BELGIUM -- An Army veteran of the Battle of the Bulge made the history books come alive with his short speech during a 75th anniversary c...
BELGIUM -- An Army veteran of the Battle of the Bulge made the history books come alive with his short speech during a 75th anniversary commemoration in Bastogne, Belgium. Malcolm "Buck" Marsh Jr., who spoke at the event Monday, was a Soldier in the 36th Armored Infantry Regiment when the enemy attacked on Dec. 16, 1944. His unit was part of the 3rd Armored Division and it was rushed in to stop the German onslaught.
The facts sound dry: Americans outnumbered five to one, the coldest winter in the region in decades, little food, inadequate clothing, shortages of medicine and ammunition. But Marsh, now a spry 95, put all that in context just by mentioning chicken soup and bedsheets. "It's great to be here," Marsh said at the start of his speech. "I'm very glad to be not digging foxholes." Marsh said he had "fond and not-so-fond" memories of his time in Belgium in 1944 and 1945.
Battle of the Bulge Army's veteran Malcolm "Buck" Marsh Jr shares his story.
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The Americans didn't have white camouflage outfits to wear as the Germans did, so the Belgians stripped their bedsheets to give the G.I.s a fighting chance. "One of my friends was tying me into the sheet and laughing a bit," Marsh said. "I asked him what was up. And he said to turn around. There was about four feet of sheet trailing behind me. I looked like a bride." Bride or not, it worked. Marsh and his friends passed a German platoon moving to attack his unit and they were never spotted. This type of story doesn't make it into history books. Field-expedient camouflage shows how adaptable the American forces were.1944's Christmas eve, I was eating snow. They couldn't find us to bring us food. Boy, that was something.
The fact that a mug of hot soup is still the best meal the young Alabamian had, says a lot about the cold and snow that the young soldiers endured. Army Maj. Gen. Brian Winski, the commander of the 101st Airborne Division based in Fort Campbell, Ky., brought about 80 soldiers from the unit to Bastogne for the commemoration. In 1944, the 101st was rushed to the crossroads city and surrounded by the German push.
The soldiers that Winski brought got the opportunity to speak with the war veterans and hear their stories. "We specifically brought young soldiers to this so they could get the stories first hand," Winski said. "One of them in 25 years, could be the division sergeant major and will be able to pass those stories on. It's important." Marsh ended his talk at Bastogne by thanking the people for letting him tell his stories and then asked all "to pray for world peace."