My Dad, William J Kull, was in the Hurtgen at that time. Co C, 12 Inf of the 4th Div. He lived to be a hundred and two! Thank you so much for putting some meaning behind those photos.
Thank you for this. My father was with an independant tank battalion in support of the the 4th ID. Seeing the tanks in these photos (and the accompanying locations) was very meaningful. He also survived DDay and the Bulge, but Hürtgen haunted him the most. he died in 2009, thinking no one cared or remembered, wanting the history of Hürtgen to be presered (failures and all). he never saw all the wonderful work you young people have done on RUclips to memorioaize this pubkicly. Thank you!! On belhalf of my father and the other vets. And myself!!
Thank you all for watching! Please like, subscribe and share this video with your friends. Stay tuned for our Battle of the Bulge video on December 16, 2023. Edit: Please excuse us. We made a slight mistake with Bennie's middle name: His full name is Benjamin "Bennie" F. Barron.
When you find a location, for example the guys walkingpast the white house up the hill, do you knock on the house to show the owners the photos or not bother?
Bennie was my uncle, my mother's youngest brother. Such an amazing video and I didn't catch any errors😉. Thank you for this wonderful tribute to these brave men.
Thank you Joey. A fantastic effort, as we have come to expect from you. My grandfather was there and suffered extreme frostbite of both feet, which plagued him for the remainder of his life. The frequently changing lines separated him from his men and he was hidden by a series of Belgian families until reunited with US troops. Afterwards, he maintained deep affection for the Belgian people. Your dedication and enthusiasm are inspiring and, often, quite emotional for me, and I venture for many other appreciative viewers. All of these scared, hungry, cold, and supremely brave men are my grandfather. Please continue your fine work. I urge all viewers to join the Snafu Docs membership and donate what you can so that Joey may pursue his passionate mission. To Victory!
Your painstaking attention to detail and the incredible detective work in finding the exact locations in the pictures and videos are a testament to your hard work, dedication and knowledge of the Hurtgen Forest. I salute you and your team for keeping WWII and American soldiers' memories alive with videos like this one, for so many have forgotten. As a former member of the 4th Infantry Division, I thank from the bottom of my heart. #SteadfastandLoyal
Great addition to put their name along with the birth and death dates of the soldiers. Sad that so few of these brave men are still with us today. Greatest generation by far.
And yet we honor them with what we have become today. I wonder how many of them would have rushed to serve if they could see what this country, its government and people have become.
@@556m4 people like you don't have the right to criticize this country. I served and paid my dues. What did you do? Nothing. That's why you are the way you are.
My Dad's best friend from his unit was killed in Hurtgen Forest, Henry 'Hank' Gordon. He only told us about it for first time in 2003 when a nephew of Gordon's did extensive research and found my Dad was last known survivor from their unit and contacted him.
My deep appreciation....I come from the Eifel and have been dealing with the Hürtgen Forest for years....your contribution from a very narrow group of soldiers shows an almost intimate insight into what happened in the deep green Hell.....
3:45 I wonder if the people who live there now know of this photograph of soldiers passing by their home. It was nice to see at the end where you show the pictures of the men in the photos that they all survived the war, though Harold Glessner died shortly after in 48. Mike Ala made it to 89 years old.
Fantastic video. Thank you so much for posting. My father-in-law was in the 4th Infantry Division, 340 Ordnance battalion. They ended up outside Bastogne during the Bulge. He made it as far as Munchen Gladbach before the war ended for him. God bless all the soldiers who fought for their country regardless of their side and their poor politics.
Thank You for the work and production you put into these documentaries. Your respect to the American forces that fought in Europe many years ago is noted!
Thank you for this amazing documentatio on the spot, and respect for those men/boys fighting in those very harsh conditions so we have our today’s freedom🙏🏻
My Uncle served with the 28th ID and was wounded in the Hurtgen Forest. The 28th was also sent to the quiet sector in the Ardennes after their ordeal in the Hurtgen. Fortunately, Uncle Dick was still in hospital so was spared that horrible experience of the Bulge. He never talked about his experience in the infantry but for a few snippets of times. His time there affected him for the remainder of his life, both physically (trench foot and the shrapnel wound) as well as mentally. Thank you so much for finding and sharing these images, the names of the soldiers and what happened to them, and showing the area today. Someday I hope to be able to visit the area as well.
