Re: WWII: European Theater daily - 1944 (was Normandy Daily)
April 3, 1945: It’s Tuesday - today marks 43 weeks (301 days) since the D-Day Invasion at Normandy and the beginning of the liberation of Europe.
Allied troops capture Hengelo, the Netherlands as British 2nd Army mop up Rhine and attack toward Osnabruck. US 9th Army captures Muenster and Recklinghausen, pushes toward Bielefeld, and continues attacking the Ruhr pocket. US 1st Army also continues reducing the Ruhr pocket and pushes east, capturing Fulda and Kassel in germany. US 45th Infantry Division of US 7th Army captures Aschaffenburg, Germany. Patton’s US 3rd Army pushes toward Muhlhausen and Suhl. The French 1st Army are attacking toward Karlsruhe.
In Birken, Germany, Private First Class Walter C. Wetzel, serving in the 13th Infantry Regiment, 8th Infantry Division, smothers the blasts of German-thrown grenades with his body, sacrificing himself to protect those around him. He is posthumously awarded the Medal Of Honor ten months later, on February 26, 1946, by President Harry S. Truman. Here is his citation:
“Pfc. Wetzel, an acting squad leader with the Antitank Company of the 13th Infantry, was guarding his platoon's command post in a house at Birken, Germany, during the early morning hours of 3 April 1945, when he detected strong enemy forces moving in to attack. He ran into the house, alerted the occupants and immediately began defending the post against heavy automatic weapons fire coming from the hostile troops. Under cover of darkness the Germans forced their way close to the building where they hurled grenades, 2 of which landed in the room where Pfc. Wetzel and the others had taken up firing positions. Shouting a warning to his fellow soldiers, Pfc. Wetzel threw himself on the grenades and, as they exploded, absorbed their entire blast, suffering wounds from which he died. The supreme gallantry of Pfc. Wetzel saved his comrades from death or serious injury and made it possible for them to continue the defense of the command post and break the power of a dangerous local counterthrust by the enemy. His unhesitating sacrifice of his life was in keeping with the U.S. Army's highest traditions of bravery and heroism.”
Wetzel was buried in the Netherlands American Cemetery, Margraten, the Netherlands.
German rocket troops are converted to regular troops and join the German 5th Army Corps.
Thousands of prisoners of Buchenwald concentration camp are forced to evacuate and march away ahead of Allied advance.
Over Germany, US 8th Air Force attacks U-boat base at Kiel with 717 bombers (two are lost), sinking 6 U-boats and 8 other German vessels. RAF Bomber Command sends 255 aircraft to attack Nordhausen during the day and 95 aircraft to attack Berlin overnight. US 9th Air Force aircraft fly armed recon, escort, patrols, leaflet missions, ground support, and tactical bombing missions, including 220 bombers that are sent to attack Holzminden and Hameln.
On the eastern front, Soviet 1st Ukrainian Front, 1st Belorussian Front, and 2nd Belorussian Front deploy along the Oder and the Niesse for new offensive to Berlin and the Elbe. Soviet 2nd Ukrainian Front penetrates the German defensive lines between Wiener Neustadt and Neusiedler Lake, advancing toward Vienna, Austria. Major Carl Szokoll, a leader of the Austrian resistance, meets with Soviet authorities about cooperation in Vienna to prevent the city's destruction. Almost all of Hungary is now clear of Axis troops while in Czechoslovakia Bratislava is besieged. After several days of heavy artillery attacks, Soviet 3rd Belorussian Front opens final assault against Koenigsberg. The 7th Guards Army of Soviet 2nd Ukrainian Front attacking German 8th Army around Bratislava
In Italy, troops of British Special Boat Service and Italian 28th Garribaldi Brigade captured islands in Lake Comacchio in northern Italy. US 12th Air Force bombers are mostly grounded by poor weather conditions, but some aircraft attack transportation lines, supply depots, methanol plants, and other targets in the Po valley and elsewhere in northern Italy.
Pictured: US soldiers rest in war-littered street of Fulda (Germany) April 3, 1945
Tankmen of the 761st Tank Battalion and infantrymen of the 3rd Battalion, 409th Regiment, 103rd Division, 7th U.S. Army, make pancakes together near Reisdorf, Germany, on April 3, 1945
A British soldier is dwarfed by a German railway locomotive resting at a precipitous angle in a heavily-bombed railyard in Munster, April 3, 1945
Retired MSgt Leo Bolick visiting PFC Wetzel's grave at Netherlands American Cemetery and Memorial in 1990. Leo was Wetzel's Platoon Sergeant and one of the men PFC Wetzel gave his life to save.
