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(This
is the third in a series of oral history narratives about WW2 in
southern
Italy.
This edited narrative is the result of interviews with Herman
Chanowitz, former captain in the 2nd Tactical Air Communications
Squadron,
and a veteran of the Allied
campaigns in North Africa, Italy, France and Germany. He is a long-time
resident of
Naples.)
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San
Pietro
There was this horrible battle
when they
landed in Salerno
to try to get up to Rome by Christmas time. In order to do that, they
had to
take what is known as Route 6. Route 6
passes by a town named Mignano —the Mignano Gap—and then it goes to San
Pietro
and Cassino. From Cassino, it goes through the Liri Valley and gets to
Rome.
It's the Appian Way. The Italians convinced the Germans that the gap at
Cassino
was one that was difficult to penetrate.
Within the ruined church
of
the old town of San Pietro.
The Germans did a wonderful job of defending
it.
They told their
people that they had to hold the Allied forces back so they didn't get
to
Cassino by Christmas. They needed that much time—this was in October,
1943—to
prepare the defensive sites. San Pietro was 20 kilometers in front
of—south
of—Cassino. There was a terrible battle fought there [in San Pietro];
it started somewhere around the 8th or 9th of
December. The town of San Pietro, itself, is in the
valley between
two hills, Monte Lungo and Monte Sammucro. It's just off of Route 6.
Another
town there is Venafro. Going up that particular valley, you come to
Monte
Lungo.
It was the 36th
Division that was
given the task
of trying to conquer San Pietro. But before they did that, they had to
take
Monte Lungo. The Italians, for the first time, had an expeditionary
force [ed. note:
the newly constituted Italian 1st Motorized Brigade] and they
wanted
very much
to get into the act. This was the first time they were working with the
Allies,
so they were given the task—if they wanted it—of conquering Monte
Lungo, just
south of San Pietro.
What happened though was that they were told
that there
weren't too many weapons up there and that it shouldn't be difficult to
take.
When they started up the hill, they were slaughtered. The Italians said
that
there were a lot of weapons up there that the Americans had said
wouldn't
be there.
It was a German trap. An American regiment from the 36th
Division—
I think it was the 143rd Regiment—finally took the hill . I think it
was next
day or the day after. Then you had to take the hill of Sammucro,
and
then you
get into the town of San Pietro, which was sitting in the valley.
What you have now at the foot
of the hill
is an Italian
cemetery for the Italians who were killed trying to get up that hill.
Across
the street from the cemetery is a war museum. And, of course, there's a
nice
road you can take to get up to the top. I've
taken people up there.
Italian muleteers
removing
the fallen.
All of this happened in late November and
early December.
They made a movie about it: The Battle for San Pietro. John
Huston. There is also a guy from San Pietro, a school teacher named
Maurizo
Zambardi. I
think he's in his forties. He is very, very good with history and has
written a
lot about it.
It was a very
big battle—on the outskirts
and in the town,
itself. House to house. The town was ultimately destroyed. Then the
Germans
just withdrew to the next position, Cassino, itself. There was a river
there. It
was very difficult to forge. You couldn't get across.
 The
19 th of December was when the
battle was just
about over. San Pietro was completely destroyed. It was a town of about
2 km by
2 km. Maybe 8-10,000 people. The people who lived there had been told
to
evacuate. The Germans made them evacuate. A lot of them were put on
trains and
sent up to northern Italy. I got to know a guy by the name of Adriano,
who was a young kid in San Pietro when all this happened. I
met him
again when we were taking a tour recently, and he told us all about how
the people
protected themselves by living in caves (photo), and how many were
killed. Now
there is
a museum about the American soldiers as well as the Italian civilians
who were
killed. The new town of San Pietro is about a kilometer and a half from
the old
town.
(Photo
credits: All photos of San Pietro by Herman Chanowitz. I have been
unable
to trace credit/copyright
information for the record album graphic of the stylized Mt.
Vesuvius/US flag. If anyone has accurate information, I
would be happy to list the appropriate credit.)
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