Foreword
In the early hours of the morning of January 22, 1944, an Allied force of 36,000 men and 3,200 vehicles boarded landing craft and prepared to assault the beach near Anzio, Italy in an operation code-named "Shingle". The plan of battle, the initial numbers of troops and the actions of their leaders were then and still are the subject of much discussion and criticism in military strategy training in many armies.
The battle of Anzio has received little attention from history and films, probably because most military historians consider it a tactical failure. We must never forget the men who landed on the Anzio beach, fought their way out of the beachhead, and ultimately were part of the liberation of Italy. Their bravery and sacrifice were no less than those of the men who landed at any other beachhead including Normandy.
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Sergeant Mike Ryan peeked through the gap in the logs that made up the huge stack of firewood in which he was hiding. It was the third German patrol he'd seen that day and he knew they were probably looking for any attempts by the Allies to move again on Cisterna.
Even though his hiding place was impossible to see from any side of the firewood, Mike quietly eased away from the gap. He held his breath when the patrol stopped, walked up to the neat stack of logs, leaned their rifles against it, and then lit cigarettes.
It was only a few minutes before the woman of the house came out and offered the group a glass of wine. Mike heard their conversation but didn't speak either German or Italian, so he couldn't understand what either the woman or the soldiers said. He did understand what the woman was doing though.
A small flag of the Italian Social Republic was draped from the house eaves at the front door. To the German soldiers, that flag meant the people living in the house still maintained allegiance to Nazi Germany and it meant that German soldiers would be treated as the defenders of the Italian Social Republic from the attacks of the Allies. The woman of the house was careful to do just that at any time any German soldiers passed by her house. Secretly, she and her entire family despised the Germans. It was just safer to pretend otherwise.
After they drank a glass of wine and stubbed out their cigarettes, the soldiers picked up their rifles and walked away. Mike waited a good fifteen minutes and then peeked through the gap in the logs again. All he saw was two cows grazing in the field across the road.
All farmhouses had these woodpiles just outside the back door. They were huge because it took a lot of wood to keep a house warm over the winter. The woodpiles were logs about two feet long and from four inches to eight inches in diameter, and they were stacked three deep for nearly the length of the house and higher than a man's head. The weight alone kept any of the logs from moving.
This particular woodpile had been built with another purpose in mind besides heating the house. It was on the side of the house like all the others, but this one was hollow. In the middle of the length was a small room of sorts about six feet long, three feet wide, and four feet high, long enough Mike could lay down and high enough he could sit up. The top was logs laid across the others and on top of those logs and down the sides was an oiled canvas tarp to keep out the wind and rain. It was through slits in the tarp that Mike could see through the logs.
On the side of the room against the house, there was a small opening into the cellar of the house. That opening was just big enough for a man to squeeze through, and on the inside was covered by a board that appeared to be part of the framing of the house. That board could be removed by releasing some hidden fasteners either in the cellar or from the outside. That opening was how Mike got food during the day and how he was able to go into the cellar to stretch his legs and use a chamberpot once darkness fell.
Mike had been in this woodpile room for two months so far with no relief in sight. Every day, he expected to see US Army troops pushing the Germans back toward Cisterna, but though there was some gunfire and the thud of artillery, the only soldiers he saw through the gap were German.
Mike sat down and cursed to himself like he had every day since the failed attack. The whole goddamned thing had been fucked up from the beginning and it didn't look like that had changed much since his Ranger company had tried to get behind the German line at Cisterna.
It had all started before daylight on the 22nd of January, 1944.
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Mike had peeked over the side of the landing craft that was speeding him and his men toward the beach at Anzio. It looked quiet, but landing zones usually did until the first landing craft was in range of the shore batteries. He didn't say anything to the men around him. He was their leader and was supposed to show confidence in what they were about to do.
Mike didn't feel confident at all and that wasn't because he didn't trust his men. The 1st Ranger Battalion had made amphibious landings twice before, once in Morocco and once in Sicily. They knew the plan for this landing backwards and forwards. The only voices he heard were the occasional murmured "Hail Mary" as one of his men prayed to live out the day. Mike had fingered the rosary around his neck and said a few "Hail Mary's" of his own.
The plan for Anzio wasn't any different. It was hit the beach, establish a beachhead and then move inland toward designated objectives for each group.
The problem Mike was having with this landing was the enemy. In Morocco, the 1st had been up against the troops of Vichy France. There had been some fighting at the port in Casablanca, but it wasn't as bad as the pre-invasion briefing had predicted. Within a week, the Allies controlled the ports at Casablanca and Algiers.
The landing in Sicily also wasn't much of a battle. The 1st landed against opposition by the Italian Army, but because of the high winds and the lack of naval bombardment prior to the landings, the Italian commander didn't think the Allies would attack and had been taken by surprise. That commander had offered little in the way of a fight before surrendering.
A lot of things had changed after Sicily. Mussolini had been removed as Prime Minister of the Italian government and replaced by Marshal Pietro Badoglio. While Badoglio had kept up the appearance of continuing to cooperate with Germany, in September of 1943, he had signed an armistice between Italy and the Allies. The German Army began replacing the Italian troops who were now fighting with the Allies with German soldiers in order to defend the Axis holdings in Italy.
During the campaigns in North Africa, the Italian Army had been proven to be poor fighters because they were out-manned and out-gunned by the Allies. The German Army had been proven to be just the opposite anywhere the Allies had fought against them. Mike figured the 1st was in for some bloody fighting.