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            <figDesc>Front Cover</figDesc>
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            <figDesc>Title Page</figDesc>
          </figure>
        </p>
      </div>
      <pb xml:id="ni" n="i"/>
      <titlePage xml:id="f2" type="series">
        <docTitle>
          <titlePart type="main">
            <hi rend="i">Official History of New Zealand<lb/>
in the Second World War<lb/>
<date from="1939" to="1945">1939–45</date></hi>
          </titlePart>
        </docTitle>
        <pb xml:id="nii" n="ii"/>
        <docImprint>
The authors of the volumes in this series of histories prepared under<lb/>
the supervision of the <name key="name-110027" type="organisation">War History Branch</name> of the Department of<lb/>
Internal Affairs have been given full access to official documents.<lb/>
They and the Editor-in-Chief are responsible for the statements<lb/>
made and the views expressed by them.
</docImprint>
        <imprimatur>
          <hi rend="sc">by authority:<lb/>
r. e. owen, government printer, wellington, new
zealand—<date when="1967">1967</date></hi>
        </imprimatur>
      </titlePage>
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            <p>The end of the <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> advance which had begun at <name key="name-010927" type="place">El Alamein</name><lb/>
in Egypt in <date when="1942-10">October 1942</date>: New Zealanders rest beside their gear in<lb/>
the Castello San Giusto of <name key="name-001410" type="place">Trieste</name>, in north-east <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, in <date when="1945-05">May 1945</date>.<lb/>
The war against <name key="name-008556" type="place">Germany</name> had been won, but already the ‘cold war’<lb/>
had started with the confrontation of the Powers of the West and the<lb/>
East on the frontier of <name key="name-004979" type="place">Yugoslavia</name></p>
          </figure>
        </p>
      </div>
      <pb xml:id="niii" n="iii"/>
      <titlePage xml:id="f4">
        <docTitle>
          <titlePart type="main">
            <hi rend="i">Official History of New Zealand<lb/>
in the Second World War <date from="1939" to="1945">1939–45</date></hi>
            <lb/>
            <name key="name-001383" type="place">ITALY</name>
            <lb/>
            <hi rend="i">Volume II<lb/>
FROM CASSINO TO TRIESTE</hi>
          </titlePart>
        </docTitle>
        <byline>
          <docAuthor>
            <name key="name-017353" type="person">ROBIN KAY</name>
          </docAuthor>
        </byline>
        <docImprint>
          <publisher>HISTORICAL PUBLICATIONS BRANCH<lb/>
DEPARTMENT OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS</publisher>
          <pubPlace><name key="name-008844" type="place">WELLINGTON</name>, NEW ZEALAND</pubPlace>
          <docDate when="1967">1967</docDate>
        </docImprint>
      </titlePage>
      <pb xml:id="niv" n="iv"/>
      <div xml:id="f5" type="correction">
        <head><hi rend="i">Correction</hi></head>
        <p>On p. 292, line 9, of <hi rend="i"><name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name></hi>, Volume I, it was stated that Lieutenant M. R. 
Drinkhall, 1/9 Gurkha Rifles, was awarded the Victoria Cross for his 
‘bravery, skill and leadership’ throughout the battle for Hangman's Hill 
at <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>. Lieutenant Drinkhall was in fact <hi rend="i">recommended</hi> for a VC but 
received the DSO. Unfortunately the award finally granted was omitted 
from the copy of the citation on the <name key="name-110027" type="organisation">War History Branch</name> file.</p>
        <p rend="center"><hi rend="i">Distributed by</hi><lb/><hi rend="sc">R. E. Owen</hi>, Government Printer Wellington, New
Zealand</p>
      </div>
      <pb xml:id="nv" n="v"/>
      <div xml:id="f6" type="foreword">
        <head>Foreword</head>
        <p rend="center">By <name key="name-009333" type="person">Brigadier <hi rend="sc">M. C. Fairbrother</hi></name>, <hi rend="sc">cbe, dso, ed</hi>, 
Editor-in-Chief, New Zealand War Histories</p>
        <p>THE publication of this volume concludes the record of New 
Zealand's military operations in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> and her participation in 
the Second World War.</p>
        <p rend="indent">Thus ended, in Churchill's words, this ‘great contention’. It was 
not, as with the First World War, a sudden ending, leaving a situation 
for the troops in which little else remained but to return home and 
resume their interrupted lives. For months after victory was won in 
<name key="name-008008" type="place">Europe</name> a further task loomed ahead. The diversion of forces from the 
European theatre to the <name key="name-008892" type="place">Pacific</name> for the defeat of <name key="name-002006" type="place">Japan</name> and the mode 
of their employment became a priority for politician and soldier alike. 
That the war in the <name key="name-008892" type="place">Pacific</name> ended without the need for New Zealand 
to again deploy her forces there was without doubt the greatest 
blessing, for the strain on manpower had been severe.</p>
        <p rend="indent">New Zealand in peacetime had displayed no warlike propensities, 
and her armed forces had been neglected. But twice within 30 years 
she had provided military forces among the most effective in the world. 
In the muddy anonymity of the Western Front in <date from="1916" to="1918">1916–18</date> this was 
not always easy to perceive and few but the experts became aware of 
it – those with access to situation maps, perhaps, or who could discern 
from enemy dispositions the respect the Germans had for their New 
Zealand opponents. But in the <name key="name-007453" type="place">Mediterranean</name> theatre in <date from="1941" to="1942">1941–42</date>, the 
whole world could see. More than once, as <name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> recorded, 
the 2nd New Zealand Division ‘stood athwart the path of history’. 
The recurrent pressures from <name key="name-005976" type="place">Britain</name> and <name key="name-008197" type="place">America</name> to keep the Division 
in that theatre, when it was plainly in New Zealand's interest that her 
men should be committed against the Japanese, testify to the high 
esteem in which the New Zealanders were held as fighting men. 
Similar tributes, too, have been paid to New Zealanders serving 
with the <name key="name-003205" type="organisation">Royal Navy</name> and the <name key="name-003198" type="organisation">Royal Air Force</name>.</p>
        <p rend="indent">What then gave rise to this effectiveness. First, New Zealanders 
were mentally and physically well adapted for military life, once 
committed to it for a just cause. Most of them, even the town
<pb xml:id="nvi" n="vi"/>
dwellers, enjoyed a good deal of country life and open-air living. 
They were well nourished, sturdy in physique, energetic and capable 
of great endurance. They were adaptable, resourceful and mentally 
alert. In these respects they compared favourably with the soldiers 
from industrial <name key="name-008008" type="place">Europe</name>, many of whom had been subjected in civil 
life to poor conditions and a deadening routine of work.</p>
        <p rend="indent">Then too, there were not the social distinctions in the New Zealand 
forces that were to be found in the forces of older countries. The 
more senior leaders, it is true, were mostly of good education and 
thoughtful background. But as the war progressed officers were 
selected from among those who had shown themselves to be tough 
and steadfast in battle and to have the capacity for leadership. No 
account was taken of social status. Once commissioned, if they 
survived the dangerous subaltern stage and later, their progress 
depended on results. The opportunity for promotion regardless of 
social or economic factors had a good deal to do with the effectiveness 
of the New Zealand soldiers.</p>
        <p rend="indent">Recruitment for infantry battalions and companies had a regional 
basis and their members therefore did not come together as strangers. 
In most companies officers, NCOs and men alike generally came from 
the same district, had attended the same schools, travelled in the same 
trains and lived more or less to the same standards. They were, in a 
sense, from the same family and shared a determination not to let 
that family down – or any member of it. Similarly the Division as a 
whole matched the country as a whole, reflecting its regional variations and also its national characteristics and its strong sense of 
solidarity. Even many expatriates, when the war came, felt impelled 
to join the New Zealand forces in England or to make their way back 
to New Zealand to join. The ‘family atmosphere’ of the 2nd NZEF 
was one of its outstanding features.</p>
        <p rend="indent">One popular branch of this family was the <name key="name-005118" type="organisation">Maori Battalion</name>, serving 
as a combatant unit as distinct from the Maori Pioneer Battalion of 
the First World War. The Maoris were cheerful, light-hearted, willing 
and full of zest. But they were stern warriors and seldom failed to gain 
their objectives in an attack. Out of action some of them were a trial 
at times to the authorities. But on the battlefield at many a crucial 
point they did great service.</p>
        <p rend="indent">Almost all the New Zealanders overseas served in fighting ships or 
as aircrew, or in combatant formations in the army. Here they often 
displayed a nonchalance towards parade ground ceremony, and on 
leave many of them were defiant of any sort of authority. But on the 
battlefield their brand of discipline showed to good effect. The officers 
and NCOs proved themselves capable and worthy of respect, and
<pb xml:id="nvii" n="vii"/>
intelligent initiative was not lacking in the men. The spirit and skill 
which brought success at <name key="name-001334" type="place">Sidi Rezegh</name>, <name key="name-010927" type="place">El Alamein</name>, <name key="name-004259" type="place">Medenine</name> and at 
<name key="name-004812" type="place">Tebaga Gap</name> and the doggedness shown in <name key="name-003325" type="place">Crete</name> were impressively 
sustained throughout the war. Nowhere were they more evident than 
in the last battles, from the crossing of the <name key="name-027664" type="place">Senio</name> until the fighting 
ended in <name key="name-001410" type="place">Trieste</name>. In this advance the 2nd New Zealand Division, 
with powerful artillery and air support, overcame a series of strong 
defensive positions at great speed and with remarkably light losses. 
This final campaign in itself explained why the New Zealand Government had received a succession of requests to allow the Division with 
its commander, <name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name>, to remain in that theatre.</p>
        <p rend="indent">In the First World War the shrewd observer could often guess the 
location of the New Zealand Division on the Western Front by noting 
the bulge on the published situation maps. This marked the positions 
of the most advanced troops and was likely to be the New Zealand 
sector. It was much the same when positional warfare developed in 
the Second World War, as in the ‘<name key="name-004362" type="place">New Zealand Box</name>’ period in Egypt 
in <date when="1942">1942</date> and again in the <name key="name-016191" type="place">Romagna</name> in the winter of 1944–45. The 
thrusting purposefulness of the men of these two Divisions, a generation apart, must have been much the same; but the circumstances of 
the fighting in the Second World War allowed more scope for speed 
of movement and versatility.</p>
        <p rend="indent">The war efforts of sovereign states are a measure, as with individuals, 
of their courage, virility and loyalty, and of their faith in their way 
of life and their attachment to freedom. New Zealand's war effort 
was large, manifesting itself not so much in great tonnages of war 
materials and the conversion of its people to war work, but most 
impressively in the high proportion of its young manhood drawn into 
the services and the heavy losses they suffered.</p>
        <p rend="indent">The pattern of the war, as it gradually unfolded, made this effort 
all the more remarkable. By far the greater number of New Zealand 
servicemen served in the struggle against <name key="name-008556" type="place">Germany</name> and <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>; yet the 
only conceivable direct threat to New Zealand came from <name key="name-002006" type="place">Japan</name>. 
New Zealanders stood in peril at <name key="name-001096" type="place">Minqar Qaim</name> and amongst disaster 
at <name key="name-001291" type="place">Ruweisat Ridge</name> and El Mreir soon after the battles of the Coral 
Sea and Midway halted the southward drive of the Japanese. For New 
Zealanders in the desert in North Africa, or fighting the Battle of the 
<name key="name-006366" type="place">Atlantic</name>, or the air war over <name key="name-008008" type="place">Europe</name>, as for their families at home, 
those were days of anxiety and anguish.</p>
        <p rend="indent">But the security of a small power in a world of compelling great 
powers must always give rise to concern. New Zealand by her efforts 
has earned her place in the League of Nations and the <name key="name-020074" type="organisation">United Nations</name>, 
and her representatives have given full support there to the principle
<pb xml:id="nviii" n="viii"/>
of collective security. Only once, through a happy conjunction of 
circumstances, has it been put into effect to check aggression: the 
case of <name key="name-004001" type="place">Korea</name> in which New Zealanders also served. New Zealand 
continues to support this principle, but she cannot rely on it. Until 
she can, she has to have allies and to deal with them loyally as she 
would like them to deal with her.</p>
        <p rend="indent">New Zealand's war effort not only made a contribution to her 
security – and a continuing one – but it also encouraged New Zealanders to regard each other with deeper understanding. As a result 
New Zealand came to know herself better. Memories of privations, 
of fortitude, failures and victories, have blurred. But the sense of 
high achievement lingers and sets the standard for new effort. It is 
something by which to measure what is done in peace as well as in war. 
It was a process of self revelation when the country looked on as its 
sons struggled from <name key="name-001184" type="place">Mount Olympus</name> to <name key="name-001410" type="place">Trieste</name>, or skilfully 
succeeded in combined operations in the <name key="name-008892" type="place">Pacific</name>, or fought the 
<hi rend="i">Graf Spee</hi> in the southern <name key="name-006366" type="place">Atlantic</name>, or were reported in air operations 
over <name key="name-006973" type="place">Berlin</name> or <name key="name-019999" type="place">Rabaul</name>. These men who were thus engaged and who 
impressed themselves in their various ways on the consciousness of 
the world lived in the same town, even in the same street, as the 
onlookers before whom the shape of the war gradually revealed itself.</p>
        <p rend="indent">The story of their achievements, of the women's services who 
supported them abroad and of the many others who worked on their 
behalf at home all for the same cause, these volumes have endeavoured 
truthfully to record. The successes and the failures, the frailties and 
the strengths are recounted in a variety of Official Histories from 
many different authors. These volumes contain a significant and 
illuminating part of the total New Zealand experience, and should be 
a prized possession of their country, for the crises of war display more 
sharply than the dilemmas of peacetime the essence of the national 
character.</p>
      </div>
      <pb xml:id="nix" n="ix"/>
      <div xml:id="f7" type="histories">
        <head>NEW ZEALAND WAR HISTORIES</head>
        <list type="simple">
          <head><hi rend="i">Campaign and Service Volumes</hi></head>
          <item>
            <p>The Pacific</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>To Greece</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>
              <name key="name-003325" type="place">Crete</name>
            </p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>The Relief of <name key="name-001400" type="place">Tobruk</name></p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>Battle for Egypt</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p><name key="name-002771" type="place">Alam Halfa</name> and <name key="name-010927" type="place">Alamein</name></p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p><name key="name-000620" type="place">Bardia</name> to <name key="name-003553" type="place">Enfidaville</name></p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p><name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, Volume I: The Sangro to <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name></p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p><name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, Volume II: From Cassino to <name key="name-001410" type="place">Trieste</name></p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>Problems of <name key="name-004368" type="organisation">2 NZEF</name></p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>Documents – Volumes I–III</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>War Surgery and Medicine</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>New Zealand Medical Services in <name key="name-005853" type="place">Middle East</name> and <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name></p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p><name key="name-016593" type="organisation">Medical Services</name> in New Zealand and the <name key="name-008892" type="place">Pacific</name></p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>The New Zealand Dental Services</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>New Zealanders with the <name key="name-003198" type="organisation">Royal Air Force</name> – Volumes I–III</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>Royal New Zealand Air Force</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>Royal New Zealand Navy</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>Prisoners of War</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>The New Zealanders in South Africa, 1899–1902</p>
          </item>
        </list>
        <list type="simple">
          <head><hi rend="i">The New Zealand People at War</hi></head>
          <item>
            <p>Political and External Affairs</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>War Economy</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>A Social Survey, 1939–45<note xml:id="fn1-ix" n="*"><p>Not yet published.</p></note></p>
          </item>
        </list>
        <list type="simple">
          <head><hi rend="i">Unit Histories</hi></head>
          <item>
            <p>Journey Towards Christmas (1st Ammunition Company)</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>New Zealand Chaplains in the Second World War</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>Medical Units of <name key="name-004368" type="organisation">2 NZEF</name> in <name key="name-005853" type="place">Middle East</name> and <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name></p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>18 Battalion and Armoured Regiment</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>19 Battalion and Armoured Regiment</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>20 Battalion and Armoured Regiment</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>21 Battalion</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>22 Battalion</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>23 Battalion</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>24 Battalion</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>25 Battalion</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>26 Battalion</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>27 (Machine Gun) Battalion</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>28 (Maori) Battalion</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>2 New Zealand Divisional Artillery</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>Divisional Signals</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>Divisional Cavalry</p>
          </item>
          <pb xml:id="nx" n="x"/>
          <item>
            <p>New Zealand Engineers, <name key="name-005853" type="place">Middle East</name></p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>4 and 6 RMT Companies</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>Supply Company</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <p>Petrol Company</p>
          </item>
        </list>
        <list type="simple">
          <head><hi rend="i">Episodes and Studies</hi></head>
          <item>
            <p>24 numbers</p>
          </item>
        </list>
      </div>
      <pb xml:id="nxi" n="xi"/>
      <div xml:id="f8" type="preface">
        <head>Preface</head>
        <p>SINCE the end of the Second World War another generation of New 
Zealanders has reached adulthood without any personal recollection 
of the events of 1939–45. For the sons and daughters of most of the men 
who served with the 2nd New Zealand Expeditionary Force the names 
of battles such as <name key="name-001392" type="place">Thermopylae</name>, <name key="name-004213" type="place">Maleme</name>, <name key="name-002045" type="place">Galatas</name>, <name key="name-001334" type="place">Sidi Rezegh</name>, Minqar 
Qaim, Ruweisat, El Mreir, <name key="name-010927" type="place">Alamein</name>, <name key="name-004259" type="place">Medenine</name>, <name key="name-004812" type="place">Tebaga Gap</name>, <name key="name-004807" type="place">Takrouna</name>, 
<name key="name-001187" type="place">Orsogna</name>, <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name>, <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>, <name key="name-001263" type="place">Rimini</name>, and of the 
many rivers in the great Po valley, may mean little beyond the 
impressions formed by their fathers' reminiscences and photograph 
albums. Even the memories of the veterans of these battles grow dim, 
and details of places and incidents become blurred and confused.</p>
        <p rend="indent">The author of this volume, the last of eight volumes covering the 
campaigns of the New Zealand Division in the <name key="name-005853" type="place">Middle East</name> and 
<name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, has endeavoured to give a clear, concise and complete account 
of the Division's progress during the year between the disbandment 
of the <name key="name-001854" type="organisation">New Zealand Corps</name>, after its unavailing attempt to capture 
<name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, and the conclusion of hostilities in <name key="name-008008" type="place">Europe</name>. Originally it was 
intended that Professor N. C. Phillips, the author of <hi rend="i"><name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, Volume I</hi>: 
<hi rend="i">The Sangro to <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name></hi>, should write this volume, but unfortunately he 
was unable to do so because of the demands upon his time and energy 
as Professor of History at the University of Canterbury.</p>
        <p rend="indent">Many years of most careful and detailed research have gone into 
the compilation of the 22 volumes of official narrative which form the 
basis of this history. These were written by Mr Ronald Walker (<name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> 
and <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>), Mr Alexander Protheroe (<name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name>, and from 
the start of the offensive on the Adriatic coast to the Savio River), 
and myself (from the <name key="name-026597" type="place">Savio</name> until the departure of the last New 
Zealanders from <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>). The relevant German military documents were 
translated by the late Mr W. D. Dawson.</p>
        <p rend="indent">As one who served in the <name key="name-005853" type="place">Middle East</name> but not in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, I have had 
to overcome the lack of first-hand knowledge of the campaign and 
the country in which it was fought by studying the private diaries, 
letters and personal accounts of the men who were there. Of these 
many indispensable sources of information undoubtedly the most 
helpful has been the diary kept faithfully every day by Major Brian 
Moss, who was accidentally killed in <date when="1955">1955</date>. Valuable assistance also 
has been given by Major-General Sir William Gentry and Brigadier
<pb xml:id="nxii" n="xii"/>
F. M. H. Hanson, who have painstakingly checked drafts of the 
narrative.</p>
        <p rend="indent">Finally I acknowledge my debt to the staff of the <name key="name-110027" type="organisation">War History 
Branch</name>, with whom I have been closely associated since the war. 
I am grateful to the Editor-in-Chief (<name key="name-009333" type="person">Brigadier M. C. Fairbrother</name>) 
and the Sub-Editor (<name key="name-018379" type="person">Mr W. A. Glue</name>) for their advice and tolerance, 
to Miss Elsie Janes for patiently typing my manuscript, and to Mrs 
M. Fogarty for the preparation of the index. I am also indebted to the 
Cartographic Branch of the Lands and Survey Department for the 
maps.</p>
        <closer>
          <mentioned>
            <address>
              <addrLine>
                <name type="place">
                  <hi rend="sc">wellington</hi>
                </name>
              </addrLine>
            </address>
            <lb/>
            <date when="1967-02">February 1967</date>
          </mentioned>
        </closer>
      </div>
      <pb xml:id="nxiii" n="xiii"/>
      <div xml:id="f9" type="contents">
        <head>Contents</head>

          <table rows="83" cols="4">
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">Page</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell>FOREWORD</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#nv">v</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell>PREFACE</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#nxi">xi</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell>INTRODUCTION</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell rend="right">1</cell>
              <cell>THE BATTLE FOR ROME</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">I:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Armies Regroup</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n7">7</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">II:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Apennine Position</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n10">10</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">III:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Destruction of the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n21">21</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">IV:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Capture of <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n31">31</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">V:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Breaking of the <name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n36">36</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">VI:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Fall of Rome</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n40">40</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell rend="right">2</cell>
              <cell>THE ROAD TO AVEZZANO</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">I:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Division Begins to Advance</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n48">48</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">II:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Pursuit to <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n58">58</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">III:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">
                  <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>
                </hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n71">71</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">IV:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">
                  <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>
                </hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n81">81</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell rend="right">3</cell>
              <cell>THE PURSUIT NORTH OF ROME</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">I:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">After the Fall of Rome</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n88">88</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">II:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Division at <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n92">92</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">III:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">
                  <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name>
                </hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n100">100</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell rend="right">4</cell>
              <cell>THE ADVANCE TO FLORENCE</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">I:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">A Change in Plan</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n113">113</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">II:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Pesa Valley</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n119">119</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">III:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Pian dei Cerri Hills</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n137">137</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">IV:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">
                  <name key="name-001307" type="place">San Michele</name>
                </hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n147">147</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">V:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">
                  <name key="name-001273" type="place">La Romola</name>
                </hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n155">155</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">VI:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">Breaking the <name key="name-011487" type="place">Paula Line</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n167">167</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">VII:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">Down to the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n180">180</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell rend="right">5</cell>
              <cell>THE GOTHIC LINE</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">I:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">A Strategic Blunder?</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n191">191</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">II:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">On the Banks of the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n198">198</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">III:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">Morale</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n206">206</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">IV:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Rimini Corridor</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n211">211</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">V:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Capture of <name key="name-001263" type="place">Rimini</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n223">223</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell rend="right">6</cell>
              <cell>INTO THE PLAIN</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">I:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Romagna</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n228">228</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">II:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">From the <name key="name-120174" type="place">Fiumicino</name> to the <name key="name-120177" type="place">Pisciatello</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n247">247</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">III:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">From the <name key="name-120177" type="place">Pisciatello</name> to the <name key="name-026597" type="place">Savio</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n269">269</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">IV:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Division in Reserve</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n279">279</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <pb xml:id="nxiv" n="xiv"/>
            <row>
              <cell rend="right">7</cell>
              <cell>THE DRIVE TO THE SENIO</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">I:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">From the <name key="name-026597" type="place">Savio</name> to the <name key="name-120182" type="place">Lamone</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n286">286</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">II:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Capture of <name key="name-000830" type="place">Faenza</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n298">298</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">III:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Halt at the <name key="name-027664" type="place">Senio</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n329">329</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell rend="right">8</cell>
              <cell>THE WINTER LINE</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">I:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Offensive Abandoned</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n347">347</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">II:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">Offensive Defence</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n357">357</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">III:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">Eighth Army Regroups</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n370">370</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">IV:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Division Gets Ready</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n376">376</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell rend="right">9</cell>
              <cell>THE SPRING OFFENSIVE</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">I:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Plan</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n391">391</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">II:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Senio Stopbank</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n403">403</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">III:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Assault on the Senio Line</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n412">412</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">IV:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">Gate-crashing the Santerno Line</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n424">424</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell rend="right">10</cell>
              <cell>THE WESTWARD THRUST</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">I:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Sillaro River and <name key="name-009569" type="place">Medicina</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n444">444</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">II:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Account Squared with the Parachutists</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n464">464</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">III:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">A Chance to Jump the <name key="name-120191" type="place">Idice</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n481">481</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell rend="right">11</cell>
              <cell>THE RACE TO TRIESTE</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">I:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">From the <name key="name-120191" type="place">Idice</name> to the Reno River</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n491">491</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">II:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">Crossing the River Po</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n500">500</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">III:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">Crossing the <name key="name-032816" type="place">Adige River</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n509">509</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">IV:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">Through the <name key="name-004898" type="place">Venetian Line</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n515">515</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">V:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">Along Route 14</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n526">526</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell rend="right">12</cell>
              <cell>THE END OF THE WAR</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">I:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Occupation of <name key="name-001410" type="place">Trieste</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n540">540</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">II:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">Confrontation with the Yugoslavs</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n551">551</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">III:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">An Agreement is Reached</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n560">560</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">IV:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">The Division Retires</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n569">569</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">V:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">Disbandment of <name key="name-004368" type="organisation">2 NZEF</name></hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n578">578</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">VI:</cell>
              <cell><hi rend="i">Conclusion</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n583">583</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell>APPENDICES</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">I:</cell>
              <cell>Casualties in 2 NZ Division in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n587">587</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">II:</cell>
              <cell>Casualties in <name key="name-004368" type="organisation">2 NZEF</name>, 1939–46</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n588">588</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">III:</cell>
              <cell>2 NZ Division Order of Battle as at <date when="1944-05-11">11 May 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n589">589</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">IV:</cell>
              <cell>2 NZ Division Order of Battle as at <date when="1945-04-09">9 April 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n592">592</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">V:</cell>
              <cell>2 NZ Division Principal Appointments as at <date when="1945-04-01">1 April 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n595">595</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">VI:</cell>
              <cell>Allied Armies in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> Order of Battle as at <date when="1944-05-11">11 May 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n598">598</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">VII:</cell>
              <cell>Fifteenth Army Group Order of Battle as at <date when="1945-04-09">9 April 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n600">600</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">VIII:</cell>
              <cell>German Army Group C Order of Battle as at <date when="1944-05-11">11 May 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n602">602</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right">IX:</cell>
              <cell>German Army Group C Order of Battle as at <date when="1945-04-09">9 April 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n603">603</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell>Bibliography</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n605">605</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell>Glossary</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n611">611</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell>Index</cell>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n623">623</ref></cell>
            </row>
          </table>
      </div>
      <pb xml:id="nxv" n="xv"/>
      <div xml:id="f10" type="illustration">
        <head>List of Illustrations</head>

          <table rows="84" cols="2">
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">Frontispiece</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>New Zealanders rest beside their gear in <name key="name-001410" type="place">Trieste</name>, <date when="1945-05">May 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">Following</hi> <ref target="#n86"><hi rend="i">p.</hi> 86</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The snow-clad Monte Cairo towers above the monastery and town of <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">British official</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Looking north to the <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name> from the junction of the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> and Rapido valleys</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i"><name key="name-020077" type="organisation">US Army</name></hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-002744" type="place">Acquafondata</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. R. Bull)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>A hairpin bend on the <name key="name-000980" type="place">Inferno Track</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. R. Bull)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>An aerial view of the roads to <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> and <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">Mediterranean Allied Photographic Reconnaissance Wing</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Guns bombarding the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">Indian Public Relations Service</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-000955" type="place">Hove Dump</name> before it was shelled by the Germans</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. R. Bull)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The ruins of the monastery</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">G. Aarons, staff photographer, ‘Yank’, newspaper</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The devastation of <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name></cell>
              <cell/>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Tanks of <name key="name-001167" type="organisation">19 Armoured Regiment</name> and British infantry, enter <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, <date when="1944-05-18">18 May 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">D. Kerr</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Italian refugees return to their homes</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>In conference at Headquarters 5 Brigade: an American military attaché, Brigadier K. L. Stewart, Brigadier C. E. Weir, Colonel R. C. Queree, <name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> and Brigadier G. B. Parkinson</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> and the Prime Minister, Mr Peter Fraser, at Headquarters <name key="name-024336" type="organisation">5 Infantry Brigade</name> near <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. R. Bull)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Looking towards <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> from <name key="name-010677" type="place">Vicalvi</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <pb xml:id="nxvi" n="xvi"/>
            <row>
              <cell>In the Upper Liri valley beyond <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">A. M. Miller</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">Following</hi> <ref target="#n202"><hi rend="i">p.</hi> 202</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>New Zealand signalmen near <name key="name-015648" type="place">Castiglione</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>New Zealand infantrymen return to their transport after driving the Germans off the high ground around <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The first Tiger tank knocked out by New Zealand tanks</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">A. M. Gourdie</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Headquarters 23 Battalion occupies a palatial villa during the advance to <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>A New Zealand 25-pounder gun crossing the <name key="name-120161" type="place">Pesa</name> River</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>A New Zealand ‘tank buster’ (M10) passing through <name key="name-001296" type="place">San Casciano</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Pian dei Cerri hills</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">Mediterranean Allied Photographic Reconnaissance Wing</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The front of the church in <name key="name-001307" type="place">San Michele</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Tiger tank captured intact by 22 Battalion at La <name key="name-120164" type="place">Romola</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>A medium gun of the <name key="name-003128" type="organisation">Royal Artillery</name> in support of the New Zealand Division during the advance to <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">British official</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Colonel B. Barrington is introduced to King George VI during the King's visit to the New Zealand sector south of <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>One of <name key="name-003131" type="organisation">20 Armoured Regiment</name>'s tanks which accompanied the first New Zealanders into <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Italian partisans greet Allied troops as they enter a <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name> suburb south of the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> with Mr Churchill and General Alexander shortly after the capture of <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (W. A. Brodie)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>An assortment of headgear</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">Following</hi> <ref target="#n304"><hi rend="i">p.</hi> 304</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Gothic Line in <date when="1944-09">September 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">J. C. Montgomery</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The coastal plain south-east of <name key="name-001263" type="place">Rimini</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">A. M. Miller</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <pb xml:id="nxvii" n="xvii"/>
            <row>
              <cell>One of the first tanks to enter <name key="name-001263" type="place">Rimini</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">Canadian Army</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>A German gun emplacement on the Adriatic coast at <name key="name-001437" type="place">Viserba</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">British official</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Refugees making their way along the beach near <name key="name-001437" type="place">Viserba</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Artificial moonlight on the Adriatic front</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Bailey bridge over the Scolo Rigossa</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Extricating a vehicle from the mud near <name key="name-000861" type="place">Gambettola</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Crossing the Lamone River into <name key="name-000830" type="place">Faenza</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">British official</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Germans from <hi rend="i">90 Panzer Grenadier Division</hi> captured in the vicinity of <name key="name-000830" type="place">Faenza</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>An ark bridge</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Men of 28 (Maori) Battalion going into position near the <name key="name-028451" type="place">Senio River</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Evacuating civilians from the battlefront</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>A mortar crew in action close to the <name key="name-027664" type="place">Senio</name> stopbank</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>On the eastern stopbank of the <name key="name-028451" type="place">Senio River</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">M. F. Kennedy</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>New Zealanders playing ‘two-up’</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">Following</hi> <ref target="#n402"><hi rend="i">p.</hi> 402</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Infantry move forward for the assault crossing of the <name key="name-027664" type="place">Senio</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Enemy troops surrender to New Zealanders who have crossed the <name key="name-028451" type="place">Senio River</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>German guns abandoned among the havoc caused by the <name key="name-014233" type="organisation">Desert Air Force</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Italians greet the New Zealanders as they pass through <name key="name-018075" type="place">Barbiano</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-024338" type="organisation">9 Infantry Brigade</name> ready to go into action for the first time</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">R. T. Little</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Germans captured by the New Zealanders near Massa Lombarda</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The enemy's side of the stopbank of the <name key="name-003056" type="place">Gaiana River</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>German transport bombed and abandoned south of the <name key="name-032975" type="place">Po River</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">R. Costello</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>A 10-barrelled <hi rend="i">nebelwerfer</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <pb xml:id="nxviii" n="xviii"/>
            <row>
              <cell>Artillery crossing the New Zealand Engineers' folding-boat equipment bridge on the <name key="name-032975" type="place">Po River</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">British official</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The pontoon ferry on the <name key="name-032816" type="place">Adige River</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">D. A. Tomkies</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Partisans with a captured German truck</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>German prisoners</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>9 Brigade enters <name key="name-001109" type="place">Monfalcone</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> confers at <name key="name-001109" type="place">Monfalcone</name> with a corps commander of the Fourth Yugoslav Army</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">Following</hi> <ref target="#n536"><hi rend="i">p.</hi> 536</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Beyond the castle on the <name key="name-011413" type="place">Miramare</name> peninsula lies the city of <name key="name-001410" type="place">Trieste</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The New Zealand Division enters <name key="name-001410" type="place">Trieste</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name>, General McCreery, and Brigadier Gentry at Headquarters 9 Brigade</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>New Zealand tank men fraternise with a Yugoslav tank crew</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>New Zealanders shoot off flares to celebrate the end of the war with <name key="name-008556" type="place">Germany</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Officers of 22 Battalion and their guests at a dance</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>New Zealand skiers at the alpine leave centre in the Dolomites</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (J. Short)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>On leave in <name key="name-001428" type="place">Venice</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (J. Short)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>In front of the cathedral in <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (G. F. Kaye)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Passing the time at Advanced Base while awaiting repatriation</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (C. J. Hayden)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Maori choir singing a hymn during the memorial service in <name key="name-003325" type="place">Crete</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (J. Murphy)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Veterans of the battle in <name key="name-003325" type="place">Crete</name> entertained at <name key="name-002045" type="place">Galatas</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (J. Murphy)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>About to depart from Advanced Base on the first stage of the voyage to New Zealand</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (C. J. Hayden)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-003916" type="organisation">Jayforce</name> parade before leaving <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> for the <name key="name-005851" type="place">Far East</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">NZ Army (J. Murphy)</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The home-coming. The <hi rend="i">Dominion Monarch</hi> carrying the
<name key="name-005118" type="organisation">Maori Battalion</name> arrives in <name key="name-008844" type="place">Wellington</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i"><name key="name-120246" type="organisation">Department of Internal Affairs</name></hi></cell>
            </row>
          </table>
      </div>
      <pb xml:id="nxix" n="xix"/>
      <div xml:id="f11" type="map">
        <head>List of Maps</head>

          <table rows="60" cols="2">
            <row>
              <cell/>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">Facing page</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n1">1</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Apennine Mountain sector, <date when="1944-04">April 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n19">19</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Advance to Rome, 11 May–4 June 1944</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n37">37</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Advance to <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>, 14 July–4 August 1944</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n119">119</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-001296" type="place">San Casciano</name> to <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>, 27 July–4 August 1944</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n137">137</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Romagna</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n219">219</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Advance to the Fiumicino River, 22–28 September 1944</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n237">237</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>From the <name key="name-120174" type="place">Fiumicino</name> to the <name key="name-120177" type="place">Pisciatello</name>, 11–17 October 1944</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n255">255</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Eighth Army Boundaries and Plan for Operation <hi rend="sc">buckland</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n385">385</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>From the Sillaro to the Idice River, 15–20 April 1945</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n451">451</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-018282" type="organisation">Fifteenth Army Group</name>, 9 April–2 May 1945</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n485">485</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>From Budrio to <name key="name-001410" type="place">Trieste</name>, 21 April–2 May 1945</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n503">503</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell rend="center"><hi rend="i">In text</hi></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><hi rend="i">Page</hi></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Italian front, <date when="1944-02">February 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n3">3</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Dispositions, <date when="1944-05-11">11 May 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n8">8</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Cassino sector</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n23">23</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Liri Valley</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n26">26</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Advance to <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, 26–31 May 1944</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n56">56</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> to <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>, 1–10 June 1944</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n72">72</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name> to <name key="name-001404" type="place">Lake Trasimene</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n98">98</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-001404" type="place">Lake Trasimene</name> to <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n101">101</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>6 Brigade's attack, 14–16 July 1944</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n104">104</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>5 Brigade's advance, 22–27 July 1944</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n121">121</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Pian dei Cerri Hills</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n140">140</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Empoli sector, 10–13 August 1944</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n203">203</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Plans for Attack on the <name key="name-000901" type="place">Gothic Line</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n213">213</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Advance to <name key="name-001263" type="place">Rimini</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n221">221</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>6 New Zealand Infantry Brigade and 11 Canadian Infantry Brigade, night 5–6 October 1944</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n252">252</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <pb xml:id="nxx" n="xx"/>
            <row>
              <cell>The Front, <date when="1944-10-08">8 October 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n254">254</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-024336" type="organisation">5 Infantry Brigade</name>, night 10–11 October 1944</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n257">257</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Advance to the <name key="name-026597" type="place">Savio</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n270">270</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Dispositions, <date when="1944-11-27">27 November 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n291">291</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Dispositions, morning <date when="1944-12-02">2 December 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n296">296</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Plan for Offensive, <date when="1944-12">December 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n299">299</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Dispositions, <date when="1944-12-12">12 December 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n307">307</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>5 Brigade, 14–15 December 1944</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n312">312</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Dispositions, <date when="1944-12-17">17 December 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n328">328</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Italian front, <date when="1944-12-31">31 December 1944</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n350">350</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-024337" type="organisation">6 Infantry Brigade</name>, <date when="1945-01-31">31 January 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n366">366</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>German Defences south of the River Po</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n371">371</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Dispositions, <date when="1945-02-15">15 February 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n377">377</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>The Italian front, <date when="1945-04-09">9 April 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n392">392</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-002987" type="organisation">5 Corps</name>' Plan to cross the <name key="name-028451" type="place">Senio River</name></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n399">399</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell><name key="name-002987" type="organisation">5 Corps</name>' Plans</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n401">401</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Dispositions, <date when="1945-04-09">9 April 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n409">409</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Situation, <date when="1945-04-10">10 April 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n418">418</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Situation, 10–11 April 1945</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n428">428</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Situation, <date when="1945-04-11">11 April 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n433">433</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Situation, <date when="1945-04-12">12 April 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n437">437</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Situation, night 12–13 April 1945</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n443">443</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Advance to the <name key="name-028459" type="place">Sillaro River</name>, 12–14 April 1945</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n450">450</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Situation, <date when="1945-04-14">14 April 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n451">451</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Situation, <date when="1945-04-19">19 April 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n479">479</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Situation, <date when="1945-04-20">20 April 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n485">485</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>From the <name key="name-120191" type="place">Idice</name> to the River Po, 21–24 April 1945</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n495">495</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>From the Po to <name key="name-001193" type="place">Padua</name>, 25–29 April 1945</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n508">508</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>9 Brigade's advance, <date when="1945-04-29">29 April 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n522">522</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>From the Piave River to <name key="name-001410" type="place">Trieste</name>, 30 April–2 May 1945</cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n534">534</ref></cell>
            </row>
            <row>
              <cell>Situation, <date when="1945-05-04">4 May 1945</date></cell>
              <cell rend="right"><ref target="#n554">554</ref></cell>
            </row>
          </table>

        <p rend="center"><hi rend="i">The occupations given in the biographical footnotes are those on enlistment. The ranks are those held on discharge or at the date of death.</hi></p>
        <p>
          <figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP002a">
            <graphic url="WH2-2ItaP002a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP002a-g"/>
            <head><name key="name-001383" type="place">ITALY</name></head>
          </figure>
        </p>
      </div>
      <pb xml:id="n1" n="1"/>
      <div xml:id="f12" type="introduction">
        <head>Introduction</head>
        <p>IN the <date when="1943">autumn of 1943</date>, after the Allied occupation of <name key="name-004712" type="place">Sicily</name>, the 
British Eighth Army, commanded by General Sir Bernard Montgomery,<note xml:id="fn1-1" n="1"><p>On <date when="1944-01-01">1 January 1944</date> Montgomery, who was to participate in the preparations for the
invasion of <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name>, was succeeded as GOC Eighth Army by Lieutenant-General Sir
Oliver Leese.</p></note> landed in <name key="name-018188" type="place">Calabria</name>, the toe of <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, and advanced along 
the Adriatic seaboard on the eastern side of the peninsula. Fifth 
Army, part American and part British, under Lieutenant-General 
Mark Clark, landed on the <name key="name-012670" type="place">Salerno</name> beaches—where a German 
counter-attack might have succeeded but for the overwhelming 
support given by the Allied naval and air forces—and pushed along 
the western side of the peninsula. Together the two armies formed 
the <name key="name-018282" type="organisation">Fifteenth Army Group</name>,<note xml:id="fn2-1" n="2"><p>Headquarters Fifteenth Army Group was redesignated Headquarters Allied Central
Mediterranean Force on <date when="1944-01-19">19 January 1944</date>, and was renamed Headquarters Allied Armies
in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> on <date when="1944-03-10">10 March 1944</date>.</p></note> commanded by General Sir Harold 
Alexander. The Germans, under Field Marshal Albert Kesselring, 
Commander-in-Chief South-West, stubbornly withdrew to the 
formidable defences of the <name key="name-006872" type="place">Winter Line</name>, which they constructed 
astride the narrow waist of <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> south of Rome. There, in country 
ideally suited to the purpose, with rivers, valleys and spurs running 
at right angles to the central backbone of the Apennine Mountains, 
and assisted by the mud, slush and snow of winter, they halted both 
Allied armies.</p>
        <p rend="indent">General Alexander's plan for the capture of Rome was in three 
phases: in the first <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> was to break through the Winter 
Line on the Adriatic coast, advance to a lateral highway (Route 5) 
which crosses the peninsula from <name key="name-004539" type="place">Pescara</name> through <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>, and 
threaten Rome from the north-east; in the second phase Fifth 
Army, by driving up the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> and Sacco valleys to <name key="name-018302" type="place">Frosinone</name>, was 
to approach Rome through the only gap in the mountains to the 
south. The third phase, which depended on the progress of the 
first two, was to be an amphibious landing south of Rome.</p>
        <pb xml:id="n2" n="2"/>
        <p rend="indent"><name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>, which <name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 New Zealand Division</name><note xml:id="fn1-2" n="1"><p>See N. C. Phillips, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name></hi>, Vol. I: <hi rend="i">The Sangro to <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name></hi>, for the New Zealand Division's
part in the battles on the <name key="name-029288" type="place">Sangro</name> and at <name key="name-001187" type="place">Orsogna</name> in the <date when="1943">winter of 1943</date> and at <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> in
the <date when="1944">spring of 1944</date>.</p></note> rejoined in November, crossed the <name key="name-016486" type="place">Sangro River</name> and fought its way into the coastal 
town of <name key="name-004506" type="place">Ortona</name> and reached the outskirts of <name key="name-001187" type="place">Orsogna</name>, but was held 
among the ridges and valleys midway between the <name key="name-029288" type="place">Sangro</name> and 
<name key="name-004539" type="place">Pescara</name> rivers. There the Adriatic sector was allowed to become 
static.</p>
        <p rend="indent"><name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name>, after a succession of costly battles, was confronted 
by the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name> (the strongly fortified rearward position of the 
<name key="name-006872" type="place">Winter Line</name> west of the <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name>), which followed the lateral 
Rapido-Gari-Garigliano valley across the mouth of the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> valley, 
through which Route 6 (perpetuating the ancient <name key="name-016321" type="place">Via Casilina</name>), 
the highway from <name key="name-007454" type="place">Naples</name>, led to Rome, 85 miles distant. <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, 
just north of the junction of the two valleys, was the key to the 
line: Route 6 passed through the town and the railway ran within 
a mile of it; rising directly behind it was the steep-sided 1500-foot 
<name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name>, crowned by the fortress-like Benedictine monastery, at 
the tip of a massive spur descending from the 5500-foot Monte 
<name key="name-003601" type="place">Cairo</name>. From these heights the enemy had an uninterrupted view of 
every approach.</p>
        <p rend="indent">The third phase of the plan to liberate Rome, the amphibious 
landing behind the enemy's front, had not been attempted because 
Eighth and Fifth Armies had been balked in their endeavours to 
break through the Winter Line. The Allies decided upon a revised 
plan, forcefully and persistently advocated by the British Prime 
Minister (Mr Churchill). In conjunction with a frontal attack 
by <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> on the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name>, a force larger than originally 
envisaged was to be landed on the beaches of <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name>, 35 miles south 
of Rome, and directed inland on the <name key="name-018050" type="place">Alban Hills</name>, which dominated 
the southern approaches to the city.</p>
        <p rend="indent"><name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name>'s attacks on the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name> in <date when="1944-01">January 1944</date> had 
the desired effect of persuading Kesselring to reinforce that front 
with his tactical reserve. The landing by 6 Corps (comprising 
British and American troops) at <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> achieved complete surprise 
and was virtually unopposed, but instead of driving immediately 
to the <name key="name-018050" type="place">Alban Hills</name>, as he certainly could have done, the corps 
commander (Major-General John Lucas) spent several days building up his beachhead to withstand the counter-attack which he 
expected. He thus gave <name type="person">Kesselring</name> time to improvise a heterogeneous force with which he was able to block 6 Corps when it eventually 
did attempt to advance inland. The Germans then massed sufficient 
troops around the beachhead to counter-attack and force 6 Corps 
on to the defensive.</p>
        <pb xml:id="n3" n="3"/>
        <p rend="indent"><name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name>'s thrusts against the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name> made little progress 
before being halted. On the left of the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> valley 10 British Corps 
(Lieutenant-General Sir Richard McCreery) crossed the Garigliano 
River into the foothills of the <name key="name-015487" type="place">Aurunci Mountains</name>, where it was
<figure xml:id="WH2-2Ita003a"><graphic url="WH2-2Ita003a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2Ita003a-g"/><head><hi rend="sc">the italian front, <date when="1944-02">february 1944</date></hi></head></figure>
<pb xml:id="n4" n="4"/>
checked but retained a bridgehead—this was to be of inestimable 
value as the springboard for an offensive four months later. In the 
centre, at the mouth of the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> valley and in full view of the enemy 
overlooking the valley, <name key="name-033018" type="organisation">2 United States Corps</name> (Major-General 
Geoffrey Keyes) launched an assault over the Gari River, but was 
repulsed with grievous casualties. On the right General Alphonse 
Juin's <name key="name-006399" type="organisation">French Expeditionary Corps</name> worked its way into the mountains north of <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>. When 2 Corps' frontal assault failed, General 
Clark tried to envelop the defences from the right by crossing 
the <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> spur into the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> valley, but the Americans, 
utterly exhausted after two months of continual fighting, were 
finally halted at the outskirts of the town and within a very short 
distance of the monastery.</p>
        <p rend="indent">The enemy's success in sealing off the <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> beachhead and 
repulsing the attacks on the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name> persuaded General 
Alexander to reinforce <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> at the expense of the Eighth. 
