• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Denise Frisino

    • Home
    • Books by Denise
      • Whiskey Cove
      • Orchids of War
      • Storms From A Clear Sky
    • Buy Now!
    • Blogs
      • Archives
    • Podcasts
      • Denise Frisino Videos
    • About
    • Contact
    • Reviews
    • Events
    • Interviews

    U.S. Army Nurse Corps

    D-Day Mistakes, Madness and Miracles –The First Wave

    June 5, 2019 by denisefrisino Leave a Comment

    The very few living survivors of the ‘First Wave’ at D-Day all concur on one thing—tragic mistakes were made that morning of June 6, 1944, costing thousands of Allied lives.

    For starters, the landing parties headed ashore later in the day than planned. They missed the opportunity of the lowest tide and the deeper water would claim hundreds of young lives.

    For many, this was their first battle, fresh from their training grounds these soldiers were to attack the battle hardened, dug in enemy. The Germans had prepared the beach with land mines, barbered wire, barricades and a strip of heavy wire that ran across the surf impacting the landing crafts.

    Just before the troops were sent ashore, Allied planes flew low across the beach laying down a protective smoke screen. However, this screen worked in reverse for many of the landing parties creating confusion as they could not tell where they were heading. Eventually, when the winds lifted the film, the Germans sitting above on Omaha Beach in their pill boxes made light work of the wet, anxious soldiers below them.

    ‘Artillery Joe’ Mehelich

    ‘Artillery Joe’ Mehelich, Private First Class, was a young man among the brave soldiers that survived the ‘First Wave.’ Previously, Joe had arrived in Africa to fight with the 2nd Armored Division at age seventeen, months before the attack on Pearl Harbor. At one point, Joe was hit and forced to pour sand over his body to extinguish the leaping flames spreading up his arms and over his boots. While severely burned and unable to wear shoes, he got ‘right back in the tank’ and kept fighting on. In fact, ‘Artillery Joe’, the nickname given to him by his troop, would go on to fight in all five major battles.

    After his company helped secure Sicily, ‘Artillery Joe’ was sent to England for the major assault of D Day. He and a fellow soldier from his company were placed in a DUKW, ‘Duck’, for the landing on Omaha Beach along with about 38 green ‘kids’. The two experienced warriors were there to provide calm for the novice soldiers unaccustomed to battle, to the deafening blast from the enemy’s heavy armor on the cliffs above attempting to sink their transport, and the unnerving number of injured and dying men washing ashore along the sand and surf.

    The result was horrific. Frightened, praying, calling for their mothers, the youth rushed over the sides, some carrying their duffel bags, into the chilling deep water only to be pulled under the rough sea by the weight of their supplies needed to defend themselves.

    Joe tried to stop them, but their fear and duty to America stripped them of reason.

    Only Joe, his friend from his original company and one of the boys from the boat made it to shore. As the three determined which way to head in the dense haze, it began to lift, and they came under attack from a barrage of gunfire from the Germans waiting above in their pill boxes. Miraculously, all lived to fight another day.

    Iconic photos by Robert Capa.
    Above, Hu Riley, 22, of Mercer Island, WA struggles ashore on Omaha Beach

    In the midst of D Day, a young John Joachims fearlessly drove his tank into battle at Normandy. He was eighteen. He would often retell of the horror spread around him on the beach, such a place of beauty transformed to a graveyard of overwhelming magnitude.

    Joachim, 18, celebrates surviving the landing at Normandy Beach.

    The special regiment, the 320th Anti-Aircraft Barrage Balloon Battalion, were trained to handle the large hydrogen filled barrage balloons that floated at about 200 feet, to protect the soldiers and tanks coming ashore. They were the first African American unit to land on D Day and the only balloon unit in France. Although Waverly B. Woodson Jr., an injured medic, was nominated for a Medal of Honor, he never received the medal.

    The first twenty-four hours of ‘Operation Overlord’ claimed thousands of lives. Those lost souls were not only Americans, but also our Allies, the Canadians, the British, and the French. One report claims, between June 6th, 1944 to July 1st of that year the United States casualties totaled 22,119. Missing, possibly some of the young boys swept out to sea, tallied 5,665 American soldiers. A startling 2,811 were killed with 13,564 reported wounded. Of the 79 taken prisoner, their eventual fate is not listed. Many of the dead never fired their guns.

    The drudgery of ‘Operation Overlord’ would last until August 25, 1944. Bob Harman, made it ashore in early August, as the troops were breaking out of Normandy on their way east. Far from being a secured safe zone, Bob remembers the first person he witnessed being shot by a sniper. The German sharpshooter had killed a Medic. Bob instantly understood the brutality of the enemy. The Germans wanted to eliminate anyone who could bring aide to an injured soldier or the dying. To this day, Bob honors the fallen Medic by displaying his blood-stained white arm band with the red cross in a beautiful glass case. Bob carried the Medic’s arm band through many clashes, including the Battle of the Bulge, as a reminder that survival in war is rudimentary: kill or be killed.

    Bob Harmon, Professor Emeritus of History, Seattle University, lectures at Paul Allen’s Flying Heritage & Combat Armor Museum.

    If you have not stood on the cliffs above the designated area called Omaha Beach, where the most difficult landing occurred, or walked the sands of Normandy, be sure to do so. The wind-swept surf carries a hint of the souls lost in this devastating conflict. You will be moved beyond imaging.

    Normandy Today

    On this 75th Anniversary of D Day remember those who gave their all to defend our country and freedom.

    Remember that during World War II, on June 6, 1944, this victory for our freedom came at the most precious price–
    brave young lives.

