After he was rested, Vernon woke up at 8AM on the morning of April 24, 1945, and traveled 15 miles North. He was still most likely attached to the 91st Infantry Division. While the 85th and 88th Infantry Divisions headed north to the town of Verona, the 91st headed North by Northeast to the town of Vicenza. He then spent the next couple of days trying to cross the Po River.
The bridges over the Po had been deliberately destroyed by the Axis Forces. As Vernon was attached to a tank Battalion, the solution was not to simply swim the river. It took the army corps of engineers a couple days to cross the Po. At 5:05 PM on April 26, 1945, Vernon and the 757th Tank finally crossed the Po. He then travelled 15 miles north to the town of Legnago Italy, and slept for the night.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Records Disappeared in Fire
I received this letter today from the National Personnel Records Center:
March 12, 2010
RE: Veteran's Name: HOSCHETTE, VERNON P.
SSN/SN: 37274XXX
Request Number: 1-7351509XXX
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Good News - Vernon listed in Online Database
I have made a few attempts to get Vernon recognized in online databases devoted to World War II combat veterans. What I have found so far is that not only is Vernon not listed, but there seems to be no record of the 757th Tank Battalion whatsoever.
I received an email this morning from Allen Cooley at the World War II History Center in El Dorado, Kansas. Outside of the "Vernon Hoschette: World War II Records" website I'm creating, Vernon and the 757th will now be listed in their database:
I received an email this morning from Allen Cooley at the World War II History Center in El Dorado, Kansas. Outside of the "Vernon Hoschette: World War II Records" website I'm creating, Vernon and the 757th will now be listed in their database:
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Notes about April, 1945 (Part 2 of 3)
On April 16th, 1945, months of planning culminated in the kick-off of the last Allied offensive in Italy. Fascist Italy was not a serious competitor at this point in the war. Mussolini had been at most a puppet ruler propped up by Hitler and his army. When Allied soldiers marched into and occupied Rome in early June, 1944, his illusory control over Italy effectively disappeared. But while the Italian Fascists had little power, the five remaining Italian divisions were working in conjunction with twenty-four German divisions, and giving the Allies one hell of a fight in Northern Italy. And while technically the Allies had yet to suffer defeat at the hands of these divisions, their victories had cost the lives of tens of thousands of American lives.
The Axis forces had set up three lines of defense. One "protected Bologna and blocked entry into the east-west Po Valley." The second was a "defensive line along the Po River itself," and the third lay in the "Alpine foothills...dubbed the Adige Line after the river of the same name." (Source: Po Valley, 1945). When the offensive began, Vernon was located in Loiano, just south of the first Axis defensive line in Bologna.
The Axis forces had set up three lines of defense. One "protected Bologna and blocked entry into the east-west Po Valley." The second was a "defensive line along the Po River itself," and the third lay in the "Alpine foothills...dubbed the Adige Line after the river of the same name." (Source: Po Valley, 1945). When the offensive began, Vernon was located in Loiano, just south of the first Axis defensive line in Bologna.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)