| |
|
|
German General Ludendorff set the stage during The Great War for the Battle of Belleau Wood when
he launched the Chemin des Dames offensive against the Allied Northern Front on May 27, 1918. The
Fourth Brigade, American Expeditionary Forces, along with other allied forces moved north on May
20. 2nd Division Marines dug in along a defensive line north of the village of Lucy-Le-Bocage. The front finally settled with the 5th Marines to the west and the 6th Marines to the east. Most units deployed without machine guns, but 2nd Bn, 5th Marines showed the Germans the effects of their superior long distance marksmanship. On June 6, the Marines make two assaults. The 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment attacks west of Belleau Wood and captures the strategically important Hill 142. Later the same day battalions of the 5th and 6th Marine Regiments assault the woods from the south and west in an effort to capture the town of Bouresches. The attack against the woods proper goes grimly.
Crossing a wheat field where they are exposed to machine gun fire. Gunnery Sergeant Dan Daly asks
his men, “Come on ya sons-of-bitches, ya
want to live forever?” The attack is only able to seize a small corner of the wood. The Marines gained more than small battered woodland. They stopped the last major German offensive of The Great War. In doing so, the Marine Corps earned the respect and admiration of our country and our allies. The 4th Brigade was awarded the French Citation, A L’Orde de L’Armee, and the wood was officially renamed, “Bois de la Brigade Marie,” in honor of the Marines. German soldiers later referred to the U.S. Marines,
respectfully, as “Teufelhunden,” or
Devil Dogs, because of their fierceness in battle. |