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Episode
One
A Necessary War
December 1941-December 1942
Airs on Western Reserve Public Media Sunday, Sept. 23 at 8 p.m.
After a haunting overview of the
Second World War, an epoch of killing that engulfed the world
from 1939 to 1945 and cost at least 50 million lives, the
inhabitants of four towns — Mobile, Alabama; Sacramento,
California; Waterbury, Connecticut; and Luverne, Minnesota
— recall their communities on the eve of the conflict.
For them, and for most Americans finally beginning to recover
from the Great Depression, the events overseas seem impossibly
far away. Their tranquil lives are shattered by the shock
of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, and America is thrust
into the greatest cataclysm in history. Along with millions
of other young men, Sid Phillips and Willie Rushton of Mobile,
Ray Leopold of Waterbury and Walter Thompson and Burnett Miller
of Sacramento enter the armed forces and begin to train for
war.
In the Philippines, two Americans
thousands of miles from home, Corporal Glenn Frazier and Sascha
Weinzheimer (who was 8 years old in 1941), are caught up in
the Japanese onslaught there, as American and Filipino forces
retreat onto Bataan while thousands of civilians are rounded
up and imprisoned in Manila.
Meanwhile, back home, 110,000 Japanese
Americans all along the West Coast, including some 7,000 from
Sacramento and the surrounding valley, are forced by the government
to abandon their homes and businesses and are relocated to
inland internment camps. On the East Coast, German U-boats
menace Allied shipping just offshore, sending hundreds of
ships and millions of tons of materiel to the bottom of the
sea. The United States seems utterly unprepared for this kind
of total war. Witnessing all of this is Katharine Phillips
of Mobile, who remembers sightings of U-boats just outside
Mobile Bay, and Al McIntosh, the editor of the Rock County
Star Herald in Luverne, who chronicles the travails of
every family in town.
In June 1942, the Navy manages
an improbable victory over the Japanese at the Battle of Midway.
In August, American land forces, including Sid Phillips of
Mobile, face the vaunted Japanese army for the first time
at Guadalcanal, armed with single shot, bolt-action rifles
and just 10 days worth of ammunition. Abandoned by their fleet
with no support from the sea or the air, the men are strafed
and bombed daily and under constant attack from enemy troops
hidden in the jungle. After six long months, the Americans
finally prevail and, in the process, stop Japan’s expansion
in the Pacific.
At the end of America’s first
year of war, more than 35,000 Americans in uniform have died.
Before the war can end, 10 times that many will lose their
lives.
Episode
Two
When Things Get
Tough
January 1943-December 1943
Airs on Western Reserve Public Media Monday, Sept. 24 at 8 p.m.
By January 1943, Americans have
been at war for more than a year. The Germans, with their
vast war machine, still occupy most of Western Europe, and
the Allies have not yet been able to agree on a plan or a
timetable to dislodge them. For the time being, they will
have to be content to nip at the edges of Hitler’s enormous
domain. American troops, including Charles Mann of Luverne,
are now ashore in North Africa, ready to test themselves for
the first time against the German and Italian armies. At Kasserine
Pass, Erwin Rommel’s seasoned veterans quickly overwhelm
the poorly led and ill-equipped Americans, but in the following
weeks, after George Patton assumes command, the Americans
pull themselves together and begin to beat back the Germans.
In the process, thousands of soldiers learn to disregard the
belief that killing is a sin and come to adopt the more professional
outlook that “killing is a craft,” as reporter
Ernie Pyle explains to the readers back home.
Across the country, in cities such
as Mobile and Waterbury, nearly all manufacturing is converted
to the war effort. Factories run around the clock, and mass
production reaches levels unimaginable a few years earlier.
Along with millions of other women, Emma Belle Petcher of
Mobile enters the industrial work force for the first time,
becoming an airplane inspector while her city struggles to
cope with an overwhelming population explosion.
In Europe, thousands of American
airmen are asked to gamble their lives against preposterous
odds, braving flak and German fighter planes on daylight bombing
missions over enemy territory. All of them, including Earl
Burke of Sacramento, know that each time they return to the
air their chances of surviving the war diminish.