Fantastisch werk mensen, en wat geweldig om te zien hoe jonge mensen het verleden van WOII levend houden en telkens weer het menselijke aspect belichten. Complimenten!!!
Outstanding! Usually I don't like historical videos that include music. But the music used in this production adds further emotion to the power of these "then and now" moments.
Thank you Joey and and all helped produce such an awesome video of one of the most hard fought battles of WW2 looking forward to December 16th Battle of the Bulge video.
Wow, wat een mooie en interessante aflevering met weer zeer unieke beelden Joey petje af! Zou leuk zijn als je een keer samen een aflevering maakt met JD en Paul Woodage. Ik verheug mij op de volgende, dankjewel echt klasse!
Thank you for bringing these images back to life. Your attention to detail and the desire to find and show the locations show that you are a terrific person. Thanks for allowing me to see these men in action again.
This one brought a tear to my eyes, just imagining what these men went thru for almost a year. During some of the most brutal fighting as Germany knew their time was limited and expended everything they had to hold the Allies back.
The German men that fought in these battles were mere faint shadows of the earlier men in the German army. Read about the battles, from a soldiers viewpoint, in the East.
@@thomaswaynewardthis video isn't about the men who fought for the murderous Nazi regime. It's about the American citizens who became soldiers and who crossed the ocean to fight in a war that the US could have avoided, and yet came anyway. For the second time.
My grandfather said the battle at the Hurtgen Forest was horrible. He said the tree bursts were terrible to contend with. He noted that he helped bury body parts of soldiers who were blown apart. The battle on the beaches of Normandy was traumatic for him but the Hurtgen Forest seemed to really stir up emotions due to the carnage.
Du kannst stolz auf deinen Großvater sein! Er hat die Hölle gesehen und überlebt! Jetzt hat er sich den Seelenfrieden in Gottes Himmelreich verdient!🇺🇲👌 Best Regards from Kreuzau near ( Hurtgen Forest)
Such respect when speaking of these men, so personal. You’re a great ambassador for these men and I’m sure they’d be very proud in your methods of handling this. Thank you.
I love how you guys added the birth and death years of the men in the photos. It’s a strong reminder of how little time we have here. Remember to live every day to the best of your abilities.
Amazing video, like all your others. Thanks for taking the time to do all the required research and traveling to the exact locations. I can experience it thanks to you.
Thank you for such intimate and personal accounts, the photo history and the soldiers who were there. Outstanding work you do on the projects. Your work is a favorite of mine to watch. Watching from St. Louis.
These videos, with the war photo comparison, are so healing for the one’s who served there. I was able to show my best friends granddad photos of Okinawa while I was stationed there. He loved seeing the life after the final images he remembered were death and destruction.
Great story telling Joey. The pictures really painted the struggles the men were experiencing. The fours months surrounding this time of the war was horrific. Germany was fighting for their lives which intensified their struggle.
Thank you Joey for your love for these heroes. For some reason when I watch these videos I have a tear in my eye for these men and knowing the love others like yourself have for them.
Thanks for video. I am researching about my grandfathers service. He was in 39th infantry, Company A. My mother later told us that he disliked being in the forest because you could only see “up”. And it was related to what he had gone through in the war.
Incredible presentation, thank you for your research and interest in history. My father served in the 38th calvary mechanized reconnaissance unit. He was involved in 111 straight days of combat action in the ardennes. He was positioned west of Monshau on the seigfried line. I have been reading daily action reports of his time in ETO. Seeing those photos make me imagine his time in Europe. Thanks again. Keep up the important work you are doing to remember these gallant soldiers.
Very good. I'm familiar with the photos of the two tank destroyers, so it's interesting to see the location as it is today. The house, with its window rails still in place, is remarkable. Looking forward to the Bulge video.
My father was there he was with company k .112th inf reg. Of the 28th division he was a combat medic and was wounded there by a tree burst from a German 88 mm gun...he also wound up in the Ardennes ...fascinating program hope you do more especially along the Kall trail he was at the aid station that was set up there....many many thanks for doing this and preserving history....
The Hurtgen forest was a complete waste of manpower and resources.The German army was amazed that the US would pick such an area for a major offensive strike. It became a meat grinder for the US Army.
