1 00:00:02,503 --> 00:00:05,715 NARRATOR: As an American private covers the retreat of his fellow soldiers, 2 00:00:08,301 --> 00:00:11,345 a blast from a German tank throws him off his feet. 3 00:00:14,599 --> 00:00:18,561 The explosion destroys his machine gun and breaks his glasses. 4 00:00:20,063 --> 00:00:23,232 He retrieves a rifle and continues to hold the line. 5 00:00:26,527 --> 00:00:32,575 On June 6th, 1944 allied forces finally land troops in Normandy. 6 00:00:33,618 --> 00:00:35,745 {\an8}To open the western front. 7 00:00:36,537 --> 00:00:38,331 (speaking in native language) 8 00:00:38,623 --> 00:00:41,000 NARRATOR: But Nazi fanatics and diehards continue 9 00:00:41,375 --> 00:00:43,836 to fight ferociously for survival. 10 00:00:46,339 --> 00:00:48,424 (rapid gunfire) 11 00:00:49,300 --> 00:00:51,511 D-Day was a battle. 12 00:00:53,221 --> 00:00:55,765 They still need to win the war. 13 00:01:06,317 --> 00:01:08,903 NARRATOR: January 9th, 1945. 14 00:01:10,696 --> 00:01:12,824 The Alsace region, France. 15 00:01:15,701 --> 00:01:18,579 American Private First-Class Glenn Schmidt scrambles through 16 00:01:18,579 --> 00:01:21,707 the snow clutching a Browning automatic rifle. 17 00:01:23,835 --> 00:01:27,797 Germans ambushed his patrol outside the French town of Hatten. 18 00:01:28,840 --> 00:01:32,927 In the firefight, Schmidt’s B.A.R. jammed and he’s shot twice. 19 00:01:32,927 --> 00:01:37,098 One blast knocked off his helmet and another bloodies his face. 20 00:01:38,224 --> 00:01:40,017 He’s the sole survivor. 21 00:01:40,017 --> 00:01:44,564 JOHN: The patrol Schmidt is on is extraordinarily unlucky. 22 00:01:44,564 --> 00:01:46,774 {\an8}They're doing something that's pretty routine, 23 00:01:46,774 --> 00:01:49,235 {\an8}and they just happen to be out there when the Germans are about 24 00:01:49,235 --> 00:01:50,987 to launch their attacks. 25 00:01:51,863 --> 00:01:53,781 NARRATOR: With enemy soldiers in pursuit, 26 00:01:53,781 --> 00:01:57,285 Schmidt must get word to a commanding officer. 27 00:01:57,285 --> 00:02:02,707 JOHN: In this case, the information you've gathered is firsthand information. 28 00:02:02,707 --> 00:02:04,917 Schmitt is kind of lucky to even get out of there 29 00:02:04,917 --> 00:02:08,004 more or less unscathed compared to many others. 30 00:02:09,213 --> 00:02:12,425 NARRATOR: The Germans are in the midst of the Battle of the Bulge. 31 00:02:12,425 --> 00:02:15,136 PETER: As Wacht Am Rhein loses momentum, 32 00:02:15,136 --> 00:02:19,557 Hitler decides to attack at a weaker part of the front. 33 00:02:19,557 --> 00:02:24,145 {\an8}This would mean that the American and the British attention 34 00:02:24,145 --> 00:02:27,190 {\an8}is drawn away from the northern battles. 35 00:02:28,482 --> 00:02:31,319 NARRATOR: For this operation, known as Nordwind, 36 00:02:31,319 --> 00:02:33,154 Hitler appoints Heinrich Himmler, 37 00:02:33,154 --> 00:02:37,450 Reichsfuhrer and head of the SS, in his first military command. 38 00:02:38,701 --> 00:02:42,788 PETER: As the war progresses, Hitler trusts less and less people. 39 00:02:42,788 --> 00:02:45,208 However, there's one exception, Himmler, 40 00:02:45,208 --> 00:02:48,794 and he knows for sure that Himmler will always be loyal to him. 41 00:02:49,921 --> 00:02:54,550 NARRATOR: Himmler is eager to impress and mark Hitler’s anniversary as Fuhrer. 42 00:02:54,550 --> 00:02:58,930 PETER: Himmler's goal is to recapture Strasbourg and present it to 43 00:02:58,930 --> 00:03:02,892 Hitler as a gift for the 12th anniversary of the seizure 44 00:03:02,892 --> 00:03:05,811 of power on the 30th of January. 45 00:03:07,063 --> 00:03:09,774 NARRATOR: As the capital of the Alsace region, 46 00:03:09,774 --> 00:03:14,528 Strasbourg had been liberated in late November by free French troops. 47 00:03:14,528 --> 00:03:16,447 Himmler’s success... 48 00:03:16,447 --> 00:03:18,449 PETER: Would mean a major blow for 49 00:03:18,449 --> 00:03:21,077 the American French alliance. 50 00:03:24,497 --> 00:03:26,874 NARRATOR: 25 miles northeast of Strasbourg, 51 00:03:26,874 --> 00:03:28,459 outside the village of Hatten, 52 00:03:31,087 --> 00:03:33,965 Private Schmidt races for the American line. 53 00:03:38,928 --> 00:03:41,472 Suddenly the night erupts in white light. 54 00:03:43,975 --> 00:03:45,893 Schmidt is struck. 55 00:03:45,893 --> 00:03:50,564 His back burns and he rolls over in the snow to cool the heat. 56 00:03:52,608 --> 00:03:54,235 JOHN: He must have been frightened out of his wits. 57 00:03:54,235 --> 00:03:57,697 He's wounded in several places. 58 00:03:57,697 --> 00:03:59,991 He's tattered and torn up. 59 00:04:01,158 --> 00:04:03,619 NARRATOR: The new wounds are from American phosphorus grenades 60 00:04:03,619 --> 00:04:08,040 and mortars fired by U.S. defenders into the Germans behind him. 61 00:04:14,797 --> 00:04:20,344 Still smoldering, he stumbles toward the safety of a bunker to join defenses there. 62 00:04:23,889 --> 00:04:28,769 At Pillbox nine, Schmidt reaches a section of the famous Maginot Line. 63 00:04:31,147 --> 00:04:33,482 {\an8}STEVEN: The Maginot Line is a fortified line 64 00:04:33,482 --> 00:04:36,319 {\an8}that the French army erected after World War I, 65 00:04:36,319 --> 00:04:38,863 {\an8}and it covered from roughly the Swiss border 66 00:04:38,863 --> 00:04:40,656 {\an8}all the way up to the Belgian frontier. 67 00:04:42,783 --> 00:04:46,454 NARRATOR: It contains massive reinforced concrete bunkers. 68 00:04:46,454 --> 00:04:49,832 STEVEN: Some of these bunkers were essentially underground cities. 69 00:04:49,832 --> 00:04:51,834 {\an8}You'd have large personnel bunkers. 70 00:04:51,834 --> 00:04:54,170 {\an8}You'd have all sorts of gun herds that would pop up 71 00:04:54,670 --> 00:04:56,088 on top of the bunkers. 72 00:04:56,088 --> 00:04:59,633 You'd have tunnels that would go between bunkers. 73 00:04:59,633 --> 00:05:03,137 NARRATOR: The concrete could be more than 11 feet thick. 74 00:05:03,137 --> 00:05:05,514 So, they could be bombarded by aircraft bombs, 75 00:05:05,514 --> 00:05:09,769 by artillery, and yet the troops within would still be protected. 