Allied troops invade Sicily and
then southern Italy, where, as they try to move towards Rome,
the weather turns bad and the terrain grows more and more
forbidding — twisting mountain roads, blown bridges
— all under constant German fire. With them is Babe
Ciarlo of Waterbury, whose division loses 3,265 men in 56
days of fighting in Italy — and moves less than 50 miles.
As 1943 comes to a close, Allied
leaders draw up plans for the long-delayed invasion of the
European continent; Hitler put tens of thousands of laborers
to work strengthening his coastal defenses. For the people
of Mobile, Sacramento, Waterbury and Luverne, things are bound
to get tougher still.
Episode
Three
A Deadly Calling
November 1943-June 1944
Airs on Western Reserve Public Media Tuesday, Sept. 25 at 8 p.m.
In fall 1943, after almost two
years of war, the American public is able to see for the first
time the terrible toll the war is taking on its troops when
Life publishes a photograph of the bodies of three
GIs killed in action at Buna. Despite American victories in
the Solomons and New Guinea, the Japanese empire still stretches
4,000 miles, and victory seems a long way off. In November,
on the tiny Pacific atoll of Tarawa, the Marines set out to
prove that any island, no matter how fiercely defended, can
be taken by all-out frontal assault. Back home, the public
is devastated by color newsreel footage of the furious battle,
including the bodies of Marines floating in the surf, and
grows more determined to do whatever is necessary to hasten
the end of the war.
Mobile, Sacramento and Waterbury
have been transformed into booming, overcrowded “war
towns,” and in Mobile — as in scores of other
cities — that transformation leads to confrontation
and ugly racial violence.
African Americans, asked to fight
a war for freedom while serving in the strictly segregated
armed forces, demand equal rights, and the military reluctantly
agrees to some changes. Blacks are allowed, for the first
time in two centuries, to join the Marine Corps, and many,
including John Gray and Willie Rushton of Mobile, sign on.
They are trained for combat, but most are assigned to service
jobs instead. Japanese-American men, originally designated
as “enemy aliens,” are permitted to form a special
segregated unit, the 442nd Regimental Combat Team. In Hawaii
and in the internment camps, thousands sign up, including
Robert Kashiwagi, Susumu Satow and Tim Tokuno of Sacramento.
They are sent to Mississippi for training, where they are
promised they will be treated “as white men.”
In Italy, Allied forces are stalled
in the mountains south of Rome, unable to break through the
German lines at Monte Cassino. In the mud, snow and bitter
cold, the killing goes on all winter and spring as the enemy
manages to fight off repeated Allied attacks. A risky landing
at Anzio ends in utter failure, with the Germans gaining the
high ground and thousands of Allied troops, including Babe
Ciarlo of Waterbury, totally exposed to enemy fire and unable
to advance for months.
In May, Allied soldiers at Cassino
and Anzio finally break through, and on June 4, they liberate
Rome. But in heading towards the city, they fail to capture
the retreating German army, which takes up new positions on
the Adolf Hitler line north of Rome. Meanwhile, the greatest
test for the Allies — the long-delayed invasion of France
— is now just days away.
Episode
Four
Pride of Our Nation
June 1944-August 1944
Airs on Western Reserve Public Media Wednesday, Sept. 26 at 8 p.m.
By June 1944, there are signs on
both sides of the world that the tide of the war is turning.
On June 6, 1944 — D-Day — in the European Theater,
a million and a half Allied troops embark on one of the greatest
invasions in history: the invasion of France. Among them are
Dwain Luce of Mobile, who drops behind enemy lines in a glider;
Quentin Aanenson of Luverne, who flies his first combat mission
over the Normandy coast; and Joseph Vaghi of Waterbury, who
manages to survive the disastrous landing on Omaha Beach where
German resistance nearly decimates the American forces. It
is the bloodiest day in American history since the Civil War,
with nearly 2,500 Americans losing their lives. But the Allies
succeed in tearing a 45-mile gap in Hitler’s vaunted
Atlantic Wall, and by day’s end more than 150,000 men
have landed on French soil. They quickly find themselves bogged
down in the Norman hedgerows, facing German troops determined
to make them pay for every inch of territory they gain. For
months, the Allies must measure their progress in yards, and
they suffer far greater casualties than anyone expected.
In the Pacific, the long climb
from island to island toward the Japanese homeland is well
underway, but the enemy seems increasingly determined to defend
to the death every piece of territory it holds. The Marines,
including Ray Pittman of Mobile, fight the costliest Pacific
battle to date — on the island of Saipan — encountering,
for the first time, Japanese civilians who, like their soldiers,
seem resolved to die for their emperor rather than surrender.