I have heard other people criticize U.S. military commanders for fighting in the Huertgen Forest, but I believe these critiques miss key realities of the military situation. First, one must ask what the alternative was. Early efforts to break into Germany through narrow corridors--such as the 5th Armored Division's salient at Wallendorf, the 28th Infantry Division's attacks at Sevenig and Harspelt, the 3rd Armored Division's effort to punch through Stolberg Corridor, and of course Operation MARKET GARDEN--all failed to get the Allies into central Germany and proved that victory would only come through a broad, systematic sweep to eliminate all enemy resistance. This meant that the the Huertgen, like all parts of western Germany, would have to be captured. Second, even if one wants to argue that the Americans should have focused on the open ground north of the forest and left the Huertgen Forest alone, the reality is that the Huertgen region is on the west side of the Roer River. American and British troops could not advance eastward across the Roer north of the Huertgen while leaving a sizable German force the forest to their rear. The only real option was to eliminate all German forces east of the Roer before crossing the river. So, the Huertgen Forest would have had to have been captured by January or February 1945 anyway, in preparation for Operation GRENADE. Finally, people often overlook the cost of the fighting just outside of the Huertgen. While the 1st, 4th, and 8th Infantry Divisions were engaged in heavy combat in the Huertgen Forest in November 1944, the 29th, 30th, 84th, and 104th Infantry Divisions, as well as the 2nd and 3rd Armored Divisions, were suffering tens of thousands of casualties trying to capture the open ground north and northwest of the Huertgen. Sure, those soldiers didn't have to deal with hilly terrain and thick vegetation. Instead, they had to advance across wide open ground in full view of German artillery, tanks, and machine guns. In short, fighting across many parts of western Germany was bloody, and in some cases just as bad as combat within the Huertgen Forest. This is not to say that all of the American tactical or strategic decisions within the Huertgen Forest were wise or necessary. For instance, the 28th Infantry Division headquarters' decision to send two battalions across the Kall River to capture and hold Schmidt involved a complete misunderstanding of the terrain and the military situation. However, the overall campaign itself was likely necessary, and was a bloody contest because it involved an effort to capture and hold territory in the face of a determined and deadly foe.
From what I understood the critics could have been led by a pre-September 1944- Montgomery, as in, go around the forest, seal the lot itself off, pick (off) the dams, and go for the industrial Ruhr. That was indeed before the Germans left France on a trot.
@annedejong1040 Yes, Montgomerys proposal of an extremely powerful concentrated northern thrust would have gone directly to the Ruhr. He wouldn't have wasted time in the Hurtgen Forest or Lorraine or Alsace. The US 1st Army should have struck towards Aachen when Market Garden was happening and while the Germans diverted forces there. Instead, they started attacks into the Hurtgen.
@thebattlefieldhistorian8990 On the contrary. Market Garden was actually the fastest allied advance against German opposition in the entire September 1944 to February 1945 period. 100km of German held ground taken in just 3 days. This showed that such thrusts could take a lot of ground quickly. The broad front strategy was a complete failure all through autumn 1944. It wasted untold men and resources for next to nothing gained. It did not even whittle German forces down to any great extent because the Germans were able to build up their forces during this period and they pushed the Americans back into a retreat at the start of winter in the Ardennes. The Hurtgen Forest was supposed to divert and tie the Germans down so an advance to and then beyond Aachen could occur. Instead all it ended up doing was suck more and more AMERICAN forces into it, causing needless casualties. 40,000 or more. This then directly lead to a thinning down of the 1st Army sector in front of the Ardennes. The result of which was a retreat and another near 100,000 casualties. The Hurtgen Forest was a terrible idea. Total waste of time, men resources.
Incredible, absolutely stunning sir. Those photos and your present-day footage around the house left me with my mouth wide open in amazement. I have done something akin to this with photos taken just after The Battle of Lookout Mountain.
Fascinating. I stood in these very same places for then and now comparisons about ten years ago. Great to see you had more original photographs to compare with. Lovely film, thank you.
My Dad, William J Kull, was in the Hurtgen at that time. Co C, 12 Inf of the 4th Div. He lived to be a hundred and two! Thank you so much for putting some meaning behind those photos.
You must be very old
@@OffendingTheOffendable Or talking shite! Old people don't attention seek like that.
Thank you for this. My father was with an independant tank battalion in support of the the 4th ID. Seeing the tanks in these photos (and the accompanying locations) was very meaningful.
He also survived DDay and the Bulge, but Hürtgen haunted him the most.
he died in 2009, thinking no one cared or remembered, wanting the history of Hürtgen to be presered (failures and all). he never saw all the wonderful work you young people have done on RUclips to memorioaize this pubkicly. Thank you!! On belhalf of my father and the other vets. And myself!!