76 00:05:10,811 --> 00:05:14,148 NARRATOR: The problem was when Germany invaded in 1940, 77 00:05:14,148 --> 00:05:16,025 they just went around it. 78 00:05:16,025 --> 00:05:18,778 STEVEN: So, the Germans never got through the Maginot Line. 79 00:05:18,778 --> 00:05:20,738 They instead avoided the Maginot Line and went through 80 00:05:20,738 --> 00:05:23,407 Belgium where the Maginot Line did not exist. 81 00:05:25,034 --> 00:05:27,495 NARRATOR: American forces now occupy the bunkers which must 82 00:05:27,495 --> 00:05:33,417 once again protect the French border against German attackers from the east. 83 00:05:44,512 --> 00:05:48,808 Oberstleutnant Karl Proll and his 35th Panzergrenadier Regiment 84 00:05:49,183 --> 00:05:51,352 spearhead the assault into Hatten. 85 00:05:55,064 --> 00:05:58,609 PETER: Karl Proll is a former NCO who commissioned later. 86 00:05:58,609 --> 00:06:02,321 He gets promoted very quickly due to his command performance 87 00:06:02,321 --> 00:06:04,323 on the eastern front. 88 00:06:04,323 --> 00:06:08,327 And he's the holder of some of the highest German military decorations. 89 00:06:17,420 --> 00:06:19,839 NARRATOR: From the woods, the Panzergrenadiers cross 90 00:06:19,839 --> 00:06:22,633 a large field toward the pillboxes. 91 00:06:26,262 --> 00:06:29,140 PETER: The Germans believe that the bunkers are unmanned, 92 00:06:29,140 --> 00:06:32,351 but suddenly, they run into a fierce resistance. 93 00:06:34,395 --> 00:06:37,231 NARRATOR: The lead elements come under fire from American mortar, 94 00:06:37,231 --> 00:06:39,442 machine guns and artillery. 95 00:06:40,192 --> 00:06:43,404 (rapid gunfire) 96 00:06:43,404 --> 00:06:46,782 They suffer very heavy casualties in the frontal attack. 97 00:06:58,794 --> 00:07:01,630 The survivors retreat back to the trees. 98 00:07:03,466 --> 00:07:06,469 PETER: Proll, who is a veteran from the eastern front, 99 00:07:06,469 --> 00:07:08,345 knows he must be flexible now and 100 00:07:08,345 --> 00:07:10,764 change his tactics and pivot. 101 00:07:17,229 --> 00:07:19,440 NARRATOR: Proll’s men and tanks must find a path between 102 00:07:19,440 --> 00:07:22,568 the American bunkers to attack Hatten directly. 103 00:07:25,613 --> 00:07:28,324 {\an8}Pillbox nine is one of a series of fortifications which 104 00:07:28,324 --> 00:07:31,827 {\an8}extend out up to a mile from the eastern edge of Hatten. 105 00:07:34,914 --> 00:07:36,790 {\an8}From a command post in the village, 106 00:07:36,790 --> 00:07:39,460 {\an8}A Company commander captain William Corson, 107 00:07:39,460 --> 00:07:41,295 coordinates the defenses. 108 00:07:41,295 --> 00:07:43,214 Pillbox five, come in. 109 00:07:43,214 --> 00:07:46,675 NARRATOR: They’re connected through telephone lines with radio back up. 110 00:07:46,675 --> 00:07:50,846 Word trickles in from across the front about the German attacks. 111 00:07:52,056 --> 00:07:54,058 {\an8}JOHN: Corson is doing what any commander wants to do in this 112 00:07:54,058 --> 00:07:56,519 {\an8}kind of circumstance, which is to gather as much 113 00:07:56,519 --> 00:07:58,479 {\an8}relevant information as he can. 114 00:07:58,479 --> 00:08:00,564 {\an8}And to do that, you have to stay in touch. 115 00:08:01,857 --> 00:08:04,777 NARRATOR: His unit from the 242nd Infantry Regiment, 116 00:08:04,777 --> 00:08:09,156 of the 42nd Division, only recently arrived in Europe. 117 00:08:10,866 --> 00:08:13,619 American command sent them to the Alsace to finish 118 00:08:13,619 --> 00:08:16,580 their training in what should’ve been a quiet sector. 119 00:08:19,291 --> 00:08:21,752 JOHN: The 42nd Division has these kind of strengths 120 00:08:21,752 --> 00:08:23,128 and weaknesses in that respect. 121 00:08:23,128 --> 00:08:26,298 The weakness is the inexperience, the kind of lack of organization, 122 00:08:26,298 --> 00:08:27,925 maybe the lack of confidence. 123 00:08:27,925 --> 00:08:32,179 But I think the strength is the, the newness of it might create a 124 00:08:32,179 --> 00:08:35,474 level of enthusiasm for fighting that may not be present in, 125 00:08:35,474 --> 00:08:37,309 in more hard-bitten units. 126 00:08:40,062 --> 00:08:44,358 NARRATOR: In response to the attacks, headquarters staff of the 242nd prepare 127 00:08:44,358 --> 00:08:47,069 improvised defenses in the village. 128 00:08:50,364 --> 00:08:54,952 Personnel lay mines to prevent German vehicles from passing through. 129 00:09:00,416 --> 00:09:02,084 Their minefield blocks the road in front of 130 00:09:02,084 --> 00:09:05,462 the first battalion command post just across from the church. 131 00:09:12,428 --> 00:09:16,015 Above the minefield, soldiers with bazookas take up position 132 00:09:16,015 --> 00:09:18,100 in the church steeple. 133 00:09:25,774 --> 00:09:29,194 They join an American artillery observer who has been there all morning. 134 00:09:29,194 --> 00:09:32,323 To direct fire in support of the Pillboxes. 135 00:09:32,781 --> 00:09:35,409 The Artillery Observer, besides maybe the Commander, 136 00:09:35,409 --> 00:09:39,079 is arguably the most important person in a, in a World War II fight. 137 00:09:39,079 --> 00:09:40,998 The Artillery Observer is the person controlling 138 00:09:40,998 --> 00:09:44,668 the most important firepower, the deadliest firepower, 139 00:09:44,668 --> 00:09:46,462 especially on the American side, 140 00:09:46,462 --> 00:09:49,173 where the artillery is just a fearsome weapon. 141 00:09:51,300 --> 00:09:55,262 NARRATOR: Back at Pillbox nine, Sergeant Alvin Cahoon, 142 00:09:55,262 --> 00:09:59,933 of A Company, had thrown back the first waves of 143 00:09:59,933 --> 00:10:02,311 the German assault against third Platoon’s position... 144 00:10:02,311 --> 00:10:04,229 MAN: Fire! 145 00:10:04,980 --> 00:10:07,566 NARRATOR: With help from artillery and mortar fire. 146 00:10:08,525 --> 00:10:12,821 But to the south, he observes a dangerous development. 147 00:10:12,821 --> 00:10:17,618 German tanks and infantry break through between Pillboxes four and five. 148 00:10:25,918 --> 00:10:29,963 NARRATOR: As the German tanks roll up, they have a chance to flank the bunkers, 149 00:10:29,963 --> 00:10:32,216 and make a straight shot into Hatten. 150 00:10:40,849 --> 00:10:46,689 But suddenly, American bazooka rounds blast into their armor 151 00:10:46,689 --> 00:10:49,066 from high in the village church. 