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David contacted me recently to say he had just completed a
WWII remerance for a friend who was captured in France and
later escaped. David has sent me the story and I have reproduced
it here with his permission.
Click
images to enlarge
WW
II Experiences of PFC John P Halada
314th Infantry Regiment, 79th Division
POW in Stalag VIIA (7A), Moosburg, Germany
Background
I
grew up in the small Central Pennsylvania town of Palmerton.
Working at Bethlehem Steel in the Ordinance Department, I
had a deferment. I quit to join the Army Air Corps, but found
out I was colorblind. Being too tall for the paratroopers,
I was drafted into the infantry in November 1943. I was 23
years old.
We
had lots of ethnic Pennsylvania Dutch near Palmerton, so I
was quite fluent in German. Hunting was a regular hobby, so
I was already a pretty good shot when I joined the Army. Being
6’3” and weighing around 215 lbs made me the obvious
GI to carry the Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR). I was also
considered a pretty tough guy.
After
six months of training I was assigned to a Replacement Contingent.
We left for England on the “SS Argentina” and
arrived in April 1944. Invasion tension was already high and
men with their equipment were practicing everywhere. D-Day
was June 6th.
On
my departure from England I was just amazed at the unbelievable
number of ships and barrage balloons dotting the horizon.
When we arrived off of Normandy, I had to go over the ships
side and down a seemingly endless cargo net into a bouncing
Landing Craft carrying my rifle and full pack. This was a
daunting task, but nothing compared to what I was about to
face. When ashore, I was ordered to discard my gas mask and
join up with my unit. I was assigned to “A” Company,
314th Infantry Regiment, 97th Infantry Division.
Normandy
Although
D-Day had been a week earlier, the effects of the battles
for Omaha and Utah Beaches were evident in the Channel and
on land. Wrecked vehicles, strewn equipment, wounded and dead
were ever present. On June 16th we moved out to attack the
entrenched German Garrison at Cherbourg. After 10 days of
heavy fighting, the bastion fell to the men of the 79th Division.
This was our first battle and casualties were heavy.
On
July 3rd we began an attack on the small French town of La
Haye du Puits. This area was very stubbornly defended and
once again casualties were very heavy on both sides. House
to house combat was the norm on July 7th and 8th. One of my
first and most unforgettable experiences was hearing a seriously
wounded German, lying between the hedgerows, calling for help.
A Southern boy sought to shut him up and went over and shot
him in the head. We almost got into a fight. A few days later,
he was seriously wounded. The law of retribution? After witnessing
such death and destruction, I asked a French farm lady to
fill my canteen with Calvados in place of water.
The
Hedgerows
For
the next several weeks we made little progress against the
German positions anchored at St. Lo. The hedgerows proved
a natural barrier and were much more advantageous for the
defender as opposed to the attacker. We lost a lot of men
and armor trying to gain precious yards.
There
were also the minefields. On one occasion, I was 2/3rds of
the way across an open area, when Boom, Boom, Boom, delayed
mines started going off. My Lieutenant, just 5 yards from
me, stepped on a Bouncing Betty, which fatally injured him.
Some how, I ran back thru that field to get help without stepping
on another mine. We had to leave our guys there until the
field could be swept. I had three of my four Lieutenants killed
in my two months in Normandy.
On
another occasion, I had just dug my foxhole when the “Jerries”
opened up on us with their 88’s. I raced back to my
shelter only to find two others had already dove into it.
I piled on top and lay as flat as I could. WOOM, one went
off real close, and I felt this heat and pressure across my
backside. A piece of shrapnel had torn the seat right out
of my pants. Almost a disASSter, but my good fortune continued.
Almost
an “ACE” and meeting “Blood and Guts”
After
the Breakthrough at St. Lo and the attacks on the Germans
in the Falaise Pocket, we headed towards the Seine. At this
time we were part of Patton’s 3rd Army and protecting
his flank. Our orders were not to shoot at aircraft, as it
would give away our position and strength. They were also
much more likely to be Allied than German.
