This
is part of a series following my father's 10th Armored Division in
World War II seventy years ago. He was a medic with the 80th Medical
Battalion assigned to the 10th Armored, part of Patton’s Third Army.
The
Tenth processed their 2,000 prisoners from Crailsheim and sent them to
the rear. They were given a new battle assignment. They were to shift
their attention and combat power toward Heilbronn where the fighting was
continuing.

CC A was directed to seize Oehringen while CC B was placed in "reserve" on a two-hour alert.
12 - 15 April
When forces entered Oehringen they were met with fierce resistance. As Nichols reports it,
Nazi fanaticism was slow to die as Wehrmacht and civilians alike resisted with renewed determination.
Heavy
and timed artillery bursts were ordered and the efforts prevailed with
the town captured on 13 April. When all the units met with the infantry
units east of Heilbronn that mission was ended.
 |
| Heilbronn, April 1945 |
16 - 24 April
It was now time to make
the move south toward the Danube and Austria. For several days there
were obstacles that acted as hidden allies of the enemy. The minefields,
roadblocks and blown bridges, says Nichols, "strained the already
overworked Tiger engineers' efforts to clear a path for continued
advance." By April 18, things began to move and all three Combat
Commands became a formidable array of six armored columns. Town after
town was captured. On April 19 the terrain of steep hills and deep
valleys slowed the advance but later in the day the Tigers again
triumphed and forged ahead 17 miles to the Rems River.
The
plateau could have been easily defended by the enemy. But the Germans
were sure that the Americans would attack from the west and were thus
unable to halt the advance from the north.
CC B crossed
the river after seizing two bridges while, to the west CC A hit a 40
MPH pace as a result of Tigers who carried a power saw to rip through
roadblocks. At Lorch they scared of an enemy plane about to land and an
enemy train. The train got up steam and raced away surprised by the
Tigers in the town. Movement of all Combat Commands quickly captured
more territory. By April 22 all were closing in on the same target of
Kircheim and burst ahead to the Danube at Ehingen.
Stuttgart
was virtually surrounded. Harassment of the enemy continued. The
capture of Kircheim marked the end of German resistance in the area as
more than 400 prisoners were taken and, more importantly, the
Stuttgart-Munich autobahn was cut. Nichols writes then,
One
of the most important days in the Tenth's memorable history was April
22, the day Chamberlain's forces steamrolled to the Danube. By midnight
they succeeded in capturing a bridge at Ehingen. Then on April 23 [they]
destroyed a German supply column.... On April 24 the Reserve Command
sped across the [Danube] and headed for Ulm. At this point the Tigers
were further south than any other American unit.... The Third Reich was
almost a dead government now, as allied armies to the north were
inflicting terrible punishment on the beaten enemy. The Tenth Armored
was no poised above the great National Redoubt, an area which the
Germans claimed could never be captured by the Americans. However, this
claim, along with their hopes for a "thousand Year Reich" died when the
Tiger's mailed fist hit them again and for the last time to end the war
in the first week of May 1945