Almont North Dakota
1906 Centennial 2006
Home Stories WWII Combat Engineer Medic - New for Veterans Day
Friday, 04 November 2005
I started doing interviews for
the North Dakota Veteran History Project in the fall of 2004. Through
this I started interviewing other veterans besides just the aviators.
In January of 2005, I was asked to interview Bob
Feland, a man I have known for many years but I didn’t know a lot
about his WW2 experiences. He used to farm and ranch south of Almont
ND. He is an old cowboy, a farrier and local brand inspector. He
now lives in Flasher ND.
This Is His Story
Robert O Feland was born
in Almont ND on January 2, 1921. After finishing Grade School and
completing one year of High School, Bob started to farm and ranch with his
father south of Almont. When the US entered WWII, Bob was drafted
into the Army and entered the service on May 27, 1942. He took his
Basic training in Illinois at camp Grant for 13 weeks then went to New Jersey,
then to South Carolina, then back to Jersey. Bob was assigned to the
540th Combat Engineer Battalion as a Medic and boarded a Troop Ship bound
for North Africa. The trip across lasted 28 days.
The 540th participated in the North African landings at St. Rafael
in French Morocco. The landings began in the wee hours of August 7,
1942. Bob was told to board Higgins boat number one (Landing Craft),
when Bob got to #1, it was full, he was told to go on to #7, when he got
to #7 he was told to go to #13. Great thought Bob, how unlucky can
I get. Bob had quite a time getting down the ladder into the Higgins
boat, the seas were rough and the boat kept rising and falling along side
the troop ship. Bob finally got off the rope ladder into the boat,
landing right on his head in the process. The landing craft pulled
onto the beach under fire where everyone got off and dug in. The next
day Bob found out how lucky he was, Higgins boat 1 and 7 had taken direct
hits killing all aboard. Higgins boat # 13 had come in with hardly
a scratch! From this day on for all his life, number 13 is Bob’s
lucky number!! Another of Bob’s close calls happened on the
beach after the landing. Bob was standing talking to an Officer when
he felt a tug on his sleeve, at the same moment the officer crumpled to
the ground. The tug on Bobs sleeve was a bullet passing threw the
material and on to shatter the knee of the officer standing next to him. Bob
treated his wound and he was sent back on a boat to a Hospital ship.
After a 3 day battle they fought their way into St. Rafael. The
fighting then continued on to Rabat, Casablanca and Algeria. This
took all fall, winter and spring. From here the 540th was loaded on
ships again and made their way to the 2nd landing Bob participated in, July
10th, 1943, Sicily. After fighting through Sicily to Palermo, the
540th was loaded again on ships and went on to their next landing (#3) at
Salerno, Italy, Sept. 9,1943.
At Salerno during the heavy fighting Bob witnessed
something that is not often talked about. A Lieutenant came from the
front lines with 5 German prisoners. He said to the Sergeant there, “Send
these prisoners to the rear, I have to get back.” “Sure
thing Lieutenant” the Sergeant said. The Lieutenant jumped in
his jeep and as soon as he disappeared over the hill the Sergeant turned
his automatic on the prisoners and shot them all. This shocked Bob,
he knew what he just saw was not right but the Sergeant outranked him. Bob
turned and walked away. The monsters weren’t all on the enemy
side.
They fought their way up to Naples then boarded
ships again for the landing (#4) at Anzio, January 25th,1944. Here
they held a beach head, 18 miles long and 8 miles deep for 3 months. It
was here that Bob received a Silver Star. He got another soldier to
help him pull 12 wounded men out of a mine field under constant enemy fire. He
was awarded the medal by General Mark Clark.
One day as they sat in their holes, (protection
against the German artillery that was almost always coming in on the beach-head),
they noticed a B-24 coming in low from the ocean side, obviously in trouble,
the plane came over the Allied lines then over the Germans and attracted
lots of fire, the plane turned back toward the beach-head, gaining a little
altitude and as soon as the plane crossed over the lines again the crew
of the plane started parachuting out. The last flyer had just cleared
the plane when it nosed down and erupted in a terrific explosion right in
a ration dump, tons of food and supplies were destroyed but no lives were
lost. Another time Bob looked up to see an American L-4 Piper Cub
coming for the allied lines at tree top level with its little engine wound
out for all it was worth. Back behind the L-4 were two German fighters
gaining rapidly on the little plane. When the L-4 got to the American
lines, it dived behind a row of trees and quickly landed. The two
German fighters (ME109s) kept coming on and ran into a hailstorm of Allied
fire, both fighters were shot down.