152 00:10:49,566 --> 00:10:51,527 JOHN: It’s the best place to see any German units 153 00:10:51,527 --> 00:10:52,736 that are on the move. 154 00:10:52,736 --> 00:10:54,571 {\an8}German commander would certainly grasp that, 155 00:10:54,571 --> 00:10:56,865 {\an8}appreciate it, and would fixate immediately on that 156 00:10:56,865 --> 00:11:00,035 {\an8}church steeple as the, as the likely spot for an observer. 157 00:11:00,661 --> 00:11:02,371 NARRATOR: The Germans return fire, 158 00:11:04,832 --> 00:11:06,917 and destroy the tower. 159 00:11:08,293 --> 00:11:10,379 The shots eliminate the bazooka teams 160 00:11:10,379 --> 00:11:13,215 and the U.S. Artillery observer posted there. 161 00:11:14,133 --> 00:11:16,301 This means the Americans can no longer count on 162 00:11:16,301 --> 00:11:18,178 accurate artillery support. 163 00:11:18,178 --> 00:11:21,348 The losses weaken their defenses in the village. 164 00:11:24,643 --> 00:11:27,813 Below the steeple, personnel at the first Battalion Command Post 165 00:11:27,813 --> 00:11:30,858 take up positions to actively defend Hatten. 166 00:11:41,076 --> 00:11:45,539 Private First-Class Vito Bertoldo is one of the guards. 167 00:11:45,539 --> 00:11:48,542 JOHN: He has bad eyesight, which obviously can be an issue 168 00:11:48,542 --> 00:11:50,335 and yet he wants to be there. 169 00:11:50,335 --> 00:11:51,837 So, he had volunteered. 170 00:11:51,837 --> 00:11:53,589 He had tried very hard to get into the Army. 171 00:11:53,589 --> 00:11:54,590 Initially, they turned him away. 172 00:11:54,590 --> 00:11:58,135 Of course, as the war unfolds the standards get a little lower 173 00:11:58,135 --> 00:12:01,221 and they need more people, so he gets in on that basis, 174 00:12:01,221 --> 00:12:03,015 but he becomes a cook. 175 00:12:03,557 --> 00:12:06,769 NARRATOR: Bertoldo wasn’t really happy in this supporting role. 176 00:12:06,769 --> 00:12:09,813 JOHN: Bertoldo has already been something of a problem child 177 00:12:09,813 --> 00:12:11,440 for his Mess Sergeant. 178 00:12:11,440 --> 00:12:14,610 If you have a soldier you perceive as a problem or 179 00:12:14,610 --> 00:12:17,070 not that good, you’re going to want to put him where you think 180 00:12:17,070 --> 00:12:18,280 he’s going to do the least harm. 181 00:12:18,697 --> 00:12:20,073 NARRATOR: After arriving in Europe, 182 00:12:20,073 --> 00:12:23,285 Bertoldo’s senior officer, Captain William Corson, 183 00:12:23,744 --> 00:12:26,497 transfers him to guard duty in Hatten. 184 00:12:27,289 --> 00:12:29,416 JOHN: The transfer is not a promotion at all. 185 00:12:29,416 --> 00:12:31,710 It’s kind of a sidelining in a way. 186 00:12:36,465 --> 00:12:39,134 NARRATOR: But for Bertoldo, as a guard he’s one step closer 187 00:12:39,134 --> 00:12:40,761 to fighting Germans. 188 00:12:42,179 --> 00:12:44,097 JOHN: Bertoldo has been bragging to his buddies 189 00:12:44,097 --> 00:12:47,351 about how, you know, if he gets a crack at the Germans, man, 190 00:12:47,351 --> 00:12:49,394 what a hero he’s going to be. 191 00:12:49,394 --> 00:12:50,896 There’s so many stories like that, 192 00:12:50,896 --> 00:12:54,441 and the end of that story is almost always this guy talked 193 00:12:54,441 --> 00:12:56,944 a big game, but when the bullets flew, 194 00:12:56,944 --> 00:12:59,029 he was, you know, in a ditch. 195 00:13:00,072 --> 00:13:02,324 NARRATOR: The former cook now sets up a machine gun in 196 00:13:02,324 --> 00:13:04,117 the doorway and waits. 197 00:13:11,708 --> 00:13:14,336 As German rounds pepper the Battalion Command Post... 198 00:13:22,886 --> 00:13:23,929 Sergeant! 199 00:13:23,929 --> 00:13:27,391 NARRATOR: Enemy artillery knocks out the communication system. 200 00:13:27,891 --> 00:13:30,686 Before the attack, Captain Corson had direct lines 201 00:13:30,686 --> 00:13:32,479 to each of the Pillboxes. 202 00:13:34,690 --> 00:13:36,775 Now he’s cut off. 203 00:13:36,775 --> 00:13:41,280 The Commander always has to decide where to place himself on the battlefield. 204 00:13:41,280 --> 00:13:43,448 So, where is it appropriate for him to be? 205 00:13:47,661 --> 00:13:49,538 NARRATOR: Corson leaves the command post. 206 00:13:51,248 --> 00:13:55,502 He sets out to re-connect with his forward troops in the Pillboxes. 207 00:13:59,131 --> 00:14:03,260 As American artillery falters, Oberstleutnant Karl Proll’s men 208 00:14:03,260 --> 00:14:06,054 renew their attacks on the northern bunkers. 209 00:14:07,014 --> 00:14:11,768 (rapid gunfire) 210 00:14:11,768 --> 00:14:14,313 Pillbox nine holds out, 211 00:14:15,772 --> 00:14:18,317 but other U.S. positions give way. 212 00:14:30,662 --> 00:14:32,789 Further south... 213 00:14:32,789 --> 00:14:35,667 {\an8}The Jagdtiger was the largest, most powerful 214 00:14:35,667 --> 00:14:37,419 {\an8}armored vehicle of World War II. 215 00:14:39,004 --> 00:14:42,633 {\an8}The basic chassis was the same as the Royal Tiger heavy tank, 216 00:14:42,633 --> 00:14:46,053 {\an8}except that instead of having a turret with an 88-millimeter gun, 217 00:14:46,053 --> 00:14:50,140 {\an8}it had a fixed superstructure with even thicker armor and 218 00:14:50,140 --> 00:14:53,894 an even more powerful 128-millimeter gun. 219 00:14:53,894 --> 00:14:56,563 {\an8}NARRATOR: Used to attack and kill enemy tanks, 220 00:14:56,563 --> 00:15:00,484 {\an8}the 128-millimeter gun weighs five and a half tons 221 00:15:00,484 --> 00:15:03,779 {\an8}and can penetrate seven and a half feet of concrete at a range 222 00:15:03,779 --> 00:15:05,781 {\an8}of over half a mile. 223 00:15:07,532 --> 00:15:09,618 STEVEN: During the time of the fighting in Alsace, 224 00:15:09,618 --> 00:15:11,912 the German troops started to run into 225 00:15:11,912 --> 00:15:14,831 the old Maginot Line bunkers for defense. 226 00:15:14,831 --> 00:15:17,125 Adolf Hitler heard about this, and he said, 227 00:15:17,125 --> 00:15:19,252 "Ah-ha, I have the ideal weapon. 228 00:15:19,252 --> 00:15:22,381 Send some Jagdtigers down and have these powerful Jagdtigers 229 00:15:22,381 --> 00:15:24,383 blast away at the bunkers." 230 00:15:30,097 --> 00:15:32,140 NARRATOR: As tanks and Panzergrenadiers attack 231 00:15:32,140 --> 00:15:35,310 along the line, the American Pillboxes fall. 232 00:15:41,358 --> 00:15:44,653 Captain William Corson speeds toward Pillbox nine, 233 00:15:44,653 --> 00:15:47,114 hoping to re-establish communications. 234 00:15:48,740 --> 00:15:50,033 As he nears the bunker... 