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Sergeant Lars
J. Erlandson
Company G, 168th
Infantry
34th
"Red Bull" Division
The above photo was
taken
in Italy. Sgt. Erlandson is wearing
a Combat Infantryman's Badge, a Campaign Ribbon and a Good Conduct
Ribbon.
Sergeant Lars J. Erlandson served in both Africa and Italy for more than nineteen months before being wounded for a second and final time on February 5, 1945. He fought with General Clark's 5th Army as a member of the 34th 'Red Bull' Division. Sergeant Erlandson received the European- African- Middle Eastern Campaign Ribbon with 3 Bronze Stars for the Naples-Foggia, Rome-Arno, and Po Valley Campaigns. He also received the Purple Heart with one Oak Leaf Cluster, Combat Infantry Badge, Presidential Unit Citation, and the Good Conduct Ribbon.
Lars grew
up
in Vernon County, Wisconsin and was inducted into the army on March 8,
1943. He received his basic training at Camp Roberts, California and
further
training at Fort Benning Georgia, Camp Shelby Mississippi, Fort George
Meade Maryland, and Camp Patrick Henry Virginia. His unit went
overseas
to Casablanca in Northern Africa. After some further training in
North Africa he landed in Naples, Italy in December of 1943.
Three
days after landing he was sent up to the front at Caserta.
Private Erlandson during
basic training. Sign above door reads: "3RD
PLATOON which
stands for
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From an article written by a local hometown paper, Lars described in his own words some of the early action. "We were the first group to go in the line at Caserta. The Volturno was just north of where we went in one morning at two o'clock. It was dark and quiet, except for the muffled chatter of machine gun fire down the valley from us. We dug in for the night, but didn't sleep because two hours later, at four o'clock we put on our fist attack. From Caserta we fought through to Cassino, which was the worst battle I have ever been in. It was terrible weather with rain and snow. We were soaked to the skin and chilled through most of the time. Day and night the Krauts threw artillery fire at us. We were fighting some times within 300 yards of the Abbey at Cassino, which the Germans had taken over and were using as a point where they could fire down on us. Our outfit withdrew on February 14th and the Abbey was bombed on February 15th."
After Cassino his unit was given a month's rest and then on March 20th they were sent on to Anzio. "We were slugging it out with the Krauts, fighting across marsh land most of the way. It was tough going at times because they were dug in to defensive positions. On March 23rd we broke out across the highway that led to Rome. We fought on through wheat fields and had good tank support. The first day we began to take lots of Nazi prisoners and the stream kept up. They were surprised and plenty scared." According to a US Army Brochure on Anzio by Clayton D. Laurie, the 34th Infantry Division was near Cisterna on March 28th as they replaced the 3rd Infantry Division.
Sgt. Erlandson somewhere in Italy.
Lars Meets Ernie
Pyle:
Ernie Pyle
from all accounts was one of the most popular and respected journalists
of WWII. He covered the action in North Africa, Sicily, Italy,
France,
before being killed by a Japanese machine gun in Okinawa. He was
famous for telling the individual stories of everyday G.I.'s and while
in Italy, Lars met Ernie several times. One such time was while
the
168th Infantry Regiment was crossing the Rapido River on January 20,
1944.
"We were
resting at one place when Ernie came up and asked some of us, including
me, what we thought about this or that. He acted like an ordinary
G.I. and I remember he was a little man in stature and he carried the
biggest
bedroll I've ever seen. He was in the thick of it too, when we
crossed
the Rapido River. We had to wade and swim across and the Nazis
were
pouring artillery fire at us. It was risky business. I
thought
that's a place no man would have chosen to be, unless he had to.
But Ernie was there, taking it with the rest of us. He wrote
about
things as they really were. We all thought he was a real guy."
Lars holding a .30 Caliber
machine
gun w/tripod.
In background is a utility trailer.
Wounded 1st Time:
Then on March 29,
1944, Lars was wounded for the first time by shrapnel from a German
tank.
"The
tank was hiding in the brush and our machine gun crew was firing from a
bank alongside a road. This tank suddenly came out into the road
and fired one shell at us. Four of my buddies were killed and one
shell shocked, and I was wounded. I was hit by six pieces of
shrapnel
in the arms and leg. An instant after I was hit, I rolled into a
ditch. Soon after I got up and started to walk, but didn't go far
before I met a runner and asked him to send for a medic. The
medic
came quickly and bandaged me up. That was at seven-thirty in the
morning and I laid there in the ditch until seven o'clock that
night.
My company was finally sent back to be reorganized and they took me
along.
I got to the evacuation hospital in Naples where my wounds were treated
and where I stayed until August 6th."
He rejoined his outfit
on
August 28th, which by that time according to the article, they had
passed
through Rome and were twenty miles south of Florence.
"The
country
around about was largely that of rolling hills. We began our main
attack there on September 5th and gained about as fast as we could
walk.