The huge amount of work you must put into these documentaries is a very fitting tribute to those who endured those times.
Wow
I find it fascinating that I am watching this 79 years to the day the footage & images were taken.
Most of the men in the photos were born about 65 years after the American civil war ended.
Thank you all for watching! Please like, subscribe and share this video with your friends. Stay tuned for our Battle of the Bulge video on December 16, 2023.
Edit: Please excuse us. We made a slight mistake with Bennie's middle name: His full name is Benjamin "Bennie" F. Barron.
When you find a location, for example the guys walkingpast the white house up the hill, do you knock on the house to show the owners the photos or not bother?
Bennie was my uncle, my mother's youngest brother. Such an amazing video and I didn't catch any errors😉. Thank you for this wonderful tribute to these brave men.
@@pamelawooden6012That’s incredible
Thank you Joey. A fantastic effort, as we have come to expect from you. My grandfather was there and suffered extreme frostbite of both feet, which plagued him for the remainder of his life. The frequently changing lines separated him from his men and he was hidden by a series of Belgian families until reunited with US troops. Afterwards, he maintained deep affection for the Belgian people. Your dedication and enthusiasm are inspiring and, often, quite emotional for me, and I venture for many other appreciative viewers. All of these scared, hungry, cold, and supremely brave men are my grandfather. Please continue your fine work. I urge all viewers to join the Snafu Docs membership and donate what you can so that Joey may pursue his passionate mission. To Victory!
Your painstaking attention to detail and the incredible detective work in finding the exact locations in the pictures and videos are a testament to your hard work, dedication and knowledge of the Hurtgen Forest. I salute you and your team for keeping WWII and American soldiers' memories alive with videos like this one, for so many have forgotten. As a former member of the 4th Infantry Division, I thank from the bottom of my heart. #SteadfastandLoyal
Great addition to put their name along with the birth and death dates of the soldiers. Sad that so few of these brave men are still with us today.
Greatest generation by far.
And yet we honor them with what we have become today. I wonder how many of them would have rushed to serve if they could see what this country, its government and people have become.
@556m4
Nice try botnik. We live in the greatest country in the world
@@SerenityMae11 Because you’ve lived in every country and are the leading source, right ? Basically proving the point of my original comment.
@@556m4 people like you don't have the right to criticize this country. I served and paid my dues. What did you do? Nothing. That's why you are the way you are.
Well Done Sir. Well Done. One of the most forgotten Battles of the 2nd World War
Outstanding then and now video. The photos were on the spot with the terrain. Keep up the excellent work.
I always keep my eye out for Snafudocs uploads. I love the whole then and now concept from I first saw it in After the Battle magazine as a kid.
I appreciate this channel so, so much.
Thank You for everything that you do.
Hi from France,as usual ,an awesome job for sharing these photos with us !
Man these videos give me chills, especially with the music.
Gänsehaut pur 😢
Ehre sei jedem Soldaten der dort gekämpft und gelitten hat!
Danke für deine Arbeit
My Dad's best friend from his unit was killed in Hurtgen Forest, Henry 'Hank' Gordon. He only told us about it for first time in 2003 when a nephew of Gordon's did extensive research and found my Dad was last known survivor from their unit and contacted him.
Which country from you
@@mujeebmujeeb6030Poopistan
What age are you???
Always nicely done. It helps me understand what my uncle went through he was in the battle of the bulge. Thank you.
My deep appreciation....I come from the Eifel and have been dealing with the Hürtgen Forest for years....your contribution from a very narrow group of soldiers shows an almost intimate insight into what happened in the deep green Hell.....
3:45 I wonder if the people who live there now know of this photograph of soldiers passing by their home. It was nice to see at the end where you show the pictures of the men in the photos that they all survived the war, though Harold Glessner died shortly after in 48. Mike Ala made it to 89 years old.
Good to see you back and as always, a great & informative video.. 👍👍
Merci beaucoup pour tout ce travail de recherche et de mémoire 👍
Thank you for doing these videos. Lest we forget what these soldiers did for humanity.
God bless you for the work that you do to keep these brave soldiers in our memories.
Great video thanks for making them 👍
As always, an interesting and unique video project with Joey and Flo! I love working with these guys!
Brilliant task you completed... finding pin-point actual locations. More power to you.
