From the very first days of the Cold War in
Germany, barriers, obstacles and special missions for the limited US
Army Engineer units in Germany were central to war planning. It is a
largely untold story and a chapter takes place in Bad Kissingen.
Major portions of the following article
appeared in The Army Engineer Magazine, Sept - Oct 2002 issue, as
written by Col (Ret) Ray S. Hansen and BG (Ret) Robert M. Wilson.
They were troop leaders with first hand experience with the mission.
If anyone would like a photocopy of this article, please contact the
web master and we will send it along. They also generously provided
additional information by telephone and e mail. Bill Burr, a trooper
in one of the key engineer units, provided great recollections and
photos. Special thanks to the family of Col (Ret) John V. Parish,
who also provided photographs.
1st Platoon, Company C, 18th Engineer
Battalion: BK and the Big Bang
Col (Ret) Hansen and BG (Ret) Wilson:
"NATO allies were ill prepared to resist a
Soviet attack, if it came in those first days of the Cold War.
Germany was still an occupied country, and had no armed forces.
British, French and US units in Germany had been organized for
occupation duties and not for defense against a former ally. The
only major US units were the 1st Infantry Division, the US
Constabulary and the 6th Infantry Regiment in Berlin. Engineer units
were limited at best and the still powerful Red Army kept 20 plus
divisions in East Germany, with ten more behind those and a total
force of 2.5 million troops."
"US planners realized that at best, the
current allied force could hope to wage a delaying action in the
event of attack and the Rhine River would be a major obstacle in the
planning. Further, they realized that the Soviets relied heavily on
rail for logistics and heavy equipment. Massive interdiction of West
Germany's east - west rail system would be required to impede
movement of bridging equipment for Soviet crossings of major rivers
such as the Main and Rhine. For this vital mission, the Pentagon
ordered two units specially created and deployed. The 18th Combat
Engineer Battalion was organized in Germany in 1950, the 485th
Combat Engineer Battalion was called up from Reserve status, fitted
out at Fort Belvoir and arrived in Germany in 1951."
When LTC Spurrier led the 2nd Recon
Battalion from Schweinfurt to Bad Kissingen in 1951, one of the
other units that also soon moved to Manteuffel Kaserne was the 1st
Platoon, Company C, 18th Engineer battalion. Their mission was
simple, to study the assigned railroad bridges and tunnels in their
sector, a corridor running southwest from the border towards the
Main River and beyond and develop detailed plans to, in the event of
war, destroy them with conventional explosives. From Rothwesten in
the north to Wuerzburg in the south, other platoons and companies of
the 18th were similarly analyzing their own target lists.
Col (Ret) Hansen was located in Fulda and BG
(Ret) Wilson and Bill Burr were in Wuerzberg with the 18th and their
experiences would certainly be similar to those of the engineer
platoon in BK. Their recollections help set the scene in Germany as
the denial mission began. Col (Ret) Patrick D. Tisdale MD and Harry
W. Thibeault tell the story from the Bad Kissingen perspective.
Col (Ret ) Hansen and BG (Ret) Wilson:
"In late 1950, the 555th Engineer Combat
Group prepared the Strategic Railway Denial Plan and assigned
missions to the two battalions. Sufficient targets were identified
to form four successive ' barrier lines '. Not lines of obstacles in
the normal sense, these were barriers to rail movements. They were
laid out to insure every route from the east to the Rhine would be
cut by at least four targets. Later, 7th Army added twelve targets
not on railways."
Bill Burr:
"I was a basic engineer and in the
Constabulary upon arrival at my first duty station in Germany, July
of 1950. (Korea broke out in June while I was in basic training just
at the end of our cycle). I wore the ' Circle C ' patch and all the
leather for about 3 weeks. Then we took off the Circle C
and replaced it with a ' 7 Steps to Hell ' patch (7th Army). From
there we were taken to Kaufburens ' Fliegerhorst Kaserne ' . We
trained there for a short time and a number of us were sent to
Murnau USAREUR Demolition School, from which I still have my
diploma. I collected my Hazard Duty Pay for the whole time I was in
the company. (( Company C, 18th engineer Battalion in Wuerzburg ))
In the early days we inspected each target bridge and I took photos
for the target folders. I would take them to the Service Club,
develop them and make matte enlargements and add the dimensions of
the abutments, girders etc. The other men sketched the sections and
put down the dimensions."