Three divisions, therefore, were brought from the static Adriatic 
sector to the <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> front, where the <name key="name-001854" type="organisation">New Zealand Corps</name>, consisting initially of the New Zealand Division and 4 Indian 
Division, joined later by 78 British Division, and commanded by 
<name key="name-207994" type="person">Lieutenant-General Sir Bernard Freyberg</name>,<note xml:id="fn1-4" n="1"><p><name key="name-207994" type="person">Lt-Gen Lord Freyberg</name>, VC, GCMG, KCB, KBE, DSO and 3 bars, m.i.d., Order of
Valour and MC (Gk); born <name key="name-006412" type="place">Richmond</name>, <name key="name-007712" type="place">Surrey</name>, <date when="1889-03-21">21 Mar 1889</date>; CO Hood Bn 1915–17;
comd 173 Bde, 58 Div, and 88 Bde, 29 Div, 1917–19; GOC <name key="name-004368" type="organisation">2 NZEF</name> Nov 1939–Nov 1945;
twice wounded; Governor-General of New Zealand, Jun 1946–Aug 1952; died Windsor,
England, <date when="1963-07-04">4 Jul 1963</date>.</p></note> came into being on 
3 February under <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name>.</p>
        <p rend="indent">Urgency was given to the resumption of the offensive at <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> 
because of the imminent danger of the German effort to drive 
the <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> beachhead force into the sea. Apparently no advantage 
could be seen in trying to exploit the bridgehead <name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name> had 
won over the Garigliano, or in trying to outflank <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> as 
suggested by Juin, by concentrating on the approach through the 
mountains to the north, where the French already had broken 
into part of the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name>. Instead, another attempt was to be 
made to crack the line at its strongest point, the town of <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> 
and the monastery hill.</p>
        <p rend="indent">Taking over the half-fought battle from <name key="name-006823" type="organisation">2 US Corps</name>, the New 
Zealand Corps attacked in February with the object of establishing 
a bridgehead across the Rapido and Gari rivers to permit the 
deployment of armour in the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> valley. The monastery was 
destroyed by heavy bombers and artillery fire, and its ruins were 
occupied by the Germans, who deny that they previously had
<pb xml:id="n5" n="5"/>
used the building as a strongpoint or for observation.<note xml:id="fn1-5" n="1"><p>See <hi rend="i"><name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name></hi>, Vol. I, pp. 211–23, for the evidence and argument about the bombing of the
monastery, which ‘is still sometimes seen as a wanton act of terror and vandalism.’ A
convincing case against the bombing is made by Rudolf Böhmler in <hi rend="i"><name key="name-024313" type="place">Monte Cassino</name>: A
German View</hi>, but he does not concede that if <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> had not been the bastion or
key point of the German Gustav Line, there would have been no danger of its being
attacked.</p></note> The 4th 
Indian Division failed in its attempt to capture <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> and 
cut Route 6 at the foot of the hill, and the New Zealanders were 
unable to retain a footing across the Rapido in the area of the 
railway station, just south of the town.</p>
        <p rend="indent">At the same time the Germans, ordered by <name key="name-006503" type="person">Hitler</name> to eliminate the 
‘abscess’ at <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name>, launched a powerful counter-attack on the beachhead. At first the issue hung in the balance, but 6 Corps repelled 
both this attack and another which came at the end of February. 
The Germans then went over to the defensive on a line round 
<name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name>. Before the struggle for the beachhead ended it took a 
heavy toll of both Allied and German soldiers.</p>
        <p rend="indent">Despite the failure of the <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> landing to break the stalemate 
and pave the way for a drive on Rome, the British were convinced 
that a vigorously prosecuted campaign in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> would assist the cross- 
Channel invasion of Western Europe (an operation known by the 
codename OVERLORD). The Americans, while not opposed to pursuing the Italian campaign at least as far as Rome, believed that 
a landing in southern <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name> (Operation ANVIL) should be made 
at the same time as OVERLORD, and that preparations should be 
continued for this undertaking. General Sir Henry Maitland Wilson, 
who had succeeded General Dwight D. Eisenhower as Supreme 
Allied Commander in the <name key="name-007453" type="place">Mediterranean</name>, recommended that 
priority be given to the Italian campaign and that ANVIL be cancelled. The Combined Chiefs of Staff compromised by giving the 
campaign in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> priority over all other operations in the Mediterranean and by postponing ANVIL.</p>
        <p rend="indent">To force the Germans to commit as many divisions as possible 
in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> at the time OVERLORD was launched, General Alexander 
planned a spring offensive in the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> valley, designed to link up 
with the <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> beachhead and capture Rome. For this offensive 
the bulk of the Allied force was to be concentrated west of the 
<name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name>, where <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> was to take over the front covering <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> and the entrance to the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> valley, and <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> 
was to retain the flank between the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> and the sea and responsibility for the <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> beachhead. But first Alexander wanted to 
establish a bridgehead across the Rapido which would give access 
into the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> valley when the offensive began.</p>
        <p rend="indent">Operation DICKENS, the last attack before the spring offensive, 
was to be an attempt by the <name key="name-001854" type="organisation">New Zealand Corps</name> to capture <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>
<pb xml:id="n6" n="6"/>
and break into the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> valley in the vicinity of Route 6. After 
the town had been pulverised by bombing, the New Zealand 
Division was to advance southwards from its northern outskirts, 
and 4 Indian Division was to guard the right flank by moving 
along the eastern face of <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name>. When Cassino had been 
captured, the corps was to exploit by opening up Route 6 and 
clearing the ground south of the town so that river crossings could 
be constructed.</p>
        <p rend="indent">The attack was fixed tentatively for 24 February, but it rained 
day after day for nearly three weeks, and while the New Zealand 
and Indian divisions, under the most disheartening conditions, 
waited for fine weather, the enemy perfected his defences and 
brought one of his best formations, <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi>, into the 
sector where he correctly anticipated the attack would come. 
On 15 March aircraft demolished <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> with nearly 1200 tons 
of bombs (about half of which fell within the town), but did 
not attack the ruined monastery which the Germans had converted 
into a fortress. The New Zealanders, with artillery support on a 
scale greater than any they had previously experienced, cleared 
the enemy from perhaps nine-tenths of the rubble defences of the 
town, but could not drive him from strongpoints on its fringe. 
On the slopes of <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> the Indians thrust as far as Hangman's Hill, near the ruins of the monastery, but also could go no 
farther. When the attack was called off on 23 March, <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> still 
barred the road to Rome.</p>
      </div>
      <divGen type="toc" rend="div/div"/>
    </front>
    <body xml:id="t1-body">
      <pb xml:id="n7" n="7"/>
      <div xml:id="c1" type="chapter">
        <head>CHAPTER 1<lb/>
The Battle for <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name></head>
        <div xml:id="c1-1" type="section">
          <head>I: <hi rend="i">The Armies Regroup</hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c1-1-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p>THE New Zealand Corps, having failed in its attempt to capture 
<name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, was disbanded on <date when="1944-03-26">26 March 1944</date>, and in the seven-week pause that ensued, the Allied armies regrouped and assembled 
a striking force west of the <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name> in preparation for a fresh 
onslaught on the German <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The exhausted troops were rested, and vitally necessary reinforcements arrived and were absorbed. The front-line positions had 
to be held in sufficient strength to withstand a possible enemy 
counter-attack, and owing to the shortage of reserves, most units 
had to vacate one position and occupy another after only a brief 
spell out of the line. Also, because the enemy overlooked much of 
the front and its approaches, it was practically impossible to relieve 
a group larger than a battalion; in fact many reliefs had to be 
made at company or even platoon level. To ease the administration 
of the two armies, <name key="name-031090" type="place">United States</name> and American-equipped French 
formations were retained under the command of <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name>, and 
British-equipped formations (except those in the Allied beachhead 
at <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name>), including <name key="name-006705" type="organisation">2 Polish Corps</name>, came under <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">When the regrouping was completed <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> had two 
corps in the line between the Tyrrhenian Sea and the confluence of 
the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> and Gari rivers: the <name key="name-006399" type="organisation">French Expeditionary Corps</name> on the 
right with four divisions (1 Motorised, 2 Moroccan, 3 Algerian and 
4 Moroccan Mountain Divisions) and about 12,000 <hi rend="i">goumiers</hi> (native 
Moroccans under French officers and NCOs, especially skilled in 
mountain warfare), <name key="name-006823" type="organisation">2 US Corps</name> on the left with 85 and 88 US 
Infantry Divisions, and 36 US Infantry Division in army reserve. At 
the <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> beachhead south of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> <name key="name-006232" type="organisation">6 Corps</name>, still under <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name>,
<pb xml:id="n8" n="8"/>
had six divisions (3, 34 and 45 US Infantry, 1 US Armoured, and 
1 and 5 British Infantry Divisions) and 1 (Canadian and American) 
Special Service Force.</p>
            <p>
              <figure xml:id="WH2-2Ita008a">
                <graphic url="WH2-2Ita008a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2Ita008a-g"/>
                <head><hi rend="sc">dispositions, <date when="1944-05-11">11 may 1944</date></hi></head>
              </figure>
            </p>
            <p rend="indent">In <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>'s sector, which extended from <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name>'s 
right boundary north-eastwards across the mountainous centre of 
the peninsula, the striking force was concentrated on the left, 
where 13 Corps held the line from the Liri River to <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> with 
four divisions (6 British Armoured, 4 and 78 British Infantry, and 
8 Indian Divisions); <name key="name-009243" type="organisation">1 Canadian Corps</name> (1 Canadian Infantry and 
5 Canadian Armoured Divisions) was in reserve in rear, ready when 
called upon to go into the line or pass through up the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>; 
<name key="name-006705" type="organisation">2 Polish Corps</name> (3 Carpathian and 5 Kresowa Divisions) was on the 
right, poised for the attack on <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name>. The remainder of 
<name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>'s sector, astride the <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name>, was held by <name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name>, 
which comprised <name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 New Zealand Division</name> (reinforced from time to 
time by British, Canadian and South African formations), and an 
Italian Motor Group about two brigades strong. The 6th South 
African Armoured Division, not all of which had arrived in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, 
was in <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> reserve. On the Adriatic coast <name key="name-002987" type="organisation">5 Corps</name>, consisting of 4 and 10 Indian Divisions, was under the direct command 
of Headquarters Allied Armies in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name><!-- Allied Armies in Italy, Headquarters -->.</p>
          </div>
          <pb xml:id="n9" n="9"/>
          <div xml:id="c1-1-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">At <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> Mr Churchill ‘had hoped that we were hurling a wild 
cat on to the shore, but all we had got was a stranded while.’<note xml:id="fn1-9" n="1"><p><hi rend="i"><name key="name-206589" type="work">The Second World War</name></hi>, Vol. V, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206592" type="work">Closing the Ring</name></hi>, p. 432.</p></note> 
If the Allied amphibious attack had fallen short of fulfilling the 
Prime Minister's hopes, at least it had placed Field Marshal 
Kesselring's <hi rend="i">Army Group C</hi> in an awkward, extended, two-fronted position, with <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> (Colonel-General Heinrich von 
Vietinghoff-Scheel) on the <name key="name-006872" type="place">Winter Line</name> across the peninsula and 
<hi rend="i"><name key="name-018315" type="organisation">Fourteenth Army</name></hi> (Colonel-General Eberhard von Mackensen) 
around the beachhead perimeter in rear of the line. <hi rend="i">Tenth Army's</hi> 
dispositions resembled those of the Allied armies: on the Adriatic 
sector <hi rend="i">Hauck Group</hi> (<hi rend="i">305</hi> and <hi rend="i">334 Infantry</hi> and <hi rend="i">114 Light 
Divisions</hi>), like <name key="name-002987" type="organisation">5 Corps</name> opposite it, had only a holding role; 
<hi rend="i"><name key="name-206737" type="work">51 Mountain Corps</name></hi> (<hi rend="i">5 Mountain, 1 Parachute</hi> and <hi rend="i">44 Infantry 
Divisions</hi>) occupied the line across the <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name> to <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> and 
the Liri River; <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206560" type="work">14 Panzer Corps</name></hi> (<hi rend="i">71</hi> and <hi rend="i">94 Infantry Divisions</hi>, with 
<hi rend="i">15 Panzer Grenadier Division</hi> in reserve) was between the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> and 
the Tyrrhenian Sea; <hi rend="i">90 Panzer Grenadier Division</hi>, between <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> 
and the Tiber River, was in army reserve. To contain <name key="name-006232" type="organisation">6 Corps</name> at 
<name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> <hi rend="i"><name key="name-018315" type="organisation">Fourteenth Army</name></hi> disposed <hi rend="i">76 Panzer Corps</hi> (<hi rend="i">362</hi> and <hi rend="i">715 
Infantry Divisions</hi>, with <hi rend="i"><name key="name-006446" type="organisation">26 Panzer Division</name></hi> in reserve) and <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Corps</hi> (<hi rend="i">4 Parachute, 65 Infantry</hi> and <hi rend="i">3 Panzer Grenadier 
Divisions</hi>—the last partly in the line); <hi rend="i">29 Panzer Grenadier</hi> and 
<hi rend="i">92 Infantry Divisions</hi>, beyond the Tiber, were in army reserve. The 
<hi rend="i">Hermann Goering Panzer Division</hi>, awaiting transport to <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name>, 
was at <name key="name-018459" type="place">Leghorn</name>—but was later drawn into the Italian battle instead 
of leaving, as intended, for the western front.</p>
            <p rend="indent">To meet the apparent threat of another seaborne (or an airborne) landing the enemy had spread out his mobile formations well 
along the west coast. He may have been deceived by an Allied 
scheme, employing dummy wireless traffic, which was intended to 
give the impression that an amphibious assault was to be made 
against the port of <name key="name-018232" type="place">Civitavecchia</name>, 40 miles north of the mouth of 
the Tiber.</p>
            <p rend="indent">To back up the forward position of the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name> the Germans 
constructed an even stronger alternative defence line, on which an 
attack might be held after the surrender of the intermediate ground. 
Known to the Allies as the <name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name>,<note xml:id="fn2-9" n="2"><p>The Germans first called this line the ‘Fuhrer Riegel’ (switch-line) but changed its name
on <name key="name-006503" type="person">Hitler</name>'s orders after the <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> landing to ‘Senger Riegel’ (<name key="name-203465" type="person">General von Senger und
Etterlin</name> commanded <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206560" type="work">14 Panzer Corps</name></hi>); before it fell they called it the ‘Dora’ Line.</p></note> this was hinged on the 
main <name key="name-006872" type="place">Winter Line</name> at <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte -->, crossed the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> about 
eight miles west of the Gari River, and continued through the
<pb xml:id="n10" n="10"/>
<name key="name-015487" type="place">Aurunci Mountains</name> to the coast at <name key="name-018747" type="place">Terracina</name>. The Gustav and 
<name key="name-006503" type="person">Hitler</name> lines were designed to block an Allied thrust up the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name>- 
<name key="name-018675" type="place">Sacco valley</name>, but because of the presence of the Allied force in their 
rear at <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name>, the Germans began to construct yet another defence 
line to delay the capture of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>. This, the <name key="name-018186" type="place">Caesar Line</name>, was supposed to cross the peninsula from the west coast north of <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> 
to the east coast north of <name key="name-004539" type="place">Pescara</name>, but was never completed; the 
most developed portion of it was in the vital area at <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name>, 
where Route 6 passed through a gap between the <name key="name-018050" type="place">Alban Hills</name> 
and the Prenestini Mountains.</p>
            <p rend="indent">When the Allies struck at the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name> on 11 May, Kesselrings mobile reserves were too far away to give immediate help, and 
because he apparently still expected a seaborne attack, he committed 
them tardily and piecemeal. General Alexander, therefore, had the 
disparity in strength he desired, ‘a local superiority of at least three 
to one’, in the battle area: between <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> and the sea four 
German divisions opposed an Allied strength of more than 13 
divisions.</p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="c1-2" type="section">
          <head>II: <hi rend="i">The Apennine Position</hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c1-2-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The transfer of the New Zealand Division from <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> to 
the Apennine mountain position was accomplished by a complicated 
process of disentanglement and rearrangement which took some 
time. After the disbandment of <name key="name-001854" type="organisation">New Zealand Corps</name> on 26 March, 
13 Corps took over the <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> front with <name key="name-032838" type="organisation">4 British Division</name> holding 
the <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte --> sector on the right, 78 British Division relieving 
4 Indian Division in the centre, and the New Zealand Division on 
the left in the ruined town and extending its flank as far south as 
the boundary between Eighth and Fifth Armies, near the confluence 
of the Gari and <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> rivers.<note xml:id="fn1-10" n="1"><p>The Rapido River flows past <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> and then across the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> as the Gari River,
which joins the Liri River and becomes the Garigliano.</p></note> The New Zealanders' sector thus 
stretched for about five and a half miles, with <name key="name-024337" type="organisation">6 Infantry Brigade</name> 
holding the line through the town to a few hundred yards south of 
the railway station and <name key="name-024336" type="organisation">5 Infantry Brigade</name> continuing it to the 
southern boundary.</p>
            <p rend="indent">As the weather improved the German observers on <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> 
enjoyed a clear view of the approaches and the positions in and 
around the town. All activity, therefore, was screened as much as 
possible with smoke, while the artillery, mortars, tanks and machine 
guns fired programmes to neutralise as many of the enemy's posts 
as possible and reduce his interference with the reliefs. Despite
<pb xml:id="n11" n="11"/>
these precautions, the withdrawal of 5 and 6 Brigades was not 
accomplished without casualties.</p>
            <p rend="indent">To get the two New Zealand brigades out of the line, <name key="name-018114" type="organisation">1 Guards</name> 
Brigade relieved 5 Brigade, which in turn relieved 6 Brigade; 2 
Independent Parachute Brigade relieved the Guards Brigade, which 
then relieved 5 Brigade. On the night of 7–8 April, when the last 
of these reliefs was completed, the whole <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> sector came under 
the command of 6 British Armoured Division, with the Guards 
Brigade on the right, the parachute brigade in the centre, and 4 
<name key="name-016617" type="organisation">NZ Armoured Brigade</name> on the left.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Fifth Brigade (Brigadier Stewart<note xml:id="fn1-11" n="1"><p>Maj-Gen Sir Keith Stewart, KBE, CB, DSO, m.i.d., MC (Gk), Legion of Merit (US);
<name key="name-120120" type="place">Kerikeri</name>; born <name key="name-120054" type="place">Timaru</name>, <date when="1896-12-30">30 Dec 1896</date>; Regular soldier; <name key="name-004367" type="organisation">1 NZEF</name> 1917–19; GSO I NZ Div
1940–41; Deputy Chief of General Staff Dec 1941–Jul 1943; comd 5 Bde Aug–Nov 1943,
4 Armd Bde Nov 1943–Mar 1944, 5 Bde Mar–Aug 1944; p.w. <date when="1944-08-01">1 Aug 1944</date>; comd 9 Bde
(<name key="name-004368" type="organisation">2 NZEF</name>, <name key="name-002006" type="place">Japan</name>) Nov 1945–Jul 1946; Chief of General Staff, 1949–52.</p></note>) went back down Route 6 to 
the <name key="name-001095" type="place">Mignano</name> locality and later to <name key="name-003895" type="place">Isernia</name>, in a peaceful valley east 
of the upper <name key="name-028520" type="place">Volturno River</name>; 6 Brigade (Brigadier <name key="name-208925" type="person">Parkinson</name><note xml:id="fn2-11" n="2"><p><name key="name-208925" type="person">Maj-Gen G. B. Parkinson</name><!-- Parkinson, Maj-Gen G. B. -->, CBE, DSO and bar, m.i.d., Legion of Merit (US); <name key="name-007584" type="place">Christchurch</name>;
born <name key="name-008844" type="place">Wellington</name>, <date when="1896-11-05">5 Nov 1896</date>; Regular soldier; NZ Fd Arty 1917–19; CO <name key="name-001152" type="organisation">4 Fd Regt</name>
Jan 1940–Aug 1941; comd 1 NZ Army Tank Bde and 7 Inf Bde Gp (in NZ) 1941–42;
6 Bde Apr 1943–Jun 1944; GOC <name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 NZ Div</name> 3–27 Mar 1944; CRA <name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 NZ Div</name> Jun–Aug
<date when="1944">1944</date>; comd 6 Bde Aug 1944–Jun 1945; QMG, Army HQ, Jan–Sep 1946; NZ Military
Liaison Officer, <name key="name-008904" type="place">London</name>, 1946–49; Commander, Southern Military District, 1949–51.</p></note> 
went to the <name key="name-027639" type="place">Presenzano</name> area, near the <name key="name-120139" type="place">Volturno</name> beyond <name key="name-001095" type="place">Mignano</name>. 
In pleasant surroundings, where the fresh spring growth in woods 
and fields was in such vivid contrast to the rubble, bomb craters, 
shattered tree-stumps, mud and water, and the perpetual smoke 
pall of the <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> battlefield, the troops relaxed and trained while 
their units reorganised. Leave parties went to <name key="name-007454" type="place">Naples</name>, <name key="name-000621" type="place">Bari</name>, <name key="name-001224" type="place">Pompeii</name> 
and elsewhere, and those not on leave were entertained by concerts, 
films and mule derbies.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Fourth Armoured Brigade (Brigadier <name key="name-208314" type="person">Inglis</name><note xml:id="fn3-11" n="3"><p><name key="name-208314" type="person">Maj-Gen L. M. Inglis</name><!-- Inglis, Maj-Gen L. M. -->, CB, CBE, DSO and bar, MC, VD, ED, m.i.d., MC (Gk); <name key="name-120018" type="place">Hamilton</name>;
born <name key="name-120065" type="place">Mosgiel</name>, <date when="1894-05-16">16 May 1894</date>; barrister and solicitor; NZ Rifle Bde and MG Bn, 1915–19;
CO 27 (MG) Bn, Dec 1939–Aug 1940; comd 4 Inf Bde, 1941–42; 4 Armd Bde, 1942–44;
GOC <name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 NZ Div</name>, 27 Jun–16 Aug 1942, 6 Jun–31 Jul 1943; Chief Judge of the Control
Commission Supreme Court in British Zone of Occupation, <name key="name-008556" type="place">Germany</name>, 1947–50; Stipendiary Magistrate; died <name key="name-120018" type="place">Hamilton</name>, <date when="1966-03-17">17 Mar 1966</date>.</p></note>), still at <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, 
came under the command of 6 British Armoured Division on 8 
April, and its 22 (Motor) Battalion relieved 2 NZ Divisional 
Cavalry two nights later in the sector bordering the inter-army 
boundary, where the cavalry had been in an infantry role. On this 
section of the front the ground sloped towards the Gari River and 
was overlooked by a ridge on the far side. After several clashes with 
enemy patrols 22 Battalion gained control of the whole of its sector 
east of the river, and its enterprising patrols, swimming the swift-flowing water or crossing in a rubber boat guided by a rope, penetrated a quarter of a mile into enemy territory on the opposite bank
<pb xml:id="n12" n="12"/>
(where they saw equipment which had been abandoned during the 
Americans' bloody repulse in January) and gathered information 
which would be of value when the Allies launched their final assault 
over the Gari.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Some of 4 Brigade's Sherman tanks were retained in the <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> 
sector in a defensive or counter-attack role. Eight or nine from 20 
Armoured Regiment stayed in the town, three of them in the station 
area, with the Guards Brigade. Unlike those still east of the Rapido 
River, where they had better fields of fire and could move from 
place to place, the tanks in the town were immobile and could do 
little or no shooting; their cover was gradually whittled away by 
enemy fire, and smoke had to be used increasingly to screen them 
from view. This was a wretched and monotonous existence for their 
crews, who could get out to stretch their cramped limbs only at 
night.</p>
            <p rend="indent">South of <name key="name-001416" type="place">Monte Trocchio</name>, the isolated hill which gave observation 
over much of the front, <name key="name-002001" type="organisation">18 Armoured Regiment</name> employed one of its 
squadrons at a time in an artillery role adopted because ammunition 
had to be husbanded for the 25-pounder field guns but was more 
than sufficient for the 75-millimetre tank guns. Among the 
variety of targets the tanks engaged from their indirect fire positions were enemy guns and buildings, including the front-line village 
of Sant' Angelo on the ridge across the Gari River. The Germans' 
retaliatory stonks<note xml:id="fn1-12" n="1"><p>Quick defensive artillery concentrations fired according to a prearranged pattern.</p></note> damaged two tanks and killed five men and 
wounded others during the three weeks the regiment was employed 
on this task before handing over to <name key="name-001167" type="organisation">19 Armoured Regiment</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The 6th Armoured Division was relieved at <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> by 8 Indian 
Division, and when 22 (Motor) Battalion had been replaced by 
3/8 Punjab Regiment, 4 Armoured Brigade relinquished command 
of its sector to 19 Indian Infantry Brigade on 25 April, and withdrew to <name key="name-001217" type="place">Pietramelara</name>, 20-odd miles from the front. The relief of 20 
Armoured Regiment's tanks in <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> by 12 Canadian Armoured 
Regiment was particularly difficult: one New Zealand tank broke 
a track on the way out and although ‘smoked’ all the ensuing day 
was too badly damaged by enemy fire to be of further use; another 
two tanks, which could not be extricated safely, were left in position 
for the Canadians.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-2-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Meanwhile, on 15 April, 2 NZ Division assumed command of 
the southern sector of <name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name>' Apennine position, where the 
French had originally broken into the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name>. This part of the
<pb xml:id="n13" n="13"/>
front covered the approaches through the mountains to the <name key="name-120139" type="place">Volturno</name> 
and Rapido valleys from <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>, a road junction in the Melfa River 
valley about 10 miles north of <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, but was overlooked from 
the west by the towering <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte --> and from the north by 
<name key="name-004318" type="place">Monte Cifalco</name><!-- Cifalco, Monte -->, <name key="name-016069" type="place">Monte San Croce</name><!-- San Croce, Monte --> and other Apennine heights still 
held by the enemy. Already <name key="name-002243" type="organisation">6 NZ Infantry Brigade</name> had relieved 
the Polish 6 Lwow Brigade astride the road at the top of the 
<name key="name-018649" type="place">Rapido valley</name>, on the more easterly of the two routes from <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>, 
and had come under the temporary command of <name key="name-004566" type="organisation">5 Kresowa Division</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On Easter Monday (10 April) 25 Battalion had left the <name key="name-120139" type="place">Volturno</name> 
valley near <name key="name-001426" type="place">Venafro</name> and motored up the winding road through 
steep-sided valleys and small villages to a debussing point near 
<name key="name-015633" type="place">Cardito</name>, where stores and equipment were loaded on mules with 
the assistance of Indian muleteers. Accompanied by Polish guides 
and troublesome mules, the companies set out on foot in the dark 
on a track alongside a tributary of the <name key="name-120139" type="place">Volturno</name> and after two or 
three miles began climbing very steep, narrow tracks—exhausting 
for the heavily laden men—on the northern side of the <name key="name-015633" type="place">Cardito</name> – San 
Biagio section of the road, where they relieved 14 Polish Battalion on 
the extreme right of the divisional sector. Following much the same 
procedure, 24 Battalion next night took over positions from 16 
Polish Battalion south of the road and facing the 3500-foot Monte 
San Croce, and 26 Battalion, after being delayed by a thunderstorm, on the following night relieved 18 Polish Battalion on the 
lower slopes of San Croce and on Colle dell' Arena, a plateau-like 
feature farther to the left. C Squadron of Divisional Cavalry and 
33 Anti-Tank Battery, both under 6 Brigade's command, were given 
infantry tasks to thicken up the defence; and the Vickers guns of 
two companies of 27 (Machine Gun) Battalion were sited where 
they could make best use of their long range and give enfilade fire 
in front of the infantry posts. Also in support were 5 Field 
Regiment, two batteries of the <name key="name-003128" type="organisation">Royal Artillery</name>, an anti-aircraft 
battery, and a company of engineers.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Sixth Brigade's sector was a comparatively quiet one, but as 
<hi rend="i">85 Mountain Rifle Regiment</hi> of <hi rend="i">5 Division</hi> had excellent observation from <name key="name-016069" type="place">Monte San Croce</name><!-- San Croce, Monte --> and the nearby high ground, it was 
hazardous to move in the open in daylight. The rugged terrain made 
a continuous line of defences impossible; wide gaps existed between 
the defended localities, which were protected by mines and wire 
entanglements, and between 6 Brigade and the Italian Motor 
Group in the next sector. Exchanges of fire were not very frequent, 
but pickets and patrols kept a vigilant watch to prevent enemy 
patrols from infiltrating through the gaps. The troops enjoyed the 
spring sunshine and the clear mountain air, the views down the
<pb xml:id="n14" n="14"/>
<name key="name-018649" type="place">Rapido valley</name> and across the intervening hills to <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name>, 
visible in fine weather, but found the nights cold, especially in posts 
which gave little shelter. Occasional storms brought high winds, 
heavy rain, and snow on the ranges.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The central sector of 2 NZ Division's line in the upper Rapido 
valley was held by 11 Canadian Infantry Brigade Group, and the 
Belvedere-<name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> sector, on the left, by 28 Infantry Brigade of 4 
British Division. The Canadian group, 7500 strong, stayed on this 
part of the front from 9 April to 5 May, when it was relieved by 
12 South African Motor Brigade. In addition to the three Canadian 
infantry battalions the group included a motor regiment of 5 
Canadian Armoured Brigade, artillery and engineer units, and the 
Italian Bafile Battalion (composed mainly of 1000 sailors from the 
Italian Navy who had volunteered for land duty after surrendering 
their ship at <name key="name-004214" type="place">Malta</name>). The Canadians' sector offered the best 
opportunity and had the most need of constant patrolling, and 
sometimes as many as a dozen patrols went out during one night. 
The Canadians' most formidable problem, shared by all formations 
in the <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name>, was getting supplies to troops in isolated, rocky 
positions.</p>
            <p rend="indent">After just over a week in the line on the Canadians' right, 6 NZ 
Infantry Brigade relinquished command of its sector on 20 April to 
2 Independent Parachute Brigade (which had been replaced at 
<name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> by a brigade of <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name>) and went into divisional 
reserve in the upper <name key="name-120139" type="place">Volturno</name> valley not far from <name key="name-004313" type="place">Montaquila</name>. 
About the same time <name key="name-001740" type="organisation">5 NZ Infantry Brigade</name> left <name key="name-003895" type="place">Isernia</name> to relieve 
28 Infantry Brigade on the Canadians' left.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-2-3" type="section">
            <head>(iii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Probably no part of the front was more difficult to reach than the 
Belvedere-<name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> sector, hardly more than a precarious foothold 
high up on the western side of the <name key="name-018649" type="place">Rapido valley</name>, about half-way 
along the route from <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> to <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>. From the lofty slopes of 
the snow-capped <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte -->, rising directly above and overlooking 
the position, and also from <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> to the south and from 
the mountains to the north, the enemy could observe every access 
route and direct fire from his guns on it.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Fifth Brigade's convoys followed the narrow, winding roads and 
tracks through the hills east of the <name key="name-018649" type="place">Rapido valley</name> to a debussing 
point near the village of <name key="name-001228" type="place">Portella</name>. The changeover of each battalion 
took two nights to complete. The first 5 Brigade troops to arrive, 
28 (Maori) Battalion, set off on foot after dark on 19 April on a 
five-mile march down to the river crossing at Sant' Elia Fiumerapido 
and to a lying-up area among trees at the foot of the precipitous
<pb xml:id="n15" n="15"/>
face of <name key="name-006187" type="place">Colle Belvedere</name><!-- Belvedere, Colle -->, where they remained until the following 
night before taking over from 2/4 Battalion, The Hampshire Regiment. Fifth Brigade assumed command of the sector on the 21st, 
and during the next two nights 23 Battalion completed the relief 
of 2 Battalion, Somerset Light Infantry, and 21 Battalion that of 
2 Battalion, Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire Regiment. The climb 
of over <date when="2000">2000</date> feet to the posts on <name key="name-006187" type="place">Colle Belvedere</name><!-- Belvedere, Colle --> and the adjacent 
<name key="name-010327" type="place">Colle Abate</name><!-- Abate, Colle --> took three to five hours. Laden with their personal gear, 
arms and ammunition, the men clambered and scrambled over 
rock faces in the darkness and stumbled and groped along narrow 
tracks and ridges.</p>
            <p rend="indent">From the village of <name key="name-003601" type="place">Cairo</name> in the <name key="name-018649" type="place">Rapido valley</name> a road zigzagged 
around 10 hairpin bends up the almost vertical southern face of 
<name key="name-006187" type="place">Colle Belvedere</name><!-- Belvedere, Colle --> and then continued onwards and upwards for about 
two miles to the enemy-occupied village of <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>, which cleaved 
to the side of <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte -->. Fifth Brigade's foremost posts, mostly 
in rock sangars very close to the enemy, were about midway between 
the top hairpin bend and <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>: 21 Battalion was astride the 
road and holding a salient on the reverse slope of <name key="name-010327" type="place">Colle Abate</name><!-- Abate, Colle -->, 23 
Battalion farther north on <name key="name-006187" type="place">Colle Belvedere</name><!-- Belvedere, Colle --> and facing part of 
<name key="name-010327" type="place">Colle Abate</name><!-- Abate, Colle --> still held by the enemy, most of 28 (Maori) Battalion 
near the top hairpin bend, and a company of Maoris, 32 Anti-Tank 
Battery and a squadron of the <name key="name-025943" type="organisation">RAF Regiment</name> (these last two in an 
infantry role) about half-way down the zigzagging road. It was 
necessary to hold the flank of the road because there was a gap 
between the New Zealand sector and the Polish <name key="name-004566" type="organisation">5 Kresowa Division</name> 
farther south, in which the terrain precluded the establishment of a 
permanent junction post. This gap had to be watched constantly—by 
standing patrols at night—to prevent enemy infiltration across the 
lines of supply to the New Zealand and Polish sectors.</p>
            <p rend="indent">A company and a half of 27 (Machine Gun) Battalion supported 
the infantry in the Belvedere-<name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> sector, but for most of the 
Vickers guns the range was absurdly low. A German band could be 
seen and heard playing in <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>, and the enemy also could be seen 
stripped to the waist and sunbathing, but it was inadvisable for the 
infantry or machine-gunners to do any shooting in daylight because 
so much of their position was overlooked from the north, west and 
south.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Also in 5 Brigade's sector were seven Sherman tanks, whose 
crews from 12 Canadian Armoured Regiment had been replaced 
by men from 18 NZ Armoured Regiment when its A Squadron relieved the Canadian armour in 11 Canadian Infantry Brigade's 
sector. A few days later A Squadron in turn was relieved by B 
Squadron of <name key="name-001167" type="organisation">19 Armoured Regiment</name>. The changeover at Belvedere
<pb xml:id="n16" n="16"/>
introduced petrol-engined Shermans to the New Zealanders, who 
were accustomed to the diesel-engined type. The tanks, badly in 
need of an overhaul, were parked in a bend in the roadway, where 
there was nothing to see or shoot at without going farther forward. 
Once or twice a tank did go up to a position from which it could 
fire into a cave or tunnel on which the artillery, owing to the angle 
of its entrance, could make no impression.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The artillery was deployed well back, among the tangle of 
hills and narrow valleys on the other side of the <name key="name-018649" type="place">Rapido valley</name>, 
where the guns might be concealed from enemy observation behind 
ridges, or dug in and camouflaged in sites—sometimes on the very 
edge of a road—which gave them sufficient crest clearance for 
defensive fire when requested by the infantry and for counter-battery and counter-mortar work. The divisional front was covered 
by <name key="name-010589" type="organisation">5 Field Regiment</name> and a battery of the 6th in support of 2 
Independent Parachute Brigade on the right, 17 Canadian Field 
Regiment (under New Zealand command) in support of the Canadian brigade group in the centre, and by 4 and 6 Field Regiments 
(less a. battery of the latter) in support of 5 Brigade on the left. 
The mediums and heavies of 2 Army Group Royal Artillery were 
available for the assistance of both 2 NZ Division and the Italian 
Motor Group.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Both sides fired propaganda leaflets, but while the Allied artillery 
had the advantage of knowing that those in German could be read 
by the opposing troops, the enemy had first to identify the occupants 
of any sector and then ensure that the shells containing the leaflets 
were correctly addressed, for they had prepared special messages 
for the Poles, Frenchmen (with separate versions for Moroccans and 
Algerians), Indians, South Africans, Canadians, Americans, New 
Zealanders, and the men from the <name key="name-006511" type="place">British Isles</name>. The New Zealanders often received leaflets in Urdu or Polish, or addressed to the 
depressed lower classes of England; on the rare occasions they 
received those intended for the ‘Kiwis’ it was obvious that the 
Germans would have done better to have left their shells filled with 
high explosive. Nor did the British leaflets appear to have much 
better effect, although a few men of Russian or south-east European 
origin came into the lines bearing ‘safe pass’ leaflets.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The Germans raided some of the forward posts in the Belvedere- 
<name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> sector, usually after a preparation of shell, mortar or 
machine-gun fire, but were driven off with grenades and small-arms 
fire, and if necessary with artillery and mortar concentrations. 
During one of several unsuccessful enemy attempts to approach 21 
Battalion's posts on <name key="name-010327" type="place">Colle Abate</name><!-- Abate, Colle -->, two men were captured from a 
unit of <hi rend="i">132 Grenadier Regiment of 44 Division</hi>, whose sector <choice><orig>ex-
<pb xml:id="n17" n="17"/>
tended</orig><reg>extended</reg></choice> at that time from <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> to <name key="name-004318" type="place">Monte Cifalco</name><!-- Cifalco, Monte -->, north of Sant' 
Elia. According to a German report ‘all our patrols in the central 
and southern parts of [44] division's sector found the enemy in 
strength holding a continuous line. The positions were most difficult 
to approach as the enemy was very alert and opened fire at the 
slightest sound.’</p>
            <p rend="indent">The bringing up of supplies and the relief of posts in the dark 
‘bulked very largely in the men's minds at that time, much more 
than anything they were called on to do in the way of fighting…. 
the most talked of and dreaded business of each day was the nightly 
walk down to the collecting point for supplies, or to the nearest 
well (all taped by Jerry) to fill water-cans.’<note xml:id="fn1-17" n="1"><p><name key="name-012310" type="person">W. D. Dawson</name><!-- Dawson, W. D. --> (23 Bn), note to <name key="name-110027" type="organisation">War History Branch</name>, <date when="1958">1958</date>.</p></note> After weeks of 
occupation by troops of different nationalities, some of whom were 
not particular about hygiene, the positions had become most insanitary. On the reverse slope of <name key="name-010327" type="place">Colle Abate</name><!-- Abate, Colle --> a machine-gun 
platoon was accommodated in sangars which ‘smelt to high heaven 
&amp; it was difficult to move in darkness without setting up a hell of 
a clatter among the empty tins that covered the ground …. The 
infantry sangars were on the brow of the hill as we saw it [the 
ground rose again just beyond them] …. At the foot of the hill 
in a fairly sheltered position on our right was a group of 3″ 
mortars. We could almost look down the barrels because of the 
steepness of the slope.’<note xml:id="fn2-17" n="2"><p>A. E. Gladstone, quoted in <hi rend="i">27 (Machine Gun) Battalion</hi>, p. 406. During the reliefs and
moves to listening posts at night men wrapped sacking around their boots to deaden
the noise.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">Troops were not expected to spend more than 10 days in the 
Belvedere-<name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> sector. Sixth Brigade began to relieve the 5th 
on the night of 29–30 April, when 25 Battalion took over from 
the 28th, and next night 24 Battalion relieved the 23rd. On the 
night of 1–2 May, when 6 Brigade assumed command of the 
sector and while 21 Battalion was still in the line, the enemy 
attacked the <name key="name-010327" type="place">Colle Abate</name><!-- Abate, Colle --> salient. He probably was aware that 
reliefs were taking place because the opposing lines were so very 
close, and no doubt wanted to identify the incoming troops. A 
German patrol, using rifle grenades and flame-throwers, made a 
determined attempt to break into a house occupied by a section of a 
platoon of A Company, 25 Battalion, south of the <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> road, 
but was repulsed. Shortly afterwards 21 Battalion called for defensive fire to cover its posts on <name key="name-010327" type="place">Colle Abate</name><!-- Abate, Colle -->, where the enemy had 
infiltrated between two platoons of B Company. The platoon on the 
left was out of communication and seemed to have been overrun. 
A counter-attack was organised, but the enemy withdrew and contact 
was restored with the platoon, which reoccupied its posts. The New
<pb xml:id="n18" n="18"/>
Zealanders had about 30 casualties that night. Many of the more 
seriously wounded who could not be removed before daybreak had 
to stay in their forward posts until the following night, when 26 
Battalion completed the relief of the 21st.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-2-4" type="section">
            <head>(iv)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The tortuous roads and tracks, by which day-to-day requirements 
were delivered to the brigades of 2 NZ Division and troops were 
ferried to and from their mountain sectors, were also used by the 
heavily laden convoys of <name key="name-006705" type="organisation">2 Polish Corps</name> dumping ammunition and 
stores in preparation for the offensive. All movement on each 
route, therefore, had to be planned in advance, and great care taken 
to prevent vehicles and troops being found in daylight in the places 
where the enemy had observation and could concentrate immediate 
shellfire. With a chain of provost posts linked by telephone and 
an efficient breakdown service to remove vehicles which blocked the 
way, the system of traffic control worked remarkably smoothly.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The New Zealand Division and the Poles both used the narrow, 
two-way road from the <name key="name-120139" type="place">Volturno</name> valley (near <name key="name-001426" type="place">Venafro</name>) to Acquafondata, which was as far as it was safe to go in daylight. From 
<name key="name-002744" type="place">Acquafondata</name>, in the basin of an old volcanic crater 2700 ft above 
sea level, two routes, one north and the other south of a ridge, 
descended westwards to meet again at <name key="name-000955" type="place">Hove Dump</name>, near Sant' Elia 
Fiumerapido. North Road was the New Zealand Division's axis 
and <name key="name-000980" type="place">Inferno Track</name> (the southern route) was the Poles', but in fact 
they shared both routes.</p>
            <p rend="indent"><name key="name-004477" type="place">North Road</name> dropped <date when="2000">2000</date> feet in 13 miles with so many twists 
and turns—vehicles had to take two swings to negotiate many of its 
21 hairpin bends—that although it was theoretically a two-way 
route it had to be restricted to one-way traffic. The enemy, in places 
only a mile or two away, could scan almost its entire length. Only 
single jeeps and ambulances attempted to use it in daylight; the 
columns of trucks travelled at night and without lights of any 
kind—and darkness did not always protect them from shellfire. Not 
infrequently a vehicle went over a bank. Between dusk and midnight westward-bound columns wormed their way down from 
<name key="name-002744" type="place">Acquafondata</name> to <name key="name-000955" type="place">Hove Dump</name>, where they were immediately unloaded; between midnight and dawn they returned to <name key="name-002744" type="place">Acquafondata</name>. 
Jeep convoys, working to a timetable which allowed them on North 
Road when it was clear of the <name key="name-002744" type="place">Acquafondata</name> columns, left Hove 
Dump with supplies for units reached by the roads branching off to 
the north and west through <name key="name-016313" type="place">Vallerotonda</name> and Sant' Elia. One of 
the routes from Sant' Elia climbed the <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> ‘Terror Track’ to the 
upper of two jeepheads serving the Belvedere-<name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> sector, the
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP003a"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP003a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP003a-g"/><head>The Apennine Mountain Sector, <date when="1944-04">April 1944</date></head></figure>
<pb xml:id="n19" n="19"/>
farthest point (about 20 miles) from <name key="name-002744" type="place">Acquafondata</name>. From the 
various jeepheads the supplies were distributed by mule and man-pack.</p>
            <p rend="indent"><name key="name-000980" type="place">Inferno Track</name> shortened the distance from <name key="name-002744" type="place">Acquafondata</name> to Hove 
Dump by six miles and was much less exposed to the enemy's view 
than <name key="name-004477" type="place">North Road</name>, but was shelled when daytime traffic raised dust, 
and was so very narrow and steep, with grades of up to one in four 
or five, that it was suitable only for one-way traffic and vehicles with 
four-wheeled drive. A system of control posts, which regulated 
movement to a bypass area, permitted groups of vehicles to proceed 
in stages up and down <name key="name-000980" type="place">Inferno Track</name> day and night, but it was such 
a slow and difficult route that some of the Polish transport had to 
be diverted to <name key="name-004477" type="place">North Road</name> each night.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Although located among the artillery gunlines, <name key="name-000955" type="place">Hove Dump</name> was 
considered a safe and convenient harbour for supplies. The ammunition, petrol, rations, and even hay for the mules, were stacked in a 
clay-walled gully—a dry riverbed said to be an old course of the 
Rapido—and according to the artillerymen these walls gave immunity from enemy shellfire. Nevertheless, early in May, the 
Germans managed to land a few shells at the gully's narrow 
lower entrance, and set fire to a dump of pyrotechnics placed 
there by the Poles. This was a portent of the calamity which the 
<name key="name-006630" type="organisation">Army Service Corps</name> had been assured could not happen.</p>
            <p rend="indent">German artillery activity increased noticeably on 6 May. Heavy 
calibre guns began to search out gun and mortar positions and 
laid several heavy concentrations round some of the headquarters 
positions and on supply roads and tracks. On the 7th, a fine day, 
shells began to drop into <name key="name-000955" type="place">Hove Dump</name>. Eye-witnesses report that ‘a 
shellburst engulfed a jeep and a huge column of black smoke— 
probably from a load of petrol—spiralled up into the clear sky, a 
fine marker for enemy gunners. There was sudden, feverish activity. 