Fantastic video. Thank you so much for posting. My father-in-law was in the 4th Infantry Division, 340 Ordnance battalion. They ended up outside Bastogne during the Bulge. He made it as far as Munchen Gladbach before the war ended for him. God bless all the soldiers who fought for their country regardless of their side and their poor politics.
Very interesting - Our Uncle was KIA on 21Nov44, 8th Inf/4th Div Company C. Thanks for sharing this story.
Joey and Flo -- As always, excellent work! Being on the anniversary of the date this battle occurred made it even more meaningful.
Great work guys you must feel so amazing standing in the footsteps of WW2 history
Awesome work
Your videos are very respectful. Thank you.
Always look forward to watching your videos. Thanks keep up the good work guys
Dear Sir, thank you doesn’t seem to be weighty enough, but from my heart thank you very much!
Thank You for the work and production you put into these documentaries. Your respect to the American forces that fought in Europe many years ago is noted!
Thank you for this amazing documentatio on the spot, and respect for those men/boys fighting in those very harsh conditions so we have our today’s freedom🙏🏻
So nice to see a young person taking such interest in those important events, that still affect the world today!
Great work again SNAFU Docs, thanks.
Fantastic video, thank you for doing this.
My Uncle served with the 28th ID and was wounded in the Hurtgen Forest. The 28th was also sent to the quiet sector in the Ardennes after their ordeal in the Hurtgen. Fortunately, Uncle Dick was still in hospital so was spared that horrible experience of the Bulge. He never talked about his experience in the infantry but for a few snippets of times. His time there affected him for the remainder of his life, both physically (trench foot and the shrapnel wound) as well as mentally. Thank you so much for finding and sharing these images, the names of the soldiers and what happened to them, and showing the area today. Someday I hope to be able to visit the area as well.
Fantastisch werk mensen, en wat geweldig om te zien hoe jonge mensen het verleden van WOII levend houden en telkens weer het menselijke aspect belichten. Complimenten!!!
❤
Outstanding! Usually I don't like historical videos that include music. But the music used in this production adds further emotion to the power of these "then and now" moments.
Fascinating piece of work as always
Thank you so much for this channel 👋
I love these “then and now” photos…. 👍🏼
Thank you Joey and and all helped produce such an awesome video of one of the most hard fought battles of WW2 looking forward to December 16th Battle of the Bulge video.
Wow, wat een mooie en interessante aflevering met weer zeer unieke beelden Joey petje af! Zou leuk zijn als je een keer samen een aflevering maakt met JD en Paul Woodage. Ik verheug mij op de volgende, dankjewel echt klasse!
Excellent video. I love the fact you are able to identify these G.I.'s.
Thank you for bringing these images back to life. Your attention to detail and the desire to find and show the locations show that you are a terrific person. Thanks for allowing me to see these men in action again.
Watching this gave me chills. Joey, bless you for doing the SNAFU documentaries. It matters.
Very well done and researched, outstanding
Nice work! Realy appreciated
This one brought a tear to my eyes, just imagining what these men went thru for almost a year. During some of the most brutal fighting as Germany knew their time was limited and expended everything they had to hold the Allies back.
The German men that fought in these battles were mere faint shadows of the earlier men in the German army. Read about the battles, from a soldiers viewpoint, in the East.
@@thomaswaynewardthere was still some hard fighting but nothing on the scale of the eastern front. The Forgotten Soldier is a must read
Some men went through the whole war..
@@thomaswaynewardthis video isn't about the men who fought for the murderous Nazi regime. It's about the American citizens who became soldiers and who crossed the ocean to fight in a war that the US could have avoided, and yet came anyway. For the second time.
They just wanted to be left alone.
Fantastic video and a fine tribute to these men.
😂🤮
My grandfather said the battle at the Hurtgen Forest was horrible. He said the tree bursts were terrible to contend with. He noted that he helped bury body parts of soldiers who were blown apart. The battle on the beaches of Normandy was traumatic for him but the Hurtgen Forest seemed to really stir up emotions due to the carnage.
All battles are horrible
Du kannst stolz auf deinen Großvater sein! Er hat die Hölle gesehen und überlebt! Jetzt hat er sich den Seelenfrieden in Gottes Himmelreich verdient!🇺🇲👌
Best Regards from Kreuzau near ( Hurtgen Forest)
Did he Aye!
Amazing work!
Such respect when speaking of these men, so personal. You’re a great ambassador for these men and I’m sure they’d be very proud in your methods of handling this. Thank you.