Back at home, while anxiously listening
to the radio, watching newsreels and scanning casualty lists
in the newspapers for definitive information from the battlefront,
Americans do their best to go about their normal lives, but
on doorsteps all across the country, dreaded telegrams from
the War Department begin arriving at a rate inconceivable
just one year earlier.
In late July, Allied forces break
out of the hedgerows in Normandy, and by mid-August, the Germans
are in full retreat out of France. On August 25, after four
years of Nazi occupation, Paris is liberated — and the
end of the war in Europe seems only a few weeks away.
Episode
Five
FUBAR
September 1944-December 1944
Airs on Western Reserve Public Media Sunday, Sept. 30 at 8 p.m.
By September 1944, in Europe at
least, the Allies seem to be moving steadily toward victory.
“Militarily,” General Dwight Eisenhower’s
chief of staff tells the press, “this war is over.”
But in the coming months, on both sides of the world, a generation
of young men will learn a lesson as old as war itself —
that generals make plans, plans go wrong and soldiers die.
On the Western Front, American
and British troops massed on the German border are desperately
short of fuel, having outrun their supply lines. Allied commanders
gamble on a risky scheme to drop thousands of airborne troops,
including Dwain Luce of Mobile and Harry Schmid of Sacramento,
behind enemy lines in Holland, but nothing goes according
to plan, and it becomes painfully clear that the war in Europe
will not end before winter.
Over the next three months, American
soldiers are ordered into some of Germany’s most forbidding
and most fiercely defended terrain. In the Hurtgen Forest,
tens of thousands of GIs, including Tom Galloway of Mobile,
fight an unwinnable battle in which the only victory to be
had is survival. During his missions over Germany, fighter
pilot Quentin Aanenson of Luverne loses so many friends and
sees so much death that he comes close to collapsing from
despair. In the Vosges Mountains, the 442nd Regimental Combat
Team, including Robert Kashiwagi, Susumu Satow and Tim Tokuno
of Sacramento, is assigned to an overly ambitious general
and endures weeks of brutal combat. At the end of October,
they are ordered to break through to a battalion of Texas
soldiers caught behind the lines — no matter the cost.
In the Pacific, General MacArthur
is poised to invade the Philippines at Leyte. Although the
nearby island of Peleliu holds little tactical value for his
campaign, the 1st Marine Division, including Eugene Sledge
and Willie Rushton of Mobile, is ordered to take it anyway.
The battle is expected to last four days, but the fighting
drags on for more than two months in one of the most brutal
and unnecessary campaigns in the Pacific.
In October, with their food supplies
dangerously low, Sascha Weinzheimer of Sacramento and the
other internees at Santo Tomas camp in Manila thrill to the
sight and sound of American carrier-based planes bombing Japanese
ships in the nearby bay, and a few weeks later, American troops
land on the island of Leyte, 350 miles away. In the movie
theaters back home, as Katharine Phillips of Mobile recalls,
Americans cheer the newsreels of General MacArthur “returning.”
But months of bloody fighting lie ahead before the Philippine
Islands — and the people imprisoned on them —
can be liberated.
Episode
Six
The Ghost Front
December 1944-March 1945
Airs on Western Reserve Public Media Monday, Oct. 1 at 8 p.m.
By December 1944, Americans have
become weary of the war their young men have been fighting
for three long years; the stream of newspaper headlines telling
of new losses and telegrams bearing bad news from the War
Department seem endless and unendurable.
In the Pacific, American progress
has been slow and costly, with each island more fiercely defended
than the last. In Europe, no one is prepared for the massive
counterattack Hitler launches on December 16 in the Ardennes
Forest in Belgium and Luxemburg. Tom Galloway of Mobile, Burnett
Miller of Sacramento and Ray Leopold of Waterbury are there,
among the Americans caught up in the biggest battle on the
Western Front — the Battle of the Bulge. Back home,
Katharine Phillips of Mobile and Burt Wilson of Sacramento
are shocked to see newspaper headlines showing the Germans
on the offensive and begin to wonder, “Are we losing
now that we’re this close?”