Drivers jumped to their jeeps and self-starters whirred. Trucks and 
jeeps, some blackened by fire, streamed out of the gully to safety.’<note xml:id="fn1-19" n="1"><p><name key="name-014114" type="person">P. W. Bates</name><!-- Bates, P. W. -->, <hi rend="i">Supply Company</hi>, p. 313.</p></note> 
Obviously attracted by the smoke, the enemy guns poured shells into 
the dump, which soon became a blazing inferno, in which whole 
stores of petrol and ammunition exploded. ‘Viewed from afar by 
awed onlookers, Hove appeared as a deep gash in the earth from 
which billowed smoke and flame and with them shuddering explosions. Even stacks of super-heated bully beef were bursting like 
small-arms fire.’</p>
            <pb xml:id="n20" n="20"/>
            <p rend="indent"><name key="name-000955" type="place">Hove Dump</name> was finished.<note xml:id="fn1-20" n="1"><p>According to German records, observers had seen the constant movement of traffic
into and out of ‘the gully north of <name key="name-001228" type="place">Portella</name>’. Presumably because the guns to the north
and north-west could not clear the crests, <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division's</hi> artillery in the <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>
area was laid on this target on 6 May. A German report next day says that after movement
in the gully was shelled ‘20 explosions were seen, followed by fires which lasted for a
long time. Petrol and ammunition had obviously been hit….’ This shelling was continued on 8 and 9 May, when more fires and explosions were reported.</p></note> Stocks of ammunition, petrol, rations, 
fodder, and many vehicles had been destroyed. The casualties, as 
far as could be assessed, were about 50, including one New 
Zealander killed and 26 wounded. Thereafter <name key="name-002744" type="place">Acquafondata</name> became the most forward New Zealand dump from which the nightly 
jeep trains distributed supplies.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-2-5" type="section">
            <head>(v)</head>
            <p rend="indent">During the five months it had been in action in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> 2 NZ 
Division had suffered over 3200 casualties, nearly half of them 
(1596, including 343 dead) at <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> between 1 February and 
<date when="1944-04-10">10 April 1944</date>. All its units needed time for training and the 
absorption of reinforcements who had been arriving in large numbers 
since the end of the battle at <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>. A complication was the surplus of senior NCOs, who included those returning from furlough in 
New Zealand, experienced in desert warfare but strangers to 
conditions in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, and ex-officers who had voluntarily relinquished 
their Territorial commissions in New Zealand to come overseas, 
with less combat experience than those who had served in either 
North Africa or <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>. By this time, also, the <name key="name-004615" type="organisation">4th Reinforcements</name>, 
who had been with the Division since <date when="1941">1941</date>, were due for furlough.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The recent reinforcements were sent into the line soon after their 
arrival. They could get little exercise and no training while confined 
in cramped shelters in the daytime and standing-to watching for 
enemy patrols at night; the men who went out on patrol usually 
were chosen from among the old hands. <name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> felt that 
his infantry had not had sufficient training in mountain warfare and 
he had no inclination to commit them in a frontal assault in such 
difficult country. It was preferable, therefore, that the Division 
should not be part of the striking force and that the main assault 
by Eighth and Fifth Armies be made elsewhere. The Division's immediate role was merely to make a series of simulated attacks to 
contain the enemy on its front, and to provide artillery and mortar 
support for the Poles, if required, in their attempt to outflank 
<name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> from the north. Later, depending on how the battle 
developed, the Division could expect an exploitation role.</p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <pb xml:id="n21" n="21"/>
        <div xml:id="c1-3" type="section">
          <head>III: <hi rend="i">The Destruction of the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name></hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c1-3-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p rend="indent">General Alexander's plan for the capture of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> and an advance of 200 miles up the Italian peninsula was defined in an 
operation order issued by Headquarters Allied Armies in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name><!-- Allied Armies in Italy, Headquarters --> on 
5 May: ‘To destroy the right wing of the German <name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name>; to 
drive what remains of it and the German <name key="name-018315" type="organisation">Fourteenth Army</name> North 
of <hi rend="sc">rome</hi>; and to pursue the enemy to the <hi rend="sc">rimini-pisa</hi> line inflicting 
the maximum losses on him in the process.’<note xml:id="fn1-21" n="1"><p>Annex No. 1A to <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206553" type="work">Fifth Army History</name></hi>, Part V.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">The offensive was to open with a simultaneous frontal attack 
by the two armies on the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name> on the night of 11–12 May 
<date when="1944">1944</date>. <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> was to force an entry into the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> and 
advance up Route 6, and <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> was to drive through the 
<name key="name-015487" type="place">Aurunci Mountains</name> and along an axis parallel to that of Eighth 
Army but south of the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> and Sacco valleys. These assaults on the 
southern front were designed to draw in the enemy's resources and 
weaken his forces encircling the Allied beachhead at <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name>. By 
the time the enemy's second line of defence, the <name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name>, had 
been broken, <name key="name-006232" type="organisation">6 Corps</name> was expected to be able to break out from 
<name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> and advance inland to cut Route 6 in the <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name> area and 
thus prevent the withdrawal of the troops opposing the advance of 
Eighth and Fifth Armies. After the capture of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> 
was to pursue the enemy on the general axis of Terni-<name key="name-016134" type="place">Perugia</name>, and 
thereafter advance on <name key="name-006149" type="place">Ancona</name> and <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>, and <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> was 
to pursue the enemy north of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, capture the <name key="name-018807" type="place">Viterbo</name> airfields 
and the port of <name key="name-018232" type="place">Civitavecchia</name>, and thereafter advance on <name key="name-018459" type="place">Leghorn</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">In <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> 13 Corps (Lieutenant-General S. C. Kirkman) 
was to make the frontal attack across the Gari River south of Cassino while <name key="name-006705" type="organisation">2 Polish Corps</name> (Lieutenant-General W. A. Anders) was 
to strike across the <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte -->-<name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> spur to turn the line 
from the north; the junction of the two corps on Route 6 was to 
isolate and ensure the capture of <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> and the monastery. The 
role of <name key="name-009243" type="organisation">1 Canadian Corps</name> (Lieutenant-General E. L. M. Burns), in 
<name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> reserve at the beginning of the offensive, would depend on the progress of 13 Corps. Should 13 Corps succeed in 
penetrating both the Gustav and <name key="name-006503" type="person">Hitler</name> lines, the Canadians were 
to pass through and exploit up Route 6 to <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, but if the British 
corps encountered strong opposition after it had established the 
initial bridgehead, the Canadians were to cross the Gari and go 
into action on its left.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Meanwhile <name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name> (Lieutenant-General McCreery) was to 
secure <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>'s right flank in the <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name> and also stage
<pb xml:id="n22" n="22"/>
a demonstration in 2 NZ Division's sector to delude the enemy into 
expecting an attack against this thinly held part of the line, through 
which ran the two routes to <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>. On the Adriatic coast <name key="name-002987" type="organisation">5 Corps</name>, 
under the command of HQ Allied Armies in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, was to hold its 
front with the minimum of troops and pursue the enemy should he 
retire.</p>
            <p rend="indent">A scheme was devised in 2 NZ Division to deceive the enemy by 
simulating a threat along the <name key="name-018450" type="place">La Selva</name> – <name key="name-018676" type="place">San Biagio</name> section of the 
road to <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> on 2 Independent Parachute Brigade's front. The 
artillery (5 NZ Field Regiment, a South African<note xml:id="fn1-22" n="1"><p>By this time 12 South African Motor Brigade, which had recently arrived in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> from
<name key="name-002106" type="place">Egypt</name>, had replaced 11 Canadian Infantry Brigade in the central sector of 2 NZ Division's
command. The Canadian brigade returned to 5 Canadian Armoured Division, which
was to take part in the offensive.</p></note> field battery and 
a South African medium troop) would fire a barrage for 42 minutes, 
starting at 2 a.m. on 12 May, on <name key="name-016069" type="place">Monte San Croce</name><!-- San Croce, Monte --> and its western 
slope, and a troop of heavy anti-aircraft guns would fire on Monte 
Carella. The 4·2-inch and 3-inch mortars and Vickers machine guns 
were to cover the right flank of the ‘attack’, and Bren-gunners from 
one of the parachute battalions were to go forward and engage 
selected targets on the slopes of <name key="name-016069" type="place">Monte San Croce</name><!-- San Croce, Monte -->. Two troops of C 
Squadron, 18 NZ Armoured Regiment's tanks were to manoeuvre 
on the road near <name key="name-018450" type="place">La Selva</name>. Presuming the enemy would think this 
‘attack’ had failed, the Division was to simulate another thrust 
towards <name key="name-018676" type="place">San Biagio</name> on the night of 13–14 May.</p>
            <p rend="indent">For several weeks before the offensive began, the <name key="name-007453" type="place">Mediterranean</name> 
Allied Air Forces,<note xml:id="fn2-22" n="2"><p>The components of the MAAF were the <name key="name-018495" type="organisation">Mediterranean Allied Strategic Air Force</name>, the
<name key="name-018496" type="organisation">Mediterranean Allied Tactical Air Force</name> (comprising the Twelfth Tactical Air Command
and the <name key="name-014233" type="organisation">Desert Air Force</name>), the Mediterranean Allied Coastal Air Force, and the Mediterranean Allied Photographic Reconnaissance Wing.</p></note> taking advantage of a supremacy of nearly 
4000 aircraft over the enemy's 700 (about half of which were 
based in <name key="name-004979" type="place">Yugoslavia</name> or southern <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name>), concentrated on the 
disruption of the enemy's road, rail and sea communications in 
an endeavour to prevent him from accumulating stores to increase 
his resistance to the forthcoming ground attack. The Allied aircraft hampered and strained the German supply and transport 
organisation, but did not succeed in isolating the battlefield. In fact, 
both <hi rend="i">Tenth</hi> and <hi rend="i">Fourteenth Armies</hi> were adequately supplied at 
the start of the May offensive.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The air forces gave their fullest support during the battle. 
They bombed headquarters (disrupting <hi rend="i">HQ Tenth Army</hi> and <hi rend="i">HQ 
Fourteenth Corps</hi>) and command posts, and attacked the German 
gun positions across the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> and behind <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>.</p>
          </div>
          <pb xml:id="n23" n="23"/>
          <div xml:id="c1-3-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">With a thunderous roar amplified by the mountain echoes, the 
Allied artillery opened fire at 11p.m. on 11 May against the 
enemy's 30-mile front between <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> and the sea. Over 1000 guns 
were employed by <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> and about 600 by the Fifth. After 
40 minutes' counter-battery fire the bulk of the artillery switched 
to the corps objectives. <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> began its thrust into the 
<name key="name-015487" type="place">Aurunci Mountains</name> south of the Liri River; in <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> 
13 British Corps forced a crossing of the Gari at the mouth of 
the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>, but <name key="name-006705" type="organisation">2 Polish Corps</name> failed in its attack on Montecassino.</p>
            <p>
              <figure xml:id="WH2-2Ita023a">
                <graphic url="WH2-2Ita023a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2Ita023a-g"/>
                <head><hi rend="sc">the cassino sector</hi></head>
              </figure>
            </p>
            <pb xml:id="n24" n="24"/>
            <p rend="indent">General Anders's plan was for <name key="name-004566" type="organisation">5 Kresowa Division</name> on the right 
and <name key="name-004565" type="organisation">3 Carpathian Division</name> on the left to capture part of the ridge 
about a mile north-west of the monastery, which would give 
observation over the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>. The Poles' first objectives included 
<name key="name-018607" type="place">Phantom Ridge</name> and <name key="name-002772" type="place">Albaneta Farm</name>, and their second objectives 
Colle Sant' Angelo (a ridge beyond <name key="name-018607" type="place">Phantom Ridge</name>) and Montecassino.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The benefit of the preliminary 40-minute counter-battery bombardment had been lost when the Poles' advance began at 1 a.m. on 
the 12th. The enemy guns and crews were well dug in and the 
damage done to their communications was quickly repaired. Soon 
their fire regained almost its full intensity. The Poles captured 
<name key="name-018607" type="place">Phantom Ridge</name> and also Point 593 (less than a mile from the 
monastery) but were exposed to a ring of artillery and mortar 
fire, and were repeatedly counter-attacked by the Germans (who 
were in greater numbers than expected because they were carrying 
out reliefs in the <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> sector that night). Weakened by extremely 
heavy casualties and unable to go on to their final objectives, the 
Poles were withdrawn to their starting point, where they would 
need time to reorganise.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The German reaction to this attack was confined at first to the 
Polish sector; except for some light shelling and mortaring, the 
adjacent New Zealand sector remained quiet. The only noticeable 
response to the simulated attack on 2 Independent Parachute 
Brigade's front at 2 a.m. was machine-gun fire on fixed lines and 
shell and mortar fire on likely forming-up points. The tanks 
from <name key="name-002001" type="organisation">18 Armoured Regiment</name> trundled up the road to the appointed 
place near <name key="name-018450" type="place">La Selva</name>, fired shells into the darkness ahead, and 
returned down the road without one retaliatory shot from the 
enemy.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The artillery of <name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name>, including some of the New Zealand 
batteries, and the air force supported the Poles throughout the battle. 
The New Zealand artillery answered numerous calls for counter-battery and counter-mortar fire on <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte -->, <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>, <name key="name-002927" type="place">Belmonte</name> 
and <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> to lessen the volume of fire the enemy was bringing down 
on the Polish sector, and also helped to cover the Poles' withdrawal.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Although the Poles' attack inflicted correspondingly heavy losses 
on the enemy (one of whose relieving battalions was believed 
to have been practically annihilated by shellfire) and divided the 
attention of the enemy artillery which might otherwise have concentrated on 13 Corps, it made no tactical gains. ‘It is no disparagement of the Poles' splendid bravery to say that it availed little 
until successes elsewhere threatened the defenders of Monte-
<pb xml:id="n25" n="25"/>
cassino with encirclement…. though the great fortress fell 
[on 18 May], it was never conquered.’<note xml:id="fn1-25" n="1"><p>Phillips, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name></hi>, Vol. I, p. 337.</p></note></p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-3-3" type="section">
            <head>(iii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">While the Poles were battling among the hills above <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, 
13 Corps was struggling to establish a bridgehead across the 
Gari River south of the town. From this bridgehead General 
Kirkman planned to turn northwards to cut Route 6 and join 
up with the Poles and isolate <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>. The town was to be cleared 
of the enemy and the road reconstructed through it. Thirteenth 
Corps then was to advance up the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> south of Route 6 
to the <name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Starting immediately after the counter-battery fire ceased, 13 Corps 
(unlike the Poles) at first did not have to contend with shellfire, 
but the swift-flowing Gari capsized many of its assault boats and 
swept many downstream, German automatic and small-arms fire 
caused numerous casualties, and the attackers soon lost the benefit 
of the supporting artillery barrage. On the right, between the 
<name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> railway station and Sant' Angelo, <name key="name-032838" type="organisation">4 British Division</name> had 
not completed a bridge before dawn and was unable to do so in 
daylight, but although lacking support weapons the division clung 
to a shallow lodgement on the far bank throughout the day. On the 
left <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name> succeeded in placing two bridges over the 
river south of Sant' Angelo and was joined by tanks of 1 Canadian 
Armoured Brigade and some anti-tank guns.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Taken by surprise, the enemy made no co-ordinated counter-attack against 13 Corps on 12 May. Instead he threw in his local 
reserves piecemeal, and hastily assembled in the rear a battle 
group (including two parachute battalions) at the disposal of 
<hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi>, whose command was extended southward over 
<hi rend="i">44 Division's</hi> front in the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>. A regiment of <hi rend="i">90 Panzer 
Grenadier Division</hi> was despatched to the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>, but Kesselring, who still expected an Allied landing behind the front, 
reserved to himself the decision to commit this formation to action.</p>
            <p rend="indent">A bridge was built over the Gari in 4 Division's sector before 
dawn on the 13th, and tanks of 26 Armoured Brigade crossed to 
assist the attack. In the afternoon <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name> completed the 
clearing of the enemy from Sant' Angelo, and 13 Corps' uneasy 
foothold across the river was converted into a firm bridgehead. 
Orders were issued for 78 British Division, reinforced by units 
from 6 British Armoured Division, to pass through next day and 
make contact with the <name key="name-004564" type="organisation">Polish Corps</name> (which was to renew its attack)
<pb xml:id="n26" n="26"/>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2Ita026a"><graphic url="WH2-2Ita026a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2Ita026a-g"/><head><hi rend="sc">the liri valley</hi></head></figure>
<pb xml:id="n27" n="27"/>
on Route 6 on 15 May. A second bridge over the Gari in 4 Division's 
sector was ready for use on the morning of the 14th, and 19 NZ 
Armoured Regiment, placed under the command of that division, 
also crossed the river.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The 19th Regiment (Lieutenant-Colonel <name key="name-002183" type="person">McGaffin</name><note xml:id="fn1-27" n="1"><p><name key="name-002183" type="person">Col R. L. McGaffin</name><!-- McGaffin, Col R. L. -->, DSO, ED; <name key="name-008844" type="place">Wellington</name>; born Hastings, <date when="1902-08-30">30 Aug 1902</date>; company
manager; 27 (MG) Bn 1939–41; comd 3 Army Tank Bn (in NZ) Mar – Oct 1942;
CO 27 (MG) Bn Feb – Apr 1943; CO <name key="name-001167" type="organisation">19 Armd Regt</name> Apr 1943–Aug 1944; comd Adv
Base, <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, Aug–Oct 1944.</p></note>) left the 
<name key="name-001217" type="place">Pietramelara</name> area at short notice, travelled about 30 miles ‘in 
stygian blackness’<note xml:id="fn2-27" n="2"><p><name key="name-018715" type="person">D. W. Sinclair</name><!-- Sinclair, D. W. -->, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-110031" type="work">19 Battalion and Armoured Regiment</name></hi>, p. 402.</p></note> on the night of 13–14 May, during which two 
tanks slipped off the road, and was refuelled and ready to go into 
action at dawn. C Squadron crossed the Gari about 8 a.m. and 
the other squadrons later in the morning, to take up positions in 
support of 4 Division, which was to act as a pivot for 78 Division's 
wheeling movement to the north and was to be prepared to move 
against <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> when it was outflanked.</p>
            <p rend="indent">As 4 Division had not yet cleared the enemy from all of its 
objectives, the GOC (Major-General A. D. Ward) decided to 
attack on the southern flank to conform with <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name>'s 
line. About 6 p.m. 2/4 Hampshires of 28 Brigade, with B Squadron 
in support, set out to take Vertechi Farm. The tanks had difficulty 
in crossing the <name key="name-018617" type="place">Pioppeto stream</name>. A scissors bridge, which had been 
hit during the day, collapsed when the first tank was half-way over; 
the second tank just failed to jump an eight-foot-wide gap, and 
the third rolled over on to its side in the run-up on the opposite 
bank. In another place, however, three tanks managed to cross 
a temporary bridge, constructed mostly of green willow logs, and 
reached the objective ahead of the infantry. Supported by these 
tanks and by fire from tanks still on the other side of the stream, the 
Hampshires were consolidating on their objective by 6.30 p.m.</p>
            <p rend="indent">A and C Squadrons of 19 Regiment stood by on 15 May in 
readiness to help 4 Division repulse a counter-attack which was 
expected at dawn but did not eventuate. B Squadron (less two 
troops supporting the Hampshires on the southern flank, which 
was still rather exposed) helped <name key="name-018169" type="organisation">2 Royal Fusiliers</name> of 12 Brigade 
clear up a small enemy salient, and claimed the destruction of an 
<hi rend="i">ofenrohr</hi><note xml:id="fn3-27" n="3"><p><hi rend="i">Ofenrohr</hi>: German weapon similar to the American bazooka and firing a hollow-charge
rocket projectile.</p></note> and its crew and a strongpoint in a house defended by 
machine guns and mortars, and silenced four machine-gun posts. 
Tanks from B Squadron accompanied the <name key="name-023564" type="organisation">Royal West Kents</name> of 
12 Brigade in an attack beyond Vertechi. One was disabled on a 
mine, but another scored an unexpected success by discovering 
and disposing of a Mark IV German tank disguised as a haystack.
<pb xml:id="n28" n="28"/>
By the end of the day 13 Corps had reached the lateral <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>- 
<name key="name-006697" type="place">Pignataro</name> road, and <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name> had captured the village of 
<name key="name-006697" type="place">Pignataro</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Meanwhile 78 Division was making slow progress through the 
bridgehead, where it was delayed by traffic congestion, difficulty 
in crossing the Gari and Pioppeto, and by shellfire. The enemy 
was able to direct his guns on targets in the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> because 
of his undisturbed possession of vantage points on the Montecassino spur, which would have been denied him if the Poles had 
succeeded in their attack. The Poles intended to renew their attack 
on 15 May, but unless 13 Corps was within supporting distance, 
would have little prospect of holding the ridge if they captured 
it. It was decided, therefore, to postpone the Polish attack until 
13 Corps, still advancing under continuous observed fire, was 
within striking distance of Route 6.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-3-4" type="section">
            <head>(iv)</head>
            <p rend="indent">While <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> was assaulting the best prepared German 
defences in the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> and north of <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> was 
making sweeping gains farther south, between the Liri River 
and the sea, through mountainous country which the enemy had 
believed impassable for a large force.</p>
            <p rend="indent"><name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> could not advance up Route 7 (the Via Appia), 
which ran along the coast, without controlling the mountain ridges 
which dominated the road. It was decided, therefore, to strike 
directly over the mountains. Against the two German divisions 
south of the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name>, <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> employed the four divisions of the 
<name key="name-006399" type="organisation">French Expeditionary Corps</name>, composed mostly of Algerians and 
Moroccans (with French officers) who were experienced and 
skilled mountain troops, and the two divisions of <name key="name-006823" type="organisation">2 US Corps</name> in the 
coastal sector, where 10 British Corps earlier had secured a bridgehead over the Garigliano River.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The French quickly penetrated the <name key="name-015487" type="place">Aurunci Mountains</name>. On 13 May 
2 Moroccan Division captured the 3000-foot Monte Maio, key 
to the German defences overlooking the Garigliano River, and 
then exploited north-westwards towards the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name>. This permitted 
the French 1 Motorised Division, after clearing the western bank 
of the Garigliano, to continue along the southern bank of the 
<name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> to <name key="name-001303" type="place">San Giorgio</name>, which it reached on the 14th. Farther south 
3 Algerian Division next day entered the Ausonia defile, through 
which the road passes to <name key="name-018628" type="place">Pontecorvo</name>, a nodal point of the Hitler 
Line. Meanwhile <name key="name-006823" type="organisation">2 US Corps</name>, on the left of the French, crossed the 
road which runs south from Ausonia to join Route 7 near the coast.</p>
            <pb xml:id="n29" n="29"/>
            <p rend="indent">Surprised by the strength and speed of <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name>'s advance, 
the Germans suffered crippling losses in men killed, wounded and 
captured, and fell back in different directions, <hi rend="i">94 Division</hi> along the 
coast and <hi rend="i">71 Division</hi> to the <name key="name-018276" type="place">Esperia</name> defile, through which the road 
from Ausonia enters the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>. This compelled the enemy to 
divert to <name key="name-018276" type="place">Esperia</name> the formation of <hi rend="i">90 Panzer Grenadier Division</hi> 
with which he had intended to reinforce the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> front. 
It arrived in detail and was defeated in detail—which was to be the 
fate of all the mobile German divisions. Meanwhile, through the 
gap in the centre, between the retreating <hi rend="i">71</hi> and <hi rend="i">94 Divisions</hi>, 
General Juin launched his Mountain Corps, composed of the 
<hi rend="i">goumiers</hi> and infantry of 4 Mountain Division, with orders to cut 
the Itri-Pico road, far in the enemy's rear. Almost unopposed as 
they crossed the trackless mountain ranges, the French had reached 
Monte Revole by 16 May, an advance of some 12 miles from the 
old line near the Garigliano.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Kesselring's failure to appreciate the strength and momentum 
of the Allied offensive south of <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> is evident in a directive he 
issued to <hi rend="i">Tenth</hi> and <hi rend="i">Fourteenth Armies</hi> in the evening of 15 May, 
when he ordered that a new line of defence be stabilised from 
<name key="name-018276" type="place">Esperia</name> through <name key="name-006697" type="place">Pignataro</name> to <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, to permit ‘the continued 
defence of the <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> massif.’<note xml:id="fn1-29" n="1"><p>Appendix to <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> war diary.</p></note> By the morning of the 16th 13 Corps 
was already holding the road this line was intended to follow. 
In a telephone conversation early that evening Kesselring and 
von Vietinghoff discussed the necessity of a further withdrawal 
and agreed they would have to give up <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>. The commander 
of <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> then issued orders for a general withdrawal to the 
<name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name>.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-3-5" type="section">
            <head>(v)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Although <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi>, facing 2 NZ Division in the 
Apennine sector, was one of the formations from which troops were 
taken, often by companies at a time, to stem <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>'s thrust 
in the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>, the Germans clearly intended to hold this part 
of the front, from <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> northwards, as long as possible.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Acting on evidence from various sources that the enemy was 
thinning out on the New Zealand front under the cover of strong 
battle patrols, the Division issued orders for the three brigades 
to prepare fighting patrols, which were to move out after dark on
<pb xml:id="n30" n="30"/>
the night of 13–14 May, lie up in suitable positions to report on 
enemy movement, and if possible ambush the enemy patrols to prepare the way for a general advance. Sixth Infantry Brigade, in the 
<name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>-Belvedere sector, briefed patrols of about platoon strength, 
one from each battalion, to go out at dusk. The first, from 24 
Battalion, attacked a house on the eastern side of <name key="name-010327" type="place">Colle Abate</name><!-- Abate, Colle -->, 
where the enemy had been seen earlier, but came under fire from a 
number of nearby posts and lost one man killed, seven wounded 
(one of whom was taken prisoner), and two missing. The Germans 
laid down defensive fire across the front, through which the patrol 
withdrew with difficulty. Satisfied that the enemy was still alert and 
manning his positions, 25 and 26 Battalions disbanded their patrols.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The same night 2 Independent Parachute Brigade repeated, with 
a modified version, its simulated attack in the vicinity of the road 
that passes through <name key="name-018676" type="place">San Biagio</name> on the way to <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>. Light machine-gun teams went forward under an artillery and mortar barrage 
on <name key="name-016069" type="place">Monte San Croce</name><!-- San Croce, Monte --> and <name key="name-018216" type="place">Monte Carella</name><!-- Carella, Monte -->. The enemy showed that 
he was still in position by laying defensive fire in front of his 
forward posts. A patrol from 12 South African Motor Brigade, in 
the Division's central sector, surprised an enemy party of seven 
men and killed five of them. The dead were identified as being from 
<hi rend="i">1 Battalion, 100 Mountain Regiment</hi>, which indicated that this 
battalion probably had spread out to cover the withdrawal of the 
other troops previously known to have been there. Nevertheless the 
Germans in this sector were very alert, constantly firing fixed-line 
tracer and Very lights, and severed the brigade's communications 
with shell and mortar fire.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Late in the afternoon of the 14th the New Zealand artillery laid 
smoke on an area where the <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>-<name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> road passes through the 
defile between Monte Belvedere and <name key="name-004318" type="place">Monte Cifalco</name><!-- Cifalco, Monte -->, and in a mixture of smoke and mist the South Africans simulated an attack with 
machine-gun and mortar fire. Although this brought little immediate 
response from the enemy, he apparently assumed it presaged a 
night attack, and after dusk he distributed so much defensive fire 
of all kinds on the New Zealand front that patrols were greatly 
hampered and pinned to the ground at times. Enemy aircraft, more 
in evidence than they had been for some time, bombed <name key="name-000955" type="place">Hove Dump</name> 
and the supply roads during the night and next day (the 15th); 
they returned the following night to bomb the medium gun areas. 
As the latter night was very still, sound carried a long way. Enemy 
mule trains and working parties, which could be heard plainly, 
were fired on by the artillery and mortars.</p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <pb xml:id="n31" n="31"/>
        <div xml:id="c1-4" type="section">
          <head>IV: <hi rend="i">The Capture of <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name></hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c1-4-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p rend="indent">For <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>'s final assault on <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> General Leese decided 
to commit his army reserve (the Canadian Corps) and continue 
the battle on a three-corps front. To isolate the town and monastery 
the <name key="name-004564" type="organisation">Polish Corps</name> and 13 Corps were to strike simultaneously on the 
morning of 17 May, the Poles south-eastwards over the Monte 
<name key="name-003601" type="place">Cairo</name> – <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> spur where they had made their previous 
attempt, and the British north-westwards in the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> to 
cut Route 6 and link with the Poles. Meanwhile the Canadians 
were to enter the valley, take over from <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name>, and 
continue the westward advance on the left of 13 Corps.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The plan for the second Polish attack on <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> was much 
the same as for the first, but the conditions were more favourable: 
not only had the enemy lost heavily in the first attack (as had 
the Poles themselves) but <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi> had been compelled to weaken itself further by sending reinforcements to the 
<name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> in the vain hope of sealing off the Allied penetrations 
of the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name>; in addition, the only way of escape from 
<name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, along Route 6, was in danger of being blocked.</p>
            <p rend="indent">This time <name key="name-004566" type="organisation">5 Kresowa Division</name>, attacking in waves of battalion 
strength, was to capture in turn the northern part of Phantom 
Ridge, Colle Sant' Angelo and Point 575 (farther south, overlooking Route 6), and was then to continue the advance downhill 
and across the highway to meet 78 Division of 13 Corps. Kresowa 
Division had an unexpected success on the night before the opening 
of the planned attack. A company, while reconnoitring in force 
(with supporting fire from 4 and 6 NZ Field Regiments), captured 
some enemy positions on the northern end of <name key="name-018607" type="place">Phantom Ridge</name>, and 
the remainder of the battalion quickly went forward to exploit 
this success. The Germans counter-attacked, but were repulsed.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The 17th of May was a day of bitter fighting, much of it 
hand-to-hand against an enemy who defended his rocky strongholds to the last. In the morning, when the artillery (with the 
New Zealand guns again participating) fired its programme in 
support of the attack, a second battalion of Kresowa Division 
passed through the one already on <name key="name-018607" type="place">Phantom Ridge</name> and took Colle 
Sant' Angelo, except for some pillboxes on the western side, but 
came under fire from <name key="name-018598" type="place">Passo Corno</name> and <name key="name-018689" type="place">Villa Santa Lucia</name><!-- Santa Lucia, Villa -->, to the 
north-west. The Germans counter-attacked from some vineyards 
under the south-western slopes and were twice repelled; but the 
Poles were running out of ammunition, and in their third attempt 
the Germans captured the southern peak of Colle Sant' Angelo.
<pb xml:id="n32" n="32"/>
Although a third Polish battalion came forward to help restore the 
losses on Colle Sant' Angelo, the day's fighting had cost Kresowa 
Division so many lives that it could go no farther.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The primary objectives of <name key="name-004565" type="organisation">3 Carpathian Division</name>, which attacked 
at the same time as Kresowa Division, were two key positions 
of the German defences, <name key="name-002772" type="place">Albaneta Farm</name> and Point 593 (a few 
hundred yards to the east). A battalion, accompanied by engineers, 
advanced to the gorge north of <name key="name-002772" type="place">Albaneta Farm</name> to clear it of the 
enemy and his mines, but as this task took longer than anticipated, 
<name key="name-002772" type="place">Albaneta Farm</name> was brought under neutralising fire while a second 
battalion was committed to an attack on Point 593, which it captured despite a German counter-attack. This battalion then attempted 
to reach Point 569, just to the south of 593, but was obstructed by 
the ruins of an old fort and came under mortar fire from the 
monastery, about half a mile away, and machine-gun fire from 
Point 575. Although a third battalion joined in the attack, the Poles 
were unable to take Point 569, and were halted within 200 yards 
of <name key="name-002772" type="place">Albaneta Farm</name> by fire from steel pillboxes.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The Carpathian Division took up defensive positions for the 
night, with orders to prevent a German withdrawal along the ridge 
from <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> to <name key="name-002772" type="place">Albaneta Farm</name>, and next morning (18 May) 
finally cleared the enemy from <name key="name-002772" type="place">Albaneta Farm</name> and Point 569. 
A patrol of <name key="name-018627" type="organisation">12 Podolski Lancers</name> met no resistance from the 30 men, 
many of them wounded, who still remained in the monastery, where 
the Polish standard was hoisted over the ruins at 10.20 a.m.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-4-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The decision to launch the <name key="name-004564" type="organisation">Polish Corps</name> attack on 17 May 
had been taken the previous evening, when 13 Corps had made 
sufficient progress in the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>: 78 Division had pushed 
north-westwards through the last defences of the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name>, while 
4 Division had straightened out its line south of <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">B and C Squadrons of 19 NZ Armoured Regiment co-operated 
with the infantry of 4 Division on the 16th in an attack across the 
<name key="name-006697" type="place">Pignataro</name> road to reduce a small salient which divided 10 and 12 
Brigades. The advance began at 6.30 p.m. B Squadron and the 
<name key="name-023564" type="organisation">Royal West Kents</name>, on the left, had gone some way towards their 
objective (a point about 1000 yards south of Route 6) when they 
met the enemy approaching as if to counter-attack (or perhaps to 
reoccupy positions vacated earlier), and after some very confused 
fighting in the failing light—complicated by the infantry's inexperience in the use of the No. 38 wireless-telephony link to keep in 
touch with the tanks—halted on the ground they had gained. 
In this engagement the Englishmen had earned the New Zealanders'
<pb xml:id="n33" n="33"/>
admiration for their ‘sheer guts and unhesitating obedience to 
orders’.<note xml:id="fn1-33" n="1"><p><hi rend="i"><name key="name-110031" type="work">19 Battalion and Armoured Regiment</name></hi>, p. 410.</p></note> The Germans also had fought with great determination. 
Their <hi rend="i">ofenrohr</hi> crews had lain concealed in the long grass until the 
tanks were nearly on top of them. B Squadron had two tanks 
knocked out, two officers killed, and seven men wounded. Next 
morning 150 enemy dead, all claimed as the victims of tank fire, 
were counted in the squadron's sector.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On the right C Squadron gained the line of the <name key="name-006697" type="place">Pignataro</name> road 
about half a mile from its junction with Route 6, but had outdistanced the infantry (the Bedfordshires and Hertfordshires), who 
had halted in the darkness. A strongpoint in a house was disposed of by tank fire, but a storm of mortar and machine-gun 
fire caused many casualties. A line was stabilised with the tanks 
in close support of the infantry.</p>
            <p rend="indent">When the <name key="name-004564" type="organisation">Polish Corps</name> and 13 Corps launched their concerted 
attack on 17 May, 78 Division, continuing its wheeling movement 
to the north-west, at first met sharp resistance, but this began 
to weaken as the attack progressed. The village of Piumarola, 
about two miles beyond the <name key="name-006697" type="place">Pignataro</name> road, was finally captured 
in the evening after a stiff fight with the garrison of German 
paratroops.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Meanwhile, on the inner flank, 4 Division conformed with this 
wheeling movement. In the morning its infantry, supported by 
tanks of <name key="name-001167" type="organisation">19 Armoured Regiment</name>, advanced against negligible 
opposition to reach Route 6 south of <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name>. B Squadron, 
having already had several days' hard fighting, was replaced by 
a troop of A Squadron, which accompanied the <name key="name-023564" type="organisation">Royal West Kents</name> 
beyond the objective of the previous night and gained the highway at the foot of the mountainside below the monastery. A troop 
of C Squadron crossed Route 6 farther to the east and shot up 
positions near the junction of the road to <name key="name-006697" type="place">Pignataro</name>, which 
allowed the Bedfordshires and Hertfordshires also to reach the 
highway. A troop of A Squadron covered 2 Duke of <name key="name-006055" type="place">Cornwall</name>'s 
Light Infantry in an advance which, against light machine-gun fire, 
reached a point near the railway south of the town. These gains 
brought <name key="name-001167" type="organisation">19 Armoured Regiment</name> into the area of the original New 
Zealand objective for which the regiment had battled unsuccessfully 
in March.</p>
            <p rend="indent">By this time the escape route from <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> and the monastery 
was restricted to the mountainside and, farther west, to the narrow 
strip of valley between the mountains and the railway running 
parallel with Route 6. In anticipation of a German attempt to 
break out that way during the night, Route 6 was patrolled and
<pb xml:id="n34" n="34"/>
the artillery put down harassing fire, but most of the enemy 
already had slipped away; only 70 prisoners were taken, many of 
them medical orderlies. It had been necessary for Kesselring 
personally to order General Richard Heidrich's <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi> 
to retire, ‘an example,’ he says, ‘of the drawback of having strong 
personalities as subordinate commanders.’<note xml:id="fn1-34" n="1"><p><hi rend="i">The Memoirs of Field Marshal Kesselring</hi>, p. 202.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">On the morning of the 18th 10 Brigade approached <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> 
with two battalions supported by tanks from A and C Squadrons, 
and without meeting any resistance—although a few Germans gave 
themselves up as prisoners—secured the Baron's Palace, the 
Colosseum and the Amphitheatre. The <name key="name-000966" type="organisation">4th Division</name><!-- 4 Div --> then made 
contact with <name key="name-018114" type="organisation">1 Guards</name> Brigade in the town and with the Poles. 
Mines and booby traps were thick on the ground and in the rubble, 
and great care had to be taken when investigating buildings. The 
tank crews were warned not to forage among the ruins, and 
especially not to touch the knocked-out New Zealand tanks still 
in the town. Having completed its task in the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>, 19 Regiment was released by 4 Division.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Shortly after midday <name key="name-004565" type="organisation">3 Carpathian Division</name> despatched a patrol 
down the slopes of <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> and made contact with 78 Division 
on Route 6 below <name key="name-002772" type="place">Albaneta Farm</name>. Nevertheless parties of Germans 
covering the withdrawal from <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, and some who had not 
received orders to withdraw, continued to resist throughout the day, 
and isolated pillboxes had to be destroyed individually. On 
<name key="name-004566" type="organisation">5 Kresowa Division</name>'s front repeated attempts to dislodge the 
enemy were thwarted by the fire from strongpoints on the southern 
slopes of Colle Sant' Angelo and from Point 575. By evening 
General Anders decided that, rather than incur further casualties,<note xml:id="fn2-34" n="2"><p>The Poles' casualties were approximately 4000, including 1000 dead.</p></note> 
it would be better to pin down and exhaust the enemy. A counter-attack from <name key="name-018689" type="place">Villa Santa Lucia</name><!-- Santa Lucia, Villa -->, farther west, was repulsed, and 
early next day (the 19th) this place was reported clear; but Passo 
Corno, at a height of about 3000 feet on the side of <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte -->, 
remained in German hands.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-4-3" type="section">
            <head>(iii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">While 13 Corps and the <name key="name-004564" type="organisation">Polish Corps</name> were fighting the battle to 
isolate <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, the Canadian Corps, entering the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> on the 
left of the 13th, struck towards the <name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name> through country 
dotted with strongpoints and furrowed by many small streams. 
The 1st Canadian Infantry Division, after taking over from 8 Indian 
Division near <name key="name-006697" type="place">Pignataro</name>, fought its way to the Forme d'<name key="name-018062" type="place">Aquino</name>, a
<pb xml:id="n35" n="35"/>
stream which straggles across the valley through marsh and gully 
to join the Liri River near <name key="name-001303" type="place">San Giorgio</name>. This natural obstacle 
allowed the enemy to disengage his forces in front of the Canadians 
on the night of 17–18 May—while farther north he reluctantly 
retired from <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> through the gap between 13 Corps and the 
Poles.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Although the enemy had lost <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name>, his northern flank 
was still secured by his retention of positions on the slopes of 
<name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte -->, including the small town of <name key="name-006695" type="place">Piedimonte San Germano</name>, 
perched on a spur overlooking Route 6. On his southern flank, 
however, his misappreciation of General Alexander's plan and of 
the Allies' ability to cross the <name key="name-015487" type="place">Aurunci Mountains</name> had resulted 
in his failure to halt <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name>'s drive. The French had taken 
<name key="name-018276" type="place">Esperia</name> by 17 May and were less than four miles from <name key="name-018628" type="place">Pontecorvo</name> 
the following afternoon. Alexander now ordered <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> 
‘to use the utmost energy to break through the “Adolf Hitler” line 
in the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> before the Germans had time to settle down in 
it’.<note xml:id="fn1-35" n="1"><p><hi rend="i">The Allied Armies in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name></hi>, p. 2925.</p></note> He also directed the Poles to press on to <name key="name-120137" type="place">Piedimonte</name> to turn the 
line from the north, and the French, after reaching Pico (west of 
<name key="name-018628" type="place">Pontecorvo</name>), to encircle the southern flank.</p>
            <p rend="indent"><name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> almost broke through the <name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name> before the 
enemy ‘had time to settle down in it’. Early in the evening of 
18 May the <name key="name-018128" type="organisation">Derbyshire Yeomanry</name> Group from 78 Division, advancing rapidly south of the railway, reached the <name key="name-018062" type="place">Aquino</name> airfield, on 
the edge of the main defences of the line. A few tanks entered the 
village of <name key="name-018062" type="place">Aquino</name>, but were without infantry support so withdrew. 
An assault was made on <name key="name-018062" type="place">Aquino</name> at daybreak on the 19th, but when 
the sun suddenly dispersed the heavy morning mist, the tanks of 
11 Canadian Armoured Regiment, supporting a battalion of 36 
British Infantry Brigade, found themselves in the open, some of 
them within point-blank range of German anti-tank guns. Shell 
and mortar fire compelled the infantry to retire, but the tanks, protected to some extent by a smokescreen, held their ground throughout the day. When the regiment finally withdrew at dusk, it had 
lost 13 Sherman tanks, and every tank of its two leading squadrons 
had received at least one direct hit by high-explosive shells.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On the same day 3 Canadian Infantry Brigade, supported by a 
battalion of the <name key="name-015594" type="organisation">Royal Tank Regiment</name>, tried to penetrate the 
defences farther south, between <name key="name-018062" type="place">Aquino</name> and <name key="name-018628" type="place">Pontecorvo</name>, but after 
emerging into the open from thick patches of stunted oak trees, 
the infantry were halted by machine-gun and mortar fire, and the 
tanks by anti-tank gunfire. By this time it was obvious that a major
<pb xml:id="n36" n="36"/>
assault would be necessary to break the <name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name> in the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> 
valley.</p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="c1-5" type="section">
          <head>V: <hi rend="i">The Breaking of the <name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name></hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c1-5-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p rend="indent">From the hill town of <name key="name-006695" type="place">Piedimonte San Germano</name> the <name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name> 
ran southwards across the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> to the vicinity of <name key="name-018628" type="place">Pontecorvo</name> 
and, after crossing the river, swung south-westwards over the 
mountains to <name key="name-018747" type="place">Terracina</name> on the coast. Although far from complete, 
its defences were even more elaborate than those of the Gustav 
Line; they included armoured pillboxes, reinforced concrete gun 
emplacements and weapon pits, underground shelters, and minefields and wire to obstruct tanks and infantry. The line's great 
weakness, however, was that there were too few troops to man 
it adequately. The <hi rend="i">90th Panzer Grenadier Division</hi>, which held the 
sector in front of the Canadian Corps, had been reduced to little 
more than a motley collection of units in which men of every arm 
were intermingled. On its left, opposite 13 Corps, was <hi rend="i">1 Parachute 
Division</hi>, and on the right in the <name key="name-018628" type="place">Pontecorvo</name>-Pico sector was 
<hi rend="i"><name key="name-006446" type="organisation">26 Panzer Division</name></hi>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The French captured Pico on 22 May and began to outflank the 
<name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name> from the south, but the enemy showed no sign of 
abandoning it. He defended <name key="name-018628" type="place">Pontecorvo</name> that day against a Canadian 
thrust. Early next morning 1 Canadian Infantry Division, with very 
heavy artillery support, launched its main assault between <name key="name-018062" type="place">Aquino</name> 
and <name key="name-018628" type="place">Pontecorvo</name> and, in a day in which the Canadians experienced 
their hardest and most costly fighting in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>,<note xml:id="fn1-36" n="1"><p>Nicholson, <hi rend="i">The Canadians in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name></hi>, pp. 423–5.</p></note> succeeded in piercing 
the line. Nearly 1000 Canadians were killed or wounded, most of 
them from units on the right flank, which was exposed to fire from 
<name key="name-018062" type="place">Aquino</name>. The German casualties included several hundred killed 
and over 700 prisoners.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The 5th Canadian Armoured Division passed through the breach 
on the 24th and exploited to the far bank of the shallow, meandering Melfa River, which crossed the valley about four miles west 
of <name key="name-018062" type="place">Aquino</name> before flowing into the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name>. A battle group from the 
infantry division pushed along the road from <name key="name-018628" type="place">Pontecorvo</name> and next 
day crossed the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> just above the junction of the two rivers. 
By nightfall on the 25th the Canadians' bridgehead west of the 
<name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> extended from the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> to the railway.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The continued presence of the enemy at <name key="name-018062" type="place">Aquino</name> after the breakthrough had prevented 78 Division of 13 Corps from advancing,
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP004a"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP004a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP004a-g"/><head>The Advance to <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, 11 May – 4 June 1944</head></figure>
<pb xml:id="n37" n="37"/>
as planned, on the right of the Canadians on the 24th. It was 
decided, therefore, that 6 British Armoured Division should take 
a route through the Canadian sector south of <name key="name-018062" type="place">Aquino</name>, but as 
5 Canadian Armoured Division was not yet clear of this route, 
13 Corps' advance was postponed until next day. Early on the 25th 
patrols found <name key="name-018062" type="place">Aquino</name> and also <name key="name-120137" type="place">Piedimonte</name> (which <hi rend="i">1 Parachute 
Division</hi> had held against the Poles' attacks) clear of the enemy. 
Thirteenth Corps then closed up to the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> with both 6 Armoured 
Division and 78 Division, while <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name>, with 18 NZ 
Armoured Regiment under command, occupied small towns and 
villages in the foothills on the northern side of the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-5-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Led by C Squadron, <name key="name-002001" type="organisation">18 Armoured Regiment</name> (Lieutenant-Colonel 
<name key="name-018664" type="person">Robinson</name><note xml:id="fn1-37" n="1"><p><name key="name-018664" type="person">Brig H. A. Robinson</name><!-- Robinson, Brig H. A. -->, DSO, MC, ED, m.i.d.; <name key="name-120141" type="place">Waipukurau</name>; born <name key="name-021363" type="place">New Plymouth</name>, 29
<date when="1912-09">Sep 1912</date>; farmhand; Div Cav 1939–44; CO <name key="name-002001" type="organisation">18 Armd Regt</name> Mar–Jul 1944; 20 Armd
Regt Mar–Oct 1945; twice wounded.</p></note>) drove up Route 6 on 25 May to join <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name>, 
commanded by Major-General D. Russell. The New Zealanders 
wondered at the evidence of the recent fighting. ‘For miles the 
ground was all torn up by shells.’ The <name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name> ‘looked really 
wicked…. The boys had never seen anything quite like it, except 
photos of the Maginot Line away back in the very early days of 
the war. Even now that those large, cunningly hidden anti-tank 
guns were tame, the thought of advancing into their muzzles made 
you feel sick inside.’<note xml:id="fn2-37" n="2"><p><name key="name-012310" type="person">W. D. Dawson</name><!-- Dawson, W. D. -->, 18 <hi rend="i">Battalion and Armoured Regiment</hi>, p. 462.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">C Squadron's tanks followed <name key="name-006274" type="organisation">6/13 Royal Frontier Force Rifles</name> 
of 19 Indian Infantry Brigade from Route 6 towards the foothills 
west of <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte -->, where the lower slopes were so closely 
cultivated and wooded that the tank crews could not see far ahead 
and at times lost sight of the infantry. <name key="name-000746" type="place">Castrocielo</name> was deserted. 