My
squad and I were walking across an open area parallel to our
vehicles that were on a road. I saw this fighter coming down
after the tanks and trucks. When he started strafing, I raised
my BAR, led the guy, and opened up with my armor piercing
ammunition. Much to my surprise, the plane began to smoke
and appeared to crash over the hill. Everyone was either congratulating
me or yelling at me when this Command Jeep comes driving over
the field. Some General, with a helmet full of stars yells,
“Who shot that plane?” Well, everyone backed away,
and I’m left standing there with a smoking BAR with
about 50 brass casings at my feet. With little other choice,
I said, “I did sir.” With that, he said: “Good
shooting soldier, you got that Jerry son of a bitch.”
He had an officer write down my name, but I never heard anything.
When I asked who that was, I was informed that was “Old
Blood and Guts Patton,’ himself. Your blood, his guts.”
What
“guts” for a General to be up at the very front
line. I thought he was great, even though his persistent aggressiveness
led to my capture.
Lobbing
A Grenade
Another
training directive, besides not shooting at aircraft, was
to “lob, not throw” a hand grenade. We were moving
through a French cemetery on the outskirts of town when a
German MG-42 machine gun opened fire from a 3rd floor window
of a house across the street from us. With some difficulty,
we managed to get to the stone cemetery wall opposite the
house with the machine gun. With the yell of “covering
fire” I was boosted over the wall and ran to the base
of the house and underneath the Germans. I pulled the pin
on my grenade and “lobbed” it towards the window.
It hit the wall and fell at my feet. I quickly grabbed it,
ran into the street and “threw a strike” at the
window. The grenade went off right at the window and killed
all three gunners. I was real lucky.
A
Good Night’s Sleep
As
we approached the Seine, I was once again in a forward element.
The plan was to pass through this village the next day. My
buddy and I saw no activity and decided to move into town
to sleep as opposed to a wet and cold foxhole. We went to
this French home, had a wonderful meal with plenty of wine
and a soft bed. We awoke at dawn and returned to our lines
in a two-wheeled horse drawn cart. The camouflaged netting
on our helmets was bedecked with flowers. Our CO was beside
himself. Later that morning we moved forward only to be met
by stiff German resistance. They had fortified the one side
of town and did not want to betray their positions to a couple
of inebriated GI’s. Another stoke of good fortune.
Capture!
The
314th crossed the River Seine near Mantes-Gassicort about
40 miles Northwest of Paris on August 20th. Myself, along
with a veteran Army Ranger named Lt. J. Bacchus occupied a
far forward position. We were given orders to withdraw, but
he insisted we stay and hold our ground. He said he did not
want to take the same real estate twice. On the night of August
21st, the Germans, led by King Tiger tanks, counterattacked.
Our position near Fontenoy St. Pierre was overrun and the
two of us hid in a under road culvert. Around 10:00 in the
morning, some Germans ordered us out or they would throw in
hand grenades. The decision was relatively easy.
As
was the usual practice, Lt. Bacchus, an officer, was separated
from me and I never was able to determine his fate. To my
surprise, a German officer asked me if our Captain Flannery
was still wearing his lucky combat boots with the big hole
in the sole. How they knew this level of detail about our
unit was certainly surprising.
As
a prisoner, I and other Americans were initially held near
the front. Here we encountered what the Germans called “American
Automatic Artillery.” There would be a continuous scream,
followed by boom, boom, boom…just like a machine gun.
There must have been more than a dozen artillery tubes firing
in tandem. We had much more firepower, but the German 88 was
very accurate and deadly.
While
near the front, I witnessed an American fighter get shot down.
All the “krauts” opened fir on him with everything
they had. The pilot did not bailout after being hit, but rammed
his plane into a German arms depot. He was a real hero. I
felt bad being a prisoner, but there was nothing I could have
done differently. Behind the German front lines was a very
dangerous place and I was anxious to get out of there.
Not
long after capture, I was united with Bob Greenawalt, another
member of “A” Company and a fellow Central Pennsylvanian
from Kutztown. We were moved by truck to Amiens, France and
then to Chalfonte. On the way, brave French women defied the
Germans and passed us loaves of bread and water. From there
we went to Stalag XII in Limburg, Luxemburg and on September
4th put on rail cars for a train ride to Moosburg. This trip
was far from uneventful as US fighters strafed our locked
up train.
