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Eisenhower and His Boys - The Men of World War II
by Stephen Ambrose
USS Satterlee and HMS Talybont, destroyers, saw what was happening and came in close to
fire with all guns at the Germans. That helped to drive some of the Germans back from the
edge of the cliff. D Company had been scheduled to land on the west side of the point, but
because of the error in navigation Rudder signaled by hand that the two LCAs carrying the
remaining D Company troops join the other seven and land side by side along the east side.
Lt. George Kerchner, a platoon leader in D Company, recalled that when his LCA made its
turn to head into the beach, "My thought was that this whole thing is a big mistake,
that none of us were ever going to get up that cliff." But then the destroyers
started firing and drove some of the Germans back from the edge of the cliff. Forty-eight
years later then retired Colonel Kerchner commented "Some day I would love to meet up
with somebody from Satterlee so I can shake his hand and thank him."
The beach at Pointe-du-Hoc was only ten meters in width as the flotilla approached, and
shrinking rapidly as the tide was coming in (at high tide there would be virtually no
beach). There was no sand, only shingle. The bombardment from air and sea had brought huge
chunks of the clay soil from the point tumbling down, making the rocks slippery but also
providing an eight-meter buildup at the base of the cliff that gave the rangers something
of a head start in climbing the forty-meter cliff.
The rangers had a number of ingenious devices to help them get to the top. One was
twenty-five-meter extension ladders mounted in the DUKWs, provided by the London Fire
Department. But one DUKW was already sunk, and the other three could not get a footing on
the shingle, which was covered with wet clay and thus rather like greased ball bearings.
Only one ladder was extended.
Sgt. William Stivinson climbed to the top to fire his machine gun. He was swaying back and
forth like a metronome, German tracers whipping about him. Lt. Elmer "Dutch"
Vermeer described the scene: "The ladder was swaying at about a forty-five-degree
angle -- both ways. Stivinson would fire short bursts as he passed over the cliff at the
top of the arch, but the DUKW floundered so badly that they had to bring the fire ladder
back down."
The basic method of climbing was by rope. Each LCA carried three pairs of rocket guns,
firing steel grapnels which pulled up plain three-quarter-inch ropes, toggle ropes, or
rope ladders. The rockets were fired just before touchdown. Grapnels with attached ropes
were an ancient technique for scaling a wall or cliff, tried and proven. But in this case,
the ropes had been soaked by the spray and in many cases were too heavy. Rangers watched
with sinking hearts as the grapnels arched in toward the cliff, only to fall short from
the weight of the ropes. Still, at least one grapnel and rope from each LCA made it; the
grapnels grabbed the earth, and the dangling ropes provided a way to climb the cliff.
To get to the ropes, the rangers had to disembark and cross the narrow strip of beach to
the base of the cliff. To get there they had two problems to overcome. The first was a
German machine gun on the rangers' left flank, firing across the beach. It killed or
wounded fifteen men as it swept bullets back and forth across the beach.
Colonel Rudder was one of the first to make it to the beach. With him was Col. Travis
Trevor, a British commando who had assisted in the training of the rangers. He began
walking the beach, giving encouragement. Rudder described him as "a great big [six
feet four inches], black-haired son of a gun -- one of those staunch Britishers."
Lieutenant Vermeer yelled at him, "How in the world can you do that when you are
being fired at?"
Copyright © 1998 by Ambrose Tubbs, Inc. Reproduced by permission of Simon & Schuster.
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