235 00:15:50,033 --> 00:15:51,660 (rapid gunfire) 236 00:15:51,660 --> 00:15:53,412 The jeep comes under fire. 237 00:15:54,663 --> 00:15:58,083 They bail out and find refuge in an empty mortar position. 238 00:15:59,042 --> 00:16:01,753 (rapid gunfire) 239 00:16:01,753 --> 00:16:04,756 Corson decides to make a run for the Pillbox. 240 00:16:05,924 --> 00:16:08,593 JOHN: This incident is a classic example of 241 00:16:08,593 --> 00:16:10,387 something you see in ground combat. 242 00:16:10,387 --> 00:16:13,181 Simple things become really difficult. 243 00:16:13,181 --> 00:16:15,559 He gets pinned down; he doesn’t know what’s going on. 244 00:16:15,559 --> 00:16:17,561 The communications are spotty. 245 00:16:17,561 --> 00:16:19,312 {\an8}Now, the simplest things become 246 00:16:19,312 --> 00:16:21,231 {\an8}extraordinarily difficult and deadly. 247 00:16:22,274 --> 00:16:23,984 NARRATOR: He leaves a walkie-talkie with one of 248 00:16:23,984 --> 00:16:27,195 his men at the jeep, to act as a relay for messages back 249 00:16:27,195 --> 00:16:29,740 to first Battalion in Hatten. 250 00:16:33,285 --> 00:16:35,996 With the Americans at the Pillboxes in a fight for their lives, 251 00:16:35,996 --> 00:16:37,998 German tanks and Panzergrenadiers 252 00:16:37,998 --> 00:16:40,417 press further into the village. 253 00:16:41,960 --> 00:16:44,171 JOHN: This is supposed to be in a rear area. 254 00:16:44,171 --> 00:16:46,131 I mean, technically, okay? 255 00:16:46,131 --> 00:16:47,799 So, here’s the first thing that’s gone wrong, 256 00:16:47,799 --> 00:16:51,011 all of a sudden, the Germans are there at this command post, 257 00:16:51,386 --> 00:16:53,680 a place where they were never supposed to be. 258 00:17:04,775 --> 00:17:07,110 (speaking in native language) 259 00:17:23,001 --> 00:17:25,420 {\an8}NARRATOR: Fortunately, the makeshift minefield outside 260 00:17:25,420 --> 00:17:28,381 {\an8}the U.S. 242nd Infantry Regiment, 261 00:17:28,381 --> 00:17:32,094 first battalion command post halts the German advance. 262 00:17:45,357 --> 00:17:48,610 Oberstleutnant Karl Proll’s Panzergrenadiers move out front 263 00:17:48,610 --> 00:17:50,779 to clear the mines. 264 00:17:56,034 --> 00:17:58,120 Private First-Class Vito Bertoldo doesn’t have 265 00:17:58,495 --> 00:18:01,123 a clear shot from the command post doorway. 266 00:18:04,167 --> 00:18:06,586 He decides to find a better angle. 267 00:18:06,586 --> 00:18:11,091 They take the machine gun into the middle of the street and set it up. 268 00:18:25,522 --> 00:18:26,439 MAN: Here! 269 00:18:26,439 --> 00:18:28,733 NARRATOR: In full sight of attacking enemy soldiers, 270 00:18:28,733 --> 00:18:31,528 American Private First-Class Vito Bertoldo 271 00:18:31,528 --> 00:18:34,030 opens fire with his machine gun. 272 00:18:34,030 --> 00:18:38,660 (rapid gunfire) 273 00:18:39,870 --> 00:18:42,497 He targets the German panzer units who attempt to clear 274 00:18:42,497 --> 00:18:45,667 a minefield that blocks the advance of their tanks. 275 00:18:53,175 --> 00:18:56,386 Bertoldo forces their retreat. 276 00:19:00,557 --> 00:19:04,019 He and his assistant pick up the machine gun to relocate. 277 00:19:05,979 --> 00:19:08,857 {\an8}Bertoldo, has been trained like any other soldier, 278 00:19:08,857 --> 00:19:12,277 {\an8}that a, an effective machine gunner displaces. 279 00:19:12,277 --> 00:19:14,821 Because of course, a machine gun is the target for the enemy. 280 00:19:14,821 --> 00:19:16,907 It's a deadly weapon. 281 00:19:20,827 --> 00:19:23,788 NARRATOR: Outside Hatten, Captain William Corson breaks 282 00:19:23,788 --> 00:19:27,167 through the German fire and arrives at Pillbox nine. 283 00:19:28,793 --> 00:19:32,297 He finds Sergeant Alvin Cahoon and other members of A Company, 284 00:19:32,297 --> 00:19:35,467 of the 242nd Infantry Regiment. 285 00:19:37,594 --> 00:19:38,762 But they’re low on ammunition and 286 00:19:38,762 --> 00:19:41,640 have many wounded who need evacuation. 287 00:19:44,392 --> 00:19:46,853 By this time, most of the American defenses along 288 00:19:46,853 --> 00:19:49,606 {\an8}their sector of the Maginot Line have crumbled, 289 00:19:50,065 --> 00:19:53,276 {\an8}but Pillbox nine in the north continues to resist. 290 00:19:55,445 --> 00:19:58,281 Corson relays the regimental orders; 291 00:19:58,281 --> 00:20:01,576 to continue to hold at all costs. 292 00:20:01,910 --> 00:20:04,037 We are requesting artillery support. 293 00:20:04,037 --> 00:20:05,205 Copy. 294 00:20:05,205 --> 00:20:07,791 NARRATOR: He also tries to contact his relay man at 295 00:20:07,791 --> 00:20:11,211 the jeep but can’t get through. 296 00:20:13,630 --> 00:20:15,298 He decides to wait until dark and 297 00:20:15,298 --> 00:20:17,801 then return to Hatten to get help. 298 00:20:21,263 --> 00:20:23,598 {\an8}If the Pillbox falls and Hatten can be flanked from 299 00:20:23,598 --> 00:20:26,559 {\an8}the north, it makes the Alsace region 300 00:20:26,559 --> 00:20:29,938 {\an8}and its newly liberated capital Strasbourg, vulnerable. 301 00:20:33,483 --> 00:20:35,819 In the early part of operation Nordwind, 302 00:20:35,819 --> 00:20:37,821 Supreme commander Dwight D. Eisenhower 303 00:20:37,821 --> 00:20:42,158 was ready to yield territory here, including Strasbourg. 304 00:20:43,493 --> 00:20:45,954 ALEXANDRA: Eisenhower is really focused on attacking Germany from 305 00:20:45,954 --> 00:20:49,374 the north and the Alsace region is too far south 306 00:20:49,374 --> 00:20:52,794 {\an8}he doesn't consider it to be particularly important and so 307 00:20:52,794 --> 00:20:54,546 {\an8}for Eisenhower it would actually make more sense just 308 00:20:54,546 --> 00:20:56,965 to simply withdraw from that front all together, 309 00:20:56,965 --> 00:21:00,885 and really put the focus on the rush to Berlin. 310 00:21:03,096 --> 00:21:06,516 NARRATOR: The proposal nearly causes a mutiny amongst French forces. 311 00:21:09,311 --> 00:21:11,688 ALEXANDRA: The Alsace region, it's been going back and forth 312 00:21:11,688 --> 00:21:14,441 between the French and the Germans for centuries, 313 00:21:14,441 --> 00:21:17,610 but what's so very important about it in this period is that 314 00:21:17,610 --> 00:21:21,948 the free French have liberated Strasbourg and so of course it's 315 00:21:21,948 --> 00:21:25,076 emotionally very, very important and a potent symbol 316 00:21:25,076 --> 00:21:28,955 for the French and they're damned if they're going to give it up again. 