Stalag
VIIA (7A)
Stalag
7A was located near the Bavarian town of Moosburg, about 35
miles Northwest of Munich. When I arrived it was just for
enlisted men like myself. We were given showers to soothe
our flea-infested bodies. There were four sections: one for
the Russians, which was separate, and one each for Americans,
English and French. We were free to intermingle except with
the Russians. A double barbed wire fence surrounded the camp
and we slept and ate in wooden barracks. My prison ID tag
number was 85-79A. The tag was perforated, so it could be
broken in two. One half was to be buried with you, the other
half to the Red Cross.
As
the war continued, the Stalag became even more crowded and
conditions worsened. We were all quite depressed when so many
American troops were added after the Battle of the Bulge in
December 1944. We knew however, that things must have been
going in our favor as we regularly watched the endless waves
of American and British bombers fly high overhead and bomb
the nearby cities. Food was becoming very scarce and Red Cross
weekly parcels were inadequate. I went from 215 to 165 during
captivity.
Meals
were an interesting cultural event. American GI’s would
push and shove in line and gobble down their chow. The Brits
would be “very proper” and have tea first and
call: “Say there Jerry, just place the food on the table
while we finish tea.” They would then line up and march
to the chow line. The French would periodically decorate their
mess tins with dandelions or other flowers to have a more
elegant dining experience.
I
loved the Brits sense of dry humor. In their latrines, they
hung signs that read: “Don’t throw fags (butts)
into the urinals, as it renders them almost unsmokeable.”
Some of those guys had been there since 1940.
The
Chicago Gangster
The
Brits got little tins of tea in their Red Cross parcels. One
“Tommy” was drying his tealeaves on the windowsill.
There was no more tea left in them. I asked if he smoked them.
He said: “Oh no, I put them back in the tin and carefully
reseal it. I can get two loaves of bread for it in town.”
He went on to warn me to “Give the bread to a mate to
hide, for they will surely come back after you”.
Some
time later, I had the opportunity to go into town and thought
I would try this “tea exchange”. I got my two
loaves of bread from a German woman but shortly thereafter,
she was back demanding the guard to have her bread returned.
She told the guard that I was a “Chicago Gangster”.
I was searched, but had already stashed the bread.
Six
cigarettes could have been traded for a loaf, but the thought
to quit smoking never occurred to any of us. Cigarettes were
a precious staple of our culture.
The
Guards
Overall,
the treatment was fair. There were good and bad guards just
as there were good and bad internees. One day we were sent
by train into Munich to help clean up after the city had been
bombed. One Brit, who was suffering from pneumonia and in
bad shape, was being harassed to work harder by a guard. I
decided to intervene and stepped between the Guard and the
man he was bullying. I cussed at him in German and yelled
for him to leave the sick alone and comply with the Geneva
Convention. With that, he smashed me in the mouth with his
rifle butt and chipped of my front teeth. After that however,
he left the infirmed alone. I looked briefly for him at the
end of the war to repay his hostility, but never located him.
On
another occasion I threatened to kill some of our own guys
who were stealing food from frail soldiers in the barracks.
One of these sick guys, Bill Rosen, came by my hometown after
the war to thank me for “saving his life”. I barely
recognized him, as I remembered Bill only as an emaciated
body in the Stalag.
The
Work Farm
In
the Spring of 1945, there was the opportunity to get out of
the Stalag and help the German farmers ready their fields.
When asked my occupation before the war, I explained I was
a farmer and raised pineapples. While they didn’t have
any pineapple farms, my ruse worked and I was sent as part
of a work detachment to assist on a local farm. This enabled
me to get some additional food that was essential.
One
of the two farms, near Hohenkammer, I worked on was owned
and managed by an old farmer and his wife. He hated Americans,
but his wife was kind and helpful. On one occasion I was very
sick and the “frau” gave me some hot tea with
schnapps in it. A guard saw this and admonished her. With
that she hit him with her broom and ordered him out of her
house. Each night we returned to a central farmhouse where
we were locked up for the night. Two other POW’s that
worked on the farm with me were Carlton Thomas of Monteagle,
Tennessee and a French soldier named Micheau Pierre of Paris.