The 540th Combat Engineers were almost always toward
the front near the fighting. As the Germans retreated, they destroyed
docks, roads, bridges, or anything else the Allies could use. The
engineers had to be right up there, rebuilding the docks, roads, bridges
even if it meant being in the middle of the fighting. The Germans
had also sown large areas with land mines that the Engineers had to clear. Losses
were high and many were wounded. By the time they had reached Anzio,
Bob had treated many casualties, some made it, some didn’t. The
main thing was to get the bleeding stopped and get them to the aid station. Bob
would give morphine shots, throw some sulfa powder in the wound, wad up
a bunch of gauze and push it in the wound, securing it with tape, applying
a tourniquet if needed. By this time many of Bob’s friends that
he had started out with had been killed or wounded. New green troops
came in and many of them also ended up killed or wounded. It got to
the point that Bob didn’t want to get to know anyone very good anymore
because eventually they would become casualties. Bob figured it wouldn’t
be long before he would be a casualty. He had had too many close calls
and one of these times his luck was bound to run out. In one instance,
Bob and another soldier were sitting in their hole during a German mortar
barrage when, THUNK, a mortar landed right in their hole practically between
the knees of the other soldier and only a few feet from where Bob sat. The
mortar round turned out to be a dud but the other soldier jumped strait
up out of the hole and ran down the hill screaming, Bob never saw him again,
he had lost his mind and was removed from the fighting.
They finally broke out of the beach head and headed
for Rome and on June 4th Rome was taken by the Allies. June 6 was
the ”D Day” landing at Normandy in France. From here on Italy
was a holding action to keep German units busy so they could not be pulled
up to the Normandy front. It would have been nice to stay in Italy
but Combat Engineers are always needed elsewhere, the 540th were loaded
on ships again. August 15th, 1944 found the allies hitting the beaches
between Nice and Marseilles, France. This was to be Bobs 5th and final
amphibious landing.
All through the fall of 1944, the 540th fought
and worked their way up through France towards Belgium and Germany, repairing
roads and bridges as they went. A poignant incident happened during
this time. One day Bob was assigned ambulance duty driving up to the
front, loading up wounded, and then taking them back to the clearing hospital. Some
of the areas he was driving through had just experienced heavy fighting,
bodies lay along side the road and by this time in the war, Bob hardly noticed
them any more. As Bob was driving along he saw a dead woman in the
ditch ahead of him, beside the woman was a little girl, and she was ALIVE!! Bob
hit the breaks, opened the ambulance door and motioned to the little girl. The
girl left the dead woman, who Bob believed was her mother, and ran for the
open door, she crawled up in with Bob and sat beside him as close as she
could get. Bob judged her to be about 3 or 4 years old and she didn’t
know a word of English, and Bob knew vary little French but they were able
to communicate on a limited basis. Little Girl (that’s what
Bob called her) rode with Bob for the rest of the day and when Bob went
back to camp that night she stuck near Bobs side threw the chow line and
Bob lined up a plate and food for her and did she EAT! Bob said she
put away food like she was full grown. When Bob went to his tent,
Little Girl came right along and when Bob crawled in his blankets, Little
Girl snuggled in beside him and went fast to sleep. Next morning at
breakfast there she was right beside Bob with Bob helping her with her plate. All
that day, she rode with Bob in the ambulance. When they got in that
night, there were two French nurses waiting for them. Someone must
have gotten word to the French authorities. Bob gave Little Girl over
to the nurses and turned to leave. Little Girl started to cry. Bob
looked back, one of the nurses was holding her back but her arms were stretched
out toward Bob. She wanted to go with him! That was the last
time Bob saw Little Girl. She was such a pretty little thing, long
dark curls that fell down on her shoulders. She would be about 64
years old today.
As Bob treated American wounded, he also came to
the aid of German casualties. One time he came on a mortally wounded
German Officer. The Officer was conscious and laying on his back and
could move his right arm but vary little. The Officer looked at Bob
and feebly pointed toward his billfold in his left breast pocket, Bob took
it out and the Officer beckoned him to open it up. Bob found a picture
of a young lady with a baby, the Officer reached for the picture and Bob
gave it to him. The German Officer took the picture and looked at
it briefly, laid it down on his lips, closed his eyes and died. This
left Bob holding the Officers billfold and he looked inside and found it
full of French money. Bob took the money with him but didn’t
say a word about it to anybody. He figured if the others knew he had
it they would be trying to get it from him. Bob didn’t feel
comfortable having this money and the first French town they came to Bob
found the bank and went in, he found a banker that could speak English and
explained what had happened and asked what he should do with the money. The
French banker smiled and said “Well I guess the moneys yours”. Bob
said “What should I do with French money?” The banker
said “Lets see it”. After some figuring he handed Bob
American money. Bob walked out of the Bank with four to five hundred
dollars, this at a time when Bob was making $20 a month. He went to
the PX, made out a money order and sent it all home to his folks. Spoils
of war!!
