World War II

A Worm's Eye View

by Charles M. Gorman, Jr.


Formats

Softcover
£11.58
Softcover
£11.58

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 14/04/2002

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 204
ISBN : 9780759670853

About the Book

This book is about my experiences during World War II. The book records the amusing side of the war as well and the serious side. In the beginning I explain why I wrote the book. I paint a verbal picture of conditions before the war, and I discuss how it felt to be inducted into the Army and to undergo infantry basic training. I was a private in the infantry, so my view of the war was a view from the ground or A Worm's Eye View.

After basic training I was assigned to the Army Specialized Training Program or ASTP at N.C. State College.

In January 1944 the army canceled ASTP, so I was sent to Louisiana Maneuvers with the 44th Infantry Division. In March after Maneuvers we moved on to Camp Phillips, Kansas for six months of desert or flat terrain training. In early September 1944 we shipped overseas from Boston to the town of Cherbourg on the Normandy Peninsular. This was three months after D-Day.

In October 1944 we went into action east of Luneville in the French Province of Alsace-Lorraine. During 1944 and 1945 my unit was in combat and in contact with the enemy for two hundred and five days. We started our war in France, and we ended our war in the Austrian Alps. I was a heavy weapons crewman and a radio operator. I also had part of the responsibility for our military maps

In the Leintrey Saga I describe our first major battle. After the breakthrough at Leintrey we were the first troops to reach the Rhine River where we captured the ancient city of Strasbourg

In the Weislingen Saga I describe how we engaged an enemy armored division. After the battle I discovered sixty to eighty people hiding in the basement of our headquarters building. The children were very frightened of me, so I started singing Christmas Carols. It was December and close to Christmas time. The church choir and the rest of the people joined me in singing Silent Night and other Christmas carols.

As a part of the Battle of the Bulge we fought a protracted winter battle near Volksberg, Montbronn, Bitch and Sarreguemines. I was wounded in action on Christmas Day 1944.

During January and February we endured very cold weather near Woelfling and Gros-Rederching. I played chess with the mayor of Gros-Rederching, and the mayor's two daughters baked me six apple pies.

Near Gros-Rederching we fought the elite 17th SS Division, and occupied the Bandelfingerhof Farm. We captured an SS Captain and twelve SS troops.

In March 1945 we crossed the Rhine River near Heidelberg, and discussed making Heidelberg an "Open City" to protect the university and the art treasures.

We fought one of the last battles of the European War. It was during a snowstonn in the Austrian Alps. Our opponents were the ski troops of the famous Austrian Mountain Division.

We were part of the army of occupation for one month, and then we were selected to go to Japan to fight the Japanese. The war ended in August 1945 while we were still in the States. I received a discharge in October, and returned to school at Georgia Tech.


About the Author

I was born in Florence, SC July 8, 1924. I grew up in Charleston, South Carolina and Atlanta, Georgia. At an early age I was encouraged to read and prepare myself for college. My father had attended the University of South Carolina. My mother was valedictorian of her high school class. Mother’s  father was a  minister. One thing my family did not have was a military tradition.

At Atlanta Boy’s High I was a good student and involved in athletics. World War II started in December 1941 when I was senior in high school. I was interested in the war news, but it seemed vague and far away. In June 1942 I graduated from high school, and started classes at Georgia Tech. At Georgia Tech I volunteered for the regular army. The Dean of Students said that I would be allowed to stay in school, get my degree and then I would be an officer. It did not happen that way. Three months after I volunteered I was called to active duty. I was in the regular army from March 1943 until October 1945.  A regular army soldier was very rare in those days. I was a volunteer at a time when most men were either drafted or from the National Guard. I went to France in September, 1944, and I was in infantry combat continuously from October 1944 until the end of the war in May 1945.

After the war I graduated from Georgia Tech and attended theology school. I later studied landscape architecture at the University of Georgia and received a BLA degree. Since 1963 I have worked as a landscape architect, military base planner and technical writer.

As a military base planner I have worked on projects for the Army, Navy,  Air Force, Marines and the Nigerian Army in Nigeria. As a landscape architect I worked on site plans for companies such as: General Motors, Honda, Sony, General Electric, Merck, Union Shale Oil plant, the Nuclear Breeder Reactor, Cape Canaveral – the satellite testing facility, The Pensacola Naval Complex, Mayport Aircraft Carrier Base, etc.

I also worked in Saudi Arabia three times. The main projects were the Aramco Community Center, Dhahran and the King Abdulaziz University Hospital and Medical Center at Jeddah.