317 00:21:40,884 --> 00:21:42,969 NARRATOR: In Hatten, German infantry and tanks 318 00:21:42,969 --> 00:21:46,806 launch a fresh attack against the first Battalion headquarters. 319 00:21:49,309 --> 00:21:50,935 Under covering fire, 320 00:21:50,935 --> 00:21:55,565 Panzergrenadier troops once again move forward to clear the minefield. 321 00:21:56,858 --> 00:21:59,861 Which anchors the American defenses in the sector. 322 00:22:01,154 --> 00:22:03,782 JOHN: The minefield is how you're going to restrict German mobility, 323 00:22:03,782 --> 00:22:05,283 it's how you're going to buy time. 324 00:22:05,283 --> 00:22:06,951 And that's a big part of the battle of Hatten, 325 00:22:06,951 --> 00:22:09,829 is to, to buy time, to get reinforcements. 326 00:22:10,663 --> 00:22:12,374 NARRATOR: And it could be better. 327 00:22:13,708 --> 00:22:15,293 {\an8}JOHN: What you hope, from the American standpoint, 328 00:22:15,293 --> 00:22:17,337 {\an8}is that a tank comes in and blows off a mine, 329 00:22:17,337 --> 00:22:19,214 blows a tread, is immobilized, 330 00:22:19,214 --> 00:22:21,966 and now becomes a kind of a nice roadblock there. 331 00:22:23,093 --> 00:22:24,969 NARRATOR: In a house from which they can monitor the approach to 332 00:22:24,969 --> 00:22:29,516 the command post and the minefield, 333 00:22:29,516 --> 00:22:31,684 Private First-Class Vito Bertoldo and 334 00:22:31,684 --> 00:22:34,270 his assistant set up their machine gun. 335 00:22:35,605 --> 00:22:37,148 {\an8}STEVEN: The gunner's assistant does a number of things. 336 00:22:37,607 --> 00:22:41,027 {\an8}The most obvious is that he helps feed the ammunition into 337 00:22:41,027 --> 00:22:44,406 {\an8}the machine gun, but he has a secondary role of defending 338 00:22:44,864 --> 00:22:48,368 the machine gun against approaching enemy troops. 339 00:22:49,119 --> 00:22:51,329 NARRATOR: They secure the weapon to a table. 340 00:22:53,039 --> 00:22:55,458 STEVEN: A light machine gun is usually mounted on a tripod. 341 00:22:55,458 --> 00:22:58,253 It has little feet on the end of it to dig into the ground. 342 00:22:58,253 --> 00:23:00,338 So, by strapping it to the table, 343 00:23:00,338 --> 00:23:02,340 he could keep the machine gun stable 344 00:23:02,340 --> 00:23:04,384 and therefore, fire more accurately. 345 00:23:10,932 --> 00:23:11,850 (rapid gunfire) 346 00:23:11,850 --> 00:23:15,228 NARRATOR: Bertoldo opens up with his tabletop machine gun. 347 00:23:25,905 --> 00:23:27,907 Once more, his fierce fire forces 348 00:23:27,907 --> 00:23:30,410 the German troops to pull back. 349 00:23:33,913 --> 00:23:37,792 But this time, the enemy tank pinpoints Bertoldo’s position. 350 00:23:38,460 --> 00:23:42,088 And from 75 yards, fires directly at his window. 351 00:23:42,088 --> 00:23:43,131 MAN: Fire! 352 00:23:48,928 --> 00:23:51,598 NARRATOR: The tank round punches through the room. 353 00:23:53,766 --> 00:23:54,726 As the dust settles, 354 00:23:54,726 --> 00:24:00,607 Private First-Class Vito Bertoldo and his assistant are thrown back, 355 00:24:00,607 --> 00:24:02,817 but amazingly, remain unhurt. 356 00:24:03,359 --> 00:24:06,154 JOHN: He gets a little lucky because the tank is firing 357 00:24:06,154 --> 00:24:08,156 an armor piercing round. 358 00:24:08,156 --> 00:24:12,076 {\an8}It's not pleasant when a shell comes into your room like that. 359 00:24:12,076 --> 00:24:14,704 {\an8}Uh, the concussive effect is, is terrific. 360 00:24:15,121 --> 00:24:17,999 But it's not as deadly as it would be if it were 361 00:24:18,416 --> 00:24:19,876 a high explosive round. 362 00:24:20,668 --> 00:24:23,421 NARRATOR: Bertoldo crawls back to the table. 363 00:24:24,672 --> 00:24:27,759 The tank still sits just beyond the minefield. 364 00:24:30,178 --> 00:24:33,515 When he reaches the machine gun, he opens fire again. 365 00:24:36,142 --> 00:24:37,685 JOHN: Firing a machine gun at a tank, 366 00:24:37,685 --> 00:24:40,021 there's a level of insanity to that. 367 00:24:40,438 --> 00:24:42,440 You are not going to penetrate the tank. 368 00:24:42,857 --> 00:24:44,901 You're going to give away your position. 369 00:24:47,529 --> 00:24:51,741 NARRATOR: A German Tank Commander emerges from the hatch to get a better look. 370 00:24:53,493 --> 00:24:55,870 Bertoldo grabs a rifle. 371 00:24:56,246 --> 00:24:59,165 At a range of 75 yards, he takes a shot... 372 00:24:59,624 --> 00:25:00,959 (gunshot) 373 00:25:00,959 --> 00:25:03,294 And kills the German officer. 374 00:25:08,049 --> 00:25:10,593 Bertoldo continues his defense of the minefield to 375 00:25:10,593 --> 00:25:13,137 hold the German armor at bay. 376 00:25:14,806 --> 00:25:16,516 JOHN: How the battle is going to turn out, 377 00:25:16,933 --> 00:25:20,019 that's really still up in the air at this stage. 378 00:25:20,019 --> 00:25:24,107 A lot’s going to depend on what happens next with Bertoldo, 379 00:25:24,524 --> 00:25:27,026 whether he's able to, to stop any kind of German push deeper 380 00:25:27,026 --> 00:25:29,821 into Hatten and whether there's going to be any reinforcements 381 00:25:29,821 --> 00:25:32,323 in a reasonable amount of time. 382 00:25:35,326 --> 00:25:38,204 NARRATOR: Meanwhile at Pillbox nine, 383 00:25:38,204 --> 00:25:42,000 Captain William Corson waits for dark to sneak back into Hatten. 384 00:25:43,918 --> 00:25:46,629 He moves to an aperture to observe the German assault and 385 00:25:46,629 --> 00:25:49,549 gauge the status of the nearby Pillboxes. 386 00:25:51,509 --> 00:25:54,846 He hopes when he gets back to the village, with access to a radio, 387 00:25:54,846 --> 00:25:58,308 he can call in artillery positions, send ammunition, 388 00:25:58,308 --> 00:26:00,893 and alleviate the pressure on the Pillbox. 389 00:26:05,148 --> 00:26:09,736 Without warning, an artillery blast hits the turret and sends Corson flying. 390 00:26:20,830 --> 00:26:22,040 As the sun sets, 391 00:26:22,040 --> 00:26:25,752 German Panzergrenadiers close in on Pillbox nine. 392 00:26:26,419 --> 00:26:28,087 As an elite infantry unit, 393 00:26:28,087 --> 00:26:31,257 Oberstleutnant Karl Proll’s troops fill the gaps between 394 00:26:31,257 --> 00:26:33,509 tanks and other armor with their weapons 395 00:26:33,509 --> 00:26:36,346 and respond quickly as the battle evolves. 