One
humorous farm story was when I was given a new young ox to
replace an older one. Two of these oxen were used to plow
the fields. The first thing this young bull did was pinning
me in the stall when trying to put on a bridle. A hard punch
in the nose let him know who was boss. On the road, he kept
forcing the other ox into a ditch. After repeated unsuccessful
tries at altering his behavior, I decided to whip the older
bull and yell left. After a while, the old bull got smart
and would gore the young one and they would both stay on the
road. When returning a large number of townspeople had lined
up to watch how the “Ami” would bring the bulls
back to the barn. Much to their astonishment, I drove them
right down the road. They could not get over such an accomplishment.
My
Escape
Without
maps or a compass it was hard to plan an escape. I was also
in my POW uniform with triangles painted on that everyone
recognized. I also had only wooden shoes. When I heard the
sound of distant artillery I knew which direction to go and
made my plans to escape from the farm before being returned
to Stalag 7A
Late
in the day, I picked up a scythe so as to look like a POW
farm worker and headed northwest. I traveled mostly at night.
One day I came on a farm and figured to hide in the barn.
Not long afterwards, I heard two armed and obviously inebriated
German soldiers approaching and climbed into the small hayloft.
Later one of them started to climb into the loft saying he
was going to sleep. Half way up the ladder, the other one
grabbed him and pulled him down saying he would fall from
there and kill himself. Lucky again.
I
continued heading towards the firing. Hiding in the brush
I saw an American truck approaching. Experience taught me
to be wary of the first vehicle as they were likely trigger-happy.
When it passed it was full of German soldiers who must have
captured it for their escape.
Friend
or Foe
Finally,
I noticed a column of American vehicles and infantry approaching.
I slowly walked out and explained my escaped POW situation.
They were members of the 20th Armored Division, new to combat,
and wary of potential of German officers impersonating as
civilians or escaping Americans. Being alone and also admitting
I spoke German added to their disbelief.
I
was then passed to a Doctor or Physiatrist who asked me multiple
questions. When asked about baseball, I said I didn’t
like it. He asked about Frank Sinatra, and I thought he was
still asking about baseball players. After a while, he believed
me and I was given a new uniform, great chow, but no weapon.
They still were not 100% convinced.
My
P08 German Luger
At
this time it was late April and the Germans were surrendering
in droves. One group of old Volkstrum, accompanied by an SS
officer, approached and laid their weapons on the side of
the road. I was directed by the 20th to interrogate the officer
while others stood back covering them. The officer demanded
I salute him and that he surrender only to an officer. With
that, I walked to the side of the road, picked up a holstered
Luger, pulled it out, and cocked it while walking back. I
then again asked the SS officer for information. This time
he was very responsive.
With
this act, the Americans now believed I was legit and the Volkstrum
got a chuckle from the SS man being humbled. I kept the Luger
(DWM 6745a) with its holster for personal protection and not
as a souvenir. I brought the Luger home with me and had it
in my possession for over 60 years.
My
Enjoyable Return
Not
being a member of the 20th Armored, I was basically free to
“find” my old unit now that the war was over.
I “signed” for, or rather commandeered an Opel
sedan and started back across Germany. I unfortunately encountered
a temporary bridge that was unable to accommodate my low-slung
Opel. For a while I traveled with another “straggler”
named Cutler. We managed to have a great party with some German
girls after liberating some wine and food from an obstinate
German and his late Doberman.
On
my way I did manage to stop in Nancy, France for several days
of wine, women and song before heading to Paris. Finally I
was reunited with a large contingent of ex-POW’s called
“Recovered Allied Military Personnel” or “RAMP”
and readied to return to the United States. The plan was to
prepare us for the Invasion of Japan.
The
Trip Home
We
shipped out of La Harve in mid-May on a Liberty Ship. Even
this was not without incident as some ships were going straight
when others decided to zigzag. The result was our ship was
struck by another, but fortunately there was only minor damage
except for a lot of frayed POW nerves. Fortunately, after
we got back to the States, and the Japanese surrendered in
August. I had real serious doubts about my willingness to
fight again.
John
P. Halada
March 2006
If you were in the same Regiment or PoW camp as John, please
let me know so I can pass the information on to David. Email
me via the contact
page.
Please be aware that information and images on
this page are © David Beck and John Halada. Please do not
reproduce or download any information or images without first
seeking permission from David.
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