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Eisenhower and His Boys - The Men of World War II
by Stephen AmbroseChapter 8: Pointe-Du-Hoc
It was a nearly 100-meter-high cliff, with perpendicular sides jutting out into the
Channel. It looked down on Utah Beach to the left and Omaha Beach to the right. There were
six 155mm cannon in heavily reinforced concrete bunkers that were capable of hitting
either beach with their big shells. On the outermost edge of the cliff, the Germans had an
elaborate, well-protected outpost, where the spotters had a perfect view and could call
back coordinates to the gunners at the 155s. Those guns had to be neutralized. The Allied
bombardment of Pointe-du-Hoc had begun weeks before D-Day. Heavy bombers from the U.S.
Eighth Air Force and British Bomber Command had repeatedly plastered the area, with a
climax coming before dawn on June 6. Then the battleship Texas took up the action, sending
dozens of 14-inch shells into the position. Altogether, Pointe-du-Hoc got hit by more than
ten kilotons of high explosives, the equivalent of the explosive power of the atomic bomb
used at Hiroshima. Texas lifted her fire at 0630, the moment the rangers were scheduled to
touch down.
Col. James Earl Rudder was in the lead boat. He was not
supposed to be there. Lt. Gen. Clarence Huebner, CO of the 1st Division and in overall
command at Omaha Beach, had forbidden Rudder to lead D, E, and F Companies of the 2nd
Rangers into Pointe-du-Hoc, saying, "We're not going to risk getting you knocked out
in the first round."
"I'm sorry to have to disobey you, sir," Rudder had replied, "but if I
don't take it, it may not go."
The rangers were in LCA boats manned by British seamen (the rangers had trained with
British commandos and were therefore accustomed to working with British sailors). The LCA
was built in England on the basic design of Andrew Higgins's boat, but the British added
some light armor to the sides and gunwales. That made the LCA slower and heavier -- the
British were sacrificing mobility to increase security -- which meant that the LCA rode
lower in the water than the LCVP.
On D-Day morning all the LCAs carrying the rangers took on water as spray washed over the
sides. One of the ten boats swamped shortly after leaving the transport area, taking the
CO of D Company and twenty men with it (they were picked up by an LCT a few hours later.
"Give us some dry clothes, weapons and ammunition, and get us back in to the Pointe.
We gotta get back!" Capt. "Duke" Slater said as he came out of the water.
But his men were so numb from the cold water that the ship's physician ordered them back
to England). One of the two supply boats bringing in ammunition and other gear also
swamped; the other supply boat had to jettison more than half its load to stay afloat.
That was but the beginning of the foul-ups. At 0630, as Rudder's lead LCA approached the
beach, he saw with dismay that the coxswain was headed toward Pointe-de-la-Percée, about
halfway between the Vierville draw and Pointe-du-Hoc. After some argument Rudder persuaded
the coxswain to turn right to the objective. The flotilla had to fight the tidal current
(the cause of the drift to the left) and proceeded only slowly parallel to the coast.
The error was costly. It caused the rangers to be thirty-five minutes late in touching
down, which gave the German defenders time to recover from the bombardment, climb out of
their dugouts, and man their positions. It also caused the flotilla to run a gauntlet of
fire from German guns along four kilometers of coastline. One of the four DUKWs was sunk
by a 20mm shell. Sgt. Frank South, a nineteen-year-old medic, recalled, "We were
getting a lot of machine-gun fire from our left flank, alongside the cliff, and we could
not, for the life of us, locate the fire." Lieutenant Eikner remembered "balling
water with our helmets, dodging bullets, and vomiting all at the same time."
Copyright © 1998 by Ambrose Tubbs, Inc. Reproduced by permission of Simon & Schuster.
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