Meanwhile, at Santo Tomas Camp
in Manila, thousands of internees, including Sascha Weinzheimer
of Sacramento, are now starving, desperately trying to hold
onto life long enough to be liberated.
At Yalta, Allied leaders agree
on a plan to end the war that includes massive bombing raids
aimed at German oil facilities, defense factories, roads,
railways and cities. In March alone, Allied warplanes drop
163,864 tons of bombs on Germany — almost as much as
they have dropped in the preceding three years combined.
In the Pacific, Allied bombers
are ready to batter Japan as well — but first, the air
strip on Iwo Jima, an inhospitable volcanic island halfway
between Allied air bases on Tinian and the Japanese home islands,
needs to be taken. There the Marines, including Ray Pittman
of Mobile, face 21,000 determined Japanese defenders, who,
with no hope of reinforcement or re-supply, have been ordered
to kill as many Americans as possible before being killed
themselves. After almost a month of desperate fighting, the
island is secured, and American bombers are free to begin
their full-fledged air assault on Japan. In the coming months,
Allied bombings will set the cities of Japan ablaze, killing
hundreds of thousands and leaving millions homeless.
By the middle of March 1945, the
end of the war in Europe seems imminent. Hundreds of thousands
of Americans are crossing the Rhine and driving into the heart
of Germany, while the Russians are within 50 miles of Berlin.
Still, back in Luverne, Al McIntosh warns his readers to keep
their heads down and keep working “until there is no
doubt of victory any more” because “lots of our
best boys have been lost in victory drives before.”
Episode
Seven
A World Without
War
March 1945-December 1945
Airs on Western Reserve Public Media Tuesday, Oct. 2 at 8 p.m.
In spring 1945, although the numbers
of dead and wounded have more than doubled since D-Day, the
people of Mobile, Sacramento, Waterbury and Luverne understand
all too well that there will be more bad news from the battlefield
before the war can end. That March, when Americans go to the
movies, President Franklin Roosevelt warns them in a newsreel
that although the Nazis are on the verge of collapse, the
final battle with Japan could stretch on for years.
In the Pacific, Eugene Sledge of
Mobile is once again forced to enter what he calls “the
abyss” in the battle for the island of Okinawa —
the gateway to Japan. Glenn Frazier of Alabama, one of 168,000
Allied prisoners of war still in Japanese hands, celebrates
the arrival of carrier planes overhead, but despairs of ever
getting out of Japan alive.
In mid-April, Americans are shocked
by news bulletins announcing that President Roosevelt is dead;
many do not even know the name of their new president, Harry
Truman. Meanwhile, in Europe, as Allied forces rapidly push
across Germany from the east and west, American and British
troops, including Burnett Miller of Sacramento, Dwain Luce
of Mobile and Ray Leopold of Waterbury, discover for themselves
the true horrors of the Nazis’ industrialized barbarism
— at Buchenwald, Ludwigslust, Dachau, Hadamar, Mauthausen
and hundreds of other concentration camps.
Finally, on May 8, with their country
in ruins and their fuehrer dead by his own hand, the Nazis
surrender. But as Eugene Sledge remembers, to the Marines
and soldiers still fighting in the Pacific, “No one
cared much. Nazi Germany might as well have been on the moon.”
The battle on Okinawa grinds on until June, and when it is
finally over, 92,000 Japanese soldiers, as well as tens of
thousands of Okinawan civilians, have been killed. Okinawa
also is the worst battle of the Pacific for the Americans,
and as they prepare to move on to Japan itself, still more
terrible losses seem inevitable. Allied leaders at Potsdam
set forth the terms under which they will agree to end the
war, but for most of Japan’s rulers, despite the agony
their people are enduring, unconditional surrender still remains
unthinkable.
Then, on August 6, 1945, under
orders from President Truman, an American plane drops a single
atomic bomb on the city of Hiroshima, obliterating 40,000
men, women and children in an instant; 100,000 more die of
burns and radiation within days (another 100,000 will succumb
to radiation poisoning over the next five years). Two days
later, Russia declares war against Japan. On August 9, a second
American atomic bomb destroys the city of Nagasaki, and the
rulers of Japan decide at last to give up — and the
greatest cataclysm in history comes to an end.
In the following months and years,
millions of young men return home — to pick up the pieces
of their lives and to try to learn how to live in a world
without war.
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