
Carl Heintze's account of the battle of the Huertgen Forest |
Carl Heintze: "I entered the Huertgen Forest on
Oct. 13 (a Friday, as it turned out) as a replacement rifleman in
Company L, 39th Infantry Battalion, 9th Infantry Division. I was a sergeant, 21, having
finished three years of
college before being drafted into the army.The day before I arrived the company had been
ambused near Germeter
and there were only two platoons left, of four. Only one officer remained. We were taken
to the front and lodged
overnight in the basement of an old house, being shelled most of the time. There were 29
of us. By the time the war
ended all but two had been wounded or killed. Next day six of us went down to plug a hole
in the line. Two were
immediately wounded. That night we were withdrawn and reorganzed into a new company with
80 new replacements
and then additional men. We went back up to Schmidt and stayed for a week in a kind of
trench and then the whole
division was withdrawn and reorganzied. After various other battles, including the Battle
of the Bulge, we went back
to Schmidt in February and eventually into the Rhineland. In the meantime I had been
wounded Jan. 1, 1945, was in
the hospital for a month and was then sent back to the front where I stayed until the war
ended in May. I can't
possibly convey what the forest was like, except to say it was the epitome of war: dark,
forboding, wet, muddy,
gloomy and terrible. Anyone who was there never forgot it, but not many people remember
it. Otherwise it was a
pretty "normal" infantry kind of war for me, scared, dirty and tired and cold
most of the time, glad to have been a
part of it, glad when it was over. The Huertgen Forest, however, was unforgettable."