GOD BLESS YOU for doing what you do...for us to travel in time and back...when all are no longer enemies.
I was a tank crewman in 4th ID. However the older I get, the prouder I am of 4th ID history. Especially, the history of the Hurtgen Forest.
Love this channel! I want to tour Europe for a couple months and visit battle sites. Been to Bastogne and Arnhem.
Thank you ever so much for your research. I've learned so much from you
Outstanding as always.
En weer een mooie reportage van jullie,bedankt hiervoor
Afgelopen zomer zelf daar rond gewandeld
Zeer indrukwekkend als je deze verhalen kent
I feel like you are walking on hallowed ground. Fantastic show.
You treat these men as if they were your brothers. Thank you and God Bless.
I love how you guys added the birth and death years of the men in the photos. It’s a strong reminder of how little time we have here. Remember to live every day to the best of your abilities.
Amazing video, like all your others. Thanks for taking the time to do all the required research and traveling to the exact locations. I can experience it thanks to you.
these comparisons, 80 years apart, are particularly fascinating and moving. What remarkable work, congratulations and thank you! From France.
Thank you for such intimate and personal accounts, the photo history and the soldiers who were there. Outstanding work you do on the projects.
Your work is a favorite of mine to watch.
Watching from St. Louis.
Keep history alive
Amazing work.
Mijn complimenten! Echt kippenvel! Jammer dat jouw foto's niet een vaste plek krijgen daar
A simple idea for a video resulting in a profoundly moving insight into the "everyday" realities these men endured. Thank you.
These videos, with the war photo comparison, are so healing for the one’s who served there. I was able to show my best friends granddad photos of Okinawa while I was stationed there. He loved seeing the life after the final images he remembered were death and destruction.
Another quality production. You guys are doing a fantastic job.
Excellent footage of a hard and almost forgotten battle.
Great to hear!
Thank you Joey! You are doing a great service to the memories of these men. I appreciate your dedication to keeping this history alive.
(Shaking my head)😮
This is just amazing to see.
Thankyou for bringing us here, where brave men died. 🌏🕊️
Great story telling Joey. The pictures really painted the struggles the men were experiencing. The fours months surrounding this time of the war was horrific. Germany was fighting for their lives which intensified their struggle.
Amazing stuff, God Bless these Men
Thank you for such a beautifully moving video. All those men will never be forgotton.
Wat een schitterende video. Ik heb ook een paar keer over dat pad gelopen niet wetende dat deze fotos hier gemaakt zijn. Bedankt.
Dankjewel!
Thank you Joey for your love for these heroes. For some reason when I watch these videos I have a tear in my eye for these men and knowing the love others like yourself have for them.
Thanks for video. I am researching about my grandfathers service. He was in 39th infantry, Company A. My mother later told us that he disliked being in the forest because you could only see “up”. And it was related to what he had gone through in the war.
Thank you for sharing these photos with us. They were taken 20 years to the day before I was born.
Congratulations on another well produced, Researched & informative documentary.
Man I love your work! Thank you for all your hard work and dedication.
Incredible presentation, thank you for your research and interest in history. My father served in the 38th calvary mechanized reconnaissance unit. He was involved in 111 straight days of combat action in the ardennes. He was positioned west of Monshau on the seigfried line. I have been reading daily action reports of his time in ETO. Seeing those photos make me imagine his time in Europe. Thanks again. Keep up the important work you are doing to remember these gallant soldiers.
At 5:25 what has he got on the end of his Thompson ? A rifle Grenade or a suppressor? Great video this must have taken months of hard work.
Words fail me except to express a heartfelt thank you.
No, thank you!
Very good. I'm familiar with the photos of the two tank destroyers, so it's interesting to see the location as it is today. The house, with its window rails still in place, is remarkable. Looking forward to the Bulge video.
My father was there he was with company k .112th inf reg. Of the 28th division he was a combat medic and was wounded there by a tree burst from a German 88 mm gun...he also wound up in the Ardennes ...fascinating program hope you do more especially along the Kall trail he was at the aid station that was set up there....many many thanks for doing this and preserving history....
The Hurtgen forest was a complete waste of manpower and resources.The German army was amazed that the US would pick such an area for a major offensive strike. It became a meat grinder for the US Army.