The civilians had taken refuge in nearby caves. Some of the 
Indians pushed on beyond the town to take the craggy peak of 
Madonna Castrocielo. They were fired on by German machine-gunners sheltering behind large boulders, but with the protection 
of a smokescreen created by the tanks, closed in and killed or 
drove off the enemy.</p>
            <p rend="indent">A Squadron of <name key="name-002001" type="organisation">18 Armoured Regiment</name> joined 1 Argyll and 
Sutherland Highlanders of <name key="name-003609" type="organisation">19 Brigade</name> and set off past <name key="name-000746" type="place">Castrocielo</name> 
towards <name key="name-001269" type="place">Roccasecca</name>, a small town near the Melfa River. During 
the advance one of A Squadron's tanks fell into a 20-foot well 
which had been roofed over and covered with earth.<note xml:id="fn3-37" n="3"><p>It was hauled out by 4 Brigade's Heavy Recovery Section.</p></note> Another
<pb xml:id="n38" n="38"/>
tank, upon turning a corner of a narrow lane, came face-to-face 
with a German turretless recovery or maintenance tank, and 
captured two of its crew. Next morning (26 May) the Argyll and 
Sutherland Highlanders entered <name key="name-001269" type="place">Roccasecca</name> unopposed. The last 
of the Germans were cleared from the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> east of the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> 
River.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-5-3" type="section">
            <head>(iii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Meanwhile, on 23 May, <name key="name-006232" type="organisation">6 Corps</name> (commanded now by Major- 
General Lucian Truscott) had opened the attack to break out from 
the <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> beachhead, and next day <name key="name-006823" type="organisation">2 US Corps</name> had occupied the 
coastal town of <name key="name-018747" type="place">Terracina</name>. Kesselring had brought the last of his 
mobile divisions, <hi rend="i">29 Panzer Grenadier</hi>, from the <name key="name-018232" type="place">Civitavecchia</name> area 
to prevent a breakout from the southern flank of the beachhead and 
to halt the American drive towards <name key="name-018747" type="place">Terracina</name>, but it had not 
arrived in time to accomplish either task.</p>
            <p rend="indent">If <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> could succeed in blocking <hi rend="i">Tenth Army's</hi> line of 
retreat by cutting Route 6 at <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name>, there was a chance that 
a rapid advance up the <name key="name-018675" type="place">Sacco valley</name> by <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> might achieve 
the encirclement of <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206560" type="work">14 Panzer Corps</name></hi>. In the afternoon of 25 May, 
however, General Clark on his own volition swung the main axis 
of <name key="name-006232" type="organisation">6 Corps</name>' advance to the north-west, away from <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name> to the 
<name key="name-018050" type="place">Alban Hills</name>, with the result that the town was not captured until 
1 June. This decision and <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>'s slow progress sacrificed 
what may have been an opportunity to cut off and destroy part 
of <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">General Clark himself says, ‘I was determined that the Fifth 
Army was going to capture <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> and I probably was overly 
sensitive to indications that practically everybody else was trying 
to get into the act.’<note xml:id="fn1-38" n="1"><p>Mark W. Clark, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206594" type="work">Calculated Risk</name></hi>, p. 357.</p></note> Alexander, however, intended that the Americans should enter <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> and that the British and their other allies 
should bypass it. ‘I had always assured General Clark in conversation that <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> would be entered by his army; and I can 
only assume that the immediate lure of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> for its publicity value 
persuaded him to switch the direction of his advance.’<note xml:id="fn2-38" n="2"><p><hi rend="i">Field Marshal Alexander's Memoirs</hi>, p. 127.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">Displaying greater defensive capabilities than the Americans 
had anticipated, the Germans delayed <name key="name-006232" type="organisation">6 Corps</name>' advance in the 
vicinity of the <name key="name-018050" type="place">Alban Hills</name>. ‘The greatest irony was that if the 
VI Corps main effort had continued on the <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name> axis… 
Clark could undoubtedly have reached <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> more quickly than 
he was able to do by the route northwest from Cisterna….
<pb xml:id="n39" n="39"/>
Ironically, too, when the <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> finally broke through the 
last of <hi rend="i">Fourteenth Army's</hi> defences, it accomplished this by a 
surprise night infiltration along the eastern side of the <name key="name-018050" type="place">Alban Hills</name> 
between the hills and <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name>….</p>
            <p rend="indent">‘For at least three days German strength in front of <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name> 
and westward to the <name key="name-018050" type="place">Alban Hills</name> was inadequate to have stopped 
a strong attack by even a secondary effort; even in subsequent 
days German strength was not sufficient to have halted the main 
effort of the VI Corps had it been directed in that direction. For 
more than a week before the capture of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, the rear and right 
(west) flank of the German <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi>, withdrawing slowly 
toward the <name key="name-018186" type="place">Caesar Line</name>, were exposed and threatened with a trap 
which the German commanders feared would be closed, but which 
was not.’<note xml:id="fn1-39" n="1"><p>Sidney T. Mathers, ‘General Clark's Decision to Drive on <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>’, in <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206774" type="work">Command Decisions</name></hi>,
pp. 362–3.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">This argument, however, overlooks the fact that Route 6 was 
not <hi rend="i">Tenth Army's</hi> only way of escape. As <name key="name-203465" type="person">General von Senger und 
Etterlin</name> says, ‘it must not be concluded that Alexander's plan to 
use strong forces from the [<name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name>] bridgehead for an attack 
towards <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name> would have met with success.’<note xml:id="fn2-39" n="2"><p><hi rend="i"><name key="name-206809" type="work">Neither Fear Nor Hope</name></hi>, p. 252.</p></note> <name key="name-203465" type="person">Von Senger</name>'s 
<hi rend="i"><name key="name-206560" type="work">14 Panzer Corps</name></hi> fell back along a road which left Route 6 at 
<name key="name-018302" type="place">Frosinone</name>—which <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> had not yet reached—and passed 
through the foothills of the <name key="name-018714" type="place">Simbruini Mountains</name> towards <name key="name-018735" type="place">Subiaco</name>. 
Along this road, well to the north of <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name>, ‘seven divisions 
were pulled back in five days and nights. This was achieved despite 
the fact that the road was practically unusable in daylight because 
of the enemy's air superiority…. XIV Panzer Corps could only 
have been annihilated if the enemy had then also succeeded in 
pinning it down at <name key="name-018302" type="place">Frosinone</name> or alternatively if he had pushed 
forward beyond <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name> towards <name key="name-018735" type="place">Subiaco</name>, which would have 
involved him in major difficulties of terrain.’<note xml:id="fn3-39" n="3"><p>Ibid.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">Nevertheless, on the eve of the British and American cross- 
Channel invasion of <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name>, the Allied armies were fulfilling their 
professed aim in tying down in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> German troops who otherwise 
might have been diverted to western <name key="name-008008" type="place">Europe</name>. The German High 
Command had consented on 22 May to the transfer of the 
<hi rend="i">Hermann Goering Panzer Division</hi> (which had been earmarked for 
<name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name>) from <name key="name-018459" type="place">Leghorn</name> to the <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> area, and to its replacement at 
<name key="name-018459" type="place">Leghorn</name> by <hi rend="i">20 Luftwaffe Field Division</hi> from <name key="name-120004" type="place">Denmark</name>. The 
<hi rend="i">Hermann Goering Division</hi>, travelling in daylight and losing heavily 
from Allied air attacks as it went, did not go into action until
<pb xml:id="n40" n="40"/>
the 27th, and its units, like those of the other divisions drawn into 
the battle, were committed piecemeal in small counter-attacks.</p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="c1-6" type="section">
          <head>VI: <hi rend="i">The Fall of Rome</hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c1-6-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Despite instructions from the <name key="name-018375" type="organisation">German High Command</name> that 
‘if at all possible, no withdrawal is to be made without the personal 
concurrence of the Fuhrer’,<note xml:id="fn1-40" n="1"><p>Appendix to <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> war diary.</p></note> it was obvious by nightfall on 25 May 
that a retreat could not be postponed much longer. Plans were 
made, therefore, for the northern wing of <hi rend="i"><name key="name-018315" type="organisation">Fourteenth Army</name></hi> to hold 
firm between Velletri (near the <name key="name-018050" type="place">Alban Hills</name>) and the sea while 
its left wing fell back with the right wing of <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> as slowly 
and economically as possible to the <name key="name-018186" type="place">Caesar Line</name>, which Hitler 
ordered Kesselring to defend at all costs.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The German forces were to retire to a series of lines of defence 
and inflict ‘such heavy casualties on the enemy that his fighting 
potentiality will be broken even before the Caesar line is reached’.<note xml:id="fn2-40" n="2"><p>Extract from Kesselring's instructions to his army commanders, in an appendix to
<hi rend="i"><name key="name-018315" type="organisation">Fourteenth Army</name></hi> war diary.</p></note> 
In <hi rend="i">Tenth Army's</hi> zone the first of these lines was near <name key="name-018225" type="place">Ceprano</name>, 
where the main <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> forked into the valley of the upper <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name>, 
through which Route 82 led northward to <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> and <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>, and 
the valley of the Sacco, through which Route 6 led north-westward 
towards <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>. The right wing of <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> could use both 
avenues of escape. On the northern side of the main <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> 
Route 6 entered the narrow Providero defile before joining Route 82 
at <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>, and then turned sharply to the south before crossing the 
upper Liri River by a bridge at <name key="name-018225" type="place">Ceprano</name>. Direct access from the 
<name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> to the <name key="name-018675" type="place">Sacco valley</name> was blocked by the upper Liri River 
and by the Isoletta Reservoir, formed by a dam below the confluence of the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> and Sacco rivers. On one route, therefore, Eighth 
Army would have to force its way through a defile; on the other 
it would have to cross a difficult water obstacle.</p>
            <p rend="indent">In the first of the three stages of <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>'s advance, 13 Corps 
on the right and the Canadian Corps on the left were to secure 
the <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>-<name key="name-018225" type="place">Ceprano</name> line at the head of the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>; in the second 
the Canadians were to advance some 10 miles along secondary 
roads south of Route 6, and in the third along Route 6 to link 
up with <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> at <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name>. In the second and third stages, 
depending on the strength of the resistance, 13 Corps was to be 
ready to advance either along Route 6 or on a more northerly
<pb xml:id="n41" n="41"/>
route on either side of the <name key="name-018714" type="place">Simbruini Mountains</name>. Tenth Corps 
was given the task of protecting <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>'s right flank by 
sealing off the approaches from the east. The Polish Corps, which 
would be pinched out at <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte --> between 10 and 13 Corps, 
was to be withdrawn because of its heavy casualties and lack of 
reinforcements. The <name key="name-006399" type="organisation">French Expeditionary Corps</name> of <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> 
was advancing on <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>'s left flank.</p>
            <p rend="indent">It had been decided that the honour of taking <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> should go 
to <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name>. <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>'s task was to break through the Caesar 
Line in the <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name>-<name key="name-018735" type="place">Subiaco</name> sector (between the <name key="name-018050" type="place">Alban Hills</name> 
and the <name key="name-018714" type="place">Simbruini Mountains</name>) and then exploit northwards along 
the roads east of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-6-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The 5th Canadian Armoured Division made slow progress on 
26 May from the Melfa River towards the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> above the Isoletta 
Reservoir. The country was rough and thickly wooded; the enemy 
had left numerous mines and booby traps, and his shell and mortar 
fire and snipers were troublesome. The bridges over the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> had 
been destroyed, but next day the division established a bridgehead 
above the reservoir and occupied <name key="name-018225" type="place">Ceprano</name>, which patrols had 
found free of the enemy. Meanwhile a force from 1 Canadian 
Infantry Division, advancing virtually unmolested on the left flank, 
where the French already had driven off the enemy, sent a patrol 
across the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> below the reservoir and also across the Sacco.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Thirteenth Corps' advance along Route 6 from the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> was 
checked by the German defence of the Providero defile. General 
Kirkman decided to take advantage of the Canadians' success by 
passing 78 Division over the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> near <name key="name-018225" type="place">Ceprano</name> and thus bypass 
the blocked route. The Canadian engineers' bridge, however, 
collapsed into the river early in the morning of 28 May and was 
not ready for traffic until the following evening. This allowed the 
Germans an extra day in which to make an unhurried and orderly 
retreat. Thirteenth Corps was given priority in the use of the 
bridge when it was completed. Meanwhile the Canadians had 
bridged the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> below the reservoir and also spanned the Sacco, 
which opened up a detour around the corps' left flank. They 
despatched a strong force along this route.</p>
            <p rend="indent">In the advance beyond the Liri River 5 Canadian Armoured 
Division had to contend with thickly wooded ridges, gullies, streams, 
minefields and shellfire, and also fought a sharp action with German 
tanks. The Canadian infantry division took over the pursuit on 
31 May and closed in on <name key="name-018302" type="place">Frosinone</name>, the town which commanded
<pb xml:id="n42" n="42"/>
the junction of Route 6 and the alternative escape route to the north 
through <name key="name-000575" type="place">Alatri</name> and <name key="name-018735" type="place">Subiaco</name>.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-6-3" type="section">
            <head>(iii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">After crossing the Melfa River, 6 Armoured Division of 13 Corps 
drove up Route 6 on 26 May until halted at the Providero defile, 
about two miles from <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>. Troops of <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi>, who 
occupied the steep and wooded hills on each side of the highway, 
thwarted for two days the British attempts to burst through to 
<name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>. To outflank this rearguard Kirkman ordered <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name> 
into the hills north of the defile, and at the same time directed 
78 Division across country to <name key="name-018225" type="place">Ceprano</name> where (as has been mentioned) the Canadians were bridging the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The 8th Indian Division, with 18 NZ Armoured Regiment still 
under command, had not yet crossed the Melfa River. In the morning of the 26th a column consisting of a squadron of <name key="name-000701" type="organisation">6 Lancers</name>' 
armoured cars, a troop of B Squadron's tanks, and a company of 
infantry was sent up the narrow gorge through which the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> 
flowed into the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>. The column overcame a German rearguard, but could not prevent the enemy from blowing the bridge 
half-way through the gorge (Ponte la Valle), so therefore returned 
to <name key="name-001269" type="place">Roccasecca</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">A ford below the gorge was negotiable to all types of vehicles, 
and a bridge built by the Germans farther downstream was still 
intact, but as these were considered inadequate, <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name> 
constructed a Bailey bridge near the ford. When this was ready, 
17 Indian Infantry Brigade, with a squadron of 18 Armoured 
Regiment in support of each of its three battalions, was to cross 
the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> and advance over the hills north of Route 6 towards 
<name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>. This country, although marked on the map as ‘impassable 
to tracked vehicles’.<note xml:id="fn1-42" n="1"><p><hi rend="i"><name key="name-110030" type="work">18 Battalion and Armoured Regiment</name></hi>, p. 469.</p></note> did not deter the New Zealand tank crews, 
who ‘were prepared to go anywhere and undertake any task. They 
took their tanks to seemingly impossible places, up steep mountain 
sides strewn with boulders and down again.’<note xml:id="fn2-42" n="2"><p>Dharm Pal, <hi rend="i">Official History of the Indian Forces in the Second World War, The Campaign in
<name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> 1943–45</hi>, p. 197.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">B Squadron (in support of <name key="name-000705" type="organisation">1 Royal Fusiliers</name>) and A Squadron 
(supporting 1/12 Frontier Force Regiment) crossed the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> in 
the afternoon of 27 May and advanced up a shallow valley 
between two steep ridges. While the infantry clambered up to the 
higher ground, the tanks moved in single file along rocky farm 
tracks on the lower slopes. The Fusiliers met only scattered resistance and in the late afternoon reached their objective, <name key="name-001117" type="place">Monte Orio</name>,
<pb xml:id="n43" n="43"/>
overlooking Route 6 about two miles from the river. The Frontiersmen, advancing without opposition from hill to hill on the northern 
side of the valley, were on their objective, Monte Clavello, in the 
evening, by which time <name key="name-018419" type="organisation">1/5 Royal Gurkha Rifles</name> and C Squadron 
had crossed the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> and begun their attack on <name key="name-000853" type="place">Frajoli</name>, a little 
village on a saddle between <name key="name-120147" type="place">Orio</name> and Clavello.</p>
            <p rend="indent">When two companies of <name key="name-026218" type="organisation">Gurkhas</name> and a troop of tanks closed 
in on <name key="name-000853" type="place">Frajoli</name> in the failing light, the Germans brought down 
machine-gun and mortar fire from the village and the nearby hillsides. The tanks replied with their 75-millimetre guns and Brownings; the artillery fired in support, and part of B Squadron crossed 
a ravine to lend a hand. By 9.30 p.m. all resistance in and around 
<name key="name-000853" type="place">Frajoli</name> had ceased. Some Germans were dead and over 40 were 
prisoners. The New Zealand casualties were slight: an officer 
wounded and one tank damaged.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Now that <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name> had secured the hills on the northern 
side of the Providero defile, 6 Armoured Division renewed the 
attack on the southern side, and gained the top of two prominent 
hills during the night. Fierce fighting continued next day.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On 28 May the Frontiersmen and B Squadron advanced beyond 
Monte Clavello to <name key="name-001115" type="place">Monte Favone</name><!-- Favone, Monte -->, the highest peak in the locality. 
On the far side of <name key="name-120148" type="place">Favone</name> was the town of <name key="name-001318" type="place">Santo Padre</name>, from which 
a road led northwards through Arpino to <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, on Route 82 in the 
upper <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>. The leading tanks skirted around <name key="name-120148" type="place">Favone</name> until 
they were looking across a ravine at <name key="name-001318" type="place">Santo Padre</name>. ‘The town was 
swarming with Germans, evidently hurrying to evacuate the place, 
for trucks and cars were pulling out as fast as they could along 
a road that wound away to the north. Our infantry was nowhere in 
sight, but down from <name key="name-120148" type="place">Favone</name> towards <name key="name-001318" type="place">Santo Padre</name> streamed figures 
in khaki, unrecognisable at that distance.’<note xml:id="fn1-43" n="1"><p><hi rend="i"><name key="name-110030" type="work">18 Battalion and Armoured Regiment</name></hi>, p. 474.</p></note> Not knowing that these 
were Germans, the New Zealanders left them alone and concentrated on the transport which came into view at a road bend 
a mile away. Several vehicles were knocked out, but the rest 
vanished down the road.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On <name key="name-001115" type="place">Monte Favone</name><!-- Favone, Monte --> the Frontiersmen were halted by German 
paratroops who had dug a series of slit trenches on almost inaccessible ledges. Some of B Squadron's tanks made ‘superhuman efforts’<note xml:id="fn2-43" n="2"><p>Dharm Pal, p. 196.</p></note> 
to get three-quarters of the way up the steep, rocky hillside, where 
they fired 75-millimetre shells which burst in the trees above the 
Germans. This drove the surviving enemy over the top of <name key="name-120148" type="place">Favone</name>. 
Next morning (the 29th) only a few dead Germans, two light anti-
<pb xml:id="n44" n="44"/>
aircraft guns and unopened cases of mines and anti-tank grenades 
remained.</p>
            <p rend="indent">About the same time as he abandoned <name key="name-001318" type="place">Santo Padre</name> the enemy 
surrendered the junction of Routes 6 and 82 at <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>. Under the 
cover of darkness <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi>, having fulfilled its role, 
disengaged on 13 Corps' front. The Gurkhas entered <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name> before 
midday, close behind troops of 6 Armoured Division.</p>
            <p rend="indent">While B Squadron and the Frontiersmen were driving the 
Germans from <name key="name-001115" type="place">Monte Favone</name><!-- Favone, Monte --> and <name key="name-001318" type="place">Santo Padre</name> on 28 May, A 
Squadron, in support of 1/5 Mahratta Light Infantry of 21 Brigade, 
was ‘inching its way forward over incredible country farther west, 
occupying the almost vertical rampart of <name key="name-001116" type="place">Monte Nero</name>’,<note xml:id="fn1-44" n="1"><p><hi rend="i"><name key="name-110030" type="work">18 Battalion and Armoured Regiment</name></hi>, p. 475.</p></note> above <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>, 
and pushing on to the next peaks. A and C Squadrons (the latter in 
support of 3/15 Punjab Regiment, also of 21 Brigade) waited next 
day on the hills above the town of <name key="name-000846" type="place">Fontana Liri</name>, from which a road 
led to the Liri River, while a way down was reconnoitred on foot 
and by an Auster artillery observation plane, and a bulldozer cut 
a track. B Squadron, meanwhile, went back from <name key="name-120148" type="place">Favone</name> to link 
up with <name key="name-003609" type="organisation">19 Brigade</name>, with which it advanced along Route 6 to the 
<name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name>.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-6-4" type="section">
            <head>(iv)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Thirteenth Corps' plan for continuing the pursuit beyond the 
<name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> was for 78 Division to advance parallel with the Canadians 
from <name key="name-018225" type="place">Ceprano</name> to <name key="name-018302" type="place">Frosinone</name> (which it reached on 31 May) and for 
<name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name> to take a more northerly route through Monte 
<name key="name-018684" type="place">San Giovanni</name>, <name key="name-001429" type="place">Veroli</name> and <name key="name-000575" type="place">Alatri</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On 30 May C Squadron, <name key="name-002001" type="organisation">18 Armoured Regiment</name>, passed through 
<name key="name-000846" type="place">Fontana Liri</name> on the way down to the river at <name key="name-000846" type="place">Fontana Liri</name> Inferiore,<note xml:id="fn2-44" n="2"><p>The lower village.</p></note> 
about a mile distant, and waited near a demolished hydro-electric 
station while 3/15 Punjabs of 21 Brigade covered the building 
of a bridge. A Squadron went about two miles upstream with the 
Mahrattas, but eventually crossed next day at <name key="name-000846" type="place">Fontana Liri</name> Inferiore. 
B Squadron waited about two miles downstream from <name key="name-000846" type="place">Fontana Liri</name> 
Inferiore while the engineers, hampered by shellfire, constructed a 
Bailey bridge which was ready for traffic that night. B Squadron's 
tanks, in support of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders of 
<name key="name-003609" type="organisation">19 Brigade</name>, were the first to get to the other side. They set off 
uphill in single file on a narrow road, and about 3 a.m. on 31 May 
reached the little hilltop town of <name key="name-000768" type="place">Colli</name>, where they waited for 
daylight.</p>
            <pb xml:id="n45" n="45"/>
            <p rend="indent">From Colli the road continued northwards between the Liri River 
and the town of Monte <name key="name-018684" type="place">San Giovanni</name>, on top of a sugar-loaf peak, 
and curved to the north-west around the far side of a large hill, 
<name key="name-000767" type="place">Colle Lucinetta</name>. Some armoured cars of <name key="name-000701" type="organisation">6 Lancers</name> and a troop from 
B Squadron, while scouting along this route, encountered a rearguard from <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi> at a road junction. A Sherman 
tank silenced an anti-tank gun, but another New Zealand tank 
and an armoured car were knocked out. The column was without 
infantry support and had no prospect of dislodging the enemy, 
so it withdrew. Meanwhile the rest of B Squadron accompanied the 
Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders across country to clear Colle 
Lucinetta and Monte <name key="name-018684" type="place">San Giovanni</name>. Its tanks fired at scattered 
parties of escaping Germans.</p>
            <p rend="indent">After crossing the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> C Squadron advanced with 3/8 Punjab 
of <name key="name-003609" type="organisation">19 Brigade</name> towards the road junction where the German rearguard had turned back the scouting column. The Indians jumped 
down from the tanks on which they had been riding and approached 
on foot, but were stopped by machine-gun and mortar fire, and 
took cover. So heavy and persistent was the subsequent fighting that 
the tanks' Browning barrels ‘were red-hot and their rifling worn 
away before the day was over.’<note xml:id="fn1-45" n="1"><p><hi rend="i"><name key="name-110030" type="work">18 Battalion and Armoured Regiment</name></hi>, p. 482.</p></note> One Sherman was hit, probably 
by a bazooka, and set on fire; a member of its crew was killed 
and the rest wounded.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Traffic, obviously the main body of the enemy, was seen speeding 
away along a road to the west. Early next morning the rearguard, 
having delayed the pursuers as long as was necessary, had gone 
from the road junction; it left behind two anti-tank guns, several 
spandaus, quantities of ammunition and stores, seven stragglers and 
about 40 dead.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On 1 June a troop of B Squadron accompanied a squadron of 
the Lancers on a reconnaissance to <name key="name-001429" type="place">Veroli</name>, on a hill several miles 
to the west. The <name key="name-006274" type="organisation">6/13 Royal Frontier Force Rifles</name>, with A Squadron 
in support, drove from Monte <name key="name-018684" type="place">San Giovanni</name> through a valley of 
prosperous farms and orchards. The countryside looked peaceful 
and free of the enemy, and the Italians who lined the road waved 
home-made Union Jacks, threw flowers and embraced the liberators.</p>
            <p rend="indent">At <name key="name-001429" type="place">Veroli</name> a German rearguard waited with machine guns, mortars 
and light anti-tank guns. When the reconnaissance column drew 
near, the enemy caught it in the open and quickly knocked out three 
Humber scout cars. B Squadron's tanks engaged <name key="name-001429" type="place">Veroli</name> and the 
nearby hillsides, and called for an artillery stonk, which silenced 
much of the hostile fire. The Frontier Force Riflemen, approaching 
by a different route, began climbing the steep slopes below the
<pb xml:id="n46" n="46"/>
village, but were brought to a halt by an intense concentration 
of machine-gun and mortar fire; the artillery, heavy mortars and 
A Squadron's tanks covered their withdrawal. The enemy vanished 
during the night, and the Indians and New Zealanders entered 
<name key="name-001429" type="place">Veroli</name> next morning to receive a heroes' welcome.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-6-5" type="section">
            <head>(v)</head>
            <p rend="indent">By this time 2 NZ Division, having crossed the Melfa River near 
<name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>, had cut the <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> escape route in the upper <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> on the 
eastern side of the <name key="name-018714" type="place">Simbruini Mountains</name>, and the only way to the 
north still open to the enemy between 10 and 13 Corps was the 
<name key="name-001429" type="place">Veroli</name>-<name key="name-000575" type="place">Alatri</name>-<name key="name-018735" type="place">Subiaco</name> route, on the western side of these mountains.</p>
            <p rend="indent">From <name key="name-001429" type="place">Veroli</name> 17 Indian Brigade continued the advance towards 
<name key="name-000575" type="place">Alatri</name> on 2 June. The Royal Fusiliers and B Squadron of 18 Regiment took most of the morning to get clear of <name key="name-001429" type="place">Veroli</name>'s narrow 
streets, which were blocked in places by debris. They then descended 
a steep, winding road littered with German vehicles knocked out 
by the <name key="name-034190" type="organisation">RAF</name> and the artillery. In the valley ahead was the transport 
of 78 Division, which had come up from the south and was 
attacking <name key="name-000575" type="place">Alatri</name>, on top of another conical hill and at times blotted 
from view by the dust and smoke of shellfire, bombing and strafing.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The Royal Fusiliers and B Squadron left the road and took to 
the fields on 78 Division's right. B Squadron ran into country ‘worse 
even than the hills east of the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name>. The tanks struggled across a 
succession of ridges, with steep rises and sharp drops to stream 
beds, and on every slope vines, vines and more vines. How the 
crews cursed those endless fields of vines! They seemed to take an 
age to push through, the Shermans pitching like destroyers in and 
out of the ditches that paralleled every row, men sitting in front with 
heavy wire-cutters to hack a passage….’<note xml:id="fn1-46" n="1"><p><hi rend="i"><name key="name-110030" type="work">18 Battalion and Armoured Regiment</name></hi>, p. 486.</p></note> The tanks fired a few 
rounds at German transport retreating farther up the road, but 
it was impossible to see in the haze whether any hits were scored. 
By nightfall 78 Division had occupied <name key="name-000575" type="place">Alatri</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">B Squadron was still ostensibly in support of the Royal Fusiliers 
on 3 June, but the going was so difficult that the tanks lost contact 
with the infantry. The squadron formed a close laager for the night 
and was on the move again before daylight on the 4th. Its tanks 
gave covering fire for a patrol of <name key="name-000701" type="organisation">6 Lancers</name> reconnoitring towards 
the next village along the road, <name key="name-000918" type="place">Guarcino</name>, which 17 Brigade 
entered the following day.</p>
            <p rend="indent">This was 18 Regiment's last action in the battle for <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>. 
B Squadron rejoined the rest of the regiment, which was replaced
<pb xml:id="n47" n="47"/>
under <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name>'s command on 4 June by 12 Canadian 
Armoured Regiment. When the New Zealanders left <name key="name-001429" type="place">Veroli</name> on 
their way south next day, Major-General Russell stood at the 
roadside to thank them. He wrote to <name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name>: ‘I wish 
you to know how glad I was to have your 18 NZ Armd Regt 
under my command. They fought well and nothing was too difficult 
for them to tackle. In fact they got across a large stretch of country 
which the going map said was impassable to tracks….’</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c1-6-6" type="section">
            <head>(vi)</head>
            <p rend="indent">While 13 Corps was pursuing the enemy through the hills north-east of Route 6, the Canadian Corps pushed along the highway 
until halted on 3 June at Anagni, about 30 miles from <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, to 
allow the <name key="name-006399" type="organisation">French Expeditionary Corps</name> to pass through on Fifth 
Army's right flank. The Canadians then went into reserve and 
<name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> regrouped so as to place 6 British Armoured Division 
and 6 South African Armoured Division, under 13 Corps, in the 
van of the pursuit to the north.</p>
            <p rend="indent">By this time the battle for <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> was drawing to a close on 
<name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name>'s front. The 2nd US Corps, attacking on the eastern 
side of the <name key="name-018050" type="place">Alban Hills</name>, had cut Route 6 at <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name> by nightfall 
on 1 June and closed the northern entrance to the <name key="name-018675" type="place">Sacco valley</name> 
next day; it then wheeled to the left and headed towards <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, 
thus threatening to turn the flank of the German <hi rend="i"><name key="name-018315" type="organisation">Fourteenth Army</name></hi>, 
which already was being hard pressed by <name key="name-006232" type="organisation">6 Corps</name>. <hi rend="i"><name key="name-018315" type="organisation">Fourteenth Army</name></hi> 
abandoned the <name key="name-018186" type="place">Caesar Line</name> and pulled out of the <name key="name-018050" type="place">Alban Hills</name>, 
leaving Route 7 an open road to <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>. <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> withdrew 
to the north of Route 6. General Clark's <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> columns 
converged on <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, where they received a wildly enthusiastic 
reception on 4 June. Two days later Allied forces under General 
Eisenhower assaulted the <name key="name-016111" type="place">Normandy</name> beaches to begin the liberation 
of north-west <name key="name-008008" type="place">Europe</name>. The Italian campaign now was of only 
secondary importance in the global war.</p>
          </div>
        </div>
      </div>
      <pb xml:id="n48" n="48"/>
      <div xml:id="c2" type="chapter">
        <head>CHAPTER 2<lb/>
The Road to <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name></head>
        <div xml:id="c2-1" type="section">
          <head>I: <hi rend="i">The Division Begins to Advance</hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c2-1-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p>WHEN the last battle for <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> ended on 18 May with the 
Poles entering the ruins of the monastery and the British 
13 Corps occupying the wrecked town, the Germans still held the 
slopes of <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte -->, which overlooked the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>, and the 
heights farther north which commanded <name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name>' front, on which 
<name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 New Zealand Division</name> held the sector nearest to the Poles.</p>
            <p rend="indent">After occupying <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> the <name key="name-004564" type="organisation">Polish Corps</name> was ordered to 
secure 13 Corps' right flank in the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> by capturing Piedimonte San Germano and the high ground at <name key="name-018598" type="place">Passo Corno</name>, on the 
southern slopes of <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte -->. <name key="name-120137" type="place">Piedimonte</name> was defended by about 
250 Germans, most of them from <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi>, and although 
a Polish battle group managed to enter its outskirts on 20 May, 
the town was not finally clear until the 25th. The Poles, supported 
by New Zealand artillery and mortar fire, captured the crest of 
<name key="name-018598" type="place">Passo Corno</name> on 21 May, but made little progress beyond that point 
until the Germans withdrew from <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte -->.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Meanwhile the New Zealand Division watched its front for 
signs that the enemy was preparing to withdraw, and discussed 
the action it was to take when he did. Plans were mooted, amended, 
cancelled and revived before it was finally decided that the Division 
should advance towards <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> with its 5 and 6 Infantry Brigades. 
Both 2 Independent Parachute Brigade and 12 South African Motor 
Brigade, which occupied the northern and central portion of the 
Division's sector, were wanted for tasks elsewhere and would have 
to be replaced.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Fifth Brigade, which had begun to relieve 6 Brigade in the 
Belvedere-<name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> sector on the night of 16–17 May, completed the 
changeover two nights later, not without incident. About 1 a.m.
<pb xml:id="n49" n="49"/>
on the 18th, while 23 Battalion was moving into the line partly on 
<name key="name-010327" type="place">Colle Abate</name><!-- Abate, Colle --> and astride the road to <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>, a German patrol 
attacked the left-hand company (A Company) of 26 Battalion, 
which had not yet vacated the position, but was driven off with 
the loss of three men killed and three taken prisoner, at the cost 
of one New Zealander killed. Next night 23 Battalion staged a 
‘demonstration’ by firing its weapons to see if the enemy was 
still there, and received retaliatory mortar fire which killed one 
man and wounded seven others. Brigadier Stewart warned his 
battalion commanders on the 19th that they were to be prepared 
for an immediate advance but were to avoid heavy engagements and 
casualties.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On the night of 20–21 May and the two following nights, 
12 South African Motor Brigade was replaced by the composite 
Pleasants Force.<note xml:id="fn1-49" n="1"><p>Commanded by Lt-Col C. L. Pleasants, this group included <name key="name-004950" type="organisation">Wilder Force</name> (Div Cav
dismounted from its armoured cars, with the Italian <name key="name-018428" type="organisation">Bafile Bn</name>— ‘more exotic than
martial’—under command), 22 (Mot) Bn, 24 Bn, 31 A-Tk Bty, <name key="name-018559" type="organisation">2 MG Coy</name>. A battalion
from <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> reserve (1/5 Essex), placed under <name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 NZ Div</name>'s command, later relieved
24 Bn, which returned to 6 Bde.</p></note> The portion of 2 Independent Parachute Brigade's 
sector east of the road leading from the <name key="name-120139" type="place">Volturno</name> valley to San 
Biagio was relinquished to the command of the Italian Corps of 
liberation<note xml:id="fn2-49" n="2"><p>A few days earlier the Italian Motor Group had been reinforced and given the title of the
<hi rend="i">Corpo Italiano di Liberazione</hi>.</p></note> on the night of 21–22 May, when the Italians relieved 
the parachute battalion in that position. The parachute brigade, 
having already withdrawn another of its battalions, now held its 
reduced front with only one unit (5 Battalion), and the road 
became the boundary between 2 NZ Division and the Italian corps. 
Sixth New Zealand Infantry Brigade assumed command of the 
parachute brigade's sector on the morning of the 27th. By that 
time the Division had begun to advance.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-1-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">When the New Zealand Division moved into the <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name> from 
<name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> in April, the German <hi rend="i">44 Infantry Division</hi> (under <hi rend="i">14 Panzer 
Corps</hi>) held the sector from <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> to <name key="name-004318" type="place">Monte Cifalco</name><!-- Cifalco, Monte -->, astride the 
defile through which the road led from the <name key="name-018649" type="place">Rapido valley</name> to Belmonte <name key="name-120146" type="place">Castello</name> and <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>; in the line to the north was <hi rend="i">51 Mountain 
Corps</hi>. Shortly before the Allied offensive began on 11 May, the 
enemy reorganised his front: the boundary between <hi rend="i">14 Panzer 
Corps</hi> and <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206737" type="work">51 Mountain Corps</name></hi> was moved into the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>, and 
<hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi> then held its front from south to north with <hi rend="i">44 Division, 
1 Parachute Division, 5 Mountain Division</hi> and <hi rend="i">114 Light Division. 
Headquarters 44 Division</hi> took over the forces just south of
<pb xml:id="n50" n="50"/>
<name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, while <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi>, in and around <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, 
and <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi> extended towards each other to meet on 
a boundary about half-way between <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> and <name key="name-018083" type="place">Belmonte Castello</name>. 
Still opposite the New Zealanders in the <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> sector, therefore, 
was <hi rend="i">132 Grenadier Regiment</hi> (of <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi>) under the command 
of <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi>, and in the <name key="name-002927" type="place">Belmonte</name> sector <hi rend="i">134 Grenadier 
Regiment</hi> (also of <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi>) under the command of <hi rend="i">5 Mountain 
Division</hi>. The <name key="name-004318" type="place">Monte Cifalco</name><!-- Cifalco, Monte --> area was held by <hi rend="i">100 Mountain 
Regiment</hi> of <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi>, and the line from <name key="name-004318" type="place">Monte Cifalco</name><!-- Cifalco, Monte --> 
to beyond <name key="name-018676" type="place">San Biagio</name> by <hi rend="i">85 Mountain Regiment</hi> of the same 
division. North of the road which passed through <name key="name-018676" type="place">San Biagio</name> was 
<hi rend="i">114 Light Division</hi>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On 10 May General Valentin Feurstein, commanding <hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi>, 
gave his opinion to the commander of <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> (General von 
Vietinghoff) that the troops under <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> were not strong 
enough to hold the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> sector ‘against such great enemy 
superiority’ and that ‘it would be better to evacuate <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> and 
<name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> and retire to the Senger support line [the <name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name>] 
before the troops of the division were smashed….’<note xml:id="fn1-50" n="1"><p>War diary, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-018320" type="organisation">51 Mtn Corps</name></hi>.</p></note> But Feurstein's 
superiors did not share this view; <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> and the present line 
were to be held as long as possible. Nevertheless <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>'s 
attack had been in progress only three days when, on 14 May, 
the commander of <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> (Lieutenant-General Bruno Ortner) 
insisted that either his division was reinforced or it would have to 
fall back on the <name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name>. Reinforcements were provided by 
transferring troops from <hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi>' northern flank. The <hi rend="i">90th Panzer 
Grenadier Division</hi> took over the sector in the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> on 15 and 
16 May, and <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> went back to a position north of <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>, 
where it resumed command of <hi rend="i">132</hi> and <hi rend="i">134 Regiments</hi> in the sector 
between <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi> and <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi>. By the time 
this reorganisation was completed, on 22 May, <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> had been 
evacuated, and the southern flank of <hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi>, pivoting on Monte 
<name key="name-003601" type="place">Cairo</name>, had fallen back to the <name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The demands on <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi> for troops to reinforce the 
formations bearing the brunt of the battle in the south brought 
the complaint from its commander (Major-General M. Schrank) 
that he could no longer guarantee to hold his sector under attack. 
Nevertheless a battalion of <hi rend="i">100 Mountain Regiment</hi> was called for 
on 23 May and had to be pulled out from the <name key="name-004318" type="place">Monte Cifalco</name><!-- Cifalco, Monte --> area 
‘in full view of the enemy’<note xml:id="fn2-50" n="2"><p>Ibid.</p></note> in daylight, and its positions left in the 
charge of small standing patrols.</p>
            <p rend="indent">In a withdrawal planned for the night of 24–25 May, following
<pb xml:id="n51" n="51"/>
the breaking of the <name key="name-018397" type="place">Hitler Line</name>, <hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi> was to conform with the 
forces falling back on its right by taking up a line running from 
the confluence of the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> and <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> rivers across the hills north 
of <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte --> to the vicinity of <name key="name-004318" type="place">Monte Cifalco</name><!-- Cifalco, Monte -->. An order from 
<hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> to hold the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> line ‘at all costs for several days’<note xml:id="fn1-51" n="1"><p>War diary, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-018320" type="organisation">51 Mtn Corps</name></hi>.</p></note> 
did not reach the corps until midday on 25 May, by which time 
<name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> already had crossed the Melfa River in the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> 
valley. The British were expected to attack in force next day. 
‘It was certain that the troops of 90 Pz Gren Div would not be 
able to stand up to such an attack, as they were dog weary physically 
and mentally, and their units were split up into makeshift 
groups…. it was clear that only a withdrawal would save a 
collapse in this sector.’<note xml:id="fn2-51" n="2"><p>Ibid.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">The divisions of <hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi> were told that the line behind the 
<name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> was to be held on orders from <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi>. The <hi rend="i">1st Parachute 
Division</hi> was to withdraw its troops to strengthen the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> front, 
and <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> was to take over the sector extending eastwards 
across the northern slopes of <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte --> to the vicinity of <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>. 
This line was to be held until further orders—but <hi rend="i">44 Division, 
5 Mountain Division</hi> and <hi rend="i">114 Light Division</hi> were to prepare to 
withdraw. Later <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> was told to re-man battle outposts on 
the <name key="name-004318" type="place">Monte Cifalco</name><!-- Cifalco, Monte --> line which it was evacuating.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Shortly before midnight on 25 May <hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi> ordered the 
immediate withdrawal of <hi rend="i">90 Panzer Grenadier Division</hi> to a line 
behind the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> north of <name key="name-018225" type="place">Ceprano</name> (where it would come under 
the command of <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206560" type="work">14 Panzer Corps</name></hi>), and of <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi> and 
<hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> to a line running eastwards from the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> over the hills 
to a point of contact with <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi> west of the 
<name key="name-002927" type="place">Belmonte</name>-<name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> road. Less than four hours later <hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi> received 
orders from <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> to retire to a line behind the Melfa River, 
to which <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> and <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi> were to go as quickly 
as possible. The Germans covered their retreat by battle outposts left 
out in front of the new line.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-1-3" type="section">
            <head>(iii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Before the enemy began to withdraw, nightly patrol activity on 
one part or another of the New Zealand Division's front and 
shell, mortar and machine-gun fire had shown that he was still 
there, if not in any strength. On the evening of the 23rd, however, 
the shelling of ground he had previously occupied suggested that 
he might be preparing to go. That night listening posts heard
<pb xml:id="n52" n="52"/>
the noise of much movement, especially in the <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte --> area. 
The Poles reported that <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> was clear—they had made similar 
reports a few days earlier—but their patrols encountered German 
working parties on the northern side of <name key="name-018598" type="place">Passo Corno</name> and did not 
reach <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>. The general impression on the Division's front on 
the morning of 24 May was that, although the enemy might be 
preparing to go, he was still present in sufficient numbers to make 
an advance difficult.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Towards evening the Division came under heavy shellfire, which 
caused some casualties. The artillery observers were not sure whether 
the enemy was firing to register his guns in fresh positions or whether 
he was using up ammunition before he pulled them out from 
their old sites. In any case it was felt that he intended to cover 
the withdrawal of at least some of his forward posts, especially 
as the village of <name key="name-011661" type="place">Valleluce</name>, which he had held just south of Monte 
Cifalco, received many of the shells.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Fifth Brigade was directed to follow up any withdrawal but 
not to make a set assault on German positions. Before the brigade 
could advance it had to have access to the tracks between its front 
line and <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>, and <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> itself would have to be clear of the 
enemy. Brigadier Stewart instructed 23 Battalion (Lieutenant- 
Colonel <name key="name-010547" type="person">McPhail</name><note xml:id="fn1-52" n="1"><p><name key="name-010547" type="person">Lt-Col E. A. McPhail</name><!-- McPhail, Lt-Col E. A. -->, DSO, MC and bar, m.i.d.; born <name key="name-008123" type="place">Wanganui</name>, <date when="1906-12-31">31 Dec 1906</date>; bank
official; CO 23 Bn May–Jun 1944, Aug–Oct 1944; 21 Bn Oct 1944–May 1945;
wounded <date when="1943-04-09">9 Apr 1943</date>; died <name key="name-021115" type="place">Ashburton</name>, <date when="1967-01-27">27 Jan 1967</date>.</p></note>) to make a noisy demonstration with all available 
weapons and, if the enemy did not react, to send out patrols at 
once to reconnoitre. The demonstration drew little reaction, but the 
patrols came under machine-gun fire.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The enemy, after firing only intermittently during the night, 
began to shell the New Zealand positions heavily at dawn on 
25 May. Observation posts reported hearing or seeing demolitions 
in locations which suggested that he already had taken his heavy 
weapons back or was abandoning them. Once again the Poles 
claimed that <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> had been vacated, and by evening they had 
a patrol of platoon strength on the summit of <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte -->.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Shortly after midday two of the tanks with 5 Brigade, manned 
by crews from the Divisional Protective Troop, advanced along the 
road towards <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>. They had reached a point about a mile from 
the village when two anti-tank guns opened fire and knocked out 
the leading tank. The crew bailed out and retired to the second 
tank, which had halted in cover. Patrols from 23 Battalion were 
then told not to try to advance until nightfall, but when it was 
noticed that the enemy was shelling some buildings south of the 
road, which he had previously held, the battalion was granted
<pb xml:id="n53" n="53"/>
permission to investigate. A patrol from B Company, covered by the 
surviving tank, approached slowly and carefully over very exposed 
ground. The tank opened fire with its 75-millimetre gun and 
machine gun on the nearest building, and some men, thought to be 
Germans, made off hurriedly, but the patrol found no other sign 
of enemy occupation.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Stewart ordered 23 Battalion to send out more patrols and 
to be prepared to reinforce them if they met no opposition. At 
8.40 p.m. the battalion asked that no artillery fire be laid on its 
front because its companies were following up its patrols. Soon 
the battalion reported that it was on the ridge across the road 
where the original German forward posts had been, without having 
met opposition, and was sending a patrol north-eastwards along 
the ridge to make contact on <name key="name-010327" type="place">Colle Abate</name><!-- Abate, Colle --> with 28 (Maori) Battalion. 
This patrol was held up by minefields, but the remainder of 
23 Battalion, after some hard climbing over the rocky slopes, took 
up positions on a line covering the road. About a dozen casualties 
were sustained on mines or booby traps and from shellfire. ‘The 
bright flash with which one large mine exploded brought enemy 
shellfire down on the area. Had it not been for the fact that many 
shells were duds, casualties would have been heavy.’<note xml:id="fn1-53" n="1"><p>Angus Ross<!-- Ross, Angus -->, <hi rend="i">23 Battalion</hi>, p. 350.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">Fifth Brigade warned 21 Battalion (Lieutenant-Colonel <name key="name-003981" type="person">McElroy</name><note xml:id="fn2-53" n="2"><p><name key="name-003981" type="person">Lt-Col H. M. McElroy</name><!-- McElroy, Lt-Col H. M. -->, DSO and bar, ED; <name key="name-002817" type="place">Auckland</name>; born <name key="name-120054" type="place">Timaru</name>, <date when="1910-12-02">2 Dec 1910</date>; public
accountant; CO 21 Bn Jun 1943–Jun 1944; four times wounded.</p></note>) 
to be ready to pass through 23 Battalion with <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> as its objective 
if the 23rd had encountered no opposition by 11 p.m. About that 
time mortar shells began to fall across the <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> road, so the 
battalion was told to wait until counter-mortar tasks could be 
fired on <name key="name-004318" type="place">Monte Cifalco</name><!-- Cifalco, Monte -->, from which the mortaring appeared to come. 
The mortaring continued intermittently, but as no small-arms fire 
was reported, Stewart released 21 Battalion shortly after midnight. 
The leading troops entered <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> before dawn without meeting 
any Germans, except three who were surprised in a house and 
surrendered, and others who were rounded up by patrols searching 
near the village. Altogether about 15 prisoners, mostly of <hi rend="i">132 
Grenadier Regiment</hi>, were taken. After daybreak guns of heavy 
calibre began to shell the New Zealand sector, especially the road 
into <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> and the village itself. Five men were wounded in 
21 Battalion before this fire slackened off when the New Zealand 
artillery bombarded known gun positions between <name key="name-002927" type="place">Belmonte</name> and 
<name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">While 5 Brigade was patrolling to <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>, Pleasants Force 
also sent out patrols, one of which, from 1/5 Essex Regiment<note xml:id="fn3-53" n="3"><p>Redesignated 5 Essex in <date when="1943-05">May 1943</date>, but referred to in most records as 1/5 Essex.</p></note>
<pb xml:id="n54" n="54"/>
(which had relieved 24 Battalion the previous night), located the 
enemy on a ridge south of the precipitous <name key="name-004318" type="place">Monte Cifalco</name><!-- Cifalco, Monte -->, probably 
part of the protective screen for the mortars operating there. 
