ebooks     ebooks
ebooks ebooks ebooks
ebooks
free titles new titles top stories register home support wish list view cart my bookshelf
ebooks
 
Advanced Search
ebooks ebooks
Buywise Club
Gift Certificates
eBook Big Bargains
ebooks
Fiction
 Alternate History
 Children
 Classic Literature
 Dark Fantasy
 Erotica
 Fantasy
 Historical Fiction
 Horror
 Humor
 Mainstream
 Mystery/Crime
 Romance
 Science Fiction
 Star Trek
 Suspense/Thriller
 Young Adult
ebooks
Nonfiction
 Business
 Children
 Education
 Family/Relationships
 General
 Health/Fitness
 History
 People
 Personal Finance
 Politics/Government
 Reference
 Self Improvement
 Spiritual/Religion
 Sports/Entertainm't
 Technology/Science
 Travel
 True Crime
ebooks
Formats
 AudioBooks
 MultiFormat
 Gemstar/Rocket
 Secure Adobe Reader
 Secure Mobipocket
 Secure MS Reader
 Secure eReaderebooks
Browse
 Authors
 Award-Winners
 Bestsellers
 Free eBooks
 eMagazines
 Kindle eBookstore
 New eBooks 
 Publishers
 Recommendations
 Series List
 Short Stories
 Under a Dollar
ebooks
Miscellany
 About Us
 Author Info
 Fictionwise Gear
 Help/FAQs
 Library
 Links
 Money Savers
 Newsgroup
 Publisher Info
 Tell a Friend
  ebooks

HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99% of hacker crime.

Click on image to enlarge.

The Road to Victory [MultiFormat]
eBook by David Colley

  Regular     Club
You Pay:  $12.99     $11.04

eBook Category: General Nonfiction
eBook Description: The Red Ball Operation, the vital train of supplies improvised by American troops during the invasion of Europe, was one of the GIs' bravest exploits, without which World War II would have dragged on at a terrible cost of allied lives. Yet it has been overlooked due to the fact that it was mostly manned by African-Americans. Now it is told in full in this first book-length study. It is a book not only about the war between the Yanks and their Nazi enemy, but also of war with an enemy closer to home--racism.

eBook Publisher: E-Reads, Published: 2000
Fictionwise Release Date: January 2002


4 Reader Ratings:
Great Good OK Poor
Available eBook Formats [MultiFormat - What's this?]: eReader (PDB) [240 KB] , ePub (EPUB) [194 KB] , Rocket/REB1100 (RB) [204 KB] , Portable Document Format (PDF) [801 KB] , Palm Doc (PDB) [229 KB] , Microsoft Reader (LIT) [205 KB] , Franklin eBookMan (FUB) [257 KB] , hiebook (KML) [520 KB] , Sony Reader (LRF) [268 KB] , iSilo (PDB) [194 KB] , Mobipocket (PRC) [233 KB] , Kindle Compatible (MOBI) [272 KB] , OEBFF Format (IMP) [314 KB]
Words: 67813
Reading time: 193-271 min.
Microsoft Reader (LIT) Format: Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud ENABLED
Portable Document Format (PDF) Format:  Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud DISABLED
All Other formats: Printing DISABLED, Read-aloud DISABLED
eReader ISBN: 1585869422


Introduction

Fall 1944 -- somewhere in eastern France at dusk, a jeep carrying a first lieutenant in charge of a platoon of trucks hauling supplies to the front crested a hill. The young officer instinctively scanned the horizon for German aircraft that sometimes swooped in low on strafing runs. The sky was empty, and as far as the eye could see ahead and to the rear, the descending night was hauntingly pierced by the headlights of hundreds of trucks snaking along the highway.

The lengthy convoy, stretching away to the horizons, was part of the Red Ball Express, the legendary military trucking operation in the European Theater of Operations (ETO) in World War II that operated around the clock and supplied the rapidly advancing American armies as they streamed toward Germany. The Red Ball was a critical part of the tidal wave of arms, men, and machines that overwhelmed the German armies. Today, it goes largely unheralded by a postwar generation, but veterans of the ETO remember the Red Ball with pride, respect, and some amusement as they recall the trucks racing to the front with essential supplies, particularly gasoline.

Without the Red Ball and the sister military express trucking lines that it spawned later in the war, World War II in the ETO undoubtedly would have been prolonged and the extraordinary mobility of the American Army drastically limited. Certainly, the Red Ball contributed significantly to the defeat of the German Army in France during the summer and fall of 1944.

The Army organized the Red Ball Express on 25 August 1944, to rush supplies to the rapidly advancing First and Third American Armies when the German Seventh and Fifth Panzer Armies began to disintegrate and retreat eastward toward the German frontier. The French rail system west of Paris had been bombed to shambles, and the Germans held most of the French ports. The only method of supply for the Americans was to transport materiel by truck from the invasion beaches to the front.

So desperate were the Americans to catch and destroy the enemy after the breakout from the Normandy bridgehead two months after D-Day that only the most critical supplies -- ammunition, rations, medical supplies, and gasoline -- were being hauled. The materiel was transported largely by thousands of six-by-six, 2 1/2-ton General Motors trucks, affectionately nicknamed "Jimmies." The spearheading armored divisions, with their tanks, half-tracks, trucks, and jeeps, couldn't run without fuel. The infantry needed rations, ammunition, and transport into battle, and the artillery needed shells.

The Red Ball Express lasted eighty-one days, from 25 August through 16 November 1944. By the end of those three months, the Red Ball had established itself firmly in the mythology of World War II. More than six thousand trucks and trailers and some twenty-three thousand men transported 412,193 tons of supplies to the advancing American armies from Normandy to the German frontier.