We stopped November 7th at a line near Bologna. The mud was
terrible
and sometimes a fellow would sink in the mire up to his hips.
Vehicles
were practically useless and we used mules for much
transportation.
Sometimes the mules got stuck and we would have to haul them out.
From our positions in the hills we could look down on Po Valley, which
looked like really good farming land."
Wounded 2nd Time:
"It was
our job to keep as many of the enemy's forces tied up in Italy as
possible.
So we were constantly on patrols or raids. I was hit the second
time
on February 5, 1945 when my regiment made a raid. I was in charge
of a machine gun and had my squad located in a house. We ran out
of ammunition and I went outside to get some. On the way back I
was
walking along-side the house and heading towards the door. All of
the sudden a Nazi with a machine gun stepped out into the open and
fired
at me. I was hit in the abdomen and fell not far from the
door.
I know at that instant that I was hit badly, but somehow I managed to
crawl
inside the house."
V-Mail - February 12, 1945 Lars wrote his girl back home and told her about being wounded. Italy
Dear Evelyn,
I am not able to write much now but thought
With Love |
"End of the 34th" November 4th, 1945 Camp Patrick Henry, VA Top
Row(standing): Sgt Erlanson's buddies sent this photo to him as he was recovering in the hospital. The soldiers are photographed wearing their Ike Jacket uniforms, but in a casual pose without their ties. This is obviously a photo taken at end of the war as noted by all their campaign ribbons and service stripes on the uniforms. The PFC on the left front served 5 years overseas. A horizontal stripe denoted 6 months service and the diagonal stripe denotes 3 years. The 34th
Red Bull patch is clearly visible on the Sergeant on the left
front. |
On May 2, 1945, just three months after Lars was wounded for a second and final time, the war in Italy came to an end. In some of the pictures he had from his time in the service was a picture of a group of buddies that they must have sent him, celebrating the end of the war in Italy and the end, as they put it, of the 34th.
Lars and his Cousins Back Home after
the War
Ralph Jacobson - Lars Erlandson - Harry
Jacobson - Kermit Sagmond
In the background is
a lady with a small child.
This pose appears to
be "out of uniform".
________
Growing up, I knew nothing of the sacrifice and commitment my Grandpa had made to the war effort back so many years ago. I guess I always knew he had been in the Army but it never was a topic of discussion. We were always busy playing dominoes, discussing shot placement on a Whitetail Deer, or going hunting. I think back now and wish I had asked questions or been aware enough just to thank him and tell him how proud I was, but that never happened and maybe that is just the way he wanted it. On May 2, 1988 he passed away after a battle with cancer. Sergeant Erlandson was someone I never got to know but below is the memory I do have of Grandpa Erlandson.
I would like to thank my Grandma for helping me along the way to discover the part of my Grandpa's life I never knew. It started with an old cigar box full of mementos from the past. A Purple Heart, Dog Tags, Red Bull Patches, Combat Infantry Badge, and more. My research continued on the Internet and was helped immensely by pictures, letters, and newspaper articles that had been stored away all these years. Hopefully this document will preserve his memory for future generations to come.
Chris
Bladl
Grandson of
Sgt. Lars Erlandson
PFC Don Olson
Hq-Co. 1st BN.362 INF
New York, New YorkJohn Jocham Jr
Clifford MichiganLawrence McKinley Jr
Bristol New HampshireMajor C. Freeman
Marshall North CarolinaPFC. Howard B. Edmunds
Co K 3rd BN 1st Marines
San Francisco, CaliforniaCarlo Zito
New Orleans, LouisianaDonald Halverson
Minneapolis, MinnesotaNick Finelli
Bangor, PennsylvaniaCannon Ball
Grand Rapids, MichiganJohn E. Gallegher
Roselle Park, New JerseyJohn Fusarelli
Reading, PennsylvaniaAlvin Melton
Forrest City, NCGordon Bragdon
Presque Isle, MEJoe Donigan
Waynesboro, TNArild G. Engelien
615th Ordnance Co AMDon E.Larson
Rice Lake, WisconsinHarry Jacobson
12 Med. Depot Co.Glen Whiteman
Compton, California
A special thanks to Chris Bladl for this story of his grandfather and also for graciously supplying the photos. If you would like to contact Chris, you may email me at Stevec01e.
A Memorial to the 34th Division
Recently, I was contacted by a retired Italian Army officer who was
researching
the history of the 34th Division. Capitano
Riccardo Barni is a member of the retired officers association,
and lives in Prato, near Florence, Italy. Mr. Barni traced the
movement
of the 133rd Regiment through the mountainous terrain north of Florence
during the month of September 1944. The struggle culminated in a
battle at Hill 810 near Montepiano on September 23rd. During his
hikes in the remote areas, Mr. Barni has located trenches, bunkers,
caves
and unexploded shells that mark the area of this battle, just south of
the GOTHIC LINE. Steve Cole -
May 2003
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