Another Essex patrol ran into the counter-mortar fire which was 
being directed on these mortar positions. A patrol from 22 Battalion 
entered <name key="name-011661" type="place">Valleluce</name> and found that both the enemy and civilians 
had gone. While reconnoitring beyond the village the patrol became 
entangled in mines and booby traps; three men were wounded, 
and when others went to their assistance, two were killed and two 
more wounded. The officer who led the patrol died of his wounds 
two days later.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-1-4" type="section">
            <head>(iv)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Fifth Brigade was instructed on the morning of 26 May to 
push through to <name key="name-018083" type="place">Belmonte Castello</name> and <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>, provided this could 
be done ‘without getting into too much trouble.’<note xml:id="fn1-54" n="1"><p>War diary, HQ 5 Inf Bde.</p></note> After Brigadier 
Stewart had examined the situation and the ground, he ordered 
tanks and carriers to <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>. These vehicles came under heavy 
shellfire when they appeared on the ridge east of the village. One 
of the carriers was hit, and one of the tanks, while turning to go 
back, ran on to a mine on the verge of the narrow track and was 
lost. The vehicles were then ordered to remain below the ridge 
until dark, when they were to join 32 Anti-Tank Battery's 
‘infantillery’, who were to take over <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> from 21 Battalion.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Both 21 and 23 Battalions were to ‘ease forward gradually as 
opportunity permits’.<note xml:id="fn2-54" n="2"><p>Ibid.</p></note> The 23rd was to use a track leading down 
a gully north of <name key="name-010327" type="place">Colle Abate</name><!-- Abate, Colle --> to <name key="name-002927" type="place">Belmonte</name>, and the 21st a route 
parallel to the 23rd's but farther west and joining the <name key="name-002927" type="place">Belmonte</name>- 
<name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> road about midway between those two places. As the tracks 
were mined, the infantry would be accompanied by sappers from 
<name key="name-003485" type="organisation">6 Field Company</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Sixth Brigade, which was to assume command of 2 Independent 
Parachute Brigade's sector on the morning of 27 May, was to have 
the role of covering the Division's right flank and clearing the 
road though <name key="name-018676" type="place">San Biagio</name> to <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> so that this route could be opened 
up as a possible main axis for the Division. The brigade was to 
dispose of any German rearguards and protect the engineers who 
were to remove mines and repair demolitions as quickly as possible. 
B Squadron of <name key="name-003131" type="organisation">20 Armoured Regiment</name> was to go under the direct 
command of 5 Brigade and A Squadron under 6 Brigade. Divisional 
Cavalry was to revert to divisional command, and its troopers, who
<pb xml:id="n55" n="55"/>
had been acting as infantry with Pleasants Force, were to be rejoined 
by their armoured cars.</p>
            <p rend="indent"><name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> told Brigadier Stewart, ‘Whoever (5 or 6 
Brigade) gets to <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> first, will go on to <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>. The other brigade 
will follow. Don't get involved, but keep the enemy on the run.’<note xml:id="fn1-55" n="1"><p>Note by Stewart to <name key="name-110027" type="organisation">War History Branch</name>, <date when="1958">1958</date>.</p></note> 
The GOC did not want the Division to get embroiled with a strong 
German rearguard.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-1-5" type="section">
            <head>(v)</head>
            <p rend="indent">It was obvious on 26 May that, although his mortars were still 
firing from <name key="name-004318" type="place">Monte Cifalco</name><!-- Cifalco, Monte --> and his large guns from positions back in 
the mountains, the enemy was on his way out from the New 
Zealand front. A deserter who came into the <name key="name-005118" type="organisation">Maori Battalion</name>'s 
lines at <name key="name-006187" type="place">Colle Belvedere</name><!-- Belvedere, Colle --> said his unit (a battalion of <hi rend="i">132 Regiment</hi>) 
had withdrawn two nights earlier and had left his company to 
demonstrate its presence until the next night, when it also had 
fallen back. The Maori Battalion came under mortar fire late in 
the afternoon, which killed two men and wounded two. After 
counter-mortar fire was directed on the <name key="name-004318" type="place">Monte Cifalco</name><!-- Cifalco, Monte --> area, a party 
of Germans bearing a wounded man on a stretcher and carrying 
a <name key="name-027417" type="organisation">Red Cross</name> flag was seen marching down the <name key="name-002927" type="place">Belmonte</name> road.</p>
            <p rend="indent">During the night 23 Battalion advanced to some houses beyond 
<name key="name-010327" type="place">Colle Abate</name><!-- Abate, Colle --> and down the track to <name key="name-002927" type="place">Belmonte</name>, which B Company 
entered without opposition about 6 a.m. on the 27th; 21 Battalion, 
advancing northward from <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>, secured the high ground beyond 
<name key="name-002927" type="place">Belmonte</name>. After exchanging a few shots with a German observation 
post on <name key="name-010613" type="place">Monte Piano</name>, A Company of 21 Battalion took four 
prisoners from <hi rend="i">134 Regiment</hi>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The 23rd Battalion, led by A Company, which took 11 prisoners, 
continued down the road to <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>, the outskirts of which were 
reached late in the afternoon. The battalion learned from civilians 
that the enemy had gone back behind the Melfa River, about a 
mile from the village. Bad demolitions were found on all the roads 
entering <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>, and the bridge over the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> had been wrecked, 
but the river was fordable. The 21st Battalion, which had kept 
pace on the left, also reached the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Meanwhile Pleasants Force had been advised of the capture of 
<name key="name-002927" type="place">Belmonte</name>, and one of its units, the Essex battalion, set out on the 
task of protecting the engineers under 7 Field Company, including 
a section with bulldozers, who were to clear the mines, shell 
damage and demolitions on the road which climbed from the Rapido 
valley through the defile between <name key="name-006187" type="place">Colle Belvedere</name><!-- Belvedere, Colle --> and Monte
<pb xml:id="n56" n="56"/>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2Ita056a"><graphic url="WH2-2Ita056a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2Ita056a-g"/><head><hi rend="sc">the advance to sora, 26–31 may 1944</hi></head></figure>
<pb xml:id="n57" n="57"/>
Cifalco, and then descended beyond <name key="name-002927" type="place">Belmonte</name> to <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>. Patrols 
of the Essex made contact with 23 Battalion at <name key="name-002927" type="place">Belmonte</name> early 
in the afternoon, but a large demolition delayed the engineers short 
of the village. Next day, however, they opened the road to <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Brigadier Stewart ordered the <name key="name-005118" type="organisation">Maori Battalion</name> (Lieutenant- 
Colonel <name key="name-001474" type="person">Young</name><note xml:id="fn1-57" n="1"><p><name key="name-001474" type="person">Lt-Col R. R. T. Young</name><!-- Young, Lt-Col R. R. T. -->, DSO; England; born <name key="name-008844" type="place">Wellington</name>, <date when="1902-06-25">25 Jun 1902</date>; oil company
executive; CO NZ School of Instruction, Feb–Apr 1943; CO 28 (Maori) Bn <date when="1943-12">Dec 1943</date>–
<date when="1944-07">Jul 1944</date>, Aug–Nov 1944; wounded <date when="1943-12-26">26 Dec 1943</date>.</p></note>) in mid-morning on the 27th to move from Colle 
Belvedere to the brigade's concentration area near Sant' Elia in 
the <name key="name-018649" type="place">Rapido valley</name> and to get ready to advance along the road 
to <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>. The Maoris marched down the <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name> track, which no 
longer offered any terror. Fifth Brigade's support units, which 
included 32 Anti-Tank Battery (reverting to its anti-tank role), 
the detachment of five tanks operated by the Divisional Protective 
Troop, 1 and 3 Companies of 27 (Machine Gun) Battalion, and 
2788 Field Squadron of the <name key="name-034190" type="organisation">RAF</name>, also were ordered to concentrate 
near Sant' Elia in readiness to follow up the infantry. B Squadron 
of <name key="name-003131" type="organisation">20 Armoured Regiment</name> had arrived during the night; on the 
way one of its tanks had gone over a bank in the darkness, killing 
one and injuring two of the crew.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Sixth Brigade began its advance from the east towards <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> early 
in the afternoon of the 27th. The 25th Battalion (Lieutenant- 
Colonel <name key="name-006583" type="person">MacDuff</name><note xml:id="fn2-57" n="2"><p><name key="name-006583" type="person">Col J. L. MacDuff</name><!-- MacDuff, Col J. L. -->, MC, m.i.d.; born <name key="name-008844" type="place">Wellington</name>, <date when="1905-12-11">11 Dec 1905</date>; barrister and solicitor;
CO 27 (MG) Bn Sep 1943–Feb 1944; 25 Bn Mar–Jun 1944; Adv Base, <name key="name-004368" type="organisation">2 NZEF</name>, Jun–Jul
<date when="1944">1944</date>; Chief Justice of <name key="name-000854" type="place">Fiji</name>, 1962–63; died <name key="name-021562" type="place">Suva</name>, <date when="1963-07-11">11 Jul 1963</date>.</p></note>) had moved up during the night from the brigade 
rest area in the <name key="name-120139" type="place">Volturno</name> valley to the vicinity of <name key="name-015633" type="place">Cardito</name>, and 
after 5 Parachute Battalion (temporarily under 6 Brigade's command) had patrolled to the road north-east of <name key="name-016069" type="place">Monte San Croce</name><!-- San Croce, Monte --> 
without seeing the enemy, resumed the advance about 1.30 p.m. 
No opposition was met, but many demolitions and mines on the 
road had to be cleared before the tanks of A Squadron, 20 Armoured 
Regiment, and the support weapons could catch up with the 
infantry, who reached the outskirts of shell-battered <name key="name-018676" type="place">San Biagio</name> 
late in the afternoon. A patrol found the village unoccupied. Some 
of the demolitions were so bad that it seemed unlikely that the 
tanks and other vehicles would rejoin the battalion overnight, 
although sappers of 572 Field Company, <name key="name-003201" type="organisation">Royal Engineers</name> (in 
support of 6 Brigade), proposed to work by moonlight.</p>
            <p rend="indent">In the triangle of hills between the two routes along which 
5 and 6 Brigades were advancing, Pleasants Force searched for any 
Germans who might remain on the Division's front. Patrols from 
22 Battalion had seen the enemy on the night of 26–27 May north 
of <name key="name-011661" type="place">Valleluce</name> and on <name key="name-004318" type="place">Monte Cifalco</name><!-- Cifalco, Monte -->, but after daybreak found only 
vacated positions, many of them mined and booby-trapped. One
<pb xml:id="n58" n="58"/>
patrol pushed to the top of Cifalco, where the enemy had abandoned 
his defences. The Italian troops in the mountains to the north of 
the New Zealand Division reached <name key="name-018676" type="place">San Biagio</name> on the evening of 
the 27th and occupied Picinisco, a village near the Melfa River 
north-east of <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>, early next day. Farther north the Italians had 
sharp encounters with German rearguards.</p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="c2-2" type="section">
          <head>II: <hi rend="i">The Pursuit to <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name></hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c2-2-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The valley of the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> ‘was bright green, cut by the silver ribbon 
of the river weaving its way through a carpet of blood-red poppies.’<note xml:id="fn1-58" n="1"><p><name key="name-009336" type="person">Maj R. T. Familton</name><!-- Familton, Maj R. T. -->, quoted in <hi rend="i"><name key="name-110036" type="work">20 Battalion and Armoured Regiment</name></hi>, p. 423.</p></note> 
From the far side of the river near <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> a road led northward 
through <name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name> to join Route 83 at <name key="name-018582" type="place">Opi</name>, in the upper <name key="name-029288" type="place">Sangro</name> 
valley; another led north-westward to join Route 82 at <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, 
in the upper <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>. Routes 82 and 83 continued on through 
the mountains to Alveo del Lago di Fucino, a large oval plain 
reclaimed from a lake in the nineteenth century. Route 5, which 
crossed the peninsula from <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> to <name key="name-004539" type="place">Pescara</name>, was joined on the 
northern edge of the Fucino basin by Route 82 at the town of 
<name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name> and by Route 83 farther east. Other roads led northward 
again.</p>
            <p rend="indent">After <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206737" type="work">51 Mountain Corps</name></hi>' withdrawal on the night of 26–27 May, 
<hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi>, on the southern flank, blocked the junction 
of Routes 6 and 82 at <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>; <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> held a line which extended 
north-eastwards to the <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>-<name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> road below <name key="name-010569" type="place">Monte Morrone</name><!-- Morrone, Monte -->, 
and <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi> continued this line across the <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>-<name key="name-018582" type="place">Opi</name> 
road to make contact with <hi rend="i">114 Light Division</hi>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Although <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi> had checked the British advance 
towards <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>, <hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi> anticipated a heavy assault on this flank, 
and as it had few anti-tank weapons and considered the present 
line unsuitable for prolonged defence, requested <hi rend="i">Tenth Army's</hi> 
permission for a further withdrawal. Army replied by directing 
the corps to extend <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi> towards the <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>-<name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> 
valley (part of the upper <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> through which Route 82 
passed on the way to <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>), so that <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> could release 
reinforcements for <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi>. The corps therefore 
ordered <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> to pull out two battalions and send them to 
<hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi>, which ‘would leave a wide gap in 44 Div's 
FDLs, but that could not be helped.’<note xml:id="fn2-58" n="2"><p>War diary, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-018320" type="organisation">51 Mtn Corps</name></hi>. FDLs: forward defended localities.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">In the evening of the 27th <hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi> asked <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> urgently
<pb xml:id="n59" n="59"/>
for anti-tank weapons ‘as the enemy tanks… could not be fought 
off with bayonets’,<note xml:id="fn1-59" n="1"><p>War diary, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-018320" type="organisation">51 Mtn Corps</name></hi>.</p></note> and again requested a withdrawal. Army 
repeated its order that <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi> should extend farther 
out to the <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> valley and directed that ‘a large force’ of 
<hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> be sent to block Route 82 five kilometres north-west 
of <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>, behind <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi>, against attacks from the 
north; it also ordered <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi> to hold firm on the 
<name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> line. This division was already behind the river. Although 
<hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> complained that it was unable, with so many troops 
detached, to hold its 18-kilometre sector in the hills west of the 
<name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name>, the two battalions were sent off to their blocking role at <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-2-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Fifth New Zealand Infantry Brigade had received instructions 
in the afternoon of 27 May that, after the capture of <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>, the 
axis of advance was to be the <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>-<name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> road. A light force was to 
lead.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The first of the brigade's troops crossed the Melfa River during 
the night. Patrols from C Company, 21 Battalion, reconnoitring 
north of <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>, discovered an easy crossing place—it was only a 
shallow stream—near the wrecked bridge, and after midnight the 
whole company took up a defensive position on the far side. 
A small patrol sent to investigate a side road leading towards the 
village of Gallinaro ran into small-arms fire and withdrew.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The engineers working under 7 Field Company opened the 
Sant' Elia – <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> road for tracked vehicles early on the 28th, and 
during the morning Staghound armoured cars of C Squadron, 
Divisional Cavalry, under 5 Brigade's direct command, reached 
<name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>. Later in the day, when further work on the road made 
it usable for trucks, 28 (Maori) Battalion motored through from 
Sant' Elia in a platoon of 4 Reserve Mechanical Transport Company's trucks. The convoy drove past <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> to disperse near the 
river. ‘The sun shining on the lorries' windscreens heliographed 
the arrival of the column to the observant enemy. A sighting smoke 
shell was followed by high explosive and there were a dozen 
casualties… before the troops scattered.’<note xml:id="fn2-59" n="2"><p><name key="name-018236" type="person">J. F. Cody</name><!-- Cody, J. F. -->, <hi rend="i">28 (Maori) Battalion</hi>, p. 381. The casualties, including NZASC men, exceeded
a dozen.</p></note> Several vehicles were 
hit.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Meanwhile 23 Battalion reconnoitred beyond the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name>. D Company found a bridge on the <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> – <name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name> road prepared for 
demolition, and the engineers, who were sent for, quickly removed
<pb xml:id="n60" n="60"/>
the charges. B Company was directed to test out the strength of 
the enemy rearguard at Gallinaro, but made slow progress because 
of mines and the shellfire which fell along the road and around 
<name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>. The company met and repulsed a German patrol, and 
encountered fire from Gallinaro itself. Artillery support was called 
for, and <name key="name-022811" type="organisation">6 Field Regiment</name>'s 25-pounders and some 5·5-inch guns of 
2 Army Group Royal Artillery harassed the village throughout 
the night. Next day the enemy vacated Gallinaro.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The engineers constructed a ford over the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name>, which was 
passable by armoured cars and tracked vehicles by about 6 p.m. 
on the 28th, and began work on an 80-foot Bailey bridge, which 
they completed during the night; in addition their mine-clearing 
parties began sweeping the road towards <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>. The 21st Battalion 
concentrated just beyond the river in preparation for resuming 
the advance, which did not get under way until late afternoon. 
Four tanks of the Divisional Protective Troop and armoured cars 
of C Squadron of Divisional Cavalry followed when the ford was 
ready, but were hindered by demolitions.</p>
            <p rend="indent">B Company of 21 Battalion, which took the lead, had as its 
objective the village of <name key="name-010677" type="place">Vicalvi</name>, on the southern slopes of Monte 
Morrone, about half-way between <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> and <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>; A Company was 
directed on <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>, a mile or two east of <name key="name-010677" type="place">Vicalvi</name>; D Company was 
given the task of getting on to <name key="name-010569" type="place">Monte Morrone</name><!-- Morrone, Monte -->, which rose to a 
height of 3000 feet behind the two villages.</p>
            <p rend="indent">B Company met a German rearguard after crossing the Mollo 
stream, just beyond the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name>, and took 17 prisoners. The company 
continued along the <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> road until it came under shellfire shortly 
before reaching the road which branched off to <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>. The men 
took to the fields, ‘where they had to push through shoulder-high 
wheat crops,’<note xml:id="fn1-60" n="1"><p>Cody, <hi rend="i">21 Battalion</hi>, p. 342.</p></note> and spent the remainder of the night in a large 
building. A Company halted below <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name> while a platoon reconnoitred to the outskirts of the village without meeting opposition. 
D Company was pinned down for an hour by shellfire near the 
turn-off to <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>, and later headed towards Morrone along a track 
between <name key="name-010677" type="place">Vicalvi</name> and <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Early next morning (the 29th) A Company entered <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>, but 
was met by small-arms fire in the upper part of the village, which 
was situated on two levels. The enemy, however, made a hurried 
departure when two Staghounds came to the assistance of the 
infantry. Meanwhile D Company began the ascent of Monte 
Morrone and, despite some hostile machine-gun fire, reached the 
crest by 9 a.m. B Company's leading troops came under mortar 
and machine-gun fire when they turned on to the side road leading
<pb xml:id="n61" n="61"/>
to <name key="name-010677" type="place">Vicalvi</name>. The company halted and called for artillery fire, but 
owing to poor communications <name key="name-022811" type="organisation">6 Field Regiment</name> did not answer 
this request until midday. When the shelling ceased B Company 
entered the village unopposed.</p>
            <p rend="indent">In the afternoon D Company's troops on <name key="name-010569" type="place">Monte Morrone</name><!-- Morrone, Monte --> were 
counter-attacked by about a company of Germans and, as they 
were running out of ammunition, were obliged to withdraw. 
Artillery fire was laid on the crest and reverse slopes, but as the 
enemy appeared to be in strength in a valley north of <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>, 
no attempt was made to retake Morrone. Four tanks of the Divisional 
Protective Troop accompanied B Company into <name key="name-010677" type="place">Vicalvi</name>, and a troop 
of B Squadron, <name key="name-003131" type="organisation">20 Armoured Regiment</name>, followed A Company into 
<name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>. A few tanks and Staghounds covered an advance by this 
company, reinforced by a platoon from D Company, to occupy 
high ground above the village. At dusk, however, the enemy had not 
been cleared completely from houses north of <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On 28 and 29 May 21 Battalion had taken 39 prisoners from 
units of <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi> and <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi>, and had sustained 
16 casualties, including three killed. Divisional Cavalry had lost 
three armoured cars on mines, without casualties to their crews.</p>
            <p rend="indent"><name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> decided to switch 5 Brigade's attack to the left 
to bypass the opposition at <name key="name-010569" type="place">Monte Morrone</name><!-- Morrone, Monte -->. The enemy could not 
be expected to hold this isolated position once his withdrawal route 
to <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> had been cut. Brigadier Stewart therefore ordered 21 
Battalion with its supporting tanks, a section of Vickers machine 
guns and 5 Brigade's heavy mortar (4·2-inch) platoon to establish 
a defensive line from <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name> to <name key="name-010677" type="place">Vicalvi</name> while <name key="name-022846" type="organisation">28 Battalion</name> was 
brought up to its left to continue the advance to <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The topography at <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> bore some resemblance to that at <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>: 
the town was overlooked by a hill capped with a castle, behind 
which rose a 3000-foot mountain (Colle Sant' Angelo); and through 
it passed the main road (Route 82) and the railway at the southern 
entrance to the steep-sided valley of the upper Liri River.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-2-3" type="section">
            <head>(iii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">While 5 Brigade was occupying <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> and thrusting along the 
dusty road towards <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, 6 Brigade continued its slow progress 
towards <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> from the east. The 25th Battalion paused at San 
Biagio while the road was cleared of demolitions to permit the 
tanks of A Squadron, 20 Regiment, and the supporting arms to 
join the infantry. The 26th Battalion (Lieutenant-Colonel
<pb xml:id="n62" n="62"/>
<name key="name-010496" type="person">Hutchens</name><note xml:id="fn1-62" n="1"><p><name key="name-010496" type="person">Lt-Col R. L. Hutchens</name><!-- Hutchens, Lt-Col R. L. -->, DSO, m.i.d., Legion of Merit (US); <name key="name-008686" type="place">Paris</name>; born <name key="name-005696" type="place">Hawera</name>, 26 Nov
<date when="1914">1914</date>; civil servant; CO 27 (MG) Bn Feb–May 1944; 26 Bn May–Jun 1944; 24 Bn Jun
<date when="1944">1944</date>–<date when="1945-05">May 1945</date>; wounded <date when="1942-07-21">21 Jul 1942</date>; High Commissioner for New Zealand in <name key="name-020943" type="place">Singapore</name>,
1959–62; NZ Ambassador to <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name>, <date when="1965">1965</date>–.</p></note>) moved up from the <name key="name-120139" type="place">Volturno</name> valley and assembled at 
<name key="name-018450" type="place">La Selva</name>, where on 28 May it relieved 5 Parachute Battalion of 
responsibility for its sector. The parachute battalion returned to 
its own brigade, which was no longer under New Zealand command.</p>
            <p rend="indent">From the rocky hilltop on which <name key="name-018676" type="place">San Biagio</name> was situated the 
winding road descended steeply into the valley of the Mollarino 
stream, which flowed into the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> near <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>, about eight miles 
distant. The enemy had obstructed the road in so many places by 
destroying or damaging bridges and culverts, blowing craters and 
laying mines, that it would take the sappers (parties from 8 Field 
Company and 572 Company, RE) several days to clear, even with 
the assistance of other troops from 6 Brigade. <name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> 
suggested that, as the road was so badly damaged, the brigade 
should move back through <name key="name-003289" type="place">Casale</name> and <name key="name-002744" type="place">Acquafondata</name> and use the 
Sant' Elia – <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> route. After some discussion this idea was 
abandoned because the <name key="name-018676" type="place">San Biagio</name> road, when cleared, would be 
a valuable alternative route, and because the engineers estimated 
that it would be cleared in less time than it would take 6 Brigade 
to go by the other route, which was already in full use by the 
transport supplying 5 Brigade and might also be wanted for 
4 Armoured Brigade.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Pleasants Force, which no longer served a purpose, was disbanded 
on 29 May: its headquarters staff and 22 (Motor) Battalion returned 
to 4 Brigade's command, and 1/5 Essex went to reserve under 2 NZ 
Division's command. Fourth Brigade had been ordered the previous 
day to bring all its available units forward to Sant' Elia. Arrangements were made for 534 Tank Transporter Company, <name key="name-003197" type="organisation">RASC</name>, to 
operate a shuttle service over the long and difficult route from 
<name key="name-001217" type="place">Pietramelara</name>, and by dusk on the 29th most of the tanks of 
19 and 20 Armoured Regiments had arrived. The 20th Regiment 
(less A Squadron with 6 Brigade) was ordered to join its B 
Squadron under 5 Brigade's command, and by the morning of the 
30th had accomplished the move through <name key="name-002927" type="place">Belmonte</name> and <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-2-4" type="section">
            <head>(iv)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The start of the Division's advance coincided with a visit from 
the Prime Minister of New Zealand (Mr Peter Fraser), who had 
attended the fourth Commonwealth Prime Ministers' conference in
<pb xml:id="n63" n="63"/>
England. Mr Fraser, accompanied by Lieutenant-General Puttick<note xml:id="fn1-63" n="1"><p>Lt-Gen Sir Edward Puttick, KCB, DSO and bar, m.i.d., MC (Gk), Legion of Merit (US);
<name key="name-008844" type="place">Wellington</name>; born <name key="name-120054" type="place">Timaru</name>, <date when="1890-06-26">26 Jun 1890</date>; Regular soldier; NZ Rifle Bde 1914–19 (CO
3 Bn); comd 4 Bde Jan 1940–Aug 1941; <name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 NZ Div</name> (<name key="name-003325" type="place">Crete</name>) 29 Apr–27 May 1941; CGS
and GOC NZ Military Forces, Aug 1941–Dec 1945.</p></note> 
(Chief of the General Staff and GOC New Zealand Military Forces), 
arrived at <name key="name-011043" type="place">Caserta</name> on 26 May and was met by <name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The Prime Minister spent a week with the Division, during which 
he visited all formations. On 31 May he called at Divisional Headquarters, by that time well beyond <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>, ‘changed from a jeep 
to a staghound and with a protective troop went forward with 
the GOC towards <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> which is now in our hands…. Prime 
Minister spoke to Maoris in the forward area and was within 
400 yards of a shell-burst. The last armoured car in the protective troop fired its 2-pdr in error just as the party started off. 
Fortunately it was pointing skywards.’<note xml:id="fn2-63" n="2"><p>GOC's diary. <hi rend="i">Divisional Cavalry</hi>, p. 342, says somebody accidentally fired the 37-mm. gun
of a Staghound.</p></note></p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-2-5" type="section">
            <head>(v)</head>
            <p rend="indent">On 28 May the British thrusting up the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> threatened 
to overrun <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi> near <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name> and roll up <hi rend="i">51 Mountain 
Corps</hi>' southern flank; the continuous bombing of German supply 
routes and the destruction of bridges caused traffic jams which prevented the delivery of ammunition; tanks were reported to be 
appearing north of <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>, and a push on <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> was expected.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The threat to the line of communication across the front between 
<name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> and <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name> necessitated a change of command in <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi>: 
the formations on the southern flank, including <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi> 
and a large part of <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi>, were transferred to <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206560" type="work">14 Panzer Corps</name></hi>, 
which left <hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi> with only the troops covering the withdrawal 
routes through <name key="name-018582" type="place">Opi</name> and <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>. At first <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> wanted to put 
the whole of <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> under <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206560" type="work">14 Panzer Corps</name></hi>' command and to 
make <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi> responsible for <hi rend="i">44 Division's</hi> sector 
covering <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> and the valley to the north, but General Feurstein 
managed to get this altered so that <hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi> kept <hi rend="i">HQ 44 Division</hi> 
and a few of its units; nevertheless he had to release the units already 
in <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206560" type="work">14 Panzer Corps</name></hi>' sector and a regimental headquarters and 
another battalion in addition. To defend the <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>-<name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> section 
of the upper <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name>, through which Route 82 passed on the 
way to <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>, <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> retained the headquarters and one 
battalion of <hi rend="i">134 Regiment</hi>, one battalion of <hi rend="i">132 Regiment</hi>, a light 
battery and an engineer battalion.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The rearranging of the front was settled at a conference at 
midnight on 28–29 May. The <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> Chief of Staff (<choice><orig>Lieuten-
<pb xml:id="n64" n="64"/>
ant</orig><reg>Lieutenant</reg></choice>-General Fritz Wentzell) claimed that <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi>, 
in pulling back to the <name key="name-018582" type="place">Opi</name> pass, had abandoned and demolished 
the only road which it could have used to move across to take 
over <hi rend="i">44 Division's</hi> sector. General Feurstein replied that <hi rend="i">Tenth 
Army</hi> had authorised the withdrawal and that when the move 
had begun Wentzell had given orders to hurry up on the left 
because of the situation at <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name>. The mountain division, 
therefore, had reached the <name key="name-018582" type="place">Opi</name> pass position when the new <hi rend="i">Tenth 
Army</hi> order arrived to hold the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> line. ‘The pulling out of one 
unit after another from 44 Div, 5 Mtn Div and 114 Lt Div had 
stretched the rubber band to its utmost, so that it was in grave 
danger of breaking….’<note xml:id="fn1-64" n="1"><p>War diary, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-018320" type="organisation">51 Mtn Corps</name></hi>.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">Although <hi rend="i">Army Group C</hi> and <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> were continually 
laying down lines on the map which were to be held at all costs, 
<hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi> could only pretend that it was holding the latest of these 
lines or admit that it had already withdrawn behind it. The troops 
opposing the New Zealand advance probably were equivalent to 
one New Zealand brigade; they had few if any tanks (in any case, 
if they had tanks, they would have had to keep them well back 
to avoid getting them cut off by their own demolitions); they were 
short of anti-tank weapons, transport and ammunition, and were 
spread over a wide front in positions which often could not give 
mutual support.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Field Marshal Kesselring probably did the corps less than justice 
in a conversation with Vietinghoff and Wentzell in the evening 
of 29 May. ‘I get very unhappy,’ he said, ‘when I think how poor 
a fight <name key="name-018320" type="organisation">51 Mtn Corps</name> has put up…. If the enemy is already 
getting trucks through past <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>, the demolitions there cannot 
have been thoroughly carried out. In that case I am afraid he will 
simply barge straight through at <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> and <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>…. That sector 
must be reinforced more….’<note xml:id="fn2-64" n="2"><p>War diary, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi>.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent"><hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> issued orders on the 29th for <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206560" type="work">14 Panzer Corps</name></hi> to 
prevent a breakthrough in the <name key="name-018675" type="place">Sacco valley</name> towards <name key="name-018302" type="place">Frosinone</name> and 
for <hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi> to prevent a breakthrough in the <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> valley. The 
latter corps was to hold a line running north-eastward from Castelliri 
(near the Liri River) across the <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>-<name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> road to a point north 
of <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>, and then eastward across the <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>-<name key="name-018582" type="place">Opi</name> road towards the 
<name key="name-016486" type="place">Sangro River</name>. The <hi rend="i">5th Mountain Division</hi> was given control of the 
mountains on the eastern side of the <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> valley, and the 
adjoining <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> was astride the valley south of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>.</p>
          </div>
          <pb xml:id="n65" n="65"/>
          <div xml:id="c2-2-6" type="section">
            <head>(vi)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The commander of <name key="name-001740" type="organisation">5 NZ Infantry Brigade</name> (Brigadier Stewart) 
gave orders in the evening of 29 May that 21 Battalion, with the 
support of the tanks, mortars and machine guns it already had, 
was to hold the <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>-<name key="name-010677" type="place">Vicalvi</name> line; 2788 Field Squadron, <name key="name-034190" type="organisation">RAF</name> 
Regiment, was to relieve 23 Battalion in the <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> area and the 
23rd was to concentrate north of the <name key="name-120145" type="place">Melfa</name> on the <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>-<name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> 
road; and 28 (Maori) Battalion was to pass through the 21st and 
continue the advance towards <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The Maori Battalion moved forward in the morning of the 
29th to positions astride the <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>-<name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> road south of the <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>- 
<name key="name-010677" type="place">Vicalvi</name> line. After conferring with the Brigadier, Colonel Young 
gave instructions for the resumption of the advance in the evening: on the right C Company, followed by A, was to get on to 
<name key="name-018503" type="place">Colle Monacesco</name><!-- Monacesco, Colle -->, the high ground north of the bridge over the 
deep, silent Fibreno River, which crossed the valley two miles south 
of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>; on the left D Company, followed by B, was to cover the 
bridge itself, which was known to have been blown up by the 
enemy, and occupy Colle Mastroianni, between the village of 
Fontechiari and the Fibreno. A troop of B Squadron, 20 Armoured 
Regiment, armoured cars of Divisional Cavalry, and sappers of 
8 Field Company were to accompany the battalion.</p>
            <p rend="indent">When it was sufficiently dark on the evening of the 29th the 
<name key="name-005118" type="organisation">Maori Battalion</name> advanced towards the Fibreno River with C and A 
Companies along the main road and D and B travelling across 
country and along the road north of Fontechiari. By dawn on the 
30th they were almost on their objectives. Men of C Company, 
who had met some slight opposition after passing <name key="name-010677" type="place">Vicalvi</name>, waded 
the waist-deep river and took up positions immediately north of the 
bridge; the other companies covered the south side.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The enemy had blown an 80-foot gap in the Fibreno bridge and 
a 60-foot gap in a bridge which crossed a stream at the junction 
of the roads from <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> and Fontechiari just south of the Fibreno. 
A bulldozer which had been working on the road through 
Fontechiari (where a cavalry patrol had been investigating an 
alternative route from <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>) came up to help on the Fibreno 
bridges, where work began as soon as reconnaissance proved that 
there were no suitable fords for tanks or trucks along this stretch 
of the river. As the daylight improved the bridges came under 
mortar and machine-gun fire, which made it difficult for the 
engineers to lay out their bridging equipment.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Headquarters <name key="name-022846" type="organisation">28 Battalion</name> was set up at the road junction south 
of the river, where the tanks and other vehicles assembled to wait 
for the completion of the bridging. About 7 a.m. six aircraft with
<pb xml:id="n66" n="66"/>
<name key="name-031090" type="place">United States</name> markings dive-bombed the assembly, causing damage 
to some of the vehicles and wounding two men. This incident was 
remarked upon with satisfaction by the enemy: ‘In the absence of 
German aircraft, our hard-pressed troops received support from 
Allied fighter-bombers, which attacked British troop concentrations 
in the <name key="name-010677" type="place">Vicalvi</name> area. Direct hits and fires were seen in tank and MT 
concentrations.’<note xml:id="fn1-66" n="1"><p>War diary, <hi rend="i">51 Mtn Corps. <name key="name-005118" type="organisation">Maori Battalion</name></hi>, pp. 382–3, says that nearby houses were set on
fire. ‘Aircraft recognition signals only seemed to annoy, [the aircraft] for they came back
and fired some more houses before they left for home.’</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">As it appeared that the passage of the vehicles across the Fibreno 
would be delayed until the enemy posts responsible for the mortar 
and machine-gun fire were driven back from the hill to the north 
(<name key="name-018503" type="place">Colle Monacesco</name><!-- Monacesco, Colle -->) and from the nearby village of <name key="name-018179" type="place">Brocco</name>, Colonel 
Young directed C and D Companies to clear this area while A 
extended to the west on the southern side of the river and B 
protected the headquarters area. C Company gained possession 
of the hill without opposition, but shortly after midday observed 
an enemy force forming up as if to counter-attack. About 30 or 40 
Germans approached the company but ‘a volley from rifles and 
automatics mowed them down; very few escaped.’<note xml:id="fn2-66" n="2"><p><hi rend="i"><name key="name-005118" type="organisation">Maori Battalion</name></hi>, p. 383.</p></note> Obviously they 
had not expected to find hostile troops in the vicinity.</p>
            <p rend="indent">D Company, which was on the southern bank of the Fibreno 
some distance west of the bridge, was unable to find a passable 
ford, but borrowed a flat-bottomed boat from an Italian and 
ferried its men across. The company advanced towards <name key="name-018179" type="place">Brocco</name> 
‘over stone terraces, through half-grown grape-vines, and around 
scattered houses. Fire was heavy but wild….’<note xml:id="fn3-66" n="3"><p>Ibid.</p></note> The Maoris 
suffered a few casualties, but the resistance died away and they 
entered the village to find that the enemy had left hurriedly.</p>
            <p rend="indent">By 2 p.m. the enemy fire on the bridges and elsewhere had 
almost ceased. Reports from patrols and civilians gave the impression 
that the Germans were withdrawing. The sappers (8 Field Company) 
were able to make fast progress on their bridging and hoped 
to be able to get the tanks over the river before nightfall.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Patrols from B Squadron, Divisional Cavalry, began to search 
the <name key="name-016150" type="place">Posta</name> area, between <name key="name-010677" type="place">Vicalvi</name> and <name key="name-018503" type="place">Colle Monacesco</name><!-- Monacesco, Colle -->, in the 
morning. Some of the armoured cars entered the village without 
meeting opposition, but others moving along a track around a small 
lake (Lago della <name key="name-016150" type="place">Posta</name>) were fired on from the ridge to the north 
of the village, and as they continued in an attempt to reach the 
far side of the Fibreno River, were mortared from the direction of 
<name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name>, a village on high ground farther north. The enemy
<pb xml:id="n67" n="67"/>
mortars were quietened by artillery fire, but five of the armoured 
cars became bogged in marshy ground, and as none could be 
extricated without help, and no infantry protection was available 
overnight, the crews walked back to squadron headquarters. The 
cars were all recovered next day.</p>
            <p rend="indent">A patrol of C Squadron, after negotiating some small demolitions 
near <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>, drove along the lateral road linking the <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>-<name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> 
and <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>-<name key="name-018582" type="place">Opi</name> roads and entered the outskirts of <name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name> in 
the morning of 30 May. The cars were halted by a demolition 
in a street and experienced some mortar fire. From a few captured 
Germans and civilians it was learned that the enemy had left 
<name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name> earlier in the day on the road to <name key="name-018582" type="place">Opi</name>. An artillery stonk 
was called down on an enemy position north of the town. A platoon 
from 21 Battalion, a few tanks, and machine guns and mortars 
in trucks were sent to <name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name> in the afternoon, but when 
German infantry were reported to be infiltrating back into <name key="name-016150" type="place">Posta</name> 
early in the evening, 21 Battalion was told to withdraw these 
tanks and troops and concentrate on defending <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-2-7" type="section">
            <head>(vii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Fifth Brigade's plan for the continuation of the advance was 
for <name key="name-022846" type="organisation">28 Battalion</name> with B Squadron, <name key="name-003131" type="organisation">20 Armoured Regiment</name>, in 
support to advance through <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> along Route 82 to where a 
track led off to <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name>. A force of <name key="name-003131" type="organisation">20 Armoured Regiment</name>'s 
tanks was to go up this track and was to be joined by infantry from 
23 Battalion who (after having taken over the position vacated 
by the 28th) were to cross <name key="name-018503" type="place">Colle Monacesco</name><!-- Monacesco, Colle --> direct to <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name>. In 
the next phase 23 Battalion and the tanks were to proceed from 
<name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name> to <name key="name-018606" type="place">Pescosolido</name>, another hill village about a mile and a 
half distant. The Maori Battalion was to assist the tanks up the 
main road and was to advance until about level with <name key="name-018606" type="place">Pescosolido</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Fifth Brigade's advance was to be supported by <name key="name-022811" type="organisation">6 Field Regiment</name> 
and 2 Army Group Royal Artillery (with 74, 102 and 140 Medium 
Regiments under command), which were to fire stonks covering 
Route 82 and the side roads to <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name> and <name key="name-018606" type="place">Pescosolido</name>. The 
medium guns were very suitable for support of this nature; they 
could leapfrog forward in fewer but longer bounds than the 
Division's field guns. Seldom if ever was the infantry without 
artillery support during the whole of 5 Brigade's advance.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Towards nightfall on the 30th A and B Companies of <name key="name-022846" type="organisation">28 Battalion</name> 
crossed the Fibreno River to assemble on the <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> road. D Company 
was to hold <name key="name-018179" type="place">Brocco</name> until relieved by a company of 23 Battalion; 
C Company, in reserve, was to follow A and B. B Company was
<pb xml:id="n68" n="68"/>
caught by mortar fire while making for the starting line, and had 
a few men wounded, but re-formed and had begun to advance with 
A when it was ordered to stop. On learning that the engineers 
were having more difficulty than expected in bridging the Fibreno, 
Brigadier Stewart sent urgent orders to <name key="name-022846" type="organisation">28 Battalion</name> to hold the 
advance until the supporting arms could cross the river. A and B 
Companies, therefore, waited where they were on the road, while C, 
on <name key="name-018503" type="place">Colle Monacesco</name><!-- Monacesco, Colle -->, guarded the right flank.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Working in waist-high water and under intermittent shell and 
mortar fire, the sappers were unable to complete the Fibreno bridges 
until nearly 11 a.m. on 31 May. When the tanks began to cross 
to the northern bank, Stewart sent word to the Maoris to begin 
their advance. By midday 24 tanks of <name key="name-003131" type="organisation">20 Armoured Regiment</name>, 
together with the carriers and supporting arms of <name key="name-022846" type="organisation">28 Battalion</name>, 
were following close behind the infantry. The vehicles were stopped 
by a demolished culvert just short of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, and while this was 
being repaired by the sappers, again working under fire, the leading 
infantry entered the town.</p>
            <p rend="indent">A Company, despite mortar and machine-gun fire, pushed on 
into the streets; B Company met stronger opposition, including 
anti-tank guns, at the railway station. D Company moved across 
country to the right to cut the <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> road beyond the town. 
Tanks of C Squadron, which accompanied the Maoris into <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, 
fired on numerous targets indicated by the infantry. The Germans 
manned some self-propelled or anti-tank guns until the last moment. 
One of the New Zealand tanks was lost to them before the combined action of tanks and infantry disposed of two guns. By late 
afternoon A and C Companies were in the town, C across the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> 
River in its western part; B was to the north with the task of 
covering the junctions of the <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>-<name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> road and the side 
roads to <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name> and <name key="name-018606" type="place">Pescosolido</name>, and D was a short way up the 
road to <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The Germans, who overlooked <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> from the hills, shelled the 
town and its environs spasmodically during the afternoon and 
until dark in spite of many counter-battery tasks fired by 6 Field 
Regiment and the medium guns on observed or suspected gun 
positions. Much information, most of it accurate, was obtained 
from civilians who claimed to be partisans working for the Allied 
cause; they assisted the observers to pinpoint gun positions, observation posts and enemy movement.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The advance to <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> had permitted Divisional Cavalry to be 
used in its proper role, as ‘the ears and eyes of the Division’, instead 
of acting, as had been its experience most of the time since arriving 
in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, as infantrymen to thicken up the defences. The Staghound
<pb xml:id="n69" n="69"/>
armoured cars were suitable for leading an advance and reconnoitring the side roads and tracks: when one ran over a mine, it 
might lose a wheel but otherwise would suffer little damage, and 
its crew probably escaped injury. When a Sherman tank exploded 
a mine the damage usually was more extensive and the crew 
badly shaken. On 31 May C Squadron remained in <name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name>, 
which the cavalry patrols had been first to enter, A Squadron was 
responsible for holding <name key="name-016150" type="place">Posta</name> until relieved by 2788 Squadron, 
<name key="name-025943" type="organisation">RAF Regiment</name>, and B Squadron, overcoming numerous demolitions, 
worked its way down Route 82 from <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> to <name key="name-018464" type="place">Isola del Liri</name><!-- Liri, Isola del -->, where 
it made contact next day with troops of <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name> who 
had come up from the south.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-2-8" type="section">
            <head>(viii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">While concentrating in a wheat field, where the vehicles were 
crammed together, near the <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>-<name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> road, 23 Battalion was 
shelled for about an hour on 30 May. Two men were killed and 
several wounded, and 20-odd trucks, most of them 4 RMT's troop-carrying three-tonners, were damaged. The battalion moved to a 
less exposed position and that night drove up to the Colle 
Monacesco-<name key="name-018179" type="place">Brocco</name> area. Next day, about the time that <name key="name-022846" type="organisation">28 Battalion</name> 
was entering <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, the 23rd had begun to advance across country 
on <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The advance was hampered by lack of communication between 
the infantry and the supporting tanks of B Squadron, 20 Armoured 
Regiment, which were to work up the road from <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>. A Company 
claimed that it reached the road west of <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name>, but did not 
make contact with the tanks, which in turn reported that they 
could find no sign of the infantry. D Company also reported that 
it gained the road (on the right of A Company), and in doing 
so had taken 10 prisoners from <hi rend="i">134 Regiment</hi>. A possible explanation of the inability of the infantry and tanks to join up may be 
that the tanks, proceeding in a compact bunch, had passed before 
the infantry reached the road.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Early in the advance the leading troop of B Squadron had been 
halted short of the <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name> turn-off on the <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>-<name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> road 
by a German anti-tank gun firing down the line of the road. This 
and another gun were silenced by the combined action of the tanks 
and a party of Maoris, but the leading tank was disabled. Subsequently another two anti-tank guns were found abandoned on this 
stretch of road. Told by Brigade Headquarters that 23 Battalion's 
men were approaching the <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name> road and needed tank support,
<pb xml:id="n70" n="70"/>
B Squadron sent up another troop (7 Troop) which, under smoke 
from the rest of the tanks, rounded the corner and continued up 
the <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name> road until held up towards dusk by a small but 
determined enemy post about a quarter of a mile from the village. 
The tanks spread out and brought concentrated fire to bear on 
this post, which the enemy abandoned, leaving six men to be taken 
prisoner. As darkness was falling and more enemy appeared to be 
ahead, 7 Troop withdrew a short distance to laager. The tank crews, 
being without infantry protection, provided their own pickets and a 
guard for the prisoners. The remainder of B Squadron tried to 
reach the high ground south of the <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name> road, where it could 
support 7 Troop, but could not negotiate a gully in the failing light 
and therefore laagered overnight near the <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> road.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Meanwhile C Company, 23 Battalion, directed on <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name>, came 
under some shellfire and was opposed on a hill just south of the 
village. Civilians informed the company that a strong force of 
Germans was entrenched ahead of it. Artillery and machine-gun 
fire was laid down on observed and reported positions before the 
company resumed the advance after dark. It was engaged on the 
hill south of the village by small-arms fire and grenades, which 
wounded two men. By this time it was midnight, and as the men 
were feeling the strain of the hard going over steep slopes 
and gullies, the company commander decided to halt and rest until 
contact could be made with the tanks and a concerted effort made 
against the enemy.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Because of the uncertainty of the tank support Colonel McPhail 
ordered C and B Companies to withdraw before dawn on 1 June. 