I have heard other people criticize U.S. military commanders for fighting in the Huertgen Forest, but I believe these critiques miss key realities of the military situation. First, one must ask what the alternative was. Early efforts to break into Germany through narrow corridors--such as the 5th Armored Division's salient at Wallendorf, the 28th Infantry Division's attacks at Sevenig and Harspelt, the 3rd Armored Division's effort to punch through Stolberg Corridor, and of course Operation MARKET GARDEN--all failed to get the Allies into central Germany and proved that victory would only come through a broad, systematic sweep to eliminate all enemy resistance. This meant that the the Huertgen, like all parts of western Germany, would have to be captured.
Second, even if one wants to argue that the Americans should have focused on the open ground north of the forest and left the Huertgen Forest alone, the reality is that the Huertgen region is on the west side of the Roer River. American and British troops could not advance eastward across the Roer north of the Huertgen while leaving a sizable German force the forest to their rear. The only real option was to eliminate all German forces east of the Roer before crossing the river. So, the Huertgen Forest would have had to have been captured by January or February 1945 anyway, in preparation for Operation GRENADE.
Finally, people often overlook the cost of the fighting just outside of the Huertgen. While the 1st, 4th, and 8th Infantry Divisions were engaged in heavy combat in the Huertgen Forest in November 1944, the 29th, 30th, 84th, and 104th Infantry Divisions, as well as the 2nd and 3rd Armored Divisions, were suffering tens of thousands of casualties trying to capture the open ground north and northwest of the Huertgen. Sure, those soldiers didn't have to deal with hilly terrain and thick vegetation. Instead, they had to advance across wide open ground in full view of German artillery, tanks, and machine guns. In short, fighting across many parts of western Germany was bloody, and in some cases just as bad as combat within the Huertgen Forest.
This is not to say that all of the American tactical or strategic decisions within the Huertgen Forest were wise or necessary. For instance, the 28th Infantry Division headquarters' decision to send two battalions across the Kall River to capture and hold Schmidt involved a complete misunderstanding of the terrain and the military situation. However, the overall campaign itself was likely necessary, and was a bloody contest because it involved an effort to capture and hold territory in the face of a determined and deadly foe.
The whole war was a waste of manpower...
From what I understood the critics could have been led by a pre-September 1944- Montgomery, as in, go around the forest, seal the lot itself off, pick (off) the dams, and go for the industrial Ruhr. That was indeed before the Germans left France on a trot.
@annedejong1040
Yes, Montgomerys proposal of an extremely powerful concentrated northern thrust would have gone directly to the Ruhr. He wouldn't have wasted time in the Hurtgen Forest or Lorraine or Alsace.
The US 1st Army should have struck towards Aachen when Market Garden was happening and while the Germans diverted forces there. Instead, they started attacks into the Hurtgen.
@thebattlefieldhistorian8990
On the contrary. Market Garden was actually the fastest allied advance against German opposition in the entire September 1944 to February 1945 period. 100km of German held ground taken in just 3 days. This showed that such thrusts could take a lot of ground quickly.
The broad front strategy was a complete failure all through autumn 1944. It wasted untold men and resources for next to nothing gained. It did not even whittle German forces down to any great extent because the Germans were able to build up their forces during this period and they pushed the Americans back into a retreat at the start of winter in the Ardennes.
The Hurtgen Forest was supposed to divert and tie the Germans down so an advance to and then beyond Aachen could occur. Instead all it ended up doing was suck more and more AMERICAN forces into it, causing needless casualties. 40,000 or more. This then directly lead to a thinning down of the 1st Army sector in front of the Ardennes. The result of which was a retreat and another near 100,000 casualties.
The Hurtgen Forest was a terrible idea. Total waste of time, men resources.
Nature is so beautiful, yet look at what people do to each other.
Incredible, absolutely stunning sir. Those photos and your present-day footage around the house left me with my mouth wide open in amazement. I have done something akin to this with photos taken just after The Battle of Lookout Mountain.
Good to see a new post from you folks. And I like the format.
These videos just put chills up my spine. Incredible. Thank you.
Thank you for this video. Fantastic footage, you do a great job. Thank you
Great job Joey and the SNAFU team. I've visited Huertgen twice. A powerful place to visit... much quieter than it was in 1944.
Incredible moments in history captured and your research once again finding these locations. I love your work... Keep it coming 👌🙏
Thank you!
Fascinating. I stood in these very same places for then and now comparisons about ten years ago. Great to see you had more original photographs to compare with. Lovely film, thank you.