396 00:26:40,516 --> 00:26:44,896 PETER: Armor is rarely effective in fighting directly against bunkers. 397 00:26:44,896 --> 00:26:48,650 Much better, suited are armored infantry, 398 00:26:48,650 --> 00:26:52,320 or Panzergrenadiers, because when they fought dismounted, 399 00:26:52,320 --> 00:26:56,157 {\an8}they can recognize better the weak spot in the defense system 400 00:26:56,157 --> 00:26:59,744 {\an8}and also protect tanks in the flanks. 401 00:27:11,297 --> 00:27:12,882 NARRATOR: With Captain Corson wounded, 402 00:27:12,882 --> 00:27:16,552 Sergeant Alvin Cahoon faces difficult choices. 403 00:27:19,180 --> 00:27:21,974 The intensity of the German fire increases. 404 00:27:26,646 --> 00:27:28,981 With the men outside running out of ammunition 405 00:27:28,981 --> 00:27:30,983 and the wounded piling up, 406 00:27:30,983 --> 00:27:34,987 Cahoon orders them to return to the relative safety of the bunker. 407 00:27:36,572 --> 00:27:37,865 JOHN: We tend to think of these bunkers 408 00:27:37,865 --> 00:27:39,450 and Pillboxes in World War II 409 00:27:39,450 --> 00:27:42,495 as these incredible, impervious fortifications. 410 00:27:42,495 --> 00:27:44,622 But I think it's important to kind of step back and remember, 411 00:27:44,622 --> 00:27:47,667 there's just scared groups of men in there. 412 00:27:47,667 --> 00:27:53,339 And their view of the world is really limited to the small apertures they got. 413 00:27:57,009 --> 00:27:58,302 (thudding) 414 00:27:58,302 --> 00:28:01,347 NARRATOR: In the darkness, Cahoon and his men hear sounds around, 415 00:28:01,347 --> 00:28:03,850 and on the roof of their bunker. 416 00:28:04,225 --> 00:28:07,562 (thudding) 417 00:28:16,279 --> 00:28:20,241 Trapped inside the Pillbox, they listen as German engineers stuff 418 00:28:20,241 --> 00:28:22,910 explosives down the ventilation tubes. 419 00:28:24,662 --> 00:28:25,955 STEVEN: Between the time they were built in the 1930s 420 00:28:26,414 --> 00:28:30,626 {\an8}and the time they saw combat in 1945, in many cases, 421 00:28:30,626 --> 00:28:33,880 {\an8}the German army had come in and stripped out a lot of the steel work 422 00:28:34,297 --> 00:28:37,925 to be put into the Atlantic wall along the Normandy coast. 423 00:28:37,925 --> 00:28:40,344 And so, they suddenly became vulnerable to attacks 424 00:28:40,344 --> 00:28:42,388 from unusual directions. 425 00:28:42,388 --> 00:28:46,768 On some of these bunkers, the ventilation shafts could be an Achilles heel. 426 00:28:48,060 --> 00:28:50,605 NARRATOR: Cahoon has no way to fight back. 427 00:28:50,605 --> 00:28:53,858 If the explosives detonate, they won’t survive. 428 00:28:55,485 --> 00:28:57,987 JOHN: He's run out of ammo, he's not in communication with 429 00:28:57,987 --> 00:29:01,032 larger units that he knows are going to come and help him. 430 00:29:01,032 --> 00:29:03,159 He can't get his people out of there. 431 00:29:06,204 --> 00:29:08,790 NARRATOR: He consults with his Captain William Corson, 432 00:29:08,790 --> 00:29:10,792 who’s injured, but alive. 433 00:29:11,918 --> 00:29:13,211 JOHN: The Germans are basically everywhere, 434 00:29:13,211 --> 00:29:15,213 and he feels there's no purpose in, 435 00:29:15,213 --> 00:29:18,716 {\an8}you know, just dying there and destroying the lives of his men. 436 00:29:18,716 --> 00:29:20,927 {\an8}And so, he decides to surrender. 437 00:29:29,268 --> 00:29:31,270 NARRATOR: Corson agrees. 438 00:29:38,778 --> 00:29:41,697 Cahoon shouts to the Germans on the roof. 439 00:29:45,535 --> 00:29:48,913 The remains of A Company file out of Pillbox nine with 440 00:29:48,913 --> 00:29:51,457 their wounded comrades and commander. 441 00:29:56,963 --> 00:29:59,882 As the last of the Maginot Line defenders in the sector, 442 00:29:59,882 --> 00:30:02,343 they’re captured as prisoners of war. 443 00:30:07,265 --> 00:30:10,476 With the American resistance eliminated outside of the village, 444 00:30:10,476 --> 00:30:13,563 the Germans can sweep into Hatten unopposed. 445 00:30:19,652 --> 00:30:22,238 NARRATOR: On the night of January 9th, 1945, 446 00:30:22,238 --> 00:30:24,657 in northeastern France, 447 00:30:27,159 --> 00:30:29,495 the new main line of resistance for U.S. forces 448 00:30:29,495 --> 00:30:32,790 in the region becomes the village of Hatten itself. 449 00:30:37,461 --> 00:30:39,547 {\an8}After the fall of Pillbox nine, 450 00:30:39,547 --> 00:30:42,008 {\an8}command posts of the first and second Battalions, 451 00:30:42,008 --> 00:30:44,552 {\an8}242nd Infantry Regiment, 452 00:30:44,552 --> 00:30:47,430 {\an8}still hold the line in the eastern part of town. 453 00:30:49,140 --> 00:30:51,309 But they need reinforcements. 454 00:30:53,853 --> 00:30:55,855 JOHN: When the Germans launched one of these local attacks, 455 00:30:55,855 --> 00:30:58,024 the Americans then react and then they come back 456 00:30:58,024 --> 00:31:00,860 with more stuff, more firepower, more people. 457 00:31:00,860 --> 00:31:03,321 {\an8}So, it's a very uncomplicated, unambiguous. 458 00:31:03,738 --> 00:31:06,991 {\an8}Go back in, take the town and just sort of reverse the situation. 459 00:31:08,993 --> 00:31:11,621 NARRATOR: In the meantime, first Battalion relocates its 460 00:31:11,621 --> 00:31:15,458 command post away from the church to a more secure position. 461 00:31:20,129 --> 00:31:22,590 Private First-Class Vito Bertoldo volunteers to 462 00:31:22,590 --> 00:31:26,052 remain on guard duty through the night to cover the move. 463 00:31:32,892 --> 00:31:34,894 JOHN: Why does he do it? 464 00:31:34,894 --> 00:31:37,730 I would doubt that he does it because he has a death wish. 465 00:31:38,981 --> 00:31:44,111 But I think that he’s ready to embrace death if that’s what it takes. 466 00:31:44,111 --> 00:31:47,657 And that is a really amazing thing to consider. 467 00:31:51,786 --> 00:31:54,455 NARRATOR: Just after dawn, the Germans are first off 468 00:31:54,455 --> 00:31:58,626 the mark and launch their own attack before the Americans get started. 469 00:32:00,002 --> 00:32:03,005 PETER: The Germans are eager to push the Americans out of Hatten 470 00:32:03,005 --> 00:32:06,133 and advance further towards Strasbourg. 471 00:32:06,550 --> 00:32:10,179 {\an8}It has got a very high symbolical value. 