The tanks, accompanied by 23 Battalion's carriers, which had joined 
them during the night, resumed the advance at dawn, overcame 
some opposition just outside <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name> and entered the village about 
9 a.m. They collected altogether about 30 prisoners. When this news 
reached Battalion Headquarters, D Company was told to follow 
immediately and occupy <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name>. The company arrived about midday and the tanks then withdrew to firing positions south of the 
village.</p>
            <p rend="indent">For the next stage of the advance the infantry was accompanied 
by tanks of B Squadron, which used tracks from the <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name> road 
to <name key="name-018606" type="place">Pescosolido</name>. No opposition was met, except some long-range 
shellfire, and in the afternoon the tanks and D Company occupied 
<name key="name-018606" type="place">Pescosolido</name>. After a patrol had ascertained that the nearby village 
of Forcella was unoccupied, A Company entered it in the evening, 
and B Company took up a position on a hill near <name key="name-018606" type="place">Pescosolido</name>.</p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <pb xml:id="n71" n="71"/>
        <div xml:id="c2-3" type="section">
          <head>III: <hi rend="i"><name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name></hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c2-3-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Kesselring had issued an order late on 30 May that ‘the enemy 
must be prevented at all costs from breaking into our positions 
towards <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> and entering the valley.’<note xml:id="fn1-71" n="1"><p>War diary, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-018320" type="organisation">51 Mtn Corps</name></hi>.</p></note> Next day, however, <hi rend="i">51 Mountain Corps</hi> had to report that the enemy had brought up fresh 
forces to the <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> sector and ‘launched a 4-battalion attack between 
<name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> and Colle Allino [north of <name key="name-018503" type="place">Colle Monacesco</name><!-- Monacesco, Colle -->], supported by 
tanks and artillery. Many of our A Tk weapons were destroyed, 
and towards evening 3 battalions of the enemy, plus 15 or 20 
tanks and some armoured cars, forced a break through just east 
of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, losing heavily in men and weapons in the process. By 
<date when="1930">1930</date> hrs the foremost enemy troops were on the line 2 km north 
of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> and 1½ km SW of <name key="name-018606" type="place">Pescosolido</name>. About a battalion of the 
enemy crossed the Liri NW of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">‘To avoid complete destruction of our forces, Corps gave orders 
for a withdrawal from the present line and the formation of a 
blocking line farther north in the <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> valley to halt the 
enemy….’<note xml:id="fn2-71" n="2"><p>Ibid.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">By this time the three divisions of <hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi>, reduced to a third 
or less of their normal strength, were known as <hi rend="i">Battle Groups 
Ortner (44 Division), Schrank (5 Mountain Division)</hi> and <hi rend="i">Boelsen 
(114 Light Division). Schrank Battle Group</hi> was ordered to leave 
<name key="name-010569" type="place">Monte Morrone</name><!-- Morrone, Monte --> (which the New Zealand Division had passed 
without capturing) and keep in close contact with <hi rend="i">Ortner Battle 
Group</hi> on its right. Most of the guns of <hi rend="i">Schrank Battle Group</hi> and 
some from <hi rend="i">Boelsen Battle Group</hi> were to be moved westward to 
points where they could be used in <hi rend="i">Ortner Battle Group's</hi> defence. 
<hi rend="i">Ortner Battle Group</hi>, which had no reserves and was reported to 
have had heavy casualties, intended to hold until dusk in the <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> 
area and then fall back on the blocking line south of <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>, 
which was being manned in the meantime by an engineer unit 
and an anti-aircraft battery.</p>
            <p rend="indent">General Feurstein advised <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> in the evening that he had 
ordered the entrance to the <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> valley to be held ‘to the 
last man. After that we must not expect <name key="name-018372" type="organisation">Ortner Battle Gp</name> to be 
fit for any more fighting.’ The group received permission from 
Corps on the morning of 1 June to make a fighting withdrawal 
to the <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> line and to ‘hold it to the last man. Commanders 
to stay in the FDLs.’<note xml:id="fn3-71" n="3"><p>Ibid.</p></note></p>
          </div>
          <pb xml:id="n72" n="72"/>
          <div xml:id="c2-3-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The battle was approaching the stage when the Germans would 
be obliged to evacuate the country north of Route 6. The roads 
through the mountain valleys still open to the enemy offered 
easily defended positions where small but determined rearguards 
could block the pursuing forces. In the New Zealand Division's 
sector, for example, on the axis of the <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>-<name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>-<name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name> route, 
the nature of the terrain limited the operations to the road and 
its vicinity; there was little or no opportunity for manoeuvre, and 
a headlong attack might have proved more costly to the attackers 
than the defenders.</p>
            <p>
              <figure xml:id="WH2-2Ita072a">
                <graphic url="WH2-2Ita072a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2Ita072a-g"/>
                <head><hi rend="sc">sora to avezzano, 1–10 june 1944</hi></head>
              </figure>
            </p>
            <pb xml:id="n73" n="73"/>
            <p rend="indent">Beyond <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> Route 82 ran for 20-odd miles close to the eastern 
side of the Liri River through a valley enclosed by two 6000-foot 
mountain ranges, the <name key="name-018710" type="place">Serra Lunga</name> on the east and the Monti 
Simbruini on the west. The railway crossed and recrossed the river 
several times. At the narrowest part of the valley, near <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>, 
a small town some six miles from <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, an abrupt escarpment on the 
eastern side overlooked the approaches from the south and was 
ideally situated for the enemy's purpose of blocking pursuit.</p>
            <p rend="indent"><name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> had advised 5 Brigade on 30 May that, except 
for light forces which were to probe forward and keep in touch with 
the enemy, the main body of the brigade was not to proceed beyond 
the 49 northing, about two miles past <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>. The General's policy 
had been to leapfrog the battalions of 5 Brigade until each had 
had some action, then to bring in 6 Brigade. By the time the Division 
had reached <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, 5 Brigade's battalions had all had some share 
in the little fighting that had occurred.</p>
            <p rend="indent">In the evening of 31 May 6 Brigade, on the GOC's orders, 
warned its units to concentrate in the area immediately east of 
<name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> in readiness to move forward next day. Divisional Headquarters issued instructions that, after 6 Brigade had assembled, 
the Division was to advance towards <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> on a two-brigade 
front, 5 Brigade on the eastern side of the valley and 6 Brigade 
on the western side, each with tanks of <name key="name-003131" type="organisation">20 Armoured Regiment</name> in 
support.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On 1 June 24 Battalion (Major <name key="name-006129" type="person">Aked</name><note xml:id="fn1-73" n="1"><p><name key="name-006129" type="person">Lt-Col E. W. Aked</name><!-- Aked, Lt-Col E. W. -->, MC, m.i.d., Aristion Andrias (Gk); <name key="name-021569" type="place">Tauranga</name>; born England,
<date when="1911-02-12">12 Feb 1911</date>; shop assistant; CO 24 Bn 4–8 Jun 1944; CO 210 British Liaison Unit with
3 Greek Bde in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> and <name key="name-002294" type="place">Greece</name>, 1944–45.</p></note>) relieved <name key="name-022846" type="organisation">28 Battalion</name> in 
<name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> and began to advance west of the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name>, and shortly after midday 
occupied a small hill just beyond the town without opposition. 
A strong patrol was sent to Colle Sant' Angelo, where, according 
to civilians, the Germans still maintained observation posts and 
some mortar posts. An enemy party, estimated at 200 strong, was 
seen withdrawing north of Colle Sant' Angelo and was engaged 
by the artillery and 4.2-inch mortars as well as by some of the 
tanks on the other side of the river. The patrol was recalled, and 
B Company, given the task of searching and occupying Colle Sant' 
Angelo, by dusk had found no Germans but evidence of their 
recent hasty evacuation of several positions.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Other 24 Battalion patrols reported that, after about three miles, 
the road on the western bank of the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> became merely a track 
hardly passable for vehicles. A patrol from A Company reached 
the village of <name key="name-018458" type="place">Le Compre</name>, about four miles beyond <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, and 
was told by the inhabitants that the enemy had left a few hours
<pb xml:id="n74" n="74"/>
previously. He had abandoned much equipment, including seven 
ammunition limbers.</p>
            <p rend="indent">In <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, where the enemy had blown two bridges, 7 Field Company built a 160-foot Bailey bridge over the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name>. Meanwhile, on 
the eastern side of the river, 28 (Maori) Battalion advanced along 
the axis of Route 82, with three tanks of B Squadron, 20 Regiment, 
in support, and in the late afternoon, having met little opposition 
except mortar fire, halted about two miles north of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, roughly 
in line with 23 Battalion on the high ground to the right.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Fourth Armoured Brigade, less 18 and 20 Regiments, was given 
the task of protecting the Division's right flank in the Monte 
Morrone-<name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name> area against the possibility of enemy infiltration 
from the <name key="name-018582" type="place">Opi</name> area, where he was thought to be in some strength. 
On the morning of 1 June 22 (Motor) Battalion took over the 
defence of the <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>-<name key="name-010677" type="place">Vicalvi</name> area from 21 Battalion. Apart from 
a brush with a small party of enemy on <name key="name-010569" type="place">Monte Morrone</name><!-- Morrone, Monte -->, 22 
Battalion's patrols met no enemy but found recently abandoned 
positions.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Under divisional command, 25 Battalion stayed in rear of 
6 Brigade to protect <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> against infiltration from the north and 
north-east. Two companies covered the road junction north of 
<name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> and sent out patrols, but were replaced on 1 June by 
armoured cars of <name key="name-000702" type="organisation">12 Lancers</name>, which became responsible for the 
route through <name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name> to <name key="name-018582" type="place">Opi</name>. The 25th Battalion was then 
recalled to 6 Brigade and moved to the vicinity of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-3-3" type="section">
            <head>(iii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The 24th Battalion resumed the advance up the western bank 
of the Liri River early on 2 June. A Company, on the right, supported by tanks of A Squadron, 20 Regiment, had to contend only 
with long-range shelling and machine-gun fire; B Company, starting 
from Colle Sant' Angelo, had a strenuous clamber over steep 
country. Learning that <name key="name-022846" type="organisation">28 Battalion</name> was advancing to another bound, 
A Company pushed on past <name key="name-018458" type="place">Le Compre</name> and came under machine-gun fire from Germans in caves in the escarpment near <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>. 
The tanks fired on these caves and also on movement in the vicinity 
of <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">An escaped South African prisoner of war, who had been hiding 
in this region for some time, came into the lines and gave detailed 
information about the enemy positions ahead. He said that the 
Germans were preparing a strong defensive position at <name key="name-018238" type="place">Collepiano</name>, 
across the narrow valley from the escarpment near <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>, and 
as late as that morning had been carrying ammunition into these
<pb xml:id="n75" n="75"/>
positions. This information proved to be correct. A Company was 
brought to a halt by small-arms and mortar fire when about a 
mile from <name key="name-018238" type="place">Collepiano</name>. The battalion's carriers and D Company 
went forward to give support, and Major Aked ordered D to pass 
through A and engage the enemy with fire only, in the expectation 
that he might retire under pressure. By midnight A and D Companies held a line about half a mile from <name key="name-018238" type="place">Collepiano</name>, with C in 
immediate reserve and B south of <name key="name-018458" type="place">Le Compre</name>. The tanks laagered 
in rear of the forward companies.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The Maori Battalion advanced steadily all day on 2 June, 
meeting only light and spasmodic mortaring of the road, and by 
late afternoon was approximately opposite <name key="name-018458" type="place">Le Compre</name>. Although 
hindered by the demolitions on the road, the tanks of C Squadron, 
20 Regiment, were up with the forward troops by evening. They 
accompanied patrols to a major demolition about a mile ahead of 
the battalion's main position and not far from where 24 Battalion 
had halted on the other side of the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">By the end of the day the Maoris were feeling the strain of 
continuous marching in such steep and broken country. When 
Brigadier Stewart was discussing a resumption of the advance, 
Colonel Young drew attention to the fact that his men were footsore 
and weary. The Brigadier then directed that next day <name key="name-022846" type="organisation">28 Battalion</name> 
should take up positions on a line which its patrols had reached, 
while 21 Battalion came up overnight and passed through to 
continue the advance. Arrangements were made also for 23 Battalion 
to follow the 21st.</p>
            <p rend="indent">During the night 24 Battalion's forward troops improved their 
positions and gained some ground, but at daybreak on 3 June 
were shelled and mortared. Confirmation having been gained of 
the enemy's strength at <name key="name-018238" type="place">Collepiano</name>, Brigadier Parkinson arranged 
for an attack supported by fire from the artillery and heavy 
mortars and from the tanks on both sides of the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name>. Twelve 
4.2-inch mortars were sent up to 24 Battalion by 6 Brigade for 
the purpose, and liaison was established with 5 Brigade's supporting 
tanks, which had a clearer field of fire across the valley than had 
those with the 24th. The day was spent in preparation for the 
attack, and towards dusk patrols went out to study the ground, 
but as 5 Brigade was also held up at this stage, the operation was 
postponed and later cancelled. During the next two days, when 
heavy rain hampered cross-country movement for vehicles, 24 
Battalion watched and engaged the enemy on <name key="name-018238" type="place">Collepiano</name> and around 
<name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>. Fire from the tanks and 4.2-inch mortars caused several 
explosions, thought to be ammunition dumps.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On the night of 2–3 June 21 Battalion embussed from its bivouac
<pb xml:id="n76" n="76"/>
area near <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> and drove up the road in rear of <name key="name-022846" type="organisation">28 Battalion</name>, whose 
carriers and tanks, covering the sappers who were working well 
forward at that time, were transferred to its command. Mortar 
and machine-gun fire had been coming from German positions on 
the escarpment south-east of <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>, and snipers were covering 
the demolitions on the road ahead of the Maoris, which made the 
engineers' work on this section of the road practically impossible. 
The first bound of 21 Battalion's advance was just beyond the escarpment, and obviously the battalion's major task would be to clear 
out the defences along this escarpment.</p>
            <p rend="indent">C Company of 21 Battalion debussed shortly after midnight, set 
off up the road on foot and then turned off into the hills with 
a point at the eastern end of the escarpment as its objective; 
D Company, which followed, turned off on a track leading to the 
hamlet of <name key="name-018659" type="place">i Ridotti</name><!-- Ridotti, i -->, and then made north towards the escarpment, 
which both companies reported they had reached before dawn. 
Meanwhile a party from B Company relieved the Maoris covering 
the engineers on the road, and with tanks of C Squadron in support, 
advanced beyond the demolition where they had been working. 
They met heavy fire, however, and were forced to fall back. As the 
light improved the hostile fire also compelled the withdrawal of 
a bulldozer which had been brought up in the darkness to the 
demolition.</p>
            <p rend="indent">D Company made its way to the top of the escarpment and 
found itself among German defences, but appeared to be getting 
the better of close fighting until other posts in the vicinity opened 
fire. The company then fell back with the loss of two officers and 
three men wounded and two men missing, but with some 20 German 
prisoners. It was ordered by radio to break contact with the enemy 
and return to the battalion.</p>
            <p rend="indent">C Company, which was out of wireless touch with the battalion 
for most of the night, also reached the top of the escarpment and 
(according to a company report) got within a quarter of a mile 
of <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>; but as the light improved the company came under 
fire from posts ahead of it. It tried to get around the right of 
these defences, but was forced to ground in inadequate cover.</p>
            <p rend="indent">When he heard of the determination of the German defence, 
Brigadier Stewart asked <name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> whether he could prepare a set-piece attack on <hi rend="sc">katipo</hi> (the codename for the bound 
just beyond the top of the escarpment). The GOC, however, did 
not give an immediate decision because he felt that the enemy 
resistance was only temporary, but permitted Stewart and Parkinson 
to start planning for a concerted attack by the two brigades. When 
these plans were prepared the General still withheld his decision.
<pb xml:id="n77" n="77"/>
The brigades therefore had to be content to continue with small 
probing attacks.</p>
            <p rend="indent">In the evening of 3 June D Company, 21 Battalion, with A following, led the way back to <name key="name-018659" type="place">i Ridotti</name><!-- Ridotti, i -->, and shortly before midnight 
A passed through D in an attempt to get around the eastern flank 
of the defences on the escarpment, while the artillery shelled the 
positions which had been observed during the day. A Company 
met men of C Company about 3 a.m. and, acting on their report of 
the strength of the enemy defences, both companies returned to 
<name key="name-018659" type="place">i Ridotti</name><!-- Ridotti, i -->.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-3-4" type="section">
            <head>(iv)</head>
            <p rend="indent">On 3 June the three New Zealand field regiments were taken 
to a comparatively flat piece of ground on the floor of the valley 
about two miles north of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> where, it seemed to a machine-gunner, they were too audacious in digging in so far forward in 
daylight. ‘A troop of guns is about 100 yards behind us and nearly 
stun us when they fire…. A Jerry shell collapsed a wall and killed 
five out of six [artillerymen] standing behind it.’<note xml:id="fn1-77" n="1"><p>Diary, B. C. H. Moss. This was a troop of <name key="name-001152" type="organisation">4 Fd Regt</name>, which was on the western side
of the Liri River; 5 and 6 Fd Regts were on the eastern side.</p></note> The 6th Field 
Regiment, which was worst hit by the German shellfire, was ‘bombarded with accurate and heavy concentrations’.<note xml:id="fn2-77" n="2"><p>War diary, <name key="name-001155" type="organisation">6 Fd Regt</name>.</p></note> The field and 
medium guns shelled enemy guns and mortars, which had observation posts well forward on the commanding heights, and the 
fighter-bombers also attacked some of these targets, but the New 
Zealand regiments were blitzed mostly by mountain guns which had 
been manhandied or mule-packed into the ranges by <hi rend="i">Schrank 
Battle Group of</hi> of <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi>.<note xml:id="fn3-77" n="3"><p>A report by <hi rend="i">5 Mtn Div</hi> claims that on 3 June its artillery ‘fired heavy concentrations of
observed fire in support of <name key="name-018372" type="organisation">Ortner Battle Gp</name>. Results were seen to be very good. Among
other things, 2 troops of enemy guns were hit by very destructive fire as they moved into
position. Supply traffic as far back as <name key="name-018464" type="place">Isola del Liri</name><!-- Liri, Isola del --> engaged. 40 trucks immobilised,
10 guns in open firing positions silenced, ammunition dumps exploded. A concentration
of 100–120 MT was thrown into panic stricken confusion….[Next day] 18 guns silenced,
1 gun immobilised….’ These claims, probably exaggerated, can not be substantiated
or disproved by New Zealand records.</p></note> Altogether the Divisional 
Artillery had over 100 casualties, including 11 killed, during 
3–5 June.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The 23rd Battalion, on the eastern side of the valley, sent a 
special ‘mountain’ platoon of volunteers with mules and muleteers 
to clear out the German observation posts on the heights. On 4 June, 
however, the platoon, apparently mistaken for an enemy party, was 
fired on by the New Zealand artillery and tanks, and was ordered 
to return. The same day 34 Anti-Tank Battery was deployed as
<pb xml:id="n78" n="78"/>
infantry to search the hills on the eastern side of the valley, but 
was also fired on by ‘friendly’ guns, which severely limited the 
extent of its reconnaissance. The enemy, therefore, still had 
observation next day.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Meanwhile 25 Battalion, which had just moved into <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, sent 
B Company, with Italian guides, mules and muleteers, to search for 
German troops reported by the Italians to be on the high ground 
on the western side of the valley. The company climbed 3500 feet 
in an approach march of about six miles along narrow tracks, and 
on the way was drenched by a thunderstorm. A dawn patrol on 
5 June captured four Germans who were still asleep. The company 
attempted to encircle an enemy party, but a German gave the alarm. 
Three of the enemy were killed, eight including an officer were 
caught, and an estimated dozen escaped. On the way back to <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> 
another German was added to the company's prisoners.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-3-5" type="section">
            <head>(v)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The New Zealand Division had been brought to a halt on 
4 June. Fearful of an outflanking movement on his left, the enemy 
kept up his fire around <name key="name-018659" type="place">i Ridotti</name><!-- Ridotti, i -->, without doing much harm to 
21 Battalion, which was in the vicinity. His shelling, mortaring and 
sniping of the main road prevented the engineers from clearing 
demolitions and patrols from working farther forward. Fifth 
Brigade's 3-inch and 4.2-inch mortars fired on the escarpment and 
paid special attention to a strongpoint from which most of the fire 
on <name key="name-018659" type="place">i Ridotti</name><!-- Ridotti, i --> seemed to come. Close liaison had been arranged 
between the tanks with 6 Brigade, which had the clearer field of 
fire across the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> on the escarpment, and those with 5 Brigade, 
which had good observation on <name key="name-018238" type="place">Collepiano</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The two brigade commanders expressed their opinion at a midday 
conference that the enemy showed no sign of falling back, and 
suggested that their plan for an attack on <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> should be 
timed for that night (4–5 June). The plan was abandoned, however, because news was received that the Americans had entered 
<name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, and a message came from <name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name> directing 8 and 10 
Indian Divisions and 2 NZ Division to form a pursuit force under 
its command. As soon as he received warning of this plan the 
GOC ordered 5 and 6 Brigades and the armour to withdraw from 
the <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> front and concentrate in readiness for the new role.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The front was taken over temporarily by <name key="name-004950" type="organisation">Wilder Force</name>, which 
was renewed under Lieutenant-Colonel Wilder's<note xml:id="fn1-78" n="1"><p><name key="name-009787" type="person">Lt-Col N. P. Wilder</name><!-- Wilder, Lt-Col N. P. -->, DSO; <name key="name-120141" type="place">Waipukurau</name>; born NZ <date when="1914-03-29">29 Mar 1914</date>; farmer; patrol commander LRDG; CO <name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 NZ Div</name> Cav, <date when="1944">1944</date>; wounded <date when="1942-09-14">14 Sep 1942</date>.</p></note> command and
<pb xml:id="n79" n="79"/>
comprised Divisional Cavalry, A Squadron of 20 Armoured Regiment, D Company of 24 Battalion, C Company of 25 Battalion, 
<name key="name-022811" type="organisation">6 Field Regiment</name> and detachments of machine-gunners and engineers. B and C Squadrons of Divisional Cavalry relieved 5 Brigade 
in <name key="name-018606" type="place">Pescosolido</name> and <name key="name-009242" type="place">Campoli</name>, and A Squadron patrolled towards 
<name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>. The two infantry companies, each supported by tanks, 
occupied positions about two miles from <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The artillery, tanks, mortars and machine guns all participated 
in a programme of harassing fire on observed enemy posts on the 
escarpment at <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> and on <name key="name-018238" type="place">Collepiano</name> during the night of 
5–6 June, and after daybreak the tanks laid another concentration 
on the defences while a patrol from C Company, 25 Battalion, 
accompanied by armoured cars of A Squadron and by carriers, 
probed along Route 82. The infantry entered <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> unopposed 
on 6 June, but the numerous demolitions prevented the vehicles 
from getting into the town that day. D Company, 24 Battalion, 
found that the enemy had vacated his heavily mined defences on 
<name key="name-018238" type="place">Collepiano</name>.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-3-6" type="section">
            <head>(vi)</head>
            <p rend="indent">General Ortner (commanding <hi rend="i">44 Division</hi>) claimed on 4 June 
that the <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> line ‘was laid out in the most favourable 
position possible, tactically well sited, and adequately prepared 
beforehand. The division… brought all its persuasion to bear 
to instil into the troops the idea that this was to be the final and 
only line on which the enemy was to be halted indefinitely. Our 
obstacles forward of the line and our rearguards took the edge 
off the enemy drive for long enough to organise the defence of 
the <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> line thoroughly. This preparatory organisation, the 
… insistence on the policy of “holding firm”, were the cause of 
the troops' splendid achievements in this line…. So far they 
have beaten off all attacks despite the terrific shellfire accompanying 
them. Unfortunately, heavy casualties have been suffered…. 
Even in the pauses between attacks, the troops have been exposed 
to continual shell and mortar fire on their positions and supply 
routes…. The position on the Army's right seems to make another 
withdrawal inevitable.’<note xml:id="fn1-79" n="1"><p>Appx to war diary, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-018320" type="organisation">51 Mtn Corps</name></hi>.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">In the late afternoon of 3 June <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> had given <hi rend="i">51 Mountain Corps</hi> permission to withdraw, and the corps had begun to 
retire in bounds that night. Light rearguards were left to cover 
the engineers, who blew some 37 prepared demolitions between 
<name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> and <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>. Along the New Zealand Division's line of
<pb xml:id="n80" n="80"/>
advance from Sant' Elia Fiumerapido to <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> the Germans had 
laid 18 minefields and blown two tunnels, 18 bridges and 30 other 
demolitions.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-3-7" type="section">
            <head>(vii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Sixty parachutists were dropped behind the enemy's lines on 
1 June with the object of compelling him to withdraw through the 
<name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>-<name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name> valley so quickly that he would be unable to complete 
his demolitions. The force was to come under the command of the 
New Zealand Division on landing, with orders to continue operations until joined by land forces or to infiltrate back to Allied lines.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The men chosen for this undertaking were drawn from 6 Battalion 
(Royal Welsh) of 2 Independent Parachute Brigade; they included 
signals and medical detachments and were equipped with two 
wireless sets linked with sets at HQ 2 NZ Division, HQ 2 
Independent Parachute Brigade, HQ <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> and HQ Allied 
Armies in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>; they also had eight pigeons to carry messages. 
The parachutists were dropped by three of 11 DC47s, escorted by 
Spitfires; the other eight DC47s released dummies in the vicinity 
of the dropping zone, which was about half-way along the road 
between <name key="name-018237" type="place">Collelongo</name> and Trasacco, in a valley south of the Fucino 
basin and separated from the upper <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> by the <name key="name-018710" type="place">Serra Lunga</name> 
range.</p>
            <p rend="indent">New Zealand troops saw the aircraft pass overhead in the evening 
of 1 June, and later that night the Division was in wireless communication with the parachute force, which reported that the drop 
had gone according to schedule. Next day, as a result of the change 
in <name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name>' plans, the Division advised the parachutists that it was 
discontinuing its operations north of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>. The instructions seem 
very casual: the parachute force was to act on its own discretion 
and was expected eventually to join the Division.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The commander of the force (Captain L. A. Fitzroy-Smith), with 
another man, walked into the Division's lines on 6 June, when the 
New Zealanders were cautiously entering <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>. He had watched 
from cover while German motor-cyclists ignited fuses to demolitions 
on the road, but had been unable to prevent them because at that 
stage he had no arms or ammunition. He reported that his force, 
after landing, had been attacked and scattered by what was estimated 
to be a company of Germans. Some of the parachutists had been 
brought in on the evening of 4 June by 22 Battalion's patrols in the 
<name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name> area, and others were brought in later.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The German reaction had been prompt and adequate. As early 
as 1.50 p.m. on 1 June, <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi> had reported to
<pb xml:id="n81" n="81"/>
<hi rend="i"><name key="name-206737" type="work">51 Mountain Corps</name></hi> that it had intercepted wireless messages indicating the likelihood of a parachute landing in the Fucino basin. 
The corps had ordered the preparation of ‘alarm units’ and the 
siting of anti-aircraft guns. The mountain division then reported 
that at dusk 200 parachutists had been seen dropping in the 
<name key="name-018237" type="place">Collelongo</name> area. Several straw dummies were found early next 
day, and it was assumed that only a few saboteurs had landed. By 
midday, however, Italian civilians had informed the Germans that 
800 men had dropped and moved off to the north-west. According 
to another story, the force was 200 strong and had requisitioned 
mules and horses.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Patrols were sent out by the German divisions in the vicinity, 
and one of these encountered a party of about 30 parachutists and 
took two prisoners, who did not deny the Italian reports that 800 
men had been dropped. Already <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> had directed that an 
armoured car squadron be sent out to assist the patrols, but on 
receipt of a report that another 200 men had landed (or through 
confusion of the earlier reports), <hi rend="i"><name key="name-022484" type="organisation">Army</name></hi> ordered <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206737" type="work">51 Mountain Corps</name></hi> 
to use its main reserve, a battalion of <hi rend="i">3 Brandenberg Regiment</hi>, 
because the corps was apprehensive that its left wing might be 
cut off. As a further precaution a makeshift force was formed, 
apparently to protect the line of communication against airborne 
landings. In subsequent encounters with the parachutists the patrols 
from the German divisions and the Brandenberg battalion claimed 
a total of 33 prisoners, more than half the original force. The 
Brandenberg battalion was recalled to the main road to act as 
rearguard for <hi rend="i">Ortner Battle Group</hi>, whose retreat from <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> 
was covered by demolitions, which it had been the object of the 
parachute force to prevent.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The failure of this enterprise was a bitter disappointment for 
the parachute brigade, which had waited long for employment in 
the role for which it had trained.</p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="c2-4" type="section">
          <head>IV: <hi rend="i"><name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name></hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c2-4-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Separated from the New Zealand Division by the intervening 
Monti Simbruini, <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name> pursued the retreating enemy 
along the road which linked Route 6 with Route 5 by way of 
<name key="name-000575" type="place">Alatri</name>, <name key="name-000918" type="place">Guarcino</name> and <name key="name-018735" type="place">Subiaco</name>. On 6 June <name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name> ordered 8 Indian 
Division to advance at speed, first to the <name key="name-018067" type="place">Arsoli</name> area on Route 5 
(the <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>-<name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name> highway) and then to the Rieti area, about 
40 miles north-east of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>; the New Zealand Division was to be
<pb xml:id="n82" n="82"/>
prepared to pass through <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name> at 48 hours' notice. 
In the evening of the 6th, however, HQ 2 NZ Division received 
confirmation of earlier news of a change in plan: the Division 
was to advance as rapidly as possible to <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name> and clear Route 82 
as an alternative way forward. Arrangements were made, therefore, 
for <name key="name-024337" type="organisation">6 Infantry Brigade</name> to take under its command the units of 
<name key="name-004950" type="organisation">Wilder Force</name> and continue the advance from <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> to <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Near <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> the Monti Simbruini rose almost vertically from 
the Liri River to the peaks of Pizzodeta and Viglio, the latter 
over 7000 feet, and at the foot of this great mountain wall most 
of the culverts and stone bridges, which occurred every few hundred 
yards along Route 82, had been demolished by the enemy. Except 
for the infantry, therefore, the rate of advance depended on how 
quickly the engineers could construct bridges and detours at these 
obstacles. While the leading troops of 6 Brigade (26 Battalion) 
came up the valley from the south, Divisional Cavalry continued 
its patrolling and the engineers their work of clearing mines and 
demolitions. A Squadron's armoured cars passed through <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> 
and by dawn on 7 June were about a mile beyond the town, where 
they were held up by an obstruction. The wrecked German guns 
and the many shell craters around them testified to the effectiveness 
of the New Zealand artillery's retaliation for the punishment it 
had received farther down the valley.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Sappers from the three field companies of the New Zealand 
Engineers and mechanical equipment of the field park company, 
including five bulldozers, were employed on Route 82 lifting mines 
(with the assistance at times of the infantry), repairing culverts, 
filling in craters and bridging the larger gaps. Mines and booby 
traps were found in houses, around demolitions, and even under 
cherry trees which were in fruit.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The Division did not regain contact with the enemy, but was 
so hindered by the demolitions and minefields that it took three 
days to reach <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>, less than 20 miles from <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">When the trucks of B Company, taking the lead in 26 Battalion, 
encountered obstructions which they could not pass until trimmed 
by the engineers' bulldozers, the infantry debussed and set out on 
foot to catch up with the armoured cars, which by that time, 8 a.m. 
on the 7th, were stopped by a demolition three miles north of 
<name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>. B Company lifted mines on the verges while the sappers 
cleared the road. The company passed Castronuovo and halted for 
the night about seven miles beyond <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>. The rest of the 
battalion, which followed as the road was opened to vehicles, 
laagered not far behind B Company. The same day 25 Battalion 
concentrated in the village of Urbani near <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>.</p>
            <pb xml:id="n83" n="83"/>
            <p rend="indent">The advance was resumed early on 8 June, when A Company, 
26 Battalion, passed through B to take the lead. The engineers 
continued to work ‘at top pressure’ so that the armoured cars, tanks 
and lorries could follow the infantry. Only A Squadron of Divisional 
Cavalry and one troop of tanks went ahead; the rest of Divisional 
Cavalry and A Squadron, 20 Regiment, moved into San Vincenzo, 
a little town among terraced hillsides which rose to the rocky heights 
east of the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name>. A Company of the 26th made steady progress, 
despite the mines and booby traps which wounded seven men 
during the day, and covered eight miles before halting near 
Capistrello, only four miles from <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>. The rest of the battalion 
stopped overnight between <name key="name-026050" type="place">Civitella Roveto</name> and Capistrello, and 
the transport, after being held up by bad demolitions farther south, 
also passed <name key="name-026050" type="place">Civitella Roveto</name> before stopping to laager. Some 
delayed-action explosions on the road during the night cut signal 
communications to the rear.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Another early start was made on 9 June, when C Company took 
over the lead from A and advanced to within about two miles of 
<name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>. A two-man patrol went on ahead over low hills to 
enter the town, where the mayor and citizens had turned out in 
force to welcome the Allied troops but waited all day in vain. The 
two men were treated royally. A very bad demolition blocked 
the road just south of Capistrello, but the troop of tanks managed 
to get over a saddle and catch up with the infantry. Half-way up 
the last hill before <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>, however, they were held up by yet 
another demolition—the last one.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Early on 10 June C Company and the troop of tanks were on 
the Capistrello-<name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name> road, D Company and a troop of armoured 
cars on the road which linked Route 82 with Route 5 west of 
<name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>, and the rest of the battalion in the vicinity of 
Capistrello. The 24th Battalion had arrived the previous day at 
Castronuovo, and the 25th was still back near <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">By this time, however, <name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name> had advised the Division that 
Route 82 would not be needed. Sixth Brigade was ordered not to 
deal with any more demolitions but to continue searching the 
<name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name> area with reconnaissance parties. The GOC drove up to 
26 Battalion in the morning and, together with Brigadier Parkinson, 
went to a point overlooking <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name> and the Fucino plain. He 
told the Brigadier to hold his present positions and to send a strong 
patrol to reconnoitre Route 5 westwards from <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name> and make 
contact with <name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name> troops reported in <name key="name-018067" type="place">Arsoli</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">A patrol composed of two troops of armoured cars, two scout 
cars of the engineers and a platoon of infantry in 15-cwt trucks set 
out along Route 5 in the afternoon of the 10th, but was delayed
<pb xml:id="n84" n="84"/>
by a series of demolitions. Two days later it met armoured cars 
of <name key="name-000702" type="organisation">12 Lancers</name> at Carsoli, six miles from <name key="name-018067" type="place">Arsoli</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">A platoon of C Company, 26 Battalion, and other troops entered 
<name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name> on the 10th. During the next few days patrols reconnoitred the side roads and villages around the Fucino plain, 
where ‘wild flowers of every colour grew in profusion and the 
squares and rectangles of cultivated land gave the appearance of 
being painted on a canvas.’<note xml:id="fn1-84" n="1"><p>Eye-witness account quoted in <hi rend="i"><name key="name-110036" type="work">20 Battalion and Armoured Regiment</name></hi>, p. 439.</p></note> The evidence obtained from civilians 
and the numerous escaped Allied prisoners of war who came into the 
lines confirmed that the enemy had gone quickly from this region, 
leaving only small rearguards to blow the demolitions. Many reports 
were received of the presence of parties of Germans, but only a few 
were rounded up. Most of them seemed to be marauders intent on 
reprisals against the Italians or the gathering of loot before they 
departed.</p>
            <p rend="indent">For A Squadron, Divisional Cavalry, whose patrols explored the 
villages near <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>, the next few days were ‘a long riot of 
German prisoners, escapees, signorinas and vino, Fascist spies and 
partisans…. The beauty of the countryside, the affection of the 
people and the lack of any and all restrictions and restraint 
together with the zest of chasing the odd Fascist spy is, in many 
respects, an ideal existence.’<note xml:id="fn2-84" n="2"><p>War diary, Div Cav.</p></note> Among the Germans collected was 
‘a very smelly bunch of ragamuffins’ from <hi rend="i">85 Regiment</hi> of <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi>, whom the partisans had locked in a house while 
working themselves up to murder pitch.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Many of the escaped Allied prisoners were reluctant to leave 
the Italian families with whom they had been sheltering. ‘Some 
came alone, some brought wives, and a few their wives and 
children.’<note xml:id="fn3-84" n="3"><p><name key="name-004479" type="person">F. D. Norton</name><!-- Norton, F. D. -->, <hi rend="i">26 Battalion</hi>, p. 405.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">The New Zealanders in the valley north of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> visited Castronuovo, <name key="name-016180" type="place">Rendinara</name> and other villages on the lower slopes, among 
fields of wheat, barley, maize, clover and vines. The Italians said the 
Germans had brought the wheat seed from <name key="name-006717" type="place">Russia</name> and that it had 
been sown by Allied prisoners, but the enemy had departed before 
he had time to harvest or destroy the crops. The grain was not yet 
ready. The hungry Italians who clustered around the New Zealand 
camps were willing to do anything for bread or any kind of food; 
they brought cherries, eggs and wine, and offered to wash clothes. 
‘Though it's strictly against regulations, the chaps gave them odd 
tins of bully, or cheese or … a few other items of rations which 
are not popular and pile up. At each meal we have a large audience
<pb xml:id="n85" n="85"/>
of kids mostly, all equipped with some sort of tin or billy and 
waiting for scraps. The boys scrape their plates into the kids' 
tins and if anything is left in the dixies, L—shares that among 
them too.’<note xml:id="fn1-85" n="1"><p>Diary, B. C. H. Moss, 27 (MG) Bn.</p></note></p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-4-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">While the two infantry brigades had been advancing in the 
valley north of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, 4 Armoured Brigade had continued to protect 
the Division's right flank in the <name key="name-010569" type="place">Monte Morrone</name><!-- Morrone, Monte --> – <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name> area.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Brigadier Inglis gave instructions on 3 June for the formation of 
a mixed patrol to search north of <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name> to see if there was a way 
into the hills by which assistance could be given to the paratroops 
who had been dropped near <name key="name-018237" type="place">Collelongo</name>. A force under the command of Captain <name key="name-002310" type="person">Saxton</name><note xml:id="fn2-85" n="2"><p><name key="name-002310" type="person">Maj C. K. Saxton</name><!-- Saxton, Maj C. K. -->, m.i.d.; Dunedin; born Kurow, <date when="1913-05-23">23 May 1913</date>; commercial traveller.</p></note> and consisting of the Reconnaissance 
Troop and a troop of Shermans of A Squadron, 19 Regiment, together 
with a platoon of 2 Company, 22 Battalion, in trucks, started out 
the same day and reached the village of Fontana Lepore, about 
four miles from <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name>. Saxton's force did not make contact with the 
retreating enemy ‘but must have been hot on his heels.’<note xml:id="fn3-85" n="3"><p><hi rend="i"><name key="name-110031" type="work">19 Battalion and Armoured Regiment</name></hi>, p. 419.</p></note> Civilians 
said he had left only that morning, with mules and mountain guns. 
The country beyond Lepore was too difficult for the tanks. They 
engaged what appeared to be German observation posts in the hills 
to the north-east, and received in return a heavy bout of shelling. 
As the result of the general revision of the Division's role, Saxton's 
force was recalled on 4 June.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The tanks of A Squadron, 19 Regiment, apart from those with 
Saxton's force, took up firing positions near <name key="name-010333" type="place">Alvito</name> to engage suspected enemy observation posts and gun positions in support of 
the armoured cars of <name key="name-000702" type="organisation">12 Lancers</name> which, with the assistance of 
1/5 Essex, were advancing on the <name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name>-<name key="name-018582" type="place">Opi</name> road. Patrols 
of the Essex had entered <name key="name-018582" type="place">Opi</name> by the morning of 6 June, by which 
time the country between <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> and <name key="name-018582" type="place">Opi</name> was clear of the enemy.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-4-3" type="section">
            <head>(iii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The New Zealand Division's task had ended with the occupation 
of <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>. <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> had sufficient troops deployed forward 
for the immediate operations against the still retreating enemy, 
and the congestion of the roads demanded that only essential 
transport should be allowed to follow the leading formations. At
<pb xml:id="n86" n="86"/>
midday on 11 June the Division passed from the command of 
<name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name> to <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> reserve. Orders were issued for Divisional 
Cavalry to hold the <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name> sector with one squadron, 6 Infantry 
Brigade to withdraw on to 4 and 5 Brigades, and the whole Division 
then to go to a rest area at <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Advance parties left on 12 June and the Division moved back 
during the next two days, <name key="name-006644" type="place">Divisional Headquarters</name>, Divisional 
Artillery and 5 and 6 Infantry Brigades to the <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> west of 
the junction of Routes 6 and 82 at <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>, and Divisional Cavalry 
(less A Squadron) and 4 Armoured Brigade (less 18 Regiment) a 
mile or two north of <name key="name-000846" type="place">Fontana Liri</name>. The 18th Armoured Regiment 
remained a few miles away in a valley below <name key="name-001429" type="place">Veroli</name>. A Squadron, 
Divisional Cavalry, was recalled from the <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name> sector on 
16 June, when Canadian engineers arrived with orders to dismantle 
all Bailey bridging equipment for use elsewhere.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The remainder of June and part of July were spent in training and 
recreation near <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c2-4-4" type="section">
            <head>(iv)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The New Zealand Division's casualties in April, May and June, 
during the occupation of the Apennine position north of <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> 
and the advance to <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> and <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>, were 121 killed and died 
of wounds, 600 wounded, and two prisoners of war, a total of 723. 
The Division had covered about 60 miles in a fortnight. The policy 
had been not to run headlong into opposition and incur needless 
casualties. Had the advance been pressed vigorously regardless of 
casualties, heavier losses might have been inflicted on the enemy, 
especially in prisoners – altogether the Division collected just over 
300 – but little more of tactical value would have been achieved.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The German tactics during the withdrawal on the Division's front 
were designed to prevent a force breaking through to the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> 
River south of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>, which might have cut off a large body of 
troops. The <hi rend="i">51st Mountain Corps</hi> therefore spread its troops over 
as wide a front as possible and tried to slow down the pursuit 
with rearguard actions and demolitions. Once the main weight of 
<name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> had passed <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name> and crossed the Liri River, nothing 
further was to be gained by holding south of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>; all that remained 
to be done was to delay the pursuit below <name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> in the upper 
<name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> long enough to allow the left-flank troops of <hi rend="i">51 Corps</hi> 
time to fall back through <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>. This the enemy succeeded 
in doing.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The New Zealand Division made as much speed as it reasonably 
could under the circumstances. Demolitions were very largely
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP005a"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP005a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP005a-g"/><head>The snow-clad <name key="name-001110" type="place">Monte Cairo</name><!-- Cairo, Monte --> towers above the monastery and town of
<name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> as they were before their destruction in February–March 1944</head></figure>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP005b"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP005b.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP005b-g"/><head>Looking north to the <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name> from the junction of the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> and
Rapido valleys</head></figure>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP006a"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP006a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP006a-g"/><head><name key="name-002744" type="place">Acquafondata</name>, the village from which convoys took supplies to the
distributing points in the Apennine mountain sector</head></figure>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP006b"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP006b.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP006b-g"/><head>A hairpin bend on the <name key="name-000980" type="place">Inferno Track</name></head></figure>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP007a"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP007a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP007a-g"/><p>An aerial view of the road zigzagging up the southern slope of Colle
Belvedere and over the shoulder of <name key="name-010327" type="place">Colle Abate</name><!-- Abate, Colle --> towards <name key="name-001386" type="place">Terelle</name>.
On the other side of <name key="name-006187" type="place">Colle Belvedere</name><!-- Belvedere, Colle --> is the entrance of the pass through
the mountains to <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name></p></figure>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP008a"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP008a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP008a-g"/><head>Guns bombarding the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name></head></figure>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP008b"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP008b.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP008b-g"/><head><name key="name-000955" type="place">Hove Dump</name> before it was shelled by the Germans</head></figure>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP009a"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP009a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP009a-g"/><head>The ruins of the monastery</head></figure>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP009b"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP009b.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP009b-g"/><head>The devastation of <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name></head></figure>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP010a"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP010a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP010a-g"/><head>Tanks of <name key="name-001167" type="organisation">19 Armoured Regiment</name> and British infantry enter
<name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, <date when="1944-05-18">18 May 1944</date></head></figure>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP010b"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP010b.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP010b-g"/><head>Italian refugees return to their homes while the New Zealand Division
advances beyond the <name key="name-006486" type="place">Gustav Line</name></head></figure>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP011a"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP011a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP011a-g"/><p>In conference at Headquarters 5 Brigade: an American military attaché,
Brigadier K. L. Stewart, Brigadier C. E. Weir, Colonel R. C. Queree,
<name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> and Brigadier G. B. Parkinson</p></figure>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP011b"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP011b.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP011b-g"/><head><name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> and the
Prime Minister, Mr Peter
Fraser, at Headquarters 5
Infantry Brigade near <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name></head></figure>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP012a"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP012a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP012a-g"/><head>Looking towards <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name> from <name key="name-010677" type="place">Vicalvi</name>. The upper <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> disappears
in the distance on the right</head></figure>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP012b"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP012b.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP012b-g"/><head>In the upper <name key="name-018465" type="place">Liri valley</name> beyond <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name></head></figure>
<pb xml:id="n87" n="87"/>
responsible for delays, especially at the crossing of the Melfa River 
near <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name> and the Fibreno River south-east of <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>. The infantry 
got across quickly, but as the commander of 5 Brigade has since 
said, ‘I would not let them go far until we had supporting arms 
(i.e. wheels) across the rivers. Had we taken the risk of exposing 
our inf to tank attack, we might have taken <hi rend="sc">sora</hi> a day earlier than 
we did.’<note xml:id="fn1-87" n="1"><p>Maj-Gen Stewart to <name key="name-110027" type="organisation">War History Branch</name>, <date when="1958">1958</date>.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">It was not known whether the enemy had tanks. Traces of tracked 
vehicles had been seen at <name key="name-002837" type="place">Atina</name>, but these might have been self-propelled guns. There is no indication in German records that either 
<hi rend="i">44 Division</hi> or <hi rend="i">5 Mountain Division</hi> disposed of any tanks, but they 
had a few self-propelled guns and towed anti-tank guns, which of 
course did not have much mobility in such hilly country and in any 
case had to be withdrawn behind the demolitions or abandoned.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The enemy made the most of his excellent observation from 
the high ground overlooking the roads along which the pursuit 
came, and employed his field and medium guns effectively, but 
perhaps his best artillery work was done by the mountain guns in 
the hills east of the <name key="name-004745" type="place">Sora</name>-<name key="name-002888" type="place">Balsorano</name> valley; these were the guns 
which inflicted so many casualties on the New Zealand artillery. 
The enemy also held up the advance at times with his mortars 
and automatic weapons, the crews of which sometimes maintained 
their fire until their ammunition was exhausted.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The advance to <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name> was in pursuit of an enemy who was 
retreating. If it had little influence on the manner of his going, 
it at least did something for the morale of the New Zealanders 
who participated: for the first time in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, after the series of 
rebuffs, if not defeats, at <name key="name-001187" type="place">Orsogna</name> and <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name>, they had the enemy 
on the run. After months of wallowing in mud and snow and the 
other discomforts of static warfare, they found it exhilarating to be 
on the move again. It was reminiscent of the war of movement 
they had mastered in the Desert.</p>
          </div>
        </div>
      </div>
      <pb xml:id="n88" n="88"/>
      <div xml:id="c3" type="chapter">
        <head>CHAPTER 3<lb/>
The Pursuit North of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name></head>
        <div xml:id="c3-1" type="section">
          <head>I: <hi rend="i">After the Fall of Rome</hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c3-1-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p>SOUTH of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, where the <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name> occupy nearly two-thirds 
of the width of the peninsula, the terrain had favoured the 
Germans in their defence of the Winter Line. North of the city, 
however, the peninsula widens, but the mountain backbone narrows 
towards the Adriatic coast and gives way in the west to comparatively open, rolling country little suited to the German purpose 
of blocking the Allied advance. North of <name key="name-001404" type="place">Lake Trasimene</name><!-- Trasimene, Lake --> the 
country becomes more rugged again, and beyond the <name key="name-032822" type="place">Arno River</name> the 
northern <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name> turn back towards the west to span the peninsula 
and block the approaches to the plains of the River Po in <name key="name-018469" type="place">Lombardy</name>. 