Col (Ret) Hansen and BG (Ret) Wilson:
"Each bridge and tunnel had a comprehensive
target folder. It contained maps and sketches of exact location, and
charge details such as size, placement and firing mechanism.
Individually classified CONFIDENTIAL, and as a group SECRET, they
were kept in company safes. We suspect most squads could do their
jobs from memory."
All of this required great amounts of
explosives and equipment necessary to move it. The allocation was in
the order of 100 tons per company split between tetryol, composition
C - 3 and TNT. A small fleet of trucks, trailers and jeeps was
assigned to each platoon; they were authorized to exceed normal
weight and cube limits to transport the loads. All the vehicles were
kept loaded and parked in special, secured remote sites. While each
platoon had sufficient equipment to move their explosives in a
single lift, there were additional stores at Wetzlar, Hanau and
Munster. There were no significant accidents but both Bill Burr and
CWO 4 (Ret) Charles Wright recall close calls.
Bill Burr:
"I can remember one day (my secondary MOS
was driver of the HQ platoon's 3/4 ton ).
We had been called out on alert, my W/C was in ordnance for some
repair which landed me as a passenger in the rear of a 2 1/2 ton
truck. (No explosives on board). In Nuremburg (I believe) the convoy
stopped. After a 10 minute wait, we started to move again at a
fairly high rate of speed. We passed another 2 1/2 which was off on
the side of the road. That was one of the fully loaded
demo. trucks. The guy driving was an assistant driver, with no
driving experience, other than barely passing the test and he had
never driven anything prior to joining the Army. He had failed to
release the emergency brake, which had caught fire. The CO (CPT
Rogers), the First Sgt. and the driver were frantically throwing C-3
satchels off the back of the truck onto the side of the road. As
this was happening, an EES (European Exchange Service) panel truck
came by in the opposite direction, saw the commotion and stopped.
The driver brought out an old pyrene fire extinguisher and proceeded
to help put the fire out. Had that man known what was in the truck,
I think he would have burned tires getting away from there. Needless
to say, if it had gone off, sympathetic detonation probably would
have taken the whole outfit and a good part of Nuremburg with it."
CWO 4 (Ret) Charles Wright, stationed in
Fulda, recalled :
"We had a report of one convoy going through
Gelnhausen and trying to maneuver through those narrow streets when
they lost sight of the other trucks. The driver increased speed to
catch up and reached a fast pace as he rounded a corner, then he
found the convoy stopped and plowed right into an explosives filled
trailer. There was tetrytol all over the place. They cleaned the
scene up and got the trailer going again and made it back to Fulda."
Even in those early days of the Cold War,
consideration was given to not alarm the local population and what
must have been a disturbing scene, American GIs constantly standing
next to major railroad bridges and tunnels with clipboards and tape
measures, soon became a thing of the past.
Col (Ret) Hansen and BG (Ret) Wilson:
"On 17 March 1951, 7th Army issued an order
prohibiting practice on actual assigned targets. Neither real or
dummy explosives were to be placed, even under cover of maneuvers.
Targets could be measured or sketched only by small parties under
cover of maneuvers."
Beyond the war mission, the companies and
platoons also followed a normal training schedule to maintain their
engineer skills. To gain access to the full set of engineer
equipment, they had to closely coordinate with the few fully
configured engineer units in that part of Germany. Construction and
the standard field tasks for engineer units plus the normal menu of
individual soldier skills were central features of this training. It
is perhaps in this light that Lt. John Parish in Bad Kissingen, was
able to get his men involved with the construction of the air strip
at Reiterswiesen.
Harry W. Thibeault:
"I was in Bad Kissingen for 18 months,
starting in 1952 and was assigned to the demolition platoon. I was a
driver and also had explosives training. We kept the trucks and
trailers fully loaded and parked in our own separate area at the
barracks. We guarded it day and night. We also kept an empty truck
by the orderly room door or wherever the platoon was to carry us all
to the motor pool fast if there was an alert. I do remember working
on some civil construction projects for the Germans and the ' alert
' truck always followed us. Our barracks was in good shape and there
was a medical platoon living in our area."
"We would inspect the targets now and then;
I recall we had one big tunnel that required explosives set in
chambers at one end and also in the middle. So, one day we are at
that target looking at the chamber in the middle and it was pitch
black except for our flash lights. The chambers had big steel doors
that we swung open and somehow in the dark, I tripped over a rail
and fell against the edge of a door. I hit me knee and I never felt
such pain in all my life! 33 years as a municipal fire fighter and
that one day in Germany was the worst! I couldn't walk and they had
to wheel me out of the tunnel on a cart! The medics gave me a few
days off until the swelling went down."