472 00:32:10,179 --> 00:32:14,016 The capital of Alsace should remain German, 473 00:32:14,016 --> 00:32:17,228 this is the way the Nazis think. 474 00:32:17,895 --> 00:32:20,731 (rapid gunfire) 475 00:32:24,235 --> 00:32:27,738 NARRATOR: Arriving American reinforcements block the German advance, 476 00:32:29,073 --> 00:32:31,117 but can’t push far enough into Hatten to relieve 477 00:32:31,117 --> 00:32:33,411 Bertoldo and the command posts. 478 00:32:40,167 --> 00:32:45,172 As the day wears on, Bertoldo remains in his position in front of the minefield. 479 00:32:55,683 --> 00:32:58,227 German troops try repeatedly to clear the mines which block 480 00:32:58,227 --> 00:33:00,980 the road and hold back the tanks. 481 00:33:04,650 --> 00:33:09,363 Bertoldo uses bursts from his machine gun to drive them off. 482 00:33:10,031 --> 00:33:13,909 (rapid gunfire) 483 00:33:17,371 --> 00:33:20,499 The German soldiers scatter and the tank backs away. 484 00:33:23,127 --> 00:33:27,590 Bertoldo and his assistant gunner reload and wait for the next assault. 485 00:33:28,966 --> 00:33:30,176 JOHN: Bertoldo and his buddy are, 486 00:33:30,176 --> 00:33:32,428 you know, chalking on the wall or writing on the wall, 487 00:33:32,428 --> 00:33:35,931 to keep track of the damage they think they've inflicted. 488 00:33:35,931 --> 00:33:38,309 If that helped pass the time, 489 00:33:38,309 --> 00:33:39,435 if that helped keep the, the mind, 490 00:33:39,435 --> 00:33:42,521 you know, all good, great. 491 00:33:43,981 --> 00:33:49,028 NARRATOR: All of a sudden, the lull is shattered, 492 00:33:49,028 --> 00:33:50,988 and the room ripped apart. 493 00:33:50,988 --> 00:33:53,991 A blast knocks Bertoldo down. 494 00:33:57,870 --> 00:34:01,457 After the explosion he crawls over to aid his assistant gunner, 495 00:34:01,457 --> 00:34:03,667 despite being injured himself. 496 00:34:07,630 --> 00:34:10,508 JOHN: His buddy is pretty badly wounded, and so, 497 00:34:10,508 --> 00:34:13,803 he helps patch him up and get him out of there, 498 00:34:14,220 --> 00:34:16,305 all of which had to be very difficult. 499 00:34:22,061 --> 00:34:25,773 NARRATOR: With his assistant out of harm’s way and the dust clearing, 500 00:34:25,773 --> 00:34:31,654 Bertoldo looks out and sees the barrel of an enemy tank 501 00:34:31,654 --> 00:34:33,697 which had crept up a side road. 502 00:34:34,990 --> 00:34:39,787 Before he can act, the tank bursts into flames. 503 00:34:41,914 --> 00:34:43,916 An American bazooka team on the second floor 504 00:34:43,916 --> 00:34:46,502 scores a direct hit. 505 00:34:48,129 --> 00:34:51,048 Blazing, the panzer kicks into reverse. 506 00:34:54,093 --> 00:34:56,971 Bertoldo opens up with his machine gun. 507 00:34:56,971 --> 00:35:00,307 (rapid gunfire) 508 00:35:00,307 --> 00:35:03,060 JOHN: There's an anger side to what he does. 509 00:35:06,397 --> 00:35:07,898 It's time to inflict damage on the Germans because of what 510 00:35:07,898 --> 00:35:10,067 they had done to his buddy. 511 00:35:12,027 --> 00:35:14,238 The battle's just become personal for Bertoldo. 512 00:35:21,412 --> 00:35:22,997 NARRATOR: Holding them responsible for the wounds 513 00:35:22,997 --> 00:35:24,790 suffered by his assistant gunner, 514 00:35:24,790 --> 00:35:27,334 Private First-Class Vito Bertoldo targets 515 00:35:27,835 --> 00:35:30,671 the German soldiers who flee the burning tank. 516 00:35:45,102 --> 00:35:48,230 By 2300 hours on January 10th, 517 00:35:50,441 --> 00:35:55,237 orders come down for the remains of the 242nd Infantry Regiment 518 00:35:55,237 --> 00:35:59,533 to retreat from Hatten to the safety of another village to the west. 519 00:36:00,284 --> 00:36:02,494 The depleted battalions have held out since the attack 520 00:36:02,494 --> 00:36:04,914 started early the day before. 521 00:36:06,332 --> 00:36:07,875 They come back in small groups. 522 00:36:07,875 --> 00:36:10,753 They're, one person covering another, 523 00:36:10,753 --> 00:36:13,797 filtering through the buildings, going through the shadows. 524 00:36:13,797 --> 00:36:15,132 Take it out with a grenade. 525 00:36:15,132 --> 00:36:17,468 However you can escape, you are going to do it. 526 00:36:17,468 --> 00:36:18,886 MAN: Move! Move! Move! 527 00:36:18,886 --> 00:36:20,429 NARRATOR: To add to the confusion, 528 00:36:20,429 --> 00:36:23,724 replacement units fight their way forward at the same time. 529 00:36:24,058 --> 00:36:26,602 (rapid gunfire) 530 00:36:34,902 --> 00:36:37,238 Bertoldo, now without his assistant, 531 00:36:37,238 --> 00:36:42,159 once more volunteers to provide covering fire for the retreating troops. 532 00:36:43,994 --> 00:36:47,289 {\an8}JOHN: The looming question for anybody who's covering withdrawal is, 533 00:36:47,289 --> 00:36:48,666 {\an8}you know, when the time comes, 534 00:36:48,666 --> 00:36:51,168 {\an8}am I myself going to be able to get away? 535 00:36:53,879 --> 00:36:55,589 NARRATOR: In the dark, German soldiers reach 536 00:36:55,589 --> 00:36:59,843 the battalion command post and advance beneath Bertoldo’s line of fire. 537 00:37:01,595 --> 00:37:05,557 From this position, he doesn’t have a shot with his machine gun. 538 00:37:11,105 --> 00:37:14,441 Instead, he reaches for some phosphorus grenades. 539 00:37:16,610 --> 00:37:19,363 Weapons containing the element phosphorus are often 540 00:37:19,363 --> 00:37:22,408 used to create smokescreens for concealment. 541 00:37:23,742 --> 00:37:27,204 When phosphorus comes into contact with oxygen in the air, 542 00:37:27,204 --> 00:37:29,999 it ignites spontaneously and burns at temperatures over 543 00:37:30,457 --> 00:37:34,378 1,400 degrees Fahrenheit to create thick smoke. 544 00:37:36,171 --> 00:37:38,716 Phosphorus grenades and artillery rounds can also be 545 00:37:38,716 --> 00:37:42,344 used as an incendiary to set targets on fire. 546 00:37:42,511 --> 00:37:45,306 Humans are often caught up in the flames. 547 00:37:45,306 --> 00:37:47,057 JOHN: It's a terrifying weapon too, 548 00:37:47,057 --> 00:37:49,518 because it doesn't take much to cause some damage. 549 00:37:49,518 --> 00:37:53,272 The white phosphorous grenade has a pretty decent radius of, 550 00:37:53,272 --> 00:37:56,775 you know, 20 or so yards in which the shards could come 551 00:37:56,775 --> 00:37:59,820 and get on you and start to burn through your skin. 552 00:38:00,446 --> 00:38:02,406 NARRATOR: While water puts the flames out, 553 00:38:02,406 --> 00:38:05,534 phosphorus will reignite when it evaporates. 554 00:38:12,249 --> 00:38:14,376 (explosions) 555 00:38:23,218 --> 00:38:26,472 Soldiers scatter from Bertoldo’s salvo. 556 00:38:29,058 --> 00:38:31,852 The Germans must eliminate the American opposition which still 557 00:38:31,852 --> 00:38:33,854 holds up their advance. 558 00:38:39,943 --> 00:38:43,447 And once more, Bertoldo’s thrown from his feet. 559 00:38:45,407 --> 00:38:46,742 JOHN: It's possible that maybe there is, 560 00:38:46,742 --> 00:38:51,538 on the German side, somebody directing the fire of the tank to where he is. 561 00:38:51,538 --> 00:38:53,916 Especially after the white phosphorous grenades 562 00:38:53,916 --> 00:38:58,003 have come into play, and this creates perhaps more urgency to get the guy. 563 00:38:59,254 --> 00:39:02,091 NARRATOR: A German tank has locked on to his window. 564 00:39:04,593 --> 00:39:07,179 JOHN: Concussion again had to be terrific. 565 00:39:07,179 --> 00:39:10,099 I don't know what it meant on an auditory level, 566 00:39:10,099 --> 00:39:13,894 but it couldn't have done anything good for his ears and his hearing. 567 00:39:15,354 --> 00:39:19,191 But of course, more immediate, for him, is it destroys his glasses. 568 00:39:20,275 --> 00:39:23,153 NARRATOR: And renders his machine gun inoperable. 569 00:39:23,153 --> 00:39:26,407 Bertoldo refuses to concede. 570 00:39:26,407 --> 00:39:31,078 He switches to a rifle and continues to target German soldiers in the street. 571 00:39:39,378 --> 00:39:41,755 Bertoldo has fought with everything he has. 572 00:39:41,755 --> 00:39:44,258 He's used some nice, innovative thinking. 573 00:39:44,258 --> 00:39:47,511 He's brought plenty of courage to the table. 574 00:40:09,575 --> 00:40:11,952 NARRATOR: Finally, after defending the minefield for 575 00:40:11,952 --> 00:40:16,498 two days, Bertoldo is told to withdraw himself. 576 00:40:42,608 --> 00:40:46,320 Bertoldo and members of the 242nd Infantry Regiment, 577 00:40:46,320 --> 00:40:49,281 prevent the Germans from sweeping through Hatten. 578 00:40:53,619 --> 00:40:57,247 The grueling battle continues in the village for ten more days. 579 00:40:59,249 --> 00:41:02,461 The delay thwarts the march to recapture Strasbourg. 580 00:41:04,046 --> 00:41:09,176 ALEXANDRA: Fighting throughout January in 1945 is absolutely vicious. 581 00:41:09,176 --> 00:41:12,471 {\an8}There's bitter street to street, house to house fighting. 582 00:41:12,471 --> 00:41:14,973 And of course not only is this terribly destructive for 583 00:41:14,973 --> 00:41:18,769 the population, but also for the infrastructure of these beautiful towns. 584 00:41:18,769 --> 00:41:20,854 Some of them are completely destroyed. 585 00:41:21,480 --> 00:41:23,732 NARRATOR: Himmler’s plan ultimately fails, 586 00:41:23,732 --> 00:41:26,443 and he can’t deliver Strasbourg to the Fuhrer to commemorate 587 00:41:26,443 --> 00:41:29,696 the 12th anniversary of the third Reich. 588 00:41:32,032 --> 00:41:35,077 PETER: This doesn't hinder Hitler from promoting Himmler 589 00:41:35,077 --> 00:41:40,123 again to take over command of army group Weichsel on the eastern front. 590 00:41:40,123 --> 00:41:43,627 {\an8}So, Himmler pursues his military career despite the fact 591 00:41:43,627 --> 00:41:46,880 {\an8}that he has utterly failed in his first job. 592 00:41:48,674 --> 00:41:50,259 NARRATOR: Captain William Corson, 593 00:41:50,259 --> 00:41:54,388 Sergeant Alvin Cahoon, Private First-Class Glenn Schmidt 594 00:41:54,388 --> 00:41:57,933 and the other Americans captured at Pillbox nine serve out the war 595 00:41:57,933 --> 00:42:00,269 in prisoner of war camps. 596 00:42:03,605 --> 00:42:07,192 First Battalion of the 242nd earns a distinguished unit 597 00:42:07,192 --> 00:42:10,320 citation for their staunch defense of Hatten, 598 00:42:10,904 --> 00:42:14,908 to acknowledge the casualties of more than 500 men and officers, 599 00:42:14,908 --> 00:42:17,995 nearly 70% of the rookie battalion’s strength. 600 00:42:22,332 --> 00:42:28,130 Oberstleutnant Karl Proll continues the attack into Hatten until January 19th. 601 00:42:28,255 --> 00:42:32,968 His first Battalion is also devastated, with only 100 survivors. 602 00:42:33,885 --> 00:42:37,431 He earns the Iron Cross with oak leaves for the operation 603 00:42:37,431 --> 00:42:41,685 and the citation reports he repelled 35 American attacks. 604 00:42:42,769 --> 00:42:45,647 They announce the honor before the end of January. 605 00:42:46,315 --> 00:42:47,983 PETER: There can be various reasons for that. 606 00:42:47,983 --> 00:42:51,778 First, one might be that his performance was so outstanding 607 00:42:51,778 --> 00:42:56,158 that it was clear cut that he must be awarded with this higher decoration. 608 00:42:56,158 --> 00:42:59,161 Or quite often, it’s the contrary. 609 00:42:59,161 --> 00:43:01,330 The Germans just want to conceal, um, 610 00:43:01,330 --> 00:43:04,875 an actual defeat, but award someone with a higher medal 611 00:43:04,875 --> 00:43:07,961 so that it looks like a heroic defeat. 612 00:43:10,047 --> 00:43:12,424 NARRATOR: Private First-Class Vito Bertoldo earns 613 00:43:12,424 --> 00:43:16,720 the highest award; the Congressional Medal of Honor 614 00:43:16,720 --> 00:43:19,473 for his tenacity and bravery. 615 00:43:21,725 --> 00:43:24,728 His commanding officer, Captain William Corson learns of 616 00:43:24,728 --> 00:43:28,231 the award from the newspapers, when he returns stateside. 617 00:43:28,774 --> 00:43:34,112 His ne’er-do-well cook had proved himself a formidable soldier. 618 00:43:35,947 --> 00:43:37,824 JOHN: It had to be a bit of a head spinner. 619 00:43:37,824 --> 00:43:40,702 "How did I, get this guy so wrong?” 620 00:43:41,745 --> 00:43:43,163 NARRATOR: Hitler’s operations; 621 00:43:43,163 --> 00:43:48,669 {\an8}Wacht am Rhein and Nordwind continue into January of 1945, 622 00:43:48,669 --> 00:43:52,798 {\an8}but they don’t deal the decisive blow Hitler had hoped for. 623 00:43:52,798 --> 00:43:56,343 {\an8}Instead they’re forced back to the German border to prepare 624 00:43:56,343 --> 00:44:00,722 {\an8}and make the Allies pay heavily for every advance onto German soil. 625 00:44:03,767 --> 00:44:07,854 {\an8}The war in Europe will still rage f or another three and a half months.