WITH THE FIRST DIVISION IN FRANCE AND GERMANY
I
My transfer to the American army appointed
me as captain of field artillery instead of infantry,
as I had wished. Just how the mistake occurred
I never determined, but once in the field artillery
I found that to shift back would take an uncertain
length of time, and that even after it was effected
I would be obliged to take a course at some school
before going up to the line. It therefore seemed
advisable to go immediately, as instructed, to the
artillery school, at Saumur. The management was
half French and half American. Colonel MacDonald
and Colonel Cross were the Americans in charge, and
the high reputation of the school bore testimony to
their efficiency. It was the intention of headquarters
gradually to replace all the French instructors with
Americans, but when I was there the former predominated.
It was of course necessary to wait until our officers
had learned by actual experience the use of the French
guns with which our army was supplied. When men
are being taught what to do in combat conditions they
apply themselves more attentively and absorb far more
when they feel that the officer teaching them has had
to test, under enemy fire, the theories he is expounding.
The school was for both officers and candidates.
The latter were generally chosen from among the non-commissioned
officers serving at the front; I afterward sent men
down from my battery. The first part of the course
was difficult for those who had either never had much
mathematical training or had had it so long ago that
they were hopelessly out of practice. A number
of excellent sergeants and corporals did not have
the necessary grounding to enable them to pass the
examinations. They should never have been sent,
for it merely put them in an awkward and humiliating
position although no stigma could possibly
be attached to them for having failed.
The French officer commanding the
field work was Major de Caraman. His long and
distinguished service in the front lines, combined
with his initiative and ever-ready tact, made him
an invaluable agent in welding the ideas and methods
of France and America. His house was always filled
with Americans, and how much his hospitality meant
to those whose ties were across the ocean must have
been experienced to be appreciated. The homes
of France were ever thrown open to us, and the sