THE THIRD ARMY IN WORLD WAR II GENERAL GEORGE S PATTON 74682
This tribute to the
Third Army in
World War II details its 281 days of combat duty, from
France and
Belgium and into
Germany in 1944-45, including the
Battle of the Bulge. Features footage of
General George S. Patton and the troops he commanded.
The United States Army Central (formerly the Third Army) is a military formation of the
United States Army, which saw service in
World War I and World War II, in the
1991 Gulf War, and in the coalition liberation of
Iraq. It is best known for its campaigns in World War II under the command of General George S. Patton.
Mobilization saw Third Army take on the role of training some of the huge numbers of recruits that the draft was bringing into the
Armed Forces.
Lieutenant General Walter Krueger, later to gain fame for his command of
Sixth Army during operations in the
Pacific, commanded Third Army from May
1941 until
February 1943. Under his leadership, the basis of the
Army's later success as a combat formation was laid. Krueger was succeeded by Lieutenant General
Courtney Hodges who led the Army for the rest of 1943. The news that many had expected came in
December 1943. Third Army was shipped from the
U.S. to the
United Kingdom.
Third Army did not take part in the initial stages of
Operation Overlord. However, when it did take the field, its field of combat suited the style of its commander far more. Lieutenant General
George Patton was one of the
U.S. Army's greatest exponents of armored warfare. When Third Army was moved to France, it was just after
Bradley's formations had achieved the breakout from
Normandy. Third Army followed up on that success and began a great dash across France. It was only the inevitability of logistics problems that halted
Patton's force near the borders of Germany.
After a period of consolidation, Third Army was ready to go on the offensive again. However, the
Germans then launched their last great offensive of the war – the Battle of the Bulge. This battle was an attempt to repeat the decisive breakthrough of
1940. However, in
1944, the Germans were doomed to failure. Their own logistical problems surfaced, and they ground to a halt.
Nevertheless, they had broken the U.S. front, and it took a great effort to reduce the resulting salient. In one of the great moves of the war, Patton turned Third Army's axis of advance through ninety degrees and set it upon the south of the
German forces.
The German salient was reduced by the end of
January 1945, and the remainder of the process of closing up to the Rhine could be completed. Some vicious fighting took place, but by April there was but one great natural barrier between Third Army and the heart of Germany. Unlike in
1918, the crossing of the Rhine was opposed. However, the bridgehead was won, and Third Army embarked on another great eastward dash. It reached
Austria and in May liberated the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camps complex. Its forces ended up in
Czechoslovakia, the furthest east of any
American units.
Third Army After
Action reports state that the Third Army captured 765,483 prisoners of war, with an additional
515,205 of the enemy already held in corps and divisional level
POW cages processed between 9 May and 13 May
1945, for a total of 1,280,688 POWs, and that, additionally, Third Army forces killed
144,
500 enemy soldiers and wounded 386,
200, for a total of 1,811,388 in enemy losses.
The Third Army suffered 16,
596 killed, 96,
241 wounded, and 26,809 missing in action for a total of 139,646 casualties.
Includes footage of the presentation of the
Congressional Medal of Honor to
Harold Garman by Patton. On August 25, 1944, wounded
American soldiers were being evacuated across the
Seine River in France. They were midstream when an enemy soldier on the other side of the river began firing at them with a machine gun.
Immediately the boat emptied, and men began swimming to the opposite shore. One American was so badly injured he could not get out of the boat, and two others were so badly injured that, once out of the boat, they could not swim. They clung desperately to the side of the craft.
Seeing the crisis unfold before him, twenty-seven-year old private Harold Garman, a medic, dove into the water. Heedless of the danger to himself, he swam to the boat under a hail of fire and, with great difficulty, towed the boat back to shore. Garman’s brave action saved the lives of three fellow soldiers and inspired the rest of the men to resume the evacuation of the wounded.
This film is part of the
Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the
USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD and 2k. For more information visit
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