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A Machine Gunner's War - From Normandy to Victory with the 1st Infantry Division in World War II (Hardcover)
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A Machine Gunner's War - From Normandy to Victory with the 1st Infantry Division in World War II (Hardcover)
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Ernest 'Andy' Andrews began his training as a machine gunner at
Fort McClellan in Alabama in July 1943. In early 1944, he arrived
in the UK for further training before D-Day, ahead of the 1st
Infantry Division deploying on the evening of June 5th on the USS
Henrico. Due to a problem with his landing craft, Andrews only
reached Omaha Beach on the early evening of June 6th, but his
experience was still a harrowing one. Fighting in Normandy, he was
nicked by a bullet and evacuated to England in late July when the
wound became infected, before returning to participate in the
Normandy breakout. Following the race across France in late August,
he participated in the rout of several retreating German units near
Mons, Belgium, and his outfit approached Aachen in mid-September.
For a month, Andrews' squad defended a bunker position in the
Siegfried Line against repeated German attacks, then after Aachen
surrendered, the unit fought its way through the Hurtgen Forest to
take Hill 232. Early on the morning of November 19th, he engaged in
his toughest battle of the war as the Germans attempted to retake
Hill 232, where he was again wounded. After surgery and a month's
convalescence he rejoined H Company in time to fight in the Battle
of the Bulge. His unit then participated in the fast-moving Roer to
the Rhine campaign, then the battle to expand the Remagen
bridgehead. Breaking out from the Remagen bridgehead, Andrews'
squad stumbled on a German tank unit and this time he narrowly
escaped death. Following a rapid advance up to the Paderborn area,
the unit raced to Germany's Harz Mountains, where the Wehrmacht was
trying to organize a last stand. They ended the war fighting in
Czechoslovakia, where Andrews witnesses the German surrender in
early May. Following occupation duty, he returned to the States in
October 1945. This vivid first-hand account takes the reader along
from Normandy to victory with Andy Andrews and his machine-gun
crew. The war shaped the author's postwar life in countless ways,
and in 1994, he made the first of three return visits to the
European battlefields where he had fought.
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