History
The 14th Armored Division landed
at Marseilles, France, 29 October 1944. On 12 November, Headquarters,
Combat Command R was ordered to Nice. The 19th and 68th Armored Infantry
Battalions were attached to CCR. The 19th AIB moved to the area of Nice
on the 13th, with the 68th AIB following the next day. The two
battalions were the first elements of the Division to enter combat,
maintaining defensive positions in the Maritime Alps along the
Franco-Italian frontier. Meanwhile the rest of the Division moved north
to the area of Epinal. On 19 November, CCA joined Seventh Army's VI
Corps in its drive through the Vosges Mountains. Hard fighting in and
around the mountain towns of Gertwiller, Benfeld, and Barr cracked Nazi
defenses, and the Division was on the Alsatian Plain early in December.
The Division began assembling at
Hochfelden on the Alsatian Plain to the east of Strasbourg on 1
December. By 11 December advance elements of the Division began movement
across the Moder River into the Haguenau woods in preparation for an
offensive to clear the Alsace of German forces. The Division began its
attacks on 13 December and reached the German border along the Lauter
River two days later. Led by troops the 19th AIB, the Division crossed
the river into Germany in the area of Wissembourg. On the 17th they
began to attack the Siegfried Line in force. Despite making good
progress in breaching the German defensive line, the Division was
ordered to withdraw into the Alsace on 19 December due to the major
German offensive in the Ardennes.
On Christmas Day Task Force
Hudelson, a relatively small force without tank support, was formed
around the Division's 62nd AIB and 94th Cavalry Squadron. The TF was
assigned defensive positions in the mountainous area running south of
Bitche in the area of Bannstein. On New Year's Eve, TF Hudelson received
the first attacks of Operation Nordwind, the last major German offensive
of the war. Engaged by elements of five German divisions the TF managed
to delay the enemy advance long enough for strong reinforcements to
arrive and contain the thrust.
With the failure of this attack,
the German command shifted its effort to the Alsatian Plain with the
goal of breaking through Hagenau to reach Saverne and Strasbourg. This,
the largest effort of Operation Nordwind nearly succeeded when attacks
at Hatten and Rittershoffen on 9 January achieved a short-lived
breakthrough of the Seventh Army lines. In a short, but furious armored
engagement, elements of the 14th Armored Division stopped the
breakthrough and restored the defensive line at the two villages. In the
resulting Battle of Hatten-Rittershoffen, the 14th, supported by the 2nd
and 3rd Bns., 315th Infantry, fought the German XXXIX Panzer Corps to a
stand-still.
The division's 11 day stand
at Hatten-Rittershoffen gave the rest of Seventh Army time to withdraw
to newly prepared defensive positions on the south bank of the Moder
River. In the early morning hours of 21 January, the 14th finally
received orders to disengage from the enemy and withdraw from
Hatten-Rittershoffen. In the darkness the division, and its supporting
units, moved south along miles treacherous, icy roads, and joined the
rest of Seventh Army. While maintaining defensive positions along the
Moder,the 14th reorganized, refitted, and trained its replacements
during February and early March. The Division resumed the offensive on
15 March 1945. It crossed the Moder River and retook the Alsatian
territory given up during Operation Nordwind. The 14th crossed the
Lauter River once again on the 19th of March and attacked the Siegfried
Line the following day. By the 24th, the Division had captured
Germersheim on the Rhine. On Easter Sunday, 1 April 1945, the 14th moved
across the Rhine on a pontoon bridge near Worms, and continued pursuit
of the retreating enemy through Lohr, Gemunden, Neustadt, and Hammelburg.
In its final thrust, the Division raced to the Danube, crossed at
Ingolstadt, and pushed on across the Isar River to Moosburg, where over
110,000 Allied prisoners were liberated. Division artillery fired its
last rounds of the war on 2 May 1945 in an action along the Inn River
not far from the Austrian border. The 14th was busy processing German
prisoners when the war in Europe finally came to an end on 8 May, 1945.
(Source and (C):
www.14tharmoreddivision.org
)
Relevant links

The Lone Sentry
There are a total of two casualties of the Division and
supporting units buried in Margraten or KIA in the Netherlands and
buried elsewhere.