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The 119th AAA
Gun Bn. (Mobile) was formed in April 1943 at Camp Hahn, Riverside,
CA, with inductees from the Western United States; California, Washington,
Oregon, Utah, Idaho, etc. The battalion consisted of a Headquarters'
battery, and four gun batteries A, B, C, and D. Each of the gun
batteries had four 90 mm anti-aircraft guns. Our training began
at Camp Hahn, then back and forth to the firing range at Camp Irwin
in the Mojave Desert thirty-five miles out of Barstow towards Death
Valley (115 to 125 degrees in the summer of '43).
As we finalized
our training, we went to various locations in Southern and Central
California. Our last training assignment was Camp Cooke at Lompoc,
which is now Vandenberg Air Force Base. We left from there on March
18 on a troop train for the East Coast. We arrived at Camp Shanks,
NY, where we stayed for about a week getting our final physical
and medical shots. Our battalion was then ferried down the Hudson
River to New York Harbor where we boarded the British ocean liner
the S.S. MAURITANIA. We departed March 31, 1944, crossing the Atlantic
alone, without a convoy. We arrived in Liverpool, England, on April
8 safe and sound and a new experience for a bunch of young soldiers
still in their teens and early twenties. Upon
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arrival we took
a train to Wales for our first stop, and then spent the next three
months moving around Wales and England for further training and
preparation for the planned invasion. We were in the Manchester
area of England when we learned that D-day was on. The next thirty
days we moved closer to the Southern part of England finally arriving
on
July 6. Our battalion was then loaded on four LST's the next day
for our journey across
the English Channel to France. We arrived at Utah Beach in Normandy
without incident on July 8, thirty-two days after D-day.
The 119th then
went into active combat assigned to Patton's Third Army as an anti-aircraft
and field artillery battalion. During the next eleven months,
from France, Belgium, and into Germany, the 119th participated in
five major campaigns; Normandy, Northern France, Ardennes, Rhineland
and Central Europe. In May 1945, when the war ended, we were in
the vicinity of Munich, Germany. The battalion was then moved back
to Metz, France, where we remained until November and then shipped
home in December for our eventual discharge.
As for me, I
just turned twenty-one on my way home from the war. Quite an experience.
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