Several times as battles raged in the area of Belgian,
truces were formed between the combatants so the dead and wounded could
be taken care of. Bob remembers vary well working shoulder to shoulder
with German medics and soldiers, these were some of the most heroic and
humanitarian truces of the Second World War.
The Allies pushed all the way to Germany’s
doorstep but had stretched their supply lines nearly to the breaking point. The
Allies dug in and held the line until the supply situation could be rectified. It
was thought the German Army was on its last legs with no fuel to run its
Panzers, thus they thought there was vary little chance of a German counteroffensive. The
Allies held a thin defensive line and waited for the supply lines to catch
up.
At exactly 5:30 a.m. on December 16, 1944 an American
sentry in the Ardennes reported numerous flashes along the German lines,
moments later the Allied lines withered under a heavy artillery barrage. These
were the opening shots in the Battle of the Bulge. December 16 found
Bob and the 540th in southern Belgium, south of the main German offensive. Miles
of constantina wire was laid out in the valley below the camp and positions
were reinforced. All the fighting was going on way up north-west of
the 540th, around Bastogne and towards the last of December it looked like
the Allies were finally getting the upper hand with reinforcements coming
in. The Germans momentum had slowed tell it was stopped.
In the early morning of New Years Day the Germans hit the line where
Bob was, tanks came tearing across the valley and were piled high with
German troops wearing white battle dress. German soldiers tried
to get across the wire in the valley and were cut down by American
machine guns positioned on the slopes but they just kept coming, wave
after wave were cut down, finally so many bodies fell on the wire that
the following troops could run right over the top of the wire by stepping
on the piled bodies. On and on they came, supported by armor
units. Finally it was realized that the Americans could no longer
hold the line. The order was given to fall back. It was
a rout, every man for himself, every one started running for the hills. It
happened so quickly that everything was left behind, trucks, jeeps,
tents, rations, equipment. Bob himself lost everything he had. The
only thing he had was the clothes on his back and his aid kit. Bob
was in with 7 other guys, and as they climbed higher up into the wooded
hills, they could see the Germans moving in through the valleys. This
German attack was called, Nordwind (North Wind). It was a diversionary
scheme to lure American Third Army troops away from Bastogne. The
group of 8 American soldiers were now behind enemy lines. They
walked all day in the snow avoiding the Germans and trying to get back
to their lines. Late that evening Bob said they were cold, wet
and hungry. They were walking along a rock wall next to a road
when they came to a house and met a Frenchman. He invited them
all in his house to warm by his fire. He then gave them some
bread and wine. This house was right beside the main road, Bob
said they tried to get some sleep but all night they could hear the
German tanks and trucks going by. They also heard hundreds of
enemy soldiers marching past the house with their hob nailed boots. The
next morning they got bread and wine for breakfast, then snuck out
again along the rock wall and headed back up into the hills. As
they were wondering which way to go to get back to their lines, they
noticed the sound of gunfire coming from different directions. Bob
could tell by now where the Americans were by the sound of the machine
guns. German guns buzzed! The American machine guns went
off with a methodical “chuk chuk chuk”. The small
group of Americans walked toward the sound of the American gun fire. The
days were short this time of year and it got dark before they could
reach friendly lines. They again were cold, wet and hungry so
they just dept walking. It was really dark now and from out of
the darkness they were startled by a shout, “Who goes there!” From
Bob’s little group, one individual (who shall remain nameless)
let out a string of cuss words that would have made an old army cook
blush! We’re cold and hungry and have been walking for
two days! Come forward and be recognized, the challenger said. The
weary soldiers walked up to a machine gun emplacement and one of the
guys manning it said, “We were ready to shoot but when we heard
all that cussing, well we knew no German would be able to cuss like
that!” Bob and the others were able to get back to their
Battalion that was in a state of disarray with soldiers coming in from
all over. The Battalion was trying to reorganize and reequip. Bob
himself had to be issued all new clothing and gear. Although
nothing would replace his personal effects, Bob felt lucky not
to have been captured or killed.
The Battle of the Bulge was finally over (officially)
on January 28th, 1945 with 81 thousand American casualties. The Germans
lost around one hundred thousand men. A terrible price to be paid
by both sides.