"I recall that we had very limited over
night field duty, our mission was those trucks loaded with
explosives so beyond engineering work we did in town and regular
training, there were no FTXs. I also recall that the platoon
integrated while I was there. The Platoon Sergeant announced one day
that it would happen and said, ' ... there better be no trouble!'.
There were some all black engineer platoons in Germany that were
broken up and each unit received something like 10% of the unit
roster, so we got three or four guys. I guess it went OK, I don't
remember any big trouble."
"BK was pretty and we did what soldiers do,
ran around, chased girls and bought some beer. One guy got paid and
got on a train out of town. Well, I guess he got in trouble and lost
his money so he started to walk back by following the railroad
tracks. You wouldn't think it but those German steam trains were
fast and quiet and they found the body sometime later. There was an
investigation to see if he was AWOL or what, it had to do with the
benefits to his parents. It was a sad story, but almost everything
else I recall from my Army job was good."
Col (Ret) Patrick D. Tisdale MD:
"I followed Jack Parish as the First Platoon
leader of Company C , 18th Engineers and it has been a very long
time since I gave any of this much thought. The junior officers in
the battalion were rotated around each year or so; I had time in
Wurzburg, Bad Kissingen and Fulda, some of the memories blend
together."
"In BK, I lived in a hotel in town but
cannot recall much about it. I bought a really nice camera soon
after arriving in BK to update the target folders, took the photos
and then gave the camera to my Platoon Sergeant as a gift. I never
was much for photography beyond what was called for in the job. In
general, I recall we were busy and leave was almost unheard of if
you were the Lt. or a senior NCO. There really was a feeling that we
would be called out to destroy our targets at a moment's notice."
"Three targets remain clear in my memory.
Near Bad Kissingen was a large tunnel that was our responsibility.
We were to destroy both an end and the middle, explosives chambers
were built and this target required a great deal of explosives. We
figured we could drive the truck and trailer into the tunnel but
this would be very slow so we looked for alternatives. On another
railway line, we found some German ' right of way ' maintenance
carts that were fitted with rail wheels. They were ideal to load and
then push by hand down the tacks so ... we liberated them and hid
them in the woods near the tunnel entrance. Another target was a
steel railway bridge that I recall looking at first as a trained
civil engineer. It was a beautiful bridge, long and sweeping using
just enough steel to bear the weight of the trains from pier to
pier. Because it was so carefully designed, it was also a very easy
target to destroy. Just a few charges at the critical points and it
would have dropped straight into the river. In Fulda was a tunnel
that ran across the border and this was the only target that had
been loaded with explosives and under constant guard by an engineer
squad."
Erwin Ritter adds the detail concerning the
Fulda tunnel:
"Yes, between Schwebda / FRG and Geismar /
DDR, was a 1066m long railroad tunnel. The name was "Frieda-Tunnel".
The tunnel is closed now and the railroad does not exist any longer.
The line was closed in 1945, at the end of the war, because one of
the bridges near the border was damaged. In the 1980s the tunnel was
filled up with stones."
As more US troops flowed into Germany and
"first battle plans" became more refined, the mission of the
"destruction" battalions began to recede as new engineer units took
over the denial and barrier plans. In 1957, the 18th Engineer
Battalion was deactivated as a "demolition battalion". The 485th had
departed two years previous. The bridge destruction mission by the
1960s, became an atomic demolition munitions story.
BG (Ret) Wilson:
"To the best of my knowledge, the engineer
platoon in BK never returned to the parent company in Wuerzburg. For
as long as the railway denial mission existed, there were targets
near BK that could not have been reached in time from Wuerzburg (C
Company also had another detached platoon, the 2nd platoon attached
to A Company in Kassel. They never returned either.) When the
18th was inactivated in 1957, its personnel (except those due for
rotation) were reassigned to other engineer units in Germany.
Probably a good number of the 1st Platoon guys stayed right there in
BK."
After leaving Bad Kissingen, Lt John V.
Parish, later Colonel (Ret), went on to a long and distinguished
career to include service in the Middle East, Vietnam, the USA and
Germany. Col. (Ret) Patrick D. Tisdale MD, left Germany for a
stateside assignment at Fort Belvior then went to medical school. He
returned to active duty as a physician and became one for the lead
pediatric doctors in the US Army over a thirty year career.