by Army Maj. Adam Hallmark
4-25 IBCT Public Affairs
6/17/2014 - SAINTE-MERE-ÉGLISE, France -- Seventy
years after the launch of the largest air- and seaborne operation in
the history of warfare, paratroopers with the 4th Infantry Brigade
Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division from Joint Base
Elmendorf-Richardson took part in a ceremony to commemorate the actions
of one of its units in the small French village of Angoville-au-Plain
June 7.
The 501st Infantry Regiment (of which today's 1st Battalion is assigned
to the Spartan Brigade) fought as the 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment
under the 101st Airborne Division during World War II.
The 501st PIR played a key role in all of the division's engagements,
including Operation Overlord in Normandy and Operation Market Garden in
Holland, and the Battle of the Bulge in Belgium.
However, it was during the Normandy campaign that the 501st got its first real taste of combat.
Activated at Camp Toccoa, Ga., in 1942 and built upon the Army's famed
parachute test platoon, the 501st was commanded by Col. Howard "Jumpy"
Johnson until his death during Operation Market Garden in October 1944.
In Normandy, the 101st Airborne Division tasked Johnson and the 501st to
drop in north and east of the town of Carentan in order to secure the
La Barquette locks on the Douve River.
That plan did not survive initial contact with the enemy.
Intense German anti-aircraft fire over Normandy forced many C-47
Skytrain pilots to take evasive action, leading to missed drop zones for
soldiers of both the 101st and 82nd Airborne Divisions.
So erratic were the drops, some paratroopers found themselves a staggering 21 miles from their planned drop zones.
The error forced paratroopers from various units to form hodgepodge
fighting outfits until the confusion could be sorted out, leading to
what later became known as little groups of paratroopers, or LGOPs for
short.
To the dismay of German forces, the initiative, adaptability and the
"can-do" fighting spirit of the American paratrooper won the day despite
the initial setback.
"These men knew what they had to accomplish," said Robert Wright Jr. of
Port Richey, Fla., and the son of one of Angoville-au-Plain's two
celebrated heroes.
"When my father was here on D-Day, he worked alongside soldiers from not
only his own regiment (501st), but even the 506th [Parachute Infantry
Regiment] as well."
Robert Wright Sr., a senior line medic with Dog Company, 501st PIR,
jumped from his C-47 and came down near a stream running through a farm
field roughly 150 yards from the town's 11th-century church.
That building would become the location for a pivotal moment in his
life, the actions within and around it forever etched in his memory.
As action with the occupying German forces intensified around
Angoville-au-Plain, the village church soon found a new role as a
makeshift casualty collection point and aid station.
Wright Sr., along with Able Company, 501st PIR senior line medic Kenneth
Moore, took charge of first aid operations within the church.
Meanwhile, the battle outside raged for three days.
The church, along with Wright Sr. and Moore's personal safety, changed
hands a number of times, but it's what they managed to accomplish in
conjunction with their primary duties that proved remarkable.
"It was Dad's idea to bar any weapons whatsoever from being brought inside the church," said Wright Jr.
Easy enough when you're working alongside friendly forces; difficult to
impossible when enemy forces are entered into the equation.
However, that's exactly what Wright Sr. and Moore accomplished.
"When a German officer walked into the church, dad told him he had to leave his weapon outside," said Wright, Jr.
"The German hesitated at first, but when he saw that dad and [Kenneth]
Moore were also treating wounded German soldiers, he complied and the
church was marked with a red cross and made off-limits to military
action."
At one point, a mortar round came through the roof of the church and landed inside without exploding.
Wright Jr. said that his father, without a second thought, picked it up and threw it outside.
Wright Sr. and Moore's courage and devotion to duty during the action,
which finally subsided on June 8, 1944, earned them both Silver Stars.
When it was finally over, Wright Sr. and Moore had treated 80 wounded
American and German soldiers, losing only three in the process. They
also treated a very young boy from the village, who survived.
The broken windows were replaced later with stained-glass depictions of
paratroopers, but the building still bears bullet scars - and the
blood-stained wooden pews that served as hospital beds.
Although separated by an ocean, the Wright family and the people of Angoville-au-Plain share a special bond.
"Many of the people here today are the children and grandchildren of those who lived here on June 6," explained Wright Jr.
Like many World War II veterans, Wright Sr., who passed away last
December, was not one to openly talk about his wartime experiences.
"Growing up, I didn't have an appreciation for what my father did during
the war because he never talked about it," said Wright, Jr. "It wasn't
till later in life . . . that he began to open up - but the people here
[in Angoville-au-Plain] knew what he did.
The June 7 ceremony wasn't Wright Jr.'s first - he's attended others.
When asked why he keeps coming back, he explained that such ceremonies
were important to his father and that it's important to carry on his
legacy.
More importantly for Wright Jr., there's another reason why he keeps coming back.
"If anything, these people [of Angoville-au-Plain] helped me to learn who my father was," he added.
Seventy years after the action that took place there, the impact that
Wright Sr. and Moore had on this rural French community and surrounding
area is still visible.
Only about 50 people call Angoville-au-Plain home these days.
But on June 7, 500 people turned out to remember what two young privates of the 501st PIR accomplished all those years ago.
Tuesday, June 17, 2014
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