It took a short time for the 540th Combat Engineer
Battalion to reequip and reorganize and as soon as the Bulge was over they
were on the move again repairing bridges and roads and pushing the Germans
back into Germany. One day Bob was assigned to a 12 man search and
destroy patrol whose job it was to find and eliminate German squads that
were roaming the allied lines. That night they camped in the forest. Bob
and another soldier dug in and set up their shelters halves, crawled into
their sleeping bags and fell into a deep sleep. During the night and
the next day a very heavy snow fell and when Bob and the other soldier woke
it was late the next day! The rest of the patrol had left! The
tents had been widely dispersed and the others must not have been able to
find their covered tent in the deep snow. The snow had fallen so heavy
that there weren’t even any tracks to show which way they had gone. The
two headed out on there own to find their way back. They walked the
rest of the day into the night and as usual it was pitch black out. They
were going to stop for the night when Bob caught the smell of bacon on the
cold night air. Bob fallowed his nose and the bacon smell got stronger. They
couldn’t see a thing but the bacon smell kept them going. All
the sudden they walked right into the side of a tent, they got inside and
here it was the mess kitchen for an infantry unit. Bob and the other
soldier took on a feed of bacon, eggs and pancakes! The next morning
they made it back to the 540th.
They fought on and by March they finally reached
the Rein at Manhiem. The fighting at Manheim was such that the city
was virtually destroyed. The bridges over the Rein were demolished
by the Germans so the engineers had to get to the river to set up pontoon
bridges.
At this time Bob was driving ambulance from the
aid station at the front, back to the clearing hospital in the rear. One
place Bob had to drive threw a railroad tunnel and at the point where he
had to come out of the tunnel, the Germans had this area zeroed in with
their artillery and the place was cluttered with wrecked tanks, jeeps and
trucks. Driving threw this area was like playing Russian Roulette,
you just hoped you could make it threw between the bursts. The noise
was horrific, then it was driving into the aid station, stop, load up as
many wounded as possible – at times Bob even had wounded soldiers
laying on the floor under his legs as he drove. Then it was back to
the clearing hospital. After the wounded were unloaded it was back
to the aid station again. Bob drove ambulance in the Manheim battle
for 48 hours straight. When he was finally relieved he fell exhausted
in his tent and went immediately asleep. Bobs ambulance was so shot
up and damaged by shrapnel during the Manheim battle that they had to give
him a new one.
Another thing that happened in the area of Manheim
was encountering German women soldiers, probably belonging to the SS. These
women soldiers worked as snipers against the Allied troops and some were
captured. Bob said these gals were really good looking but you really
had to stay clear of them, they would shout all sorts of threats and curses,
if you got close enough to them they would throw something at you or spit
on you. Most of the German prisoners were easy to get along with,
many were glad not to be fighting anymore, but not these women! Bob
had to treat several of them and really had to watch it around them!! They
may have been prisoners but they weren’t ready to give up!
The end of the war found Bob at Munich and finally
the end of the fighting. Bob had survived and finally was preparing
to go home. They were pulled back to Marseilles, France. From
here they boarded B-24 bombers outfitted as transports. They flew
down across Spain and Gibraltar to Casablanca, North Africa. Then
Bob boarded a twin engine C-47 for the flight across the ocean. They
flew to the Azores, then on to Bermuda. On the way to Bermuda, a fire
started in the right engine. This plane was not outfitted for a water ditching,
no life rafts and no life preservers among the thirty plus soldiers on this
plane. Bob thought, here I am, I’ve just survived three years
of some of the bloodiest fighting in the Second World War without so much
as a scratch and when I’m finally coming home I’ll be lost in
the ocean. Luckily the pilots got the engine shut down and the fire
out so they could limp into Bermuda on one engine. After being in
Bermuda for several hours with mechanics working on the troubled engine,
it was declared good to go so everyone boarded again and took off for Miami,
Florida. When they were nearing the Florida coast the right engine
caught fire again. About this time Bob was wishing he could have gotten
on a nice slow but safe boat to get home! This time the pilots could
not get the fire put out so they just pushed the throttles on full and headed
for the Miami airport. They finally landed and the hot molten metal
coming off the wing and engine bounced higher than the plane as it rolled
down the runway, but they made it. This was the last time Bob ever
set foot on an airplane! From here Bob got on a train to Wisconsin
where he got his discharge.
Bob served over three years as a Medic with the
Engineers. The only time he ever carried a weapon was the first landing
at French Morocco and he never even fired it, he said it just got in his
way when he was trying to take care of the wounded, he refused to carry
one from then on.
In addition to the Silver Star, Bob received seven Battle Stars for
the 7 major actions he participated in, (Five amphibious landings and
two land battles). The only major battle Bob missed in Europe
was the Normandy invasion. His rank at discharge was Corporal
Technician, 5th grade
Sources: Personal interview with Bob Feland, The Complete History of
World War II by Francis Trevelyan Miller, Time Life Books: The Battle
of the Bulge.
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