April 3, 1945: It’s Tuesday - today marks 43 weeks (301 days) since the D-Day Invasion at Normandy and the beginning of the liberation of Europe.
Allied troops capture Hengelo, the Netherlands as British 2nd Army mop up Rhine and attack toward Osnabruck. US 9th Army captures Muenster and Recklinghausen, pushes toward Bielefeld, and continues attacking the Ruhr pocket. US 1st Army also continues reducing the Ruhr pocket and pushes east, capturing Fulda and Kassel in germany. US 45th Infantry Division of US 7th Army captures Aschaffenburg, Germany. Patton’s US 3rd Army pushes toward Muhlhausen and Suhl. The French 1st Army are attacking toward Karlsruhe.
In Birken, Germany, Private First Class Walter C. Wetzel, serving in the 13th Infantry Regiment, 8th Infantry Division, smothers the blasts of German-thrown grenades with his body, sacrificing himself to protect those around him. He is posthumously awarded the Medal Of Honor ten months later, on February 26, 1946, by President Harry S. Truman. Here is his citation:
“Pfc. Wetzel, an acting squad leader with the Antitank Company of the 13th Infantry, was guarding his platoon's command post in a house at Birken, Germany, during the early morning hours of 3 April 1945, when he detected strong enemy forces moving in to attack. He ran into the house, alerted the occupants and immediately began defending the post against heavy automatic weapons fire coming from the hostile troops. Under cover of darkness the Germans forced their way close to the building where they hurled grenades, 2 of which landed in the room where Pfc. Wetzel and the others had taken up firing positions. Shouting a warning to his fellow soldiers, Pfc. Wetzel threw himself on the grenades and, as they exploded, absorbed their entire blast, suffering wounds from which he died. The supreme gallantry of Pfc. Wetzel saved his comrades from death or serious injury and made it possible for them to continue the defense of the command post and break the power of a dangerous local counterthrust by the enemy. His unhesitating sacrifice of his life was in keeping with the U.S. Army's highest traditions of bravery and heroism.”
Wetzel was buried in the Netherlands American Cemetery, Margraten, the Netherlands.
German rocket troops are converted to regular troops and join the German 5th Army Corps.
Thousands of prisoners of Buchenwald concentration camp are forced to evacuate and march away ahead of Allied advance.
Over Germany, US 8th Air Force attacks U-boat base at Kiel with 717 bombers (two are lost), sinking 6 U-boats and 8 other German vessels. RAF Bomber Command sends 255 aircraft to attack Nordhausen during the day and 95 aircraft to attack Berlin overnight. US 9th Air Force aircraft fly armed recon, escort, patrols, leaflet missions, ground support, and tactical bombing missions, including 220 bombers that are sent to attack Holzminden and Hameln.
On the eastern front, Soviet 1st Ukrainian Front, 1st Belorussian Front, and 2nd Belorussian Front deploy along the Oder and the Niesse for new offensive to Berlin and the Elbe. Soviet 2nd Ukrainian Front penetrates the German defensive lines between Wiener Neustadt and Neusiedler Lake, advancing toward Vienna, Austria. Major Carl Szokoll, a leader of the Austrian resistance, meets with Soviet authorities about cooperation in Vienna to prevent the city's destruction. Almost all of Hungary is now clear of Axis troops while in Czechoslovakia Bratislava is besieged. After several days of heavy artillery attacks, Soviet 3rd Belorussian Front opens final assault against Koenigsberg. The 7th Guards Army of Soviet 2nd Ukrainian Front attacking German 8th Army around Bratislava
In Italy, troops of British Special Boat Service and Italian 28th Garribaldi Brigade captured islands in Lake Comacchio in northern Italy. US 12th Air Force bombers are mostly grounded by poor weather conditions, but some aircraft attack transportation lines, supply depots, methanol plants, and other targets in the Po valley and elsewhere in northern Italy.
Pictured: US soldiers rest in war-littered street of Fulda (Germany) April 3, 1945

Tankmen of the 761st Tank Battalion and infantrymen of the 3rd Battalion, 409th Regiment, 103rd Division, 7th U.S. Army, make pancakes together near Reisdorf, Germany, on April 3, 1945

A British soldier is dwarfed by a German railway locomotive resting at a precipitous angle in a heavily-bombed railyard in Munster, April 3, 1945

Retired MSgt Leo Bolick visiting PFC Wetzel's grave at Netherlands American Cemetery and Memorial in 1990. Leo was Wetzel's Platoon Sergeant and one of the men PFC Wetzel gave his life to save.