Apart from the few roads which thread their way through deep 
valleys and over high passes, the only gap in this great barrier is 
the narrow corridor of foothills along the Adriatic coast south of 
<name key="name-001263" type="place">Rimini</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">It seemed unlikely that Kesselring would attempt a protracted 
defence until his depleted armies reached the <name key="name-032822" type="place">Arno River</name> and the 
<name key="name-000901" type="place">Gothic Line</name><note xml:id="fn1-88" n="1"><p>Described at first by the Allies as the <name key="name-006702" type="place">Pisa</name>-<name key="name-001263" type="place">Rimini</name> line, the <name key="name-000901" type="place">Gothic Line</name> was originally
called the ‘Apennine position’ by the Germans, then the ‘<name key="name-000901" type="place">Gothic Line</name>’ (<hi rend="i">Gotenstellung</hi>) and
from 16 June the ‘Green Line’ (<hi rend="i">Gruene Linie</hi>).</p></note> in the northern <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name>. He strengthened his right 
flank, which in the open country west of the Tiber River was in 
greater danger than the sector nearer the <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name>, by reinforcing 
with fresh but inexperienced formations, moving <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206560" type="work">14 Panzer Corps</name></hi> 
west of the Tiber to join <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Corps in Fourteenth Army</hi>, 
and replacing <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206560" type="work">14 Panzer Corps</name></hi> by <hi rend="i">76 Panzer Corps</hi> on the right of 
<hi rend="i"><name key="name-206737" type="work">51 Mountain Corps</name></hi> in <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi>. Kesselring gave orders for a 
gradual fighting withdrawal to the <name key="name-000901" type="place">Gothic Line</name>, but Hitler was
<pb xml:id="n89" n="89"/>
suspicious that he might want to fall back to this position without 
offering serious resistance and demanded that ‘After reorganisation 
of the formations the Army Group will resume defence operations 
as far south of the <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name> as possible.’<note xml:id="fn1-89" n="1"><p>War diary, Commander-in-Chief South-West.</p></note> On 14 June, therefore, 
the German commander-in-chief ordered that the <name key="name-000901" type="place">Gothic Line</name> was 
to be built up sufficiently to resist an Allied attempt to break 
through to the plains of the River Po, and to gain time for these 
preparations the Army Group was to ‘stand and defend the Albert- 
Frieda Line’,<note xml:id="fn2-89" n="2"><p>Appendix to war diary, Commander-in-Chief South-West.</p></note> which crossed the peninsula from coast to coast and 
passed just south of <name key="name-001404" type="place">Lake Trasimene</name><!-- Trasimene, Lake -->.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c3-1-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">At first the Allied armies made rapid progress in pursuit of the 
Germans north of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>. <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> drove up the <name key="name-018751" type="place">Tiber valley</name> with 
two armoured divisions of 13 Corps, 6 South African Armoured 
Division along Route 3 west of the river and 6 British Armoured 
Division up Route 4 east of it; on the left <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> advanced 
with <name key="name-006823" type="organisation">2 US Corps</name> on Route 2 and 6 US Corps on Route 1 up the 
coastal flank. The Americans seized the port of <name key="name-018232" type="place">Civitavecchia</name>, 40 
miles north-west of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, on 7 June and the <name key="name-018807" type="place">Viterbo</name> airfields on 
the 9th. Although the port had been extensively damaged, it was 
open to Allied traffic in less than a week.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Meanwhile the enemy also began to fall back along the Adriatic 
coast and <name key="name-002987" type="organisation">5 Corps</name><note xml:id="fn3-89" n="3"><p><name key="name-002987" type="organisation">5 Corps</name> now comprised 4 Ind Div and the Italian Liberation Corps. The two divisions
of the opposing German <hi rend="i">Hauck Group</hi> had been drawn into the battle west of the Apennines and replaced by <hi rend="i">278 Inf Div</hi>.</p></note> started to follow up on 8 June. <name key="name-001187" type="place">Orsogna</name> – which 
had withstood the New Zealand Division's repeated attacks six 
months earlier – was entered next day, and <name key="name-006342" type="place">Chieti</name> and <name key="name-004539" type="place">Pescara</name> were 
occupied and the <name key="name-004539" type="place">Pescara</name> River crossed on the 10th, the day the 
New Zealanders arrived at <name key="name-002867" type="place">Avezzano</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">General Alexander calculated that the enemy, despite the reinforcements he was known to have received, was not strong enough 
to hold the <name key="name-000901" type="place">Gothic Line</name> against a really powerful attack. In an appreciation to General Wilson (Supreme Allied Commander, Mediterranean) on 7 June he wrote of the Allied armies: ‘Neither the 
<name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name> nor even the Alps should prove a serious obstacle to 
their enthusiasm and skill.<note xml:id="fn4-89" n="4"><p>Alexander's Despatch, <hi rend="i">The Allied Armies in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name></hi>, p. 2931.</p></note> He proposed to continue to press the 
pursuit up the centre of the peninsula and over the northern 
<name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name>. If his armies were held in force he ‘would mount a 
full-scale attack on <name key="name-009179" type="place">Bologna</name> not later than 15th August. I would 
then establish a firm base in the area of <name key="name-009179" type="place">Bologna</name> and <name key="name-018502" type="place">Modena</name> for
<pb xml:id="n90" n="90"/>
the development of further operations either westwards into <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name> 
or north-eastwards into <name key="name-007106" type="place">Austria</name> according to the requirements of 
Allied strategy at that time.’<note xml:id="fn1-90" n="1"><p>Alexander's Despatch, p. 2931.</p></note> Such a plan would be possible only 
if the existing Allied forces were retained in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Alexander ordered <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> to advance with all possible 
speed to the general area of <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>, Bibbiena and <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>, on the 
middle and upper reaches of the <name key="name-032822" type="place">Arno River</name>, and <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> to 
occupy the region of <name key="name-006702" type="place">Pisa</name>, <name key="name-018474" type="place">Lucca</name> and <name key="name-018619" type="place">Pistoia</name>, at the northern 
extremity of the <name key="name-120163" type="place">Tuscan</name> plains; he authorised the two army commanders to take ‘extreme risks to secure [these] vital areas … 
before the enemy can reorganise or be reinforced.’<note xml:id="fn2-90" n="2"><p>Alexander's Despatch, p. 2931.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">To carry out these orders both armies regrouped. In Eighth 
Army <name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name> (6 British Armoured and 8 Indian Divisions, with 
<name key="name-024249" type="organisation">10 Indian Division</name> in reserve) assumed 13 Corps' responsibilities 
east of the Tiber River, and 13 Corps (78 Division and 6 South 
African Armoured Division, with 4 Division in reserve) continued 
its northward drive west of the river. On the Adriatic coast 
<name key="name-006705" type="organisation">2 Polish Corps</name> replaced <name key="name-002987" type="organisation">5 Corps</name>. The Canadian Corps was still in 
reserve. The <name key="name-006399" type="organisation">French Expeditionary Corps</name> relieved <name key="name-006823" type="organisation">2 US Corps</name> 
on <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name>'s right and 4 US Corps took over the coastal sector 
from 6 US Corps.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The pursuit continued against stiffening resistance. Tenth Corps 
entered <name key="name-016134" type="place">Perugia</name>, east of <name key="name-001404" type="place">Lake Trasimene</name><!-- Trasimene, Lake -->, on 20 June, and was 
then checked in the hills beyond the town; 13 Corps was halted 
near the south-western shore of the lake. The Allied armies were up 
to the Albert-Frieda (or Trasimene) Line, where the Germans had 
established a coherent defence across the Italian peninsula. Only 
after hard fighting was 13 Corps able to break this line west of the 
lake and continue its advance. Between <name key="name-001404" type="place">Lake Trasimene</name><!-- Trasimene, Lake --> and <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>, 
its next objective, 13 Corps was halted again; it did not enter 
<name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> until 16 July, after it had been reinforced by the New 
Zealand Division.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c3-1-3" type="section">
            <head>(iii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">While the Allied armies were making these gains in central 
<name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, Generals Wilson and Alexander were vainly striving to 
retain for the Italian campaign priority over all other operations 
in the <name key="name-007453" type="place">Mediterranean</name>. The Combined Chiefs of Staff had agreed 
in April that ANVIL<note xml:id="fn3-90" n="3"><p>Later known by the codename DRAGOON.</p></note> (the invasion of southern <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name>) should be 
deferred so as not to interfere with the offensive which was to
<pb xml:id="n91" n="91"/>
accomplish the capture of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, but also had directed Wilson 
to plan for the ‘best possible use of the amphibious lift remaining 
to you either in support of operations in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>, or in order to take 
advantage of opportunities arising in the south of <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name> or elsewhere….’<note xml:id="fn1-91" n="1"><p>Combined Chiefs of Staff directive to General Wilson, <date when="1944-04-19">19 April 1944</date>.</p></note> Wilson therefore warned Alexander on 22 May that 
he intended to mount an amphibious operation not later than mid- 
September, either in close support of the Allied Armies in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> or 
elsewhere.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The Combined Chiefs of Staff informed Wilson on 14 June that 
‘they were firm in the decision to mount and launch an amphibious 
operation of the type and scope planned for Southern <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name>’,<note xml:id="fn2-91" n="2"><p>Report by the Supreme Allied Commander, <name key="name-007453" type="place">Mediterranean</name>, on the Italian Campaign,
Part II, p. 31.</p></note> but 
a choice might be made between a seaborne assault on the south 
or the west coast of <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name> or at the head of the Adriatic Sea. 
‘All such plans were contingent on the completion of the ground 
advance to the <name key="name-006702" type="place">Pisa</name>-<name key="name-001263" type="place">Rimini</name> line and the ultimate selection of an 
operation was dependent on the general stategic situation….’<note xml:id="fn3-91" n="3"><p>Ibid.</p></note> 
Wilson informed Alexander of this decision and directed him to 
prepare for the release of American and French divisions from 
<name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> for assignment to <name key="name-018770" type="organisation">Seventh Army</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Wilson recommended a course favoured by Alexander: the continuation of the Italian offensive into the <name key="name-018632" type="place">Po valley</name> and thence, 
supported by an amphibious assault on the Istrian peninsula, through 
the <name key="name-018468" type="place">Ljubljana</name> Gap (in <name key="name-004979" type="place">Yugoslavia</name>) into <name key="name-007106" type="place">Austria</name> and <name key="name-026913" type="place">Hungary</name>, 
which would threaten <name key="name-008556" type="place">Germany</name> from the south-east. General Eisenhower, however, wanted the operation against southern <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name>. 
He believed that the Allies could support only one major theatre in 
the European war, which was in <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name>. An important consideration 
was that an additional port was needed for the introduction into 
<name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name> of some 40 to 50 divisions waiting in the <name key="name-031090" type="place">United States</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Wilson received a directive from the Combined Chiefs of Staff 
on 2 July that he was to carry out the operation against southern 
<name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name>, on the target date of 15 August if possible. He informed 
Alexander on the 5th that the new operation must receive priority 
over the Italian campaign but assured him that not more than 
four French and three American divisions were to be taken from 
his command; they were to be replaced by 92 US (Negro) 
Infantry Division and a Brazilian infantry division. Alexander's 
task was to continue the destruction of the German forces in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>; 
he was to advance through the <name key="name-015474" type="place">Apennines</name> to the <name key="name-032975" type="place">Po River</name> and 
thereafter to a line from <name key="name-001428" type="place">Venice</name> through <name key="name-001193" type="place">Padua</name> to <name key="name-018797" type="place">Verona</name> and 
<name key="name-120097" type="place">Brescia</name>, on the northern edge of the plains.</p>
            <pb xml:id="n92" n="92"/>
            <p rend="indent">Alexander realised that, with the loss of 6 US Corps, the French 
Expeditionary Corps and a large part of the Allied Air Force, 
the penetration into the <name key="name-018632" type="place">Po valley</name> before the winter set in was 
most unlikely. He therefore gave permission for the bombing of 
the Po bridges, which previously had been spared because of the 
engineering problems that would be involved in rebuilding them.</p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="c3-2" type="section">
          <head>II: <hi rend="i">The Division at <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name></hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c3-2-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p rend="indent">While the Allied armies were continuing their advance north of 
<name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, the New Zealand Division rested and trained alongside the 
Liri River near the village of <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>. The men settled in tents under 
trees, in the vineyards or on gentle slopes near the river, 
in a peaceful countryside well suited to the open-air life. The fine 
weather, however, was interspersed with occasional showers and 
sudden thunderstorms, the worst of which drove the men hurriedly 
and frantically to dig drains around their bivouac tents.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> commander (General Leese) advised <name key="name-207994" type="person">General 
Freyberg</name> on 16 June that he did not see any role for the New 
Zealand Division in the immediate future. After discussions with 
Generals Alexander and Leese the GOC passed on the information 
to the Division on the 20th that it would not be needed for 
operations for 30 days.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The New Zealanders and Canadians were left out of the advance 
north of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> because Fifth and Eighth Armies were both limited 
to those forces which could be supplied along the available roads. 
It was hoped that the two armies, so constituted, would be able to 
push the Germans back to the <name key="name-006702" type="place">Pisa</name>-<name key="name-001263" type="place">Rimini</name> or <name key="name-000901" type="place">Gothic Line</name>, while 
the forces left in reserve rested and reorganised in preparation for 
the breakthrough into the northern plains of <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name>. This plan, however, had to be modified because of the demands for troops to take 
part in the landings in southern <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name>, and also because of the 
unexpectedly determined German resistance south of the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name> 
River. Consequently the New Zealand Division's promised 30-day 
stay around <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name> was cut short.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c3-2-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent"><name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> had taken steps immediately after the fall of 
<name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> to secure a suitable building there to serve as a New Zealand 
forces club, and also had made a personal approach to General 
Alexander for permission to send men on daily conducted tours of 
the city. The Division took over one of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>'s best hotels, the
<pb xml:id="n93" n="93"/>
Quirinale, in the Via Nazionale. Leave was not generous and the 
decision that other ranks were not allowed to stay overnight (only 
a limited number of officers, nurses and VADs could do so) was 
not at all popular. Every man was keen to get to <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, and more 
succeeded in getting there than were supposed to do so under 
the scheme of daily leave apportioning.</p>
            <p rend="indent">An officer describing his first visit to the city says that ‘the 
Catholics all made a beeline for St. Peters where the Pope was 
giving mass to 4000 members of the Allied forces, and Mac and 
I started off on a sight seeing tour…. We walked up the via 
Nazionale, looking into shops and watching the passers-by. The 
people of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> are a different stamp from the Neapolitans and 
many of the women are really lovely. They are very happy to have 
their city liberated from the Tedeschi and posters and banners across 
the streets welcome the Allied soldier. Like all Italians though, they 
are not above making money out of the troops, and prices of 
everything are high. Half the trouble as usual is caused by the 
Yanks with their wads of lucre and their willingness to pay any 
price for an article they want. They shove the prices up wherever 
they go…. We dropped into a bar which must have been a first 
class place in peace time, with mirrors all over the walls, fine 
glassware and elegant furnishings. We sampled some of the famous 
Sarti cognac, a thimbleful costing L25. It was rare stuff, almost 
like whisky.’</p>
            <p rend="indent">The Quirinale had not yet been opened as a New Zealand club. 
‘We were thinking of going to the <name key="name-026979" type="organisation">NAAFI</name> for a cup of tea and 
a sandwich when we were accosted by an old man who asked us 
in broken English if we wanted lunch. We were surprised because 
there are no “ristorantes” open in <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, Jerry having taken most 
of the foodstuffs, but we decided to see what he had up his sleeve. 
He led us for a couple of blocks [adding several Americans and 
Englishmen to the party on the way] and then turned suddenly 
into an inconspicuous doorway in the Street of the Twentieth of 
September…. We went up six storeys and were then ushered 
into the dining room of a well-to-do private home. While the lady 
of the house set the table we looked around the carpeted and well 
furnished room. An expensive radio stood in a corner and through 
the doors of glass fronted cabinets we could see shelves of crystal 
&amp; glassware, some of it inlaid with gold. As the Yank major said— 
this guy musta been a Fascist to have kept all this from the 
Tedeschi. The meal consisted of macaroni and vegetable soup with 
a roll of white bread, beefsteak and beans, and cherries for dessert, 
so it was obviously a black market feed. The price was 150 lire but
<pb xml:id="n94" n="94"/>
any civilian who can turn on a meal with bread and meat can 
name his own price….’<note xml:id="fn1-94" n="1"><p>Diary, B. C. H. Moss.</p></note></p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c3-2-3" type="section">
            <head>(iii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Excursions were made to the <name key="name-001638" type="place">Cassino</name> battlefield. The ruins of the 
town had changed little in two months, except that ‘the rims of 
the craters on the outskirts are overgrown with weeds, and poppies 
and daisies are flowering about the place….The air is still 
heavy with a fetid stench from decomposing bodies and the sour 
taint of the phosphorus shells…. most of the town is just a 
flattened chaos of stone rubble, shattered beams and severed girders, 
all jutting at grotesque angles and torn and twisted by high 
explosive. We entered the town from Caruso Rd and the first grisly 
exhibit was a partially intact building, heaped inside to a depth 
of eight feet with unidentifiable portions of human bodies…. 
All over the town bodies lay where they had been struck 
down…. Numbers of New Zealanders were working among 
the ruins, recovering mates whose uniforms alone kept them in 
one piece….</p>
            <p rend="indent">‘We left the town and went hand over hand up a rope trailing 
down the precipitous mine-free track up <name key="name-009249" type="place">Castle Hill</name>. Outside the 
castle wall, rusting weapons and shrap-riddled equipment mark 
the scene of many a savage counter attack made by Jerry from 
Pt 165 in attempts to retake the Castle…. From the Castle we 
gingerly picked our way to the zig-zag road which was formerly 
a walled and bitumen surfaced track. Now the wall is breached 
every few feet and not a square yard of surface is clear of boulders 
and loose rocks which have been dislodged from further up the 
hillside. From foot to summit, <name key="name-001114" type="place">Montecassino</name> hill is strewn with the 
casings of the countless 25 pr. smoke shells which blinded the 
Abbey for two months…. Because of the mine and booby trap 
danger we walked carefully the whole way up, stepping cautiously 
over a few dead Jerries….</p>
            <p rend="indent">‘Behind Hangman's Hill the little flat is churned, by hundreds 
of overlapping shell holes, into an earthy mass like a potato patch 
which has been dug over. Between Hangman's Hill and the Abbey 
there was originally a terraced garden with little stone walls and 
fruit and olive trees. Not a vestige of the walls remain… and the 
softer-wooded trees are also gone. Only the sturdier olives remain, 
and they are just tortured trunks…. Fanning out from the front 
of the monastery, like the shingle slide at the foot of a crumbling 
rock face, is a great cascade of dust, mortar and shale—formed
<pb xml:id="n95" n="95"/>
from the shattered walls…. No earthquake could have so 
ruthlessly razed the towers and domes and battlemented walls as 
did the bombing….’<note xml:id="fn1-95" n="1"><p>Diary, B. C. H. Moss.</p></note></p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c3-2-4" type="section">
            <head>(iv)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The Division organised leave and trips to places other than <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>. 
Through the courtesy of the <name key="name-003205" type="organisation">Royal Navy</name>, parties were able to 
spend three days on the Isle of <name key="name-120156" type="place">Ischia</name> in the Gulf of <name key="name-007454" type="place">Naples</name>. 
Parties also went to <name key="name-027670" type="place">Sorrento</name>, <name key="name-012670" type="place">Salerno</name> and Amalfi, and elsewhere 
on the coast. Units held organised picnics at the lovely Lake 
Albano, in the <name key="name-018050" type="place">Alban Hills</name>, and along the banks of the fast-flowing 
Liri River. Concerts were given by the immensely popular Kiwi 
Concert Party and a British ENSA<note xml:id="fn2-95" n="2"><p>Entertainments National Services Association.</p></note> party; films were shown by 
the <name key="name-014641" type="organisation">YMCA</name> mobile cinema, and programmes given by the brigade 
bands. Units staged race meetings and organised games of cricket, 
baseball, basketball, athletics, swimming, and aquatic carnivals on 
the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The weather was so hot that exertion made men sweat. The 
atmosphere was still oppressive at 7.30 p.m., when anti-malarial 
precautions, which included the covering of bare limbs, had to be 
taken. The flies were also very annoying, ‘not only being persistent like the desert variety, but biting hard as well.’<note xml:id="fn3-95" n="3"><p>Diary, B. C. H. Moss.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">Only part of the time was taken up with leave, sport and entertainment. The usual routine was training in the mornings and 
exercises on many afternoons. ‘This “rest” business you hear about 
is really only a lot of hard work for us, training, etc. They never 
leave you alone for long.’<note xml:id="fn4-95" n="4"><p>Quoted by Jim Henderson in <hi rend="i">22 Battalion</hi>, p. 303.</p></note> Units were on route marches, sometimes 
up steep, zigzag roads to hilltop villages; they held NCOs' and 
snipers' courses and lectures, were instructed in minelifting, attended 
demonstrations by other arms, and carried out shoots with their own.</p>
            <p rend="indent">In a series of exercises in co-operation between armour and 
infantry, various combinations from regiments and battalions 
reached a sound basis of understanding. In one such exercise the 
companies of 26 Battalion advanced with tanks accompanying each 
platoon. ‘Guided to their targets by the infantry, the tanks did a 
lot of shooting which added to the reality of the scene. Radio 
communication between tanks and infantry was still not very 
successful, but when the radio failed use was made of the telephone 
fitted to the rear of each tank.’<note xml:id="fn5-95" n="5"><p>26 <hi rend="i">Battalion</hi>, p. 407.</p></note></p>
            <pb xml:id="n96" n="96"/>
            <p rend="indent">Because the anti-tank gunners had been employed as infantrymen 
in the recent operations and were likely to be so again, 7 Anti-Tank 
Regiment trained in infantry tactics and in the use of infantry 
weapons. The regiment received an issue of nine M10s, the new self-propelled anti-tank guns,<note xml:id="fn1-96" n="1"><p>The <name key="name-016101" type="organisation">7 A-Tk Regt</name> narrative describes the new weapon as a 3-inch American naval
gun mounted in a Sherman tank chassis.</p></note> which were allotted to 31 Battery. There 
was little time for instruction with these weapons before the 
Division left <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>, but as many men as possible were sent to 
4 Armoured Brigade for short courses in driving, wireless operating, 
gunnery and maintenance. The M10 was much more vulnerable 
than the Sherman tank, and its crew therefore needed no less skill 
than was demanded of the tank crew. The conversion of 4 Brigade 
from an infantry to an armoured brigade had taken a year, but the 
men of 31 Battery were in action with their M10s three weeks after 
they first set eyes on these ‘tank destroyers’.</p>
            <p rend="indent">For about three weeks in June and a week in July the New 
Zealand <name key="name-006630" type="organisation">Army Service Corps</name>, assisted by men and vehicles from the 
artillery and the armoured brigade, was very busy carrying ammunition, petrol and supplies for <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> from depots in or 
near the <name key="name-120139" type="place">Volturno</name> valley to dumps at <name key="name-000575" type="place">Alatri</name>, <name key="name-018791" type="place">Valmontone</name>, near 
<name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, and <name key="name-016092" type="place">Narni</name> (43 miles north of the city), and from <name key="name-000595" type="place">Anzio</name> 
to <name key="name-016092" type="place">Narni</name>. ‘Moving ammunition and supplies with a rush involved 
platoons [of the transport] in heavy work over long hours, and 
although drivers stood up well to the strain of long hours and the 
choked and often dusty roads, an avoidable annoyance was poor 
administration at some dumps, together with some double-talk of 
orders and counter-orders which led to a certain amount of confusion, waste of time, and ripe cursing.’<note xml:id="fn2-96" n="2"><p>Henderson, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206745" type="organisation">RMT</name></hi>, pp. 321–2.</p></note></p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c3-2-5" type="section">
            <head>(v)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> Chief of Staff (Major-General G. P. Walsh) 
telephoned HQ 2 NZ Division from HQ Allied Armies in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> 
on the night of 7–8 July to say that he had an urgent operational 
role for the Division and wanted it to begin moving to a forward 
concentration area south of <name key="name-001404" type="place">Lake Trasimene</name><!-- Trasimene, Lake --> next day. This order 
was quite unexpected because <name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> had been told 
by HQ <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> on the 6th that there was no forecast of a 
move for the Division for some time. The task to which the 
Division was summoned was to reinforce 13 Corps, whose resources 
were considered inadequate for an attack on the German positions
<pb xml:id="n97" n="97"/>
dominating the approach to <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>, about 20 miles beyond Lake 
Trasimene.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The GOC immediately called the GSO I (Colonel Thornton<note xml:id="fn1-97" n="1"><p>Lt-Gen Sir Leonard Thornton, KCB, CBE, m.i.d.; <name key="name-008844" type="place">Wellington</name>; born <name key="name-007584" type="place">Christchurch</name>, 15 Oct
<date when="1916">1916</date>; Regular soldier; BM 6 Bde Feb–Sep 1942; GSO II <name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 NZ Div</name> Oct 1942–Jun 1943;
CO <name key="name-001153" type="organisation">5 Fd Regt</name> Jun–Dec 1943, Apr–Jun 1944; GSO I <name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 NZ Div</name> <date when="1944">1944</date>; CRA <name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 NZ Div</name>
<date when="1945">1945</date>; DCGS Apr 1948–Jan 1949; QMG 1955–56; Adjutant-General 1956–58; Chief
of SEATO Military Planning Office, 1958–60; Chief of General Staff, 1960–65; Chief of
Defence Staff, <date when="1965-07">Jul 1965</date>–.</p></note>) 
the AA &amp; QMG (Colonel <name key="name-014112" type="person">Barrington</name><note xml:id="fn2-97" n="2"><p><name key="name-014112" type="person">Brig B. Barrington</name><!-- Barrington, Brig B. -->, DSO, OBE, ED, m.i.d.; born Marton, <date when="1907-10-02">2 Oct 1907</date>; insurance
inspector; BM 6 Bde May 1941–Jan 1942; AA &amp; QMG <name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 NZ Div</name> Nov 1942–Dec 1944;
died <name key="name-008844" type="place">Wellington</name>, <date when="1954-04-17">17 Apr 1954</date>.</p></note>) and the Commander 
NZASC (Brigadier <name key="name-000782" type="person">Crump</name><note xml:id="fn3-97" n="3"><p><name key="name-000782" type="person">Brig S. H. Crump</name><!-- Crump, Brig S. H. -->, CBE, DSO, m.i.d.; Bronze Star (US); <name key="name-120035" type="place">Lower Hutt</name>; born <name key="name-008844" type="place">Wellington</name>,
<date when="1889-01-25">25 Jan 1889</date>; Regular soldier; NZASC 1915–19; Commander NZASC, <name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 NZ Div</name>,
1940–45; comd <name key="name-004368" type="organisation">2 NZEF</name>, <name key="name-002006" type="place">Japan</name>, Jun–Sep 1947; on staff HQ BCOF and NZ representative on Disposals Board in <name key="name-002006" type="place">Japan</name>, 1948–49.</p></note>) to confer with him on arrangements 
for the move. It was decided that the NZASC should start next 
day by sending vehicles to <name key="name-015660" type="place">Civita Castellana</name>, a town on Route 3 
north of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name>, where the Division was to stage en route to Lake 
Trasimene, and that the first brigade—<name key="name-024337" type="organisation">6 Infantry Brigade</name> (Brigadier 
<name key="name-207546" type="person">Burrows</name><note xml:id="fn4-97" n="4"><p><name key="name-207546" type="person">Brig J. T. Burrows</name><!-- Burrows, Brig J. T. -->, CBE, DSO and bar, ED, m.i.d., Order of Valour (Gk); Christchurch; born <name key="name-007584" type="place">Christchurch</name>, <date when="1904-07-14">14 Jul 1904</date>; schoolmaster; CO 20 Bn <date when="1941-05">May 1941</date>, <date when="1941-12">Dec 1941</date>–
<date when="1942-07">Jul 1942</date>; 20 Bn and Armd Regt Aug 1942–Jun 1943; comd 4 Bde 27–29 Jun 1942,
5 Jul–15 Aug 1942; 5 Bde <date when="1944-03">Mar 1944</date>, Aug–Nov 1944; 6 Bde Jul–Aug 1944; Commander
Southern Military District, 1951–53; Commander K Force, 1953–54; Commander,
SMD, 1955–60.</p></note>) was selected—should move from the <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name> rest area on 
the night of 9–10 July. Formations were warned of the move by 
telephone.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The move was to be secret: all fernleaf signs and unit signs were 
to be obliterated from vehicles, and hat badges and shoulder titles 
removed. But these security measures did not deceive the Italians, 
who identified the ‘neo-zelandesi’ as they travelled northward.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The sudden call to the Division imposed much organising and 
travelling on the NZASC, many of whose vehicles were still 
carrying ammunition and supplies for <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>. All load-carriers were ordered to return immediately to <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name>, and company 
headquarters and workshops were to go to <name key="name-015660" type="place">Civita Castellana</name>. On 
the 8th the troop-carrying vehicles of the two RMT companies 
joined the battalions of 5 and 6 Infantry Brigades; other transport picked up ammunition, petrol and rations and went to Civita 
Castellana. Next day the NZASC convoys completed the second 
stage of the move.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The Division made the 200-mile journey to <name key="name-001404" type="place">Lake Trasimene</name><!-- Trasimene, Lake --> in 
six groups. The first convoy, <name key="name-022308" type="organisation">36 Survey Battery</name>, left <name key="name-000596" type="place">Arce</name> in daylight on 9 July and was followed that night by HQ 2 NZ Division 
and <name key="name-024337" type="organisation">6 Infantry Brigade</name> group, and on the next three nights by 
<name key="name-024336" type="organisation">5 Infantry Brigade</name> group, a divisional troops group, and 4 Armoured
<pb xml:id="n98" n="98"/>
Brigade group. The convoys took about seven and a half hours 
to make the run by Routes 6 and 3 to the staging area at Civita 
Castellana, where the troops spent a day resting, and about the 
same time to cover the remaining half of the journey by way of 
Route 3 to <name key="name-016092" type="place">Narni</name>, from there to <name key="name-016122" type="place">Orvieto</name>, and on Route 71 to the 
south-west side of <name key="name-001404" type="place">Lake Trasimene</name><!-- Trasimene, Lake -->.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The first part of the journey was made over good roads and 
was uneventful except that it gave many men their first glimpse 
of <name key="name-001271" type="place">Rome</name> as they passed through its outskirts at daybreak. On
<figure xml:id="WH2-2Ita098a"><graphic url="WH2-2Ita098a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2Ita098a-g"/><head><hi rend="sc">arce to lake trasimene</hi></head></figure>
<pb xml:id="n99" n="99"/>
Route 3, beyond the city, the New Zealanders saw the unmistakable 
evidence of the enemy's hasty retreat under attack from the air and 
ground forces. The highway had been cut in many places by bombs 
and was dotted with wrecked German vehicles. At the Division's 
staging area hundreds of vehicles and guns were parked nose-to-tail 
and ‘a single enemy fighter plane could have brewed up dozens 
of them. That such a risk can be taken, and the fact that we 
can move a convoy of any size in daylight is a tribute to the air 
supremacy maintained by the DAF and MAAF. The day was hot and 
a strong wind blew steadily all afternoon making the place about 
as comfortable as <name key="name-009139" type="place">Amiriya</name> in a khamsin….’<note xml:id="fn1-99" n="1"><p>Diary, B. C. H. Moss. <name key="name-009139" type="place">Amiriya</name> was a transit camp near <name key="name-000576" type="place">Alexandria</name>.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">At Narni, a town in a gorge, ‘yawning gaps had been torn in 
three huge arched bridges by the Jerry engineers but most of 
the road damage had been caused by our own bombing. At least 
once in every mile or so the road and railway had been straddled 
by sticks of bombs which had breached the highway and cratered 
the surrounding area…. every few hundred yards lay the burnt-out 
rusting skeletons of Jerry transport…. the total of wrecks 
must have run into four figures. Quite a number of tanks and 
S.P. guns were among the victims, and every now and then small 
groups of railway rolling stock sat drunkenly athwart the rails, 
with peppered sides and blackened ribs…. In one place a whole 
double column of Jerry transport had been caught hiding in a 
tree-lined side road and every vehicle shattered. The Hun has 
been using a considerable amount of civilian transport, particularly 
buses and Fiat cars, to try and make up his losses….’<note xml:id="fn2-99" n="2"><p>Ibid.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">With the arrival of 4 Armoured Brigade's convey on the 14th, 
the whole of the wheeled portion of the Division was assembled 
by <name key="name-001404" type="place">Lake Trasimene</name><!-- Trasimene, Lake -->. The heavy tracked vehicles travelled on tank 
transporters, which completed the journey three days later. Camp 
sites were established under oaks and pines in a pleasant rural 
locality, which was found to be appreciably cooler than the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> 
valley. Much of the lake was surrounded by mud and reeds, but 
where it was accessible for swimming the water was pleasantly 
warm. Some units, however, were able to make only the briefest 
acquaintance with <name key="name-001404" type="place">Lake Trasimene</name><!-- Trasimene, Lake --> at this time, for 6 Infantry 
Brigade was committed for operations on the <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> front on 
12 July, the day after its arrival. The Division was placed under 
the command of 13 Corps (Lieutenant-General Kirkman) at midday 
on the 11th.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Some units, therefore, continued northward along Route 71, past 
<name key="name-015648" type="place">Castiglione</name> on a promontory on the western shore of the lake, and
<pb xml:id="n100" n="100"/>
beyond an airfield crowded mostly with Spitfires. At a railway 
station a little farther on ‘a whole concentration of locomotives 
and railway rolling stock had been beaten up by the <name key="name-034190" type="organisation">RAF</name>. Numerous 
craters were squarely in the middle of the tracks and the rails 
were bent back like baling wire…. One or two [locomotives] 
had been ripped open like tin cans…. Most of the coaches 
and trucks were burnt out while others were shattered by the 
explosion of their contents….’<note xml:id="fn1-100" n="1"><p>Diary, B.C.H. Moss.</p></note></p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="c3-3" type="section">
          <head>III: <hi rend="i"><name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name></hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c3-3-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The Allied armies were checked right across <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name> before they 
reached the ports of <name key="name-006149" type="place">Ancona</name> on the east coast and <name key="name-018459" type="place">Leghorn</name> on 
the west, and in the middle of the peninsula, the road and rail 
centre of <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">A broad and fertile valley, the Val di Chiana, leads northwards 
from the western side of <name key="name-001404" type="place">Lake Trasimene</name><!-- Trasimene, Lake --> towards <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>, a town 
four miles from the <name key="name-032822" type="place">Arno River</name>. Route 71 runs at the foot of the 
mountains on the eastern side of the valley and joins Route 73 (the 
<name key="name-001335" type="place">Siena</name>-<name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> highway) at a defile less than three miles from <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>. 
<name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> advanced from the Trasimene Line with 13 Corps 
in the <name key="name-015655" type="place">Chiana valley</name> and the hills to the west, and with <name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name> 
in the broken country of the <name key="name-018751" type="place">Tiber valley</name> to the east.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On 13 Corps' right 6 British Armoured Division, which had 
taken over from 78 Division, found the enemy defending the 
mountain heights east of Route 71, from which he had observation over the <name key="name-015655" type="place">Chiana valley</name>. The armoured division succeeded in 
gaining a foothold on <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte -->, due south of <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>, and 
on <name key="name-016063" type="place">Monte Castiglion Maggio</name><!-- Castiglion Maggio, Monte -->, farther to the south-east, but failed 
to clear the enemy from the crests. In the corps' centre 4 British 
Infantry Division and on the left 6 South African Armoured Division 
were unable to break through the hills west of the <name key="name-015655" type="place">Chiana valley</name> 
and so reach the <name key="name-018066" type="place">Arno valley</name> west of <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>. A major action would 
be necessary to dislodge the enemy and capture <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>, and for 
this 13 Corps would need reinforcement. It was decided, therefore, 
to bring up ‘the most readily available formation,’<note xml:id="fn2-100" n="2"><p>Alexander's Despatch, <hi rend="i">The Allied Armies in <name key="name-001383" type="place">Italy</name></hi>, p. 2937.</p></note> the New 
Zealand Division. The attack was postponed until 15 July to give 
the New Zealanders time to move up to the front from the <name key="name-120138" type="place">Liri</name> 
valley, and in the meantime a heavy preliminary artillery and air 
assault was made on the German gun positions.</p>
            <pb xml:id="n101" n="101"/>
            <p>
              <figure xml:id="WH2-2Ita101a">
                <graphic url="WH2-2Ita101a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2Ita101a-g"/>
                <head><hi rend="sc">lake trasimene to arezzo</hi></head>
              </figure>
            </p>
            <p rend="indent">It was 13 Corps' intention to attack the enemy in his positions 
west and south-west of <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> and continue the advance to 
<name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>. The 6th Armoured Division was to capture the high 
ground south-west of <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>, cut the roads north and west of the 
town, secure crossing places over the <name key="name-032822" type="place">Arno River</name>, and occupy 
the town when the chance occurred. The British armoured division's 
right flank was to be protected by the New Zealand Division, which
<pb xml:id="n102" n="102"/>
was to relieve a group named Sackforce<note xml:id="fn1-102" n="1"><p>Sackforce, under command of <name key="name-000675" type="organisation">6 Armd Div</name> for right-flank protection, comprised KDG,
1 KRRC, a battery of 5 Med Regt, a self-propelled anti-tank battery and a platoon of
engineers; it was strengthened on 8 July by 1 Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders temporarily detached from 8 Ind Div.</p></note> and occupy the heights 
from <name key="name-016063" type="place">Monte Castiglion Maggio</name><!-- Castiglion Maggio, Monte --> to <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte -->; on the left, 
west of the Chiana canal, 4 Division was to give supporting fire.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Sixth New Zealand Infantry Brigade group<note xml:id="fn2-102" n="2"><p>At this stage 6 Inf Bde had under command two troops of 17/21 Lancers, B Sqn Div
Cav, <name key="name-018539" type="organisation">33 A-Tk Bty</name>, 43 Lt AA Bty, 39 Mortar Bty less two troops, 5 Inf Bde Hy Mortar
Pl, <name key="name-011445" type="organisation">8 Fd Coy</name>, <name key="name-018559" type="organisation">2 MG Coy</name>, a detachment of <name key="name-001145" type="organisation">2 NZ Div</name> Provost Coy, and <name key="name-009616" type="organisation">5 Fd Amb</name>, and in
support 5 and 6 Fd Regts.</p></note> was ordered to 
relieve Sackforce on the night of 12–13 July. Brigadier Burrows 
instructed 25 Battalion (Lieutenant-Colonel <name key="name-006665" type="person">Norman</name><note xml:id="fn3-102" n="3"><p><name key="name-006665" type="person">Lt-Col E. K. Norman</name><!-- Norman, Lt-Col E. K. -->, DSO, MC, m.i.d., Legion of Merit (US); <name key="name-008844" type="place">Wellington</name>; born
<name key="name-008318" type="place">Napier</name>, <date when="1916-09-14">14 Sep 1916</date>; theological student; CO 25 Bn Dec 1943–Feb 1944, <date when="1944-06">Jun 1944</date>–
<date when="1945-04">Apr 1945</date>; wounded <date when="1945-04-23">23 Apr 1945</date>.</p></note>) to take over 
the positions of 1 King's Royal Rifle Corps on the south-western 
slopes of <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte -->, and 26 Battalion (Lieutenant-Colonel 
Fountaine<note xml:id="fn4-102" n="4"><p><name key="name-006395" type="person">Col D. J. Fountaine</name><!-- Fountaine, Col D. J. -->, DSO, MC, m.i.d.; Westport; born Westport, <date when="1914-07-04">4 Jul 1914</date>; company
secretary; CO 20 Bn Jul–Aug 1942; 26 Bn Sep 1942–Dec 1943, Jun–Oct 1944; comd
NZ Adv Base Oct 1944–Sep 1945; wounded <date when="1941-11-26">26 Nov 1941</date>.</p></note>) to relieve 1 Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders on 
the slopes of <name key="name-016063" type="place">Monte Castiglion Maggio</name><!-- Castiglion Maggio, Monte -->. These peaks, together with 
<name key="name-004316" type="place">Monte Camurcina</name><!-- Camurcina, Monte --> and <name key="name-018223" type="place">Poggio Cavadenti</name><!-- Cavadenti, Poggio -->, which lay between them, 
rose about <date when="2000">2000</date> feet above the <name key="name-015655" type="place">Chiana valley</name> and gave excellent 
observation of 13 Corps' activities to the west as well as commanding 
the approaches to <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The convoy carrying 25 and 26 Battalions and their supporting 
machine guns and mortars left the south-western side of Lake 
Trasimene early in the evening of the 12th, drove up Route 71 
to <name key="name-003287" type="place">Castiglion Fiorentino</name> and halted for half an hour until darkness 
fell. The 25th Battalion's vehicles then went to a debussing point 
three miles farther up the road, where the machine guns and other 
equipment were loaded on mules. Shortly before midnight the 
battalion, using the mules and jeeps, set out to climb to the positions 
occupied by the KRRC on <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte -->. The relief was completed 
by 4.30 a.m. without casualties, despite some shelling and mortaring. 
Meanwhile, by midnight, 26 Battalion had relieved the Argyll 
and Sutherland Highlanders in the <name key="name-016063" type="place">Monte Castiglion Maggio</name><!-- Castiglion Maggio, Monte --> sector.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c3-3-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The defence of the German position in the mountains south of 
<name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> was chiefly the responsibility of <hi rend="i">305 Infantry Division</hi> of 
<hi rend="i">76 Panzer Corps</hi>, but the western slopes of <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte --> and the 
ground extending north-westward to the main road were held by 
<hi rend="i">115 Regiment of 15 Panzer Grenadier Division</hi>. The <hi rend="i">305th Division</hi>,
<pb xml:id="n103" n="103"/>
which was very weak although reinforced by troops from <hi rend="i">94 Infantry 
Division</hi>, occupied a front running south-eastwards over a wide 
stretch of mountains.</p>
            <p rend="indent"><hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> had ordered <hi rend="i">76 Panzer Corps</hi> to hold its existing 
line but to swing back its left (east) wing. It had been intended 
that <hi rend="i">44 Infantry Division</hi> of <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206737" type="work">51 Mountain Corps</name></hi> should occupy 
Monte Favalto, a high peak about eight miles east of Monte 
<name key="name-001028" type="place">Lignano</name>, but this had not been done. Instead, troops of 4 Indian 
Division (<name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name>) reached the slopes of Monte Favalto on 
12 July. The commander of <hi rend="i">76 Corps</hi> (General Herr) then told 
<hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> that <hi rend="i">305 Division's</hi> left flank was ‘in an untenable 
position, and must draw back and lose control of the commanding 
heights. That may mean that the Corps cannot hold on for long 
in the rest of the sector….’<note xml:id="fn1-103" n="1"><p>Appendix, war diary, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi>.</p></note> <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> gave orders that 
<hi rend="i">305 Division's</hi> right was to hold firm on <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte -->, and the 
rest of the division could take up a line extending over Monte 
Camurcina and towards Monte Favalto.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The capture of Monte Favalto by 4 Indian Division was a threat 
to <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> from an unexpected direction, and also placed the left 
flank of <hi rend="i">305 Division</hi> in a dangerous salient, from which it began 
thinning out on the night of 12–13 July. <name key="name-016063" type="place">Monte Castiglion Maggio</name><!-- Castiglion Maggio, Monte -->, 
at the southern tip of the salient, was abandoned completely. Thus 
<name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name>' advance assisted 13 Corps.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c3-3-3" type="section">
            <head>(iii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">At dawn on 13 July a three-man patrol from A Company, 
26 Battalion, climbed to the top of <name key="name-016063" type="place">Monte Castiglion Maggio</name><!-- Castiglion Maggio, Monte --> and 
found it unoccupied. The patrol pushed along a high saddle for 
about a mile to <name key="name-018223" type="place">Poggio Cavadenti</name><!-- Cavadenti, Poggio --> without meeting any enemy. 
There was more activity in 25 Battalion's sector on the slopes of 
<name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte -->, which the enemy shelled and mortared. At least 
two of the houses the battalion was using received direct hits. 
That night 24 Battalion (Lieutenant-Colonel Hutchens) moved into 
the line on the western slopes of <name key="name-004316" type="place">Monte Camurcina</name><!-- Camurcina, Monte --> to fill the gap 
between 25 and 26 Battalions.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The same night 26 Battalion had its first encounter with the 
enemy since taking over from the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders. Two platoons of B Company left about 5 p.m. to spend 
the night as a standing patrol on <name key="name-018223" type="place">Poggio Cavadenti</name><!-- Cavadenti, Poggio -->, which had 
been found unoccupied in the morning. On the summit the leading 
platoon (10 Platoon) met an enemy patrol of about 10 men. 
‘Surprise was mutual but the New Zealanders were the first to
<pb xml:id="n104" n="104"/>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2Ita104a"><graphic url="WH2-2Ita104a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2Ita104a-g"/><head><hi rend="sc">6 brigade's attack, 14–16 july 1944</hi></head></figure>
recover. One German was killed and three taken prisoner; two of 
those who escaped were believed to be wounded. The two platoons 
dug in along the crest. Later in the night they were subjected to 
heavy mortar fire which slackened off towards morning. Only one 
man was hit….’<note xml:id="fn1-104" n="1"><p><hi rend="i">26 Battalion</hi>, p. 412.</p></note> The prisoners were from a unit of 
<hi rend="i">94 Infantry Division</hi> under the command of <hi rend="i">305 Infantry Division</hi>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">As he felt that the enemy already was beginning to withdraw, 
Colonel Fountaine ordered C Company, 26 Battalion, to occupy 
<name key="name-018724" type="place">Poggio Spino</name><!-- Spino, Poggio -->, about two miles north of <name key="name-016063" type="place">Monte Castiglion Maggio</name><!-- Castiglion Maggio, Monte -->. 
The company set out about 1 a.m. on the 14th and had much trouble
<pb xml:id="n105" n="105"/>
in keeping direction because of the darkness and the nature of the 
ground. When it had gone about two miles its commander (Major 
Williams<note xml:id="fn1-105" n="1"><p>Lt–Col J. R. Williams, DSO, m.i.d.; <name key="name-007584" type="place">Christchurch</name>; born <name key="name-007584" type="place">Christchurch</name>, <date when="1911-07-27">27 Jul 1911</date>;
solicitor; CO Div Cav Bn Jan–Apr 1945; three times wounded.</p></note>) ordered his men to rest until daylight, when he would 
be better able to determine his position. At daybreak, however, it 
was evident that the company was still some distance from its 
objective. Williams decided to rest his men until early afternoon.</p>
            <p rend="indent">When C Company approached Point 671, the nearer of the two 
peaks of <name key="name-018724" type="place">Poggio Spino</name><!-- Spino, Poggio -->, it came under fire from a farmhouse. 