    WWII Normandy American Cemetery

    Filed Under: Air Force, Armed Forces, Army, D Day, Marines, Military, Navy, U.S. Army Nurse Corps, USCG, World War II Tagged With: ‘Duck’, 2nd Armored Division, 320th Barrage Balloon Battalion, 75th Anniversary of D Day, barbered wire, barricades, Bob Capa, Bob Harmon, British, Canadians, DUKW, England, first African American unit, First Wave’ at D-Day, German, John Joachim, John Joachums, June 6 1944, land mines, Medal of Honor, museum of flight combat armor, Normandy, Omaha Beach, Operation Overlord, Paul Allen, Pearl Harbor, protective smoke screen, Waverly B. Woodson Jr., World War II, WWI, WWI Normandy American Cemetery

    Memorial Day

    May 20, 2019 by denisefrisino Leave a Comment

    While the debate on when and where the first Decoration Day/Memorial Day was held in America still rages, one fact remains–the day set aside to honor and remember those fallen in battle, those who bravely fought for our freedom, was originally the concept of women.

    The custom of decorating the graves of soldiers harkens back to the Ancient Greeks. This Attic Vase Painting, from the Classic Period dating back to 440 B.C., depicts two women approaching a grave stele or monument that has been draped with two wreaths.

    The tradition of putting wreaths and flowers on soldiers graves became rooted in America, unfortunately, as the result of war on our own land. The Civil War erupted in 1861. On June 3rd of that year, in Warrenton, Virginia, the first grave of a fallen Civil War soldier was decorated to honor and remember the loss due to combat. [Read more…] about Memorial Day

    Filed Under: Air Force, Armed Forces, Army, Marines, Memorial Day, Military, Navy, U.S. Army Nurse Corps, USCG, World War II Tagged With: Ancient Greeks, armed forces, Atlantic, Attic Vase Painting, civil war, decoration day, Fireside Poet, General John Logan, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, In Flanders Fields, memorial day, Red Poppy, Support Our Troops, U.S. Flag, veterans

    Queen Mary

    November 10, 2016 by denisefrisino

    My godmother, Mary Sommerhauser Russell, chose to serve in the U.S. Army Nurse Corps during WWII because she was tired of wearing white nylons. Nurses back then, much in demand, had a choice as to which service they could join.
    “I had good looking legs and wanted to show them off. I liked the Army uniform better.”
    While she admits it sounds vain, she has no regrets because, with the army, she saw real action. Mary landed on Omaha Beach in August 1944, two days after the Liberation of Paris. She was 22 years old.

    Mary

    She tells of sailing on the RMS Queen Mary, which had already been whisked to Sydney, Australia, to be converted into a troopship, painted navy gray, stripped of its finery and had degaussing coils added to protect the ship from magnetic mines.
    For her journey to Europe the approximately 72 nurses were sequestered on the upper deck with the thousands of male troops below.
    “I had a date every 15 minutes,” she smiles slyly. “But then in the middle of the night they came and made us move to a lower deck.”
    Well, that got Mary’s goat. She rose early the next morning to see who had taken her precious upper deck and when she looked up, there, standing at the railing, was a well-known world leader dressed in his famous blue jumpsuit, holding his cigar. Winston Churchill traveled frequently as “Colonel Warden” on the Queen Mary, who, because of her speed, was difficult for any U-Boat to catch, and became known as the “Gray Ghost.”

    Queen Mary - The Gray Ghost

    Raised in Butte Montana, in a German and Irish household, Mary knew how to get a job done.
    “When we got there they kept telling us we would have a hospital, but we worked in tents in the fields. To save our precious penicillin we would dig holes in the cold ground, put the vial of penicillin in a condom, then in a can and bury it. There was no refrigeration. You made due.”
    She talks of how the snow covered soldiers arrived at their medic tents with disfiguring frostbite, the engineers that stayed with the makeshift hospitals to keep the equipment running, the death and hope they all lived with daily.

    Liberation of Paris

    There is no telling how many lives she touched in an attempt to save our boys and the horror she keeps privately tucked away.
    But I know that from now on I will refer to First Lieutenant Mary Sommerhauser, Mrs. Ralph Russell, who just turned 95, as the real Queen Mary–for all the love and support she gave to the hundreds of troops on the ground in the European Theater. I am so proud she is my godmother.

     

    Save

    Filed Under: U.S. Army Nurse Corps Tagged With: nurses, queen mary, World War II, WWII

    • « Previous Page
    • Page 1
    • Page 2

    Primary Sidebar

    There is more treasure in books than in all the pirate’s loot on Treasure Island. ~ Walt Disney

    Books by Denise


    Published through

    Awards

    Recent Posts

    • The Rewards of Research
    • Midway
    • Decoration Day
    • Victory In Europe – VE Day
    • True Fiction Interview with Reenita Hora
    • Four Chaplains, One Heroic Mission

    Tags

    1941 Act of Military Surrender Allied Victory armed forces Asia Australia Bob Harmon civil war December 7 December 7th decoration day East-Wind-Rain General’s Eisenhower and Patton Germany Surrenders Guadalcanal Hitler Imperial Japanese Army Japanese Land of the Rising Sun Magic May 7 May 8 memorial day Monuments Men Mussolini’s fascist navy Nazi’s Surrender New Guinea Pacific Theatre Pearl Harbor Philippines President Roosevelt Rhine River Russians Soviet Red Army unconditional surrender of Germany US Armies VE Day Victory in Europe World War 2 World War II World War Two WW2 WWII WWII Ends

    © Copyright 2017 Denise Frisino · All Rights Reserved ·

    Please go to EVENTS to see where I'm appearing next! Dismiss