Red Ball became the "tail" of an American Army that was the most highly mechanized and mobile combat force the world had ever seen. The Red Ball route ran from the beaches of Normandy and the ports of the Cotentin Peninsula, principally Cherbourg, to Paris, 270 miles to the east. From Paris, it branched to Verdun and Metz in the southeast, and to Hirson in northeast France on the frontier with Belgium.

Even the Germans, who had developed the blitzkrieg in their lightning invasions of Poland, the Low Countries, and France in 1939 and 1940, were astonished by the speed and mobility of the American advance, particularly that led by Gen. George S. Patton, and by the unimaginable number of vehicles and trucks that supplied the American forces.

What is most often overlooked about the Red Ball operation, as well as the war in Europe, is the contribution made by the African American soldiers assigned to Quartermaster and Transportation Corps units. Although three-fourths of Red Ball drivers were black, and the majority of the quartermaster truck companies in the ETO were manned by blacks, African American troops represented less than 10 percent of all military personnel in World War II. When the call went out to form the Red Ball Express, African American troops, in large measure, kept the supply lines rolling.

The Red Ball formed the basis of several later express routes with different designations, some for specific tasks, that operated through the rest of the war. The largest of these was the XYZ line that transported supplies to U.S. forces advancing across Germany during the spring of 1945.

The Red Ball was retired on 16 November 1944, when its usefulness declined because the Allied armies were stalled by tenacious enemy forces at the German frontier. But Red Ball never really died. Its name and mystique were so embedded in the mythology of World War II that, even after its termination, most of the men who drove the trucks until the end of the war believed that they were part of the Red Ball. Welby Frantz, a trucking company commander who later became president of the American Trucking Association and whose unit did not arrive in France from Iran until February 1945, still believed, a half century after the war, that his unit was on the Red Ball. "That's what we were all told."

Some of the confusion came about because the Transportation Corps shoulder patch, issued to the men in the trucking companies in 1945, carried a red sphere centered on a yellow background shield. Most soldiers who wore the patch assumed that it meant they were on the Red Ball.

The average GI, then and now, often refers to all trucking operations in the ETO -- indeed, the entire motorized transport system -- as the Red Ball Express. Frank Buergler, a sergeant with an engineering battalion in the 94th Division, remembered a section of autobahn, deep inside Germany toward the end of the war, being marked with splotches of red paint to direct traffic forward. "Oh, it was the Red Ball," he says. To the Americans in the ETO, there was only one trucking line to the front -- the Red Ball Express.

The Red Ball was so much a part of World War II in the ETO that it was the subject of a movie, The Red Ball Express, starring Jeff Chandler and Sidney Poitier, in 1952. Even though the film bore little resemblance to the real Red Ball, it acclaimed the express line for its role in winning the war.

A Broadway revue, Call Me Mister, starring Melvin Douglas and staged in 1946, literally sang the praises of the Red Ball Express:

There are songs of infantry, of the air corps and the sea,
Of the coast guard and Marines in battle dress.
We sing August forty-four and the Normandy shore,
Just the story of the old RED BALL EXPRESS.

Driving truck loads night and day, thirty-six hours on the way,
They supplied our hungry armies from the shore.
Steam was hissing from our hoods, when they showed up with the goods,
But they turned around and went right back for more.

In a never-ending chain, thru the mud and thru the rain,
Closing up the gaps the shells left in their file,
They kept driving, holding tight, sometimes stopped to dig and fight.
They high-balled on, a song for every mile.

Oh, the way their trucks did hop, would have killed a traffic cop.
There was driving out of this world on those runs.
Sometimes one truck would detour, draw the fire -- to make sure
That the other loads got safely by the guns.

So we sing this ballad for the old quartermaster corps,
Just a small part of the team of victory.
Tho you may not know the name, there are plenty all the same,
Never will forget that job in Normandy.

To this very day they say, when the night is dull and gray,
Norman farmers hear a strange hullabaloo,
And they peep outside and yell, French for "shut my mouth; do tell,"
As a ghostly car-a-van comes bouncing thru!

It's the RED BALL EXPRESS roaring by!
It's the RED BALL EXPRESS roaring by--
With one man at the wheel and one man at the gun
And a pride in the job to be done.
With the clash of gears and the clanking of chains,
And a song ringing clear to the sky.
It's the RED BALL EXPRESS roaring by, roaring by....

This book focuses on the "official" Red Ball Express that ran from August to November 1944 and, in so doing, relates the critical role played by the operation's trucks and drivers in winning the war.

A generation after World War II, Col. John D. Eisenhower, a veteran of the European war and son of Supreme Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower, paid as much tribute to the men who drove the Red Ball trucks as to those who drove the tanks. Eisenhower wrote in his history, The Bitter Woods: "Without it [Red Ball] the advance across France could not have been made."

Copyright © 2000 by David P. Colley


Icon explanations:
Discounted eBook; added within the last 7 days.
eBook was added within the last 30 days.
eBook is in our best seller list.
eBook is in our highest rated list.

All pages of this site are Copyright © 2000- Fictionwise LLC.
Fictionwise (TM) is the trademark of Fictionwise LLC.
A Barnes & Noble Company

About Us | Bookshelf | For Authors | Free eBooks | Login | News | Privacy | Register | Shopping Cart | Support | Terms of Use

eBook Resources at Barnes & Noble
eReader · eBooks · Free eBooks · Cheap eBooks · Romance eBooks · Fiction eBooks · Fantasy eBooks · Top eBooks
Follow us on Twitter!