A forward observation officer from <name key="name-022811" type="organisation">6 Field Regiment</name> who was 
with the company put through a call on his wireless to the guns, 
which laid a heavy concentration on the enemy-held position. No. 14 
Platoon charged in after the concentration, and the enemy retired 
down the reverse slope. The other two platoons took up position on 
the other peak (Point 691), which they found deserted. The 
company was still digging in at nightfall when, following a mortar 
concentration, the enemy counter-attacked 14 Platoon and forced 
it back about 80 yards from the farmhouse. The other two platoons 
stayed on Point 691 and returned the enemy's fire. The artillery FOO 
called down another concentration, which fell in the company 
area. This, or possibly simultaneous enemy fire, caused four casualties, including two men killed. The enemy made no attempt to 
press home his advantage, and 14 Platoon later reoccupied its 
position on Point 671 without opposition.</p>
            <p rend="indent"><name key="name-004316" type="place">Monte Camurcina</name><!-- Camurcina, Monte -->, like <name key="name-018724" type="place">Poggio Spino</name><!-- Spino, Poggio -->, had twin summits: the 
main peak (Point 846) and Colle de Luca (Point 844), farther 
west, were joined by a low saddle. C Company, 24 Battalion, had 
taken over a position from a platoon of 25 Battalion at Podere 
Rigutinelli, a group of farmhouses less than a mile to the south-west of Colle de Luca. The commander (Second-Lieutenant Crawshaw<note xml:id="fn2-105" n="2"><p>2 Lt K. S. Crawshaw; <name key="name-002817" type="place">Auckland</name>; born NZ <date when="1921-08-14">14 Aug 1921</date>; student teacher.</p></note>) of 15 Platoon, which was occupying this position, had been 
informed by the commander of the platoon he had relieved that 
Colle de Luca was either unoccupied or very thinly held. He 
set out at 5.30 a.m. to discover whether or not it was clear of the 
enemy. The platoon advanced cautiously with a section on each side 
of a ridge, scouts out in front, and the third section some way in the 
rear. One of the scouts was fired on 200 yards from the summit. 
Crawshaw ordered the two leading sections to make an encircling 
movement, but they were fired on from newly disclosed positions 
and sent to ground. The reserve section, going to assist, was also 
pinned down.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Concluding that the position was too strong for a single platoon
<pb xml:id="n106" n="106"/>
to assault, Crawshaw reported to Company Headquarters and was 
told to await the arrival of 14 Platoon. Second-Lieutenant <name key="name-013474" type="person">Lloyd</name><note xml:id="fn1-106" n="1"><p><name key="name-013474" type="person">Maj D. H. Lloyd</name><!-- Lloyd, Maj D. H. -->; Dunedin; born <name key="name-120092" type="place">Dargaville</name>, <date when="1922-03-29">29 Mar 1922</date>; clerk.</p></note> 
set off with 14 Platoon at 7.30 a.m. and made contact with 
15 Platoon, but also came under fire and consequently withdrew 
down the ridge and reported to Company Headquarters. He was 
told to consolidate, and while he was doing so, 15 Platoon came 
down the ridge to the vicinity of his position. Crawshaw's men 
had been counter-attacked by the enemy with grenades and automatic weapons and had beaten off the attack, but with the loss 
of two men killed and five wounded. He then gave orders for the 
withdrawal, in the course of which three more men were killed and 
one wounded. The two platoons held their positions below Colle 
de Luca for the rest of the day.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Some of the opposition encountered by C Company had come 
from spandau posts on <name key="name-004316" type="place">Monte Camurcina</name><!-- Camurcina, Monte -->, Point 781 (between Monte 
Camurcina and <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte -->) and <name key="name-018058" type="place">Poggio Altoviti</name><!-- Altoviti, Poggio --> (to the 
south-east). C Company estimated there was a company of the 
enemy on Colle de Luca, and reported three machine guns in the 
saddle between the twin peaks. Lieutenant-Colonel Hutchens decided 
that A Company should relieve C Company and capture both peaks 
of <name key="name-004316" type="place">Monte Camurcina</name><!-- Camurcina, Monte -->. That night A Company advanced about the 
same time as 25 Battalion made its attack on <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte -->.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c3-3-4" type="section">
            <head>(iv)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The plan to break through the German defences at <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> was 
for <name key="name-018114" type="organisation">1 Guards</name> Brigade of 6 British Armoured Division, supported 
by the tanks of 17/21 Lancers, to capture the high ground at the 
head of the <name key="name-015655" type="place">Chiana valley</name>, south-west of the town, after which 
26 Armoured Brigade was to pass through into the <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> plain 
and capture crossings over the <name key="name-032822" type="place">Arno River</name>. Concurrently with the 
first phase of this attack, <name key="name-002243" type="organisation">6 NZ Infantry Brigade</name> was to clear Monte 
<name key="name-001028" type="place">Lignano</name> and protect the right flank of the Guards Brigade.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The orders for 6 Brigade's part in the attack stated that 25 
Battalion, with one platoon of 2 MG Company and two troops 
of 17/21 Lancers under command, was to capture <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte --> 
(Point 838) and then Point 650, about 1200 yards north-west 
of the summit of <name key="name-001028" type="place">Lignano</name>. The three New Zealand field regiments, 
which were located in the <name key="name-003287" type="place">Castiglion Fiorentino</name> area, were to support the attack by firing concentrations on the two objectives and 
other targets. A British medium battery also was to support the 
attack. The 4.2-inch mortars were to put down timed concentrations 
along a line east of <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte --> and in the area of II Palazzo,
<pb xml:id="n107" n="107"/>
north-east of the feature. After the capture of <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte --> 
6 Brigade was to reorganise on the high ground running from 
<name key="name-018724" type="place">Poggio Spino</name><!-- Spino, Poggio --> to <name key="name-004316" type="place">Monte Camurcina</name><!-- Camurcina, Monte --> and <name key="name-001028" type="place">Lignano</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">‘It was recognised that the precipitous nature of the country 
made the task of the artillery very difficult….’<note xml:id="fn1-107" n="1"><p>Sir Edward Puttick, <hi rend="i">25 Battalion</hi>, p. 451.</p></note> The field regiments 
were warned that care was to be taken in the computation of correct 
angles of sight for individual guns during the fire plan.</p>
            <p rend="indent">There was a thunderstorm about midnight. The artillery bombardment on the New Zealand front and in support of the Guards 
Brigade's attack on the left opened at 1 a.m. on the 15th, and 
25 Battalion's advance began 40 minutes later. A and C Companies 
had orders to capture <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte -->, and D Company to take 
Point 783, 500 yards to the north-west, and then clear the ridge 
running 700 yards westward to Point 650; B Company was to 
occupy the positions vacated by C Company on the southern slopes 
of <name key="name-001028" type="place">Lignano</name>. C Company moved off first, followed at 10-minute 
intervals by A and D Companies.</p>
            <p rend="indent">All three companies followed the same route, up a fairly narrow 
ridge. ‘The terrain was such that the start line could only be 
reached by scrambling on hands and knees in single file,’ a member 
of 15 Platoon said later.<note xml:id="fn2-107" n="2"><p>Eye-witness account by <name key="name-014559" type="person">Pte J. M. Shinnick</name><!-- Shinnick, Pte J. M. --> recorded in <date when="1944-09">September 1944</date>.</p></note> C Company was held up some distance 
from the summit by shellfire which was believed to be from the 
supporting artillery, but it deployed and moved on when the 
barrage lifted at 2 a.m. ‘We … commenced to move forward up 
the steep face of the main feature. It was terribly rocky and often 
it was a case of helping one another over the obstacles…. First 
opposition was from a Jerry fox-hole, but we silenced it and pressed 
on over the rocky terrain, until we encountered the next opposition. 
Another Jerry strongpoint was left in silence…. We made the 
crest on which was a very badly shattered building and we occupied 
it…. Prisoners were now being taken…. We wirelessed back 
that the position had been taken and to lift the barrage, but it 
continued to whittle away at what poor protection we had….’<note xml:id="fn3-107" n="3"><p>Ibid.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">A Company encountered very little opposition on the way to 
the summit. Two or three spandau posts were silenced. Some mines 
with trip wires attached caused no casualties because the wires 
were too slack to explode them. D Company passed through on 
the way to its more distant objective, where it overcame a more 
stubborn resistance than the enemy had offered on <name key="name-001028" type="place">Lignano</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">In case the enemy should counter-attack, Colonel Norman at 
4.45 a.m. asked for the tanks of 17/21 Lancers to come up and 
support the forward companies. The difficult going prevented them
<pb xml:id="n108" n="108"/>
from getting close to the high ground held by the infantry, but 
they took up a position where they could deal with an enemy 
attack. By daybreak 25 Battalion was firmly established, with 
A Company on the summit of <name key="name-001028" type="place">Lignano</name>, C a little to the south-east, 
D holding the line of the ridge from Point 783 to Point 650, and 
B in reserve on the southern slope of <name key="name-001028" type="place">Lignano</name>. The battalion's 
casualties on 15 July were 12 dead and 27 wounded; it had killed 
an estimated 20 of the enemy and taken 19 prisoners, most of whom 
were from <hi rend="i">115 Panzer Grenadier Regiment</hi>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">‘The only serious trouble encountered in the attack by 25 Battalion 
was the shellfire reported on many occasions, and from several 
sources, as coming from the supporting artillery.’<note xml:id="fn1-108" n="1"><p><hi rend="i">25 Battalion</hi>, p. 459.</p></note> A report from 
the battalion gives 14 instances on 15 July of the shelling of A, 
C and D Companies by the supporting guns, which caused 16 
casualties. On six occasions, from 2.25 a.m. to 3.25 a.m., the shells 
fell on the summit of <name key="name-001028" type="place">Lignano</name>, which was the target for concentrations timed to end at 2 a.m. There should have been no 
fire after that hour on the peak, but despite the battalion's attempts 
to rectify this, the shells continued to fall there.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The guns believed to be responsible were reported to be on a 
bearing of 155 degrees, which passed through the area occupied 
by the supporting artillery and, if projected beyond the summit 
of <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte -->, ran through one of the artillery target areas 
750 yards north-west of the peak. It appears, therefore, that either 
the guns firing the concentrations on <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte --> failed to 
lift at 2 a.m. as they should have done, or those that were to have 
fired concentrations on targets 750 yards beyond <name key="name-001028" type="place">Lignano</name> shelled 
that peak instead. Nevertheless, the bearing cited by 25 Battalion 
as the source of the shelling, if extended in the opposite direction, 
passed through the site of a German battery just west of <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>. 
It is quite possible, therefore, that this battery or some other German 
long-range guns were responsible for at least some if not all of the 
damaging fire while the attack was in progress. ‘The German 
artillery had the area well surveyed…. and [was] easily able to 
bring down fire on the ground over which the New Zealanders 
attacked.’<note xml:id="fn2-108" n="2"><p><name key="name-018520" type="person">W. E. Murphy</name><!-- Murphy, W. E. -->, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-110051" type="work">2nd New Zealand Divisional Artillery</name></hi>, p. 612.</p></note></p>
            <p rend="indent">The Guards Brigade, attacking at the same time as 25 Battalion, 
met stubborn resistance along the lower north-western slopes of 
<name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte -->. A battalion of the Grenadier Guards captured 
Stoppiace, less than half a mile from Point 650, after a short fight, 
but a company directed to Point 575 (north-east of Stoppiace) was 
counter-attacked and forced back 300 yards from the crest, and a
<pb xml:id="n109" n="109"/>
squadron of 17/21 Lancers which went to the company's assistance 
at dawn was engaged by anti-tank guns. Later in the morning a 
battalion of the <name key="name-000695" type="organisation">Coldstream Guards</name> captured Point 575, but a 
company which reached a hill farther to the north-west in the 
afternoon was immediately counter-attacked and forced to withdraw. The Coldstream Guards attacked again and recaptured the 
hill. The enemy made no further attempt to recover it.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c3-3-5" type="section">
            <head>(v)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The loss of <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte -->, the dominant peak in the <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> 
defence system, meant that the Germans would have to withdraw. 
<hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> reported to <hi rend="i">Army Group C</hi> during the morning of 
15 July that ‘we have lost M. <name key="name-001028" type="place">Lignano</name>. From there the enemy 
has a view of <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>. Therefore we cannot remain there much 
longer…. A counter attack would be very costly and is out of 
the question….’ Field Marshal Kesselring agreed that ‘with 
M. <name key="name-001028" type="place">Lignano</name> in the hands of the enemy we must withdraw.’<note xml:id="fn1-109" n="1"><p>War diary, <hi rend="i"><name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi>.</p></note> Permission was given for <hi rend="i">76 Panzer Corps</hi> to make a delaying withdrawal, lasting two days, to the <name key="name-032822" type="place">Arno River</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Although the Germans had been compelled to yield Monte 
<name key="name-001028" type="place">Lignano</name>, they still held <name key="name-004316" type="place">Monte Camurcina</name><!-- Camurcina, Monte --> and other points on 
the high ground in the New Zealand sector. The previous evening 
(14 July) Hutchens had ordered A Company, 24 Battalion, to 
relieve C Company on the slopes of Colle de Luca and take first 
that peak and then the other peak of Camurcina. A Company had 
moved up during the night and passed through C Company, but 
had been brought to a halt by machine-gun fire at the locality where 
C Company had been engaged on the morning of the 14th. A Company attempted no further action on the 15th. Much enemy activity 
was observed on Colle de Luca in the afternoon and, at the company's request, the artillery fired on the peak.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Less than a mile south-east of Colle de Luca an eight-man 
patrol from B Company of 26 Battalion (which was occupying 
<name key="name-018223" type="place">Poggio Cavadenti</name><!-- Cavadenti, Poggio --> with two platoons) clashed with Germans on 
<name key="name-018058" type="place">Poggio Altoviti</name><!-- Altoviti, Poggio -->. The patrol set out just before dawn and, on 
reaching the crest of Altoviti, its leader (Corporal Brick<note xml:id="fn2-109" n="2"><p><name key="name-015165" type="person">Lt W. Brick</name><!-- Brick, Lt W. -->, MM; <name key="name-120109" type="place">Putaruru</name>; born <name key="name-021115" type="place">Ashburton</name>, <date when="1921-09-20">20 Sep 1921</date>; clerk; wounded <date when="1943-12-24">24 Dec 1943</date>.</p></note>) and 
another man tripped over a spandau post. Brick opened fire before 
the enemy gunners recovered from their surprise. One German 
was killed and two others wounded and taken prisoner, and 
although other spandaus in the vicinity began firing, Brick and 
his men, driving their prisoners before them, raced back across
<pb xml:id="n110" n="110"/>
open ground to <name key="name-018223" type="place">Poggio Cavadenti</name><!-- Cavadenti, Poggio -->, which they reached without 
casualties.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Brigadier Burrows decided to stage an attack on the remaining 
features in the New Zealand sector believed to be still in enemy 
hands, and gave orders in the afternoon of the 15th for an attack 
which was to begin at 2 a.m. next day: 26 Battalion on the right 
was to capture <name key="name-018058" type="place">Poggio Altoviti</name><!-- Altoviti, Poggio -->, and 24 Battalion on the left was 
to take Colle de Luca and the main peak of <name key="name-004316" type="place">Monte Camurcina</name><!-- Camurcina, Monte -->. 
The 23rd Battalion, having passed temporarily to 6 Brigade's 
command, was to be in reserve.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The three field regiments were to support this attack with a series 
of concentrations on the objectives and other targets. The 4.2-inch 
mortars also were to give support by firing on Point 812 (north 
of Colle de Luca) and at dawn were to carry out observed bombardments of the valleys north of the objectives.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The artillery opened fire on <name key="name-018058" type="place">Poggio Altoviti</name><!-- Altoviti, Poggio --> at the appointed 
time (2 a.m.). B Company of 26 Battalion, led by 7 Platoon 
(attached from A Company), advanced to the peak and found 
it deserted. Soon afterwards the company came under what was 
believed to be 25-pounder fire. ‘Frantic messages were relayed back 
to the gunners and the firing soon ceased, but not before two men 
had been killed and two wounded.’<note xml:id="fn1-110" n="1"><p><hi rend="i">26 Battalion</hi>, p. 414.</p></note> It is again possible that the 
German artillery, which was well placed to fire on this peak, may 
have been responsible. The enemy could have judged from the 
New Zealand shelling how the attack was progressing and where 
to place his fire to best advantage.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Before the bombardment began A Company, 24 Battalion, withdrew 400 yards from Colle de Luca, and half an hour after the 
guns opened fire, moved forward again unopposed. D Company 
passed through and found Camurcina deserted. The two companies 
were ordered to send out patrols at daybreak to search for any 
enemy who might be lying low. Supplies and equipment, including 
machine guns, were taken up to <name key="name-004316" type="place">Monte Camurcina</name><!-- Camurcina, Monte --> by a mule team. 
A patrol from A Company made contact with 25 Battalion on Monte 
<name key="name-001028" type="place">Lignano</name>, and also took two prisoners. Mines and several enemy 
dead were found.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c3-3-6" type="section">
            <head>(vi)</head>
            <p rend="indent">While 6 Brigade was driving the enemy off <name key="name-004320" type="place">Monte Lignano</name><!-- Lignano, Monte --> and 
the adjacent peaks, a column consisting of B Squadron of Divisional 
Cavalry, two troops of C Squadron, <name key="name-002001" type="organisation">18 Armoured Regiment</name>, and 
D Company of 26 Battalion was making its way through the hills
<pb xml:id="n111" n="111"/>
to the south-east, along a narrow winding road which linked 
<name key="name-003287" type="place">Castiglion Fiorentino</name> on Route 71 with Palazzo del Pero on Route 73 
five miles from <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The column made slow progress on 14 July, being delayed at 
several places by mines and demolitions, and was halted in the 
afternoon by a large crater at the junction of a side road which 
led round the northern face of <name key="name-018724" type="place">Poggio Spino</name><!-- Spino, Poggio --> (the peak occupied 
by C Company, 26 Battalion, that afternoon), about two miles from 
Palazzo del Pero. Enemy shell and mortar fire prevented the 
sappers of 8 Field Company from repairing the road, and as the 
shelling had not stopped next morning (the 15th), it was decided 
to bulldoze a bypass, which was completed before midday. An 
armoured car patrol then advanced without opposition to the road 
junction at Palazzo del Pero, where it found more mines and 
demolitions and came under fire from enemy guns. The tanks, which 
also moved to Palazzo del Pero, engaged with harassing fire small 
distant parties of the enemy, who appeared to be pulling back 
through the hills.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Meanwhile troops of 4 Indian Division, of <name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name>, which 
planned to cross Route 73 east of <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> and capture the Alpe 
di Poti, the high ground dominating the east and north-east of 
the town, came through the mountains south-east of Palazzo del 
Pero, and early on 16 July—when C Squadron's tanks had just 
started off along Route 73—the New Zealanders were recalled from 
what was now <name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name>' sphere of operations.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c3-3-7" type="section">
            <head>(vii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The enemy had broken contact on the New Zealand front; he 
had also gone from 6 Armoured Division's sector, on the left, where 
a battalion of the <name key="name-015595" type="organisation">Welsh Guards</name> moved unopposed on to the 
Agazzi hills, across the highway leading to <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>. The 26th 
Armoured Brigade drove through the gap in the hills, occupied 
the town and crossed the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The occupation of <name key="name-004316" type="place">Monte Camurcina</name><!-- Camurcina, Monte --> and <name key="name-018058" type="place">Poggio Altoviti</name><!-- Altoviti, Poggio --> had 
ended the New Zealand Division's part in the battle. The Division 
went into reserve, and orders were given for the withdrawal of 
6 Brigade. Equipment was loaded on mules and the various companies came down from the high ground to the road, where they 
were picked up by the transport which took them back to the 
brigade's B echelon area, west of <name key="name-000777" type="place">Cortona</name> in the <name key="name-015655" type="place">Chiana valley</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The New Zealand casualties in the battle for <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> totalled 116, 
including 37 killed or died of wounds; 66 of these (22 killed and 
44 wounded) were incurred by 25 Battalion.</p>
            <pb xml:id="n112" n="112"/>
            <p rend="indent">Immediately after 6 Brigade's return <name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> held a 
conference of formation and unit commanders to announce the 
<name key="name-022826" type="organisation">New Zealand Government</name>'s policy on furlough. Already most of 
the men who had left New Zealand with the First, Second and 
Third Echelons had been granted furlough; the Ruapehu draft of 
over 6000 had left <name key="name-002106" type="place">Egypt</name> for New Zealand in <date when="1943-06">June 1943</date>, and the 
Wakatipu draft of over 2500 in <date when="1944-01">January 1944</date>. But the 4th Reinforcements, who included men who had fought in <name key="name-002294" type="place">Greece</name>, <name key="name-003325" type="place">Crete</name> 
and North Africa, were still serving with the <name key="name-004368" type="organisation">2 NZEF</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The GOC issued a special order on 17 July stating that replacements were being sent from New Zealand to relieve the 4th 
Reinforcements, a proportion of whom would be withdrawn forthwith and the remainder later in the year after the arrival of the 
replacements. The first group, numbering 1500, was to include 
all the married men of the <name key="name-004615" type="organisation">4th Reinforcements</name> and a proportion 
of the single men selected by ballot; and also officers of the first 
three echelons who had not yet had furlough (except a few in key 
positions) but no officers of the <name key="name-004615" type="organisation">4th Reinforcements</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Celebration parties for those who were going—and to drown 
the sorrows of those who were not—were staged before the departure of the Taupo draft on 20 July. Several weeks later, when the 
GOC found it necessary to draw the attention of formation commanders to breaches of discipline, he listed as one example of 
‘unrestricted consumption of intoxicating liquor’ the occasion when 
‘troops from certain units turned up at the parade of 4th Reinforcements in a hopelessly drunken condition, and had to be kept off 
the parade ground. Numerous men of this draft were in possession 
of large quantities of liquor which was taken on the trucks with 
them.’</p>
          </div>
        </div>
      </div>
      <pb xml:id="n113" n="113"/>
      <div xml:id="c4" type="chapter">
        <head>CHAPTER 4<lb/>
The Advance to <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name></head>
        <div xml:id="c4-1" type="section">
          <head>I: <hi rend="i">A Change in Plan</hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c4-1-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p>THE capture of <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> by 13 Corps on 16 July was followed 
by other successes: <name key="name-006705" type="organisation">2 Polish Corps</name> broke through to <name key="name-006149" type="place">Ancona</name> on 
the Adriatic coast on the 18th and 4 United States Corps entered 
<name key="name-018459" type="place">Leghorn</name> on the Ligurian coast next day. These advances gave the 
Allied armies possession of two vital ports of supply—both of 
which had to be cleared of extensive demolitions before they could 
be used—and in <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> an administrative base for the planned 
offensive against the <name key="name-000901" type="place">Gothic Line</name>. The next objective was <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>, 
which was wanted as an operational base for such an offensive.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Thirteenth Corps' sector offered the easiest terrain for an advance 
to <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>—north-westwards from <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> down the valley of the 
<name key="name-032822" type="place">Arno River</name>. This valley, however, was dominated from the east by 
the rugged and almost unroaded <name key="name-018636" type="place">Pratomagno massif</name> and from the 
west by the comparatively gentle ridges of the Monti del Chianti. 
The corps advanced on a front of three divisions, with 6 British 
Armoured Division in the <name key="name-018066" type="place">Arno valley</name>, 6 South African Armoured 
Division on the western side of the Chianti mountains, and 
4 British Infantry Division keeping contact between them. It soon 
became apparent that the enemy was determined to resist strongly 
in the <name key="name-018066" type="place">Arno valley</name>, where he had concentrated some of his best 
troops.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The widening of <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name>'s front, when the French Expeditionary Corps of <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> departed to prepare for the <hi rend="sc">anvil</hi> 
expedition, gave another possible approach to <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>: west of 
the Chianti mountains. Thirteenth Corps, extending westwards, took 
over the French Corps' sector on <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name>'s right flank, astride 
Route 2, which led northwards from <name key="name-001335" type="place">Siena</name> through <name key="name-018622" type="place">Poggibonsi</name>
<pb xml:id="n114" n="114"/>
(captured by the French on 14 July) and <name key="name-001296" type="place">San Casciano</name> to the city. 
It was a region of rolling hills and many secondary roads and 
tracks, and according to Intelligence reports and the experiences of 
the French, was not as strongly defended as the <name key="name-018066" type="place">Arno valley</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">To take advantage of the expected lighter resistance in this 
sector, therefore, General Kirkman moved the weight of 13 Corps' 
attack westward. On the corps' right flank 6 Armoured Division 
was to continue its thrust down the eastern side of the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name> 
valley and 4 Division was to push down the western side of the 
lower slopes of the Chianti mountains; these two divisions were to 
contain the enemy facing them, maintain constant pressure and 
be prepared to take advantage of any opportunities. The 6th South 
African Armoured Division, which earlier had the subsidiary role of 
making down the valley of the River Greve (a tributary of the 
<name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name>), an outflanking move to assist the attack down the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name>, 
was now to take part in the major assault, with the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name> west 
of <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name> for its objective. After the New Zealand Division and 
<name key="name-006524" type="organisation">8 Indian Division</name> had relieved the <name key="name-006399" type="organisation">French Expeditionary Corps</name>, 
the New Zealanders were to share with the South Africans in this 
assault, and the Indians were to conform with the advance and 
cover the left flank.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The New Zealand Division was to relieve 2 Moroccan Division 
and pass through the leading troops as early as possible after 
dawn on 22 July; it was intended to thrust northwards from 
<name key="name-012268" type="place">Castellina</name> in Chianti (east of <name key="name-018622" type="place">Poggibonsi</name>), cut across Route 2 by 
<name key="name-001296" type="place">San Casciano</name> and occupy the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name> crossings at <name key="name-001336" type="place">Signa</name>, six or seven 
miles west of <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>. The Division's sector was only about three 
miles wide; it led north-north-westwards and included the secondary 
road running in that direction from <name key="name-012268" type="place">Castellina</name>, a short stretch of 
Route 2 and a network of minor roads and tracks beyond San 
Casciano.</p>
            <p rend="indent">In instructions issued on 21 July to the five divisions of 13 Corps 
General Kirkman directed that every effort should be made, with 
the help of Italian partisans where available, to secure bridges 
intact over the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name>, form bridgeheads north of the river, and 
even take advantage of any opportunity given by the enemy's 
weaknesses or disorganisation to penetrate the <name key="name-000901" type="place">Gothic Line</name>. He 
thought it more likely, however, that the enemy would withdraw 
in orderly bounds and be found firmly deployed in prepared defences 
in the <name key="name-000901" type="place">Gothic Line</name>. The corps commander also said that it was not 
his intention to become involved in serious street fighting in 
<name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>, but to bypass the city if necessary. <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name> was not to be 
shelled without sanction from Corps Headquarters.</p>
          </div>
          <pb xml:id="n115" n="115"/>
          <div xml:id="c4-1-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">General Kirkman informed <name key="name-207994" type="person">General Freyberg</name> in the afternoon 
of 20 July that the New Zealand Division would be called on for 
the assault on <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>. Orders were given and preparations made 
for the move of the Division's 4855 vehicles to <name key="name-012268" type="place">Castellina</name>, a distance 
of about 60 miles. The Division was divided into 14 convoys which, 
with the exception of 150 tracked vehicles of 4 Armoured Brigade, 
went by a route from <name key="name-003287" type="place">Castiglion Fiorentino</name> past <name key="name-001335" type="place">Siena</name> to <name key="name-012268" type="place">Castellina</name>; 
the tracked vehicles' route was from <name key="name-015648" type="place">Castiglione</name> del Lago past 
Sinalunga and <name key="name-001335" type="place">Siena</name>. The first convoys left on 21 July and the 
last two days later; they completed the journey with few mishaps. 
The usual security precautions were taken of not displaying New 
Zealand badges, titles and fernleaf signs, and wireless silence was 
enforced.</p>
            <p rend="indent">It was mid-summer. During the journey a man who had served 
in North Africa declared that ‘never before in all my life have I 
travelled over such a dusty road. The endless stream of vehicles had 
ground the surface into a light feathery dust which was six inches 
deep in places. There was little wind, and although the road wound 
up and down over broken hills and was only visible at scattered 
points, its whole length could be traced by the pall of dust hanging 
over it. Vehicles and occupants were covered with a chalky grey 
powder which gave them a ghastly unnatural appearance. Occasionally we had to drop to crawling speed because the swirling clouds 
limited visibility to the end of the bonnet. The route took us through 
the foothills of the Chianti mountains which were thickly wooded 
at first, later becoming barren and wind eroded as we made 
towards <name key="name-001335" type="place">Siena</name>.’ The convoys drove round the high, massive brick 
wall of the town, ‘but over the top we could see several domes 
and spires and some large buildings. A little further on we turned 
off the main route … down a side road to our new bivvy area, 
on the estate of some Italian count….</p>
            <p rend="indent">‘We have the trucks parked along a line of white mulberries 
bordering a lucerne paddock in the characteristic setting of wheat 
and maize patches crisscrossed by grapevines supported on topped 
maples…. A very striking thousand yard avenue of upright 
Italian cypresses runs from the main gates up to the residence…. 
The long line of sombre dark green spires forms a striking contrast 
with the yellow brown background of rolling hills. The final two 
hundred yards leading to the house is flanked on either side by 
groves of fine old ashes, beeches and maritime pines…. The 
place has been very pretty but is now in a state of neglect.’<note xml:id="fn1-115" n="1"><p>Diary, B. C. H. Moss.</p></note></p>
          </div>
          <pb xml:id="n116" n="116"/>
          <div xml:id="c4-1-3" type="section">
            <head>(iii)</head>
            <p rend="indent"><name key="name-006644" type="place">Divisional Headquarters</name> issued an operation order in the evening 
of the 21st which said the intention was to advance and capture 
crossings over the River Arno at <name key="name-001336" type="place">Signa</name>. Fifth Brigade was to 
relieve 2 Moroccan Division and then advance against the enemy 
as early as possible next day. The remainder of the Division was 
to remain south of <name key="name-012268" type="place">Castellina</name> on three hours' notice until called 
forward. Three Royal Artillery regiments came under the Division's 
command—70 and 75 Medium Regiments and 142 Army Field 
Regiment<note xml:id="fn1-116" n="1"><p>142nd Royal Devon Yeomanry Field Regiment, with 105–mm. howitzers on tank chassis.</p></note> (self-propelled)—and in support was B Flight of 655 
Air Observation Post Squadron. The Division also took over 
temporarily some armoured and artillery units which had been 
supporting 2 Moroccan Division.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On the night of 21–22 July 5 Brigade relieved two battalions 
of 2 Moroccan Division five or six miles north-west of <name key="name-012268" type="place">Castellina</name>, 
with 23 Battalion (Lieutenant-Colonel <name key="name-018748" type="person">Thomas</name><note xml:id="fn2-116" n="2"><p><name key="name-018748" type="person">Brig W. B. Thomas</name><!-- Thomas, Brig W. B. -->, DSO, MC and bar, m.i.d., Silver Star (US); <name key="name-008556" type="place">Germany</name>; born <name key="name-005626" type="place">Nelson</name>,
<date when="1918-06-29">29 Jun 1918</date>; bank officer; CO 23 Bn 1944–45; 22 Bn (<name key="name-002006" type="place">Japan</name>) Oct 1945–Nov 1946;
wounded and p.w. <date when="1941-05-25">25 May 1941</date>; escaped <date when="1941-11">Nov 1941</date>; returned to unit <date when="1942-05">May 1942</date>; twice
wounded; British Army, <date when="1947">1947</date>–; comd <name key="name-018200" type="organisation">12 Inf Bde</name>, <name key="name-008556" type="place">Germany</name>, <date when="1964">1964</date>–.</p></note>) on the right at 
<name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name> in Poggio and 28 (Maori) Battalion (Lieutenant- 
Colonel Young) on the left between the <name key="name-012268" type="place">Castellina</name> – <name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name> 
road and Route 2. Each battalion was supported by two platoons 
of medium tanks and one of light tanks from 757 US Tank 
Battalion; in addition, 23 Battalion had two troops of A Squadron, 
Divisional Cavalry, and a platoon of 7 Field Company under 
command, and <name key="name-022846" type="organisation">28 Battalion</name> had one troop of A Squadron, 
Divisional Cavalry, a platoon of 7 Field Company and 5 Brigade 
Heavy Mortar Platoon. The 5th Field Regiment was deployed two 
and a half miles north-west of <name key="name-012268" type="place">Castellina</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The 23rd Battalion completed the relief of 2 Battalion, 8 Moroccan Infantry Regiment, before midnight and sent out patrols, one 
of which met opposition on a ridge (Point 337) a mile and a half 
to the north along the road to <name key="name-012671" type="place">Sambuca</name>. The Maori Battalion, 
whose sector was farther from the road, took until dawn to complete the relief of 2 Battalion, 5 Moroccan Infantry Regiment.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The codeword (<hi rend="sc">skegness</hi>) for the start of 5 Brigade's advance 
was circulated by <name key="name-006644" type="place">Divisional Headquarters</name> by a signal timed 
1.30 p.m. on 22 July; this allowed units operationally engaged to 
use their wireless sets, and also permitted the display again of 
New Zealand titles, badges and fernleaf signs.</p>
          </div>
          <pb xml:id="n117" n="117"/>
          <div xml:id="c4-1-4" type="section">
            <head>(iv)</head>
            <p rend="indent">When the New Zealand Division went into the line for the assault 
on <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>, the <name key="name-004564" type="organisation">Polish Corps</name>, in the Adriatic coastal sector, had 
crossed the Esino River, between <name key="name-006149" type="place">Ancona</name> and <name key="name-016230" type="place">Senigallia</name>, and was 
steadily pushing the enemy back towards the main defences of the 
<name key="name-000901" type="place">Gothic Line</name>, the eastern flank of which rested on <name key="name-004538" type="place">Pesaro</name>. In 
<name key="name-000668" type="organisation">10 Corps</name>' mountainous sector armoured car patrols were operating 
on a wide front east of <name key="name-024249" type="organisation">10 Indian Division</name>, which was working 
its way northward along the <name key="name-018751" type="place">Tiber valley</name>, and 4 Indian Division 
was in the rugged country north-east of <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">On 13 Corps' right flank 6 British Armoured Division, advancing 
in a north-westerly direction from <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> to clear the eastern side 
of the <name key="name-018066" type="place">Arno valley</name>, had not progressed far beyond the southern end 
of the <name key="name-018636" type="place">Pratomagno massif</name>, and <name key="name-032838" type="organisation">4 British Division</name>, on a narrow 
front extending into the foothills of the Monti del Chianti, was 
less than half-way along Route 69 (the road from <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> to 
<name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>).<note xml:id="fn1-117" n="1"><p>Route 69 joins Route 67 at Pontassieve, about eight miles east of <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>.</p></note> Farther west 6 South African Armoured Division was 
clearing the defences on the main features of the Monti del 
Chianti to permit an advance along a secondary road to Greve, 
south of <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>. Thirteenth Corps' front continued westward 
through the New Zealand Division's sector to where 8 Indian 
Division relieved 4 Moroccan Mountain Division, which had reached 
a line stretching north-westwards along the Elsa River to Castelfiorentino. The command of the part of the front taken over by the 
New Zealand and Indian divisions passed from the French 
Expeditionary Corps of <name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name> to 13 Corps of <name key="name-018099" type="organisation">Eighth Army</name> at 
midnight on 22–23 July.</p>
            <p rend="indent"><name key="name-018769" type="organisation">Fifth Army</name>, reduced to a front of four divisions to release troops 
for the landing in southern <name key="name-008009" type="place">France</name>, penetrated over Route 67 
(the road from <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name> to <name key="name-006702" type="place">Pisa</name> and <name key="name-018459" type="place">Leghorn</name>), entered the southern 
part of <name key="name-006702" type="place">Pisa</name> on 23 July, and began to regroup along the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name>.</p>
          </div>
          <div xml:id="c4-1-5" type="section">
            <head>(v)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The enemy held a line across the peninsula south of the Gothic 
Line defences, with <hi rend="i"><name key="name-018315" type="organisation">Fourteenth Army</name></hi> (comprising <hi rend="i">75 Corps, 
14 Panzer Corps</hi> and <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Corps</hi>) on the right (west) and 
<hi rend="i">Tenth Army (76 Panzer Corps</hi> and <hi rend="i">51 Mountain Corps)</hi> on the 
left. <hi rend="i">Seventy-fifth Corps</hi> disposed one division around the mouth 
of the <name key="name-032822" type="place">Arno River</name> and on the Ligurian coast to the north, and 
another in the <name key="name-006702" type="place">Pisa</name> area; <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206560" type="work">14 Panzer Corps</name></hi> was along the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name> to 
the confluence with its tributary, the Elsa, with two divisions <choice><orig>for-
<pb xml:id="n118" n="118"/>
ward</orig><reg>forward</reg></choice> and one in reserve; from Castelfiorentino on the Elsa eastwards 
across the hills south of <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name> to the Monti del Chianti—the part 
of the front to which the New Zealand and Indian divisions were 
transferred, alongside the South Africans—was <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Corps</hi> 
with three divisions, <hi rend="i">29 Panzer Grenadier</hi> on the right, <hi rend="i">4 Parachute</hi> 
in the centre and <hi rend="i">356 Infantry</hi> on the left.</p>
            <p rend="indent">East of the boundary between the two German armies, <hi rend="i">76 Panzer 
Corps</hi> held the line from the Monti del Chianti across the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name> 
valley between <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name> and <name key="name-000598" type="place">Arezzo</name> with seven divisions, one of 
which was in the process of relieving the <hi rend="i">Hermann Goering 
Division</hi>, destined to leave the Italian front, and another (<hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi>) was to be withdrawn to <name key="name-001263" type="place">Rimini</name> on the Adriatic 
coast. The line from the <name key="name-018751" type="place">Tiber valley</name> through the mountains to the 
coast was held by <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206737" type="work">51 Mountain Corps</name></hi> with four divisions.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The enemy had few reserves behind the front line he could call 
upon if necessary. North of <name key="name-006702" type="place">Pisa</name> two <name key="name-022576" type="organisation">German Air Force</name> divisions 
were being converted into one formation. <name key="name-018723" type="place">Spezia</name>, on the Ligurian 
coast, was garrisoned by a fortress brigade; the coast east and 
west of Genoa was covered by a German division, and another 
was guarding the Franco-Italian frontier with the Italian <hi rend="i">Army 
Liguria. <name key="name-011173" type="organisation">Tenth Army</name></hi> had one division in reserve at <name key="name-009179" type="place">Bologna</name>. 
A Turcoman division of doubtful reliability was watching the 
Adriatic coast south of <name key="name-009664" type="place">Ravenna</name>, and <hi rend="i">1 Parachute Division</hi>, as it 
was withdrawn from the <name key="name-018066" type="place">Arno valley</name>, went into position south of 
<name key="name-001263" type="place">Rimini</name>, in rear of the Adriatic flank of the <name key="name-000901" type="place">Gothic Line</name>. The 
<name key="name-018375" type="organisation">German High Command</name> was still apprehensive of seaborne landings behind the front.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Field Marshal Kesselring knew from experience that the mobility 
of the Allied armies enabled them to attack with little warning 
at widely separated parts of the front. His own <hi rend="i">Army Group C</hi>, on 
the other hand, was handicapped by its lack of transport and the 
continual interruption of communications by the almost unopposed 
Allied bombing, and therefore had difficulty in transferring formations rapidly from one sector to another. To guard against a breakthrough which might cut in behind and encircle part of his forces, 
he had to cover as wide a front as possible and fall back evenly 
across that front. As he could not expect to receive sufficient 
reinforcements for use as a mobile reserve or as a counter-attack 
force, his tactics could be only a step-by-step withdrawal under 
pressure to keep his line intact.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Hitler had given orders to hold the line south of <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name> as 
long as possible. The placing of <hi rend="i">Tenth Army's</hi> main strength across 
the <name key="name-018066" type="place">Arno valley</name> south-east of the city had influenced 13 British 
Corps in its decision to change its line of assault to a sector farther
<figure xml:id="WH2-2ItaP013a"><graphic url="WH2-2ItaP013a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2ItaP013a-g"/><head>The Advance to <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>, 14 July – 4 August 1944</head></figure>
<pb xml:id="n119" n="119"/>
west. <hi rend="i"><name key="name-018315" type="organisation">Fourteenth Army</name></hi> intended to hold the Heinrich-Paula<note xml:id="fn1-119" n="1"><p>The German withdrawal towards the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name> was based on a series of phase lines known by
girls' names, which included Irmgard, Karin, Maedchen, Nora, Olga and Paula. These
were not connected areas of fortified or even dug-in defences, but merely lines of withdrawal marked on the map where the topography seemed to offer advantageous delaying
positions. The <name key="name-018391" type="place">Heinrich Line</name> appears to have been the name given to the line of the
<name key="name-032822" type="place">Arno River</name> from the sea to about the Elsa River confluence; later, when it was extended
eastwards across the north of <name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>, it was referred to as the Heinrich Mountain Line.</p></note> line, 
which ran along the lower <name key="name-032822" type="place">Arno River</name> from the coast to <name key="name-016064" type="place">Montelupo</name> 
and then eastwards through the hills about five miles south of 
<name key="name-000842" type="place">Florence</name>. In <hi rend="i">Army Group's</hi> opinion this line was too close to the 
city, and orders were given, therefore, that a line farther south 
should be reconnoitred and prepared.</p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="c4-2" type="section">
          <head>II: <hi rend="i">The Pesa Valley</hi></head>
          <div xml:id="c4-2-1" type="section">
            <head>(i)</head>
            <p rend="indent">The New Zealand Division was now in the Chianti country, 
famous for its wine, a closely settled region of undulating ridges, 
slopes and gullies, where thickly wooded land alternated with olive 
groves, vineyards, crops of wheat and cereals, and where innumerable stone-built farmhouses and hamlets were interspersed with 
handsome villas. Many of these buildings were to become strongpoints for defence and targets for attack.</p>
            <p rend="indent">This became known as the ‘Tiger country’ because of the many 
German Tiger (Mark VI) 60-ton tanks encountered there. The 
Sherman was considered no match for the Tiger.<note xml:id="fn2-119" n="2"><p>Although twice the size of a Sherman and armed with an 88-mm. gun, the Tiger had its
disadvantages. In <hi rend="i"><name key="name-206809" type="work">Neither Fear Nor Hope</name></hi>, pp. 263–4, <name key="name-203465" type="person">General von Senger</name> says that
‘dozens of these monsters had fallen out of the fighting because even when only slightly
damaged we had no means of dragging them away…. If a Tiger became temporarily
immobile, it could only be towed away by another Tiger. Such targets were very conspicuous to the enemy with his good air and artillery observation and were soon under
fire, which inevitably caused further damage to their propelling mechanism….’</p></note> ‘From the moment 
the Tiger appeared it became a kind of bogey, and the air was full 
of rumours of more and more Tigers lying in wait just ahead; 
just as in the desert every German gun was an “eighty-eight”, so 
here every tracked vehicle heard over in German territory was 
a Tiger. The natural result was that, quite suddenly, the New 
Zealand tanks became more cautious than they had ever been 
before…. The high mutual regard of New Zealand tanks and 
infantry was in danger.’<note xml:id="fn3-119" n="3"><p><hi rend="i"><name key="name-110030" type="work">18 Battalion and Armoured Regiment</name></hi>, p. 521.</p></note> The Chianti country appeared to offer 
no advantages for the attacking armour: it was intersected by 
shallow watercourses and narrow roads which could be obstructed 
by mines and demolitions. Much of the advance would have to be 
made across country, where the tanks would have to grope almost 
blindly among the trees and vines.</p>
          </div>
          <pb xml:id="n120" n="120"/>
          <div xml:id="c4-2-2" type="section">
            <head>(ii)</head>
            <p rend="indent">Fifth Infantry Brigade was to start the New Zealand Division's 
advance towards the <name key="name-120158" type="place">Arno</name>. The intention was that on the right 
23 Battalion was to follow the axis of the secondary road leading 
north-west from <name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name> in Poggio into Route 2, and from 
<name key="name-012671" type="place">Sambuca</name> was to continue on the eastern side of the Pesa River; 
on the left 28 (Maori) Battalion was to take the side road which 
turned off westward just south of <name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name> and swung north-westward to join Route 2 by <name key="name-001381" type="place">Tavarnelle</name> in Val di <name key="name-120161" type="place">Pesa</name>, and was 
to follow Route 2 as far as <name key="name-001362" type="place">Strada</name> and then turn left on to the 
side road which ran north-westwards along the west of the <name key="name-120161" type="place">Pesa</name> 
valley.</p>
            <p rend="indent">The first objective (codename <hi rend="sc">buffalo</hi>) was about three miles 
north of <name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name>, the second (<hi rend="sc">montreal</hi>) another mile and 
a half, and the third (<hi rend="sc">quebec</hi>) a further mile and a half.<note xml:id="fn1-120" n="1"><p>The codenames of subsequent objectives of 5 Bde's advance were <hi rend="sc">savannah, Concord,
douglas, hamilton, vancouver, omaha</hi>.</p></note> These 
were phase lines rather than objectives; they were intended to 
indicate the rate and extent of the advance. Both battalions were 
to keep in contact with the enemy and force him to continue withdrawing; until they met a strong defence needing a set-piece attack, 
they were to conduct their own advances, with Brigade Headquarters co-ordinating times and objectives. Until relieved by 18 NZ 
Armoured Regiment, the tanks of 757 US Tank Battalion were 
to stay in support of 23 and 28 Battalions. Provision was made for 
the field and medium artillery to move forward as required in 
support.</p>
            <p rend="indent">At daybreak on the 22nd troops of 23 Battalion prepared to 
advance against the enemy posts identified by patrols the previous 
night, and the artillery was asked to fire on Point 337, a mile and 
a half beyond <name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name>, and to harass all likely defences on the 
route to <name key="name-012671" type="place">Sambuca</name>. The 5th Field Regiment began firing at 6.20 a.m.</p>
            <p rend="indent">C Company pushed westward along a ridge towards Point 357, 
which a platoon quickly occupied, and took a few prisoners from 
<hi rend="i"><name key="name-000871" type="organisation">4 Parachute Division</name></hi>. B Company had a more difficult task. About 
a mile north of <name key="name-001297" type="place">San Donato</name> a side road led off to the north-west 
towards <name key="name-001126" type="place">Morocco</name> and <name key="name-001381" type="place">Tavarnelle</name>, and near the road fork the 
settlement of <name key="name-018686" type="place">San Martino a Cozzi</name> would have to be occupied before 
the battalion could advance up either the road to <name key="name-012671" type="place">Sambuca</name> or the 
road to <name key="name-001126" type="place">Morocco</name>. Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas therefore ordered 
B Company to capture <name key="name-001306" type="place">San Martino</name>.</p>
            <p rend="indent">Attacking without tank support, B Company's men were caught 
at close range by devastating fire and had to retire when their
<pb xml:id="n121" n="121"/>
<figure xml:id="WH2-2Ita121a"><graphic url="WH2-2Ita121a.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" xml:id="WH2-2Ita121a-g"/><head><hi rend="sc">5 brigade's advance, 22–27 july 1944</hi></head></figure>
ammunition ran low. About midday the company commander (Major 
<name key="name-012802" type="person">Worsnop</name><note xml:id="fn1-121" n="1"><p><name key="name-012802" type="person">Lt-Col J. A. Worsnop</name><!-- Worsnop, Lt-Col J. A. -->, MBE; born Makotuku, <date when="1909-01-31">31 Jan 1909</date>; Regular soldier; <name key="name-002983" type="organisation">1 Army</name>
Tk Bn 1942–43; CO Div Cav, <name 