounded a bend, entered a huge
cobblestone piazza and there before us stood the Coliseum, silhouetted against the first
blush of pink light in the eastern sky! It was a sight I'll never forget! The
thrill of a lifetime! I stood in the mist of 2000 years of history and I felt a
strong sense of having added to it.
My driver found the way
back and I reported to the CO. "How far into the city did you go," he
accused? "As far as the Coliseum," I told him. He grinned and
ordered the 3rd Battalion in on trucks Two days later the Allies invaded Normandy.
We were no longer fighting alone.
Our decimated Division
garrisoned Rome for one week. I visited St. Peters, the Vatican, the Sistine Chapel,
the Catacombs, the Aqueducts, the Coliseum, the Forum, a wealth of history. Only one
other Lieutenant from my group of twenty-one junior officer replacements, who came in on
the same day, made it to Rome.--It was good to be alive!
Russ Cloer
February 26,1998
Rev. May 4, 1998
Lt. Russ W. Cloer Dec. 1944 the
Ardennes
press
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