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Kilroy Was There
A GI's War in Photographs
Tony Hillerman
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eBook - ePub
Kilroy Was There
A GI's War in Photographs
Tony Hillerman
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When I saw Frank Kessler's collection of photographs I was struck by how different they were from the movie-camera views I see on television. No public relations pictures here, intended to glorify battle and rally support. These were up-close snapshots of the dirty, damp, and disheveled men in the rifle companies and tank units. It was the war as they endured it, as they struggled through it from the beaches of France to the streets of Berlin until they finally won it. âTony Hillerman
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World War IIWe gray and grizzled veterans sometimes call it âthe last good war,â and, indeed, it did offer Kilroys some moments of pride, captured so well by Kessler and others in Normandy street scenes where jubilant residents thank their liberators, children gather around a truck to get chewing gum, and GIs pause a moment to accept a gift of wine in their canteen cups and in pictures of refugee families returning to their ravaged but liberated homes.
But most of us Kilroys missed these joyful celebrations. Villagers wisely took shelter elsewhere when war came down their streets, and duty kept front echelon soldiers moving.
In the biggest liberation celebration, U.S. Army combat units were held back at the fringes of Paris to allow Charles de Gaulle and his Free French Army the glory of their nationâs salvation. That was okay with us. Rifle squad members by then had done enough street and hedgerow fighting to gladly leave most of the rooting out of German snipers and capture of German prisoners to the home boys. (Besides, being around the generals and the crowd of colonels required getting boots cleaned and âlooking like a soldier.â)
Alas, those few joyful memories were offset by the countless grim ones. And one that is difficult for even long-ago soldiers to erase is our first up-close-and-personal encounter with deathâno matter the side. The German sprawled on the sidewalk (opposite) still holds the grenade he was poised to throw when the fatal bullet struck him. He would have killed you if he could have, but 60 years later you still remember that he looked a lot like you. Even more indelible are farewells to your own. This Kilroy (opposite), head wound bandaged, is about to be ambulanced back to his battalionâs aid station. If he lives, you may see him again, brought back on a replacement truck to fight some more. Or this may be, if heâs lucky, the âmillion-dollar woundâ that sends him home alive. But the man lying face down (below) is a subject for the Grave Registration team, as is the soldier whose body has been covered with flowers by the French citizens looking on.
Medics earned an almost awed respect from their fellow Kilroys. The medics treating the wounded or leading the injured to safety were exactly as vulnerable as the soldiers whose lives they were trying to save. Of the aid men who came for me when I got my million-dollar wound, two were wounded, one fatally.
Injury was not the only relief from combat. The Army did develop rotation systems. For air corpsmen a certain number of combat missions would send them home to train other flight crews. For the infantrymen points were tallied based on months in combat plus extra points (for example, five for a combat wound and five for a âbeyond the call of dutyâ decoration), and there was also a rotation system under which a company could send men back to Paris for a week of R&R, rest and relaxation. Unfortunately, the average infantryman lasted slightly less than six months in combat, winning either a Z-class (Zone of Interior) wound or a body bag before any rotation relief. At the time I was wounded and out of the war, on February 27, 1945, only five men in my Charley Company had yet lasted long enough to benefit from the point rotation system.
The observation that âwar is long days of boredom punctuated by exhilarating moments of fearâ is only somewhat exaggerated. For the Kilroys, there was everyday life to be lived, or survived. Some of Kesslerâs boysâ most intimate portraits were of us Kilroys going about the mundane.
Illustrated in a photo of troops attending mass is the adage that there are no atheists in foxholes, that at least some of us were believers. (In my own experience, I saw only four chaplains. One was driving through a shattered French village when we flagged him down and asked him to perform services for us in the local church. A second was in a medical clearing station at Saverne. The third we happened on in a snowy Vosges Mountain field. And the fourth I met in the Third General Hospital at Aix en Provence, where I was awaiting a hospital ship to haul me home.)
The notion of âcleanliness is next to godlinessâ did not hold true for combat troops. We washed up where we couldâbe it a murky stream or a village pump. My Charley Company had only one Army-provided bath from the time we entered combat in September 1944 until March 1945. With the company in Division Reserve, we were treated to a hot shower. In two huge tents erected in a snowy field, we stripped and marched naked (but clutching our boots) into the shower tent, where a gasoline burner heated the water. We scrubbed furiously at the embedded grime with bar soap before rinsing off. We picked up clean socks, shorts, and long johns from a table and reclaimed our dirty uniforms. Beneath the dirty clothes we were clean againâa wonderful feeling!
But it was food, or the lack of it, that consumed most of our thoughts. We were hungry. After all, most of us Kilroys were still in our growing years. We survived mostly on canned C-rations or, even worse, boxed K-rations. Can and box contents varied. Kessler and his men caught us eating what and where ...