|
7 April 1945
Suhl, Germany
He slowly opened his eyes and said, "I ain't dead yet,
you son of a bitch!" Those were the last words he remembered
before the effects of the morphine syrette kicked in and darkness
overcame him. This was just as a fellow GI began to remove his
combat boots, as he lay wounded on a stretcher on the hood of
the medical jeep with severe pain from his gunshot wound to his
shoulder and back. At first, he thought the guy taking off his
boots was performing an act of kindness in trying to make him
comfortable. Then to his astonishment he realized that the low-life
bastard was stealing his boots, leaving him shoeless! Although
they were ready to give him up for dead, he lived to fool them
all one more time. His anger and determination to live helped
carry himself over another hurdle in life.
Orphaned at an early age and growing up in my hometown of
Racine, Wisconsin, I met this tough street-wise teen-ager one
day when my older brother Bob brought him home to stay with us.
Even though we were struggling in the midst of The Great Depression
of the 1930s, our Irish Catholic mother never turned away a stranger
in need and Gordy became "family."
When the pain killing drugs wore off, he kept playing it over
and over again in his mind. This time he ran it in slow motion,
almost one frame at a time, as if it was a series of stop action
still photos and picture clear, recapping the exact sequences
leading up to the moment the bullet impacted him. He was the
point man leading his squad. When without warning, he heard the
shot fired, being so close to the unseen shooter, in the house-to-house
fighting in the German village. In that millisecond instant when
he felt the bullet smash into his left shoulder, he felt the
searing hot pain that spun him around as his legs buckled. His
arms and legs became entangled with each other, as he fell to
the cobble-stoned street in front of the house. His Garand M-1
rifle flew out of his hands and clattered to the ground, as he
was unable to break his fall. When he hit the ground his helmet
flew off as he recalled looking up and staring at the gray sky,
bareheaded and feeling naked without his rifle and helmet.
"God, damn it, I got it again," he thought. Another
Purple Heart -- only this time he knew he was busted up inside
pretty bad, far worse than last time.
The rest of his infantry squad scattered to take cover for
fear the Kraut would pick off another member of this armored
infantry company in the lead of the attack on this crossroads
village. He had no recollection how long he laid there, out in
the open, unaided. What seemed like forever, an unknown amount
of time passed as the ensuing firefight raged in taking the barricaded
houses one by one at the intersection from the enemy defenders.
Finally, his own cry of "Medic" was heard and the kid
they had named "Doc" ran out to where he lay twisted,
where he had fallen. Carefully rolling him on to his side, Doc
found the blood spurting from the shoulder and back of his combat
jacket. The bullet had entered the shoulder muscle mass and had
exited from his back. It was a clean through-and-through shot,
smashing everything, bone and muscle, in its exit path.
"How bad is it?" he asked Doc. The medic answered,
"You're going stateside." Translated to GI unspoken
terms, "if you make it!" The Doc dug into his bag and
began applying compresses to staunch the flow of blood, but the
internal damage was his main concern and worried him the most.
They would have to move fast to get him to an aid station for
a medical doctor to take over as soon as possible, before he
went into cardiac arrest from loss of blood and shock. A second
medic appeared with a stretcher taken from their infantry half-track.
They carefully lifted him gingerly onto to the canvas between
the two poles. Placing him on the stretcher rack on the hood
of their medical jeep they went back to pick up another seriously
wounded man for the fast trip to the collection point and aid
station.
The Doc had given him a shot from the morphine syrette and
it had started to take effect and put him out of it. His mind
raced to recall the events that occurred just prior to the moment
he heard that distinctive crack of a rifle fired from yards away.
Just seconds before his mind went blank from the drugs, he saw
the American soldier approaching the foot of his stretcher. Without
saying a word, the soldier started unbuckling the tops of his
combat boots, to remove them, as though they were a prized possession
instead of issue GI boots. Now we have all heard of scum in our
own Army who would steal from a corpse, but this live body contained
the heart and soul of a street fighter, who didn't know the meaning
of the word quit. When the drug over-powered his mind and rendered
him unable to fight back, he became totally helpless and also
shoeless.
The stops at the various aid stations and evacuation points
were all a blur in his memory. He only could recall the first
stop where they stripped away his clothing and then it became
dark all over again. Unknown voices, motions, movements when
he finally came out of the fog, he asked the Army nurse, "Where
am I?" Back came her standard reply, "You're in England,
soldier." He was now a patient at US Army Hospital, Plant
#4150, APO #63, NY. It was April 10, 1945. The long journey home
and the painful recuperation and rehabilitation were about to
begin. Receiving his first Purple Heart Medal awarded after being
wounded at Metz, France, he was briefly hospitalized and was
soon returned to duty in time to fight in the Battle of the Bulge.
However, that would not be the case this time. With the war winding
down, he had almost made it until this happened. Like many other
friends of mine in the Army, April was the unlucky month, among
them, Gil Lindgren and Norm Steele.
While recovering from his surgery he tried to put the pieces
back together and let his mind replay the events over and over
repeatedly. He recalled that he had tried to tell his new replacement
platoon officer that the village was perfectly situated for a
Kraut rear guard defense. By now it was well known that the fanatical
teenage Hitler Youth were fighting a desperate delaying action
all across the front, refusing to surrender until they ran out
of ammunition. His apprehension fell on deaf ears as the new
Lieutenant led his first combat patrol and was eager to impress
his superiors with his newly learned leadership skills.
It was early April 1945, with all the US armored divisions
hell bent to reach Berlin first, pushing the Krauts into the
hordes of Russians intent upon doing the same thing - reaching
Berlin. The assignment for Company "B", 63rd Armored
Infantry Battalion, 11th Armored Division, was the German village
of Suhl. Just one more meaningless Kraut town to capture, in
the final rat race that would bring us closer to returning home.
Our soldier was Private First Class Farrell Gordon Schoedel,
Regular Army, Serial Number 7032333, hometown, Racine, Wisconsin.
Gordy, as he preferred, was another of my friends I grew up with
from the old north side neighborhood. He was on the wild side
and with an attitude, as were most teenagers I knew during that
period of time. Those were hard times and it drew out the hardness
in good people, too, in order to survive. He had that wry smile
and "that devil may care look" in his eyes that was
deceptive. Depending on the gender of the person he was addressing,
the look could expressly convey the thought "Well, do you
want to frolic, fight or run a foot race? Take your pick. I'm
ready for whatever comes up."
Gordy was involved in a lot of fights with that attitude.
Often his explanation was a shrug of his shoulders and a laugh.
More often as not, Gordy gave as good as he got, while coming
out the winner. Gordy was on the small side of average; about
5 foot 6 inches, about 140 pounds, including beer. As often as
he was tested, he could take a punch and gained the reputation
for being able to punch equally well with both hands. The guy
had balls plus a fair share of scar tissue around both eyes as
souvenirs from brawls. And so did a lot of other guys bigger
than he was after meeting Gordy mano-mano.
Recalling his last conversation with the new Lieutenant after
the briefing that fateful day, they learned the "B"
Company would lead off the attack and their platoon had "the
honors." Gordy was the only member from his platoon to voice
his opinion that his platoon got the shaft once more to lead
off. For popping off, the Lieutenant glared at him and said,
"Soldier, you take the point when we move out." Conversation
ended.
Though a Private, Gordy was the senior ranking member in "B"
Company from the Old Army standpoint of payroll protocol. In
keeping with the Old Army tradition, all Regular Army men, regardless
of rank, were paid first in the pay line at the pay table, in
front of men with the wartime ranks of First Sergeant and all
other "First Three Graders" (Master, Tech and Staff)
thereby making him a marked man in the eyes of superiors of both
ranks. He was the classic screw up resulting in infrequent promotions
and reductions in repeated summary court-martials for minor infractions
and off duty run ins with the MPs in town. On post without alcohol,
he was the perfect soldier. Off post was trouble.
Our paths in the Army crossed on 16 January 1945, when our
two armored divisions, the 2nd and the 11th, linked up and closed
off the salient separating the northern First Army and the southern
Third Army at Houffalize, Belgium, in the frozen snow drifts
of the Eiffel Mountains in the Ardennes Forrest, ending the Battle
of the Bulge.
We met again after the war in our hometown favorite neighborhood
watering hole when I returned home. He had been finally discharged
from the Battle Creek, Michigan, Army Hospital Rehab Center.
I greeted him with a facetious remark, "Gordy, my little
hero, tell me how you got shot in the back?" Which I knew
would drive him up the wall -- questioning his courage.
Instantly, "that look" came over his face and his
piercing eyes focused on me for a brief moment, when I saw his
wicked smile spreading as he said, "You miserable so-and-so,
Don! Nice to see you too again. We both made it home alive. The
first drink is on me. Ain't we the lucky ones!"
Gordy died May 3, 1970, at the age of fifty, but he had cheated
the Grim Reaper out of the 25 years since April 10, 1945, so
once again he broke even in the books. Tonight I'm sure he's
in Valhalla searching for that low-life-scum-bag who stole his
boots. I know once he finds him, he'll give him "that look"
just before he belts him.
Publication or reproduction, in part or whole,
is prohibited without written permission from the author, Don
R. Marsh. All rights remain the sole property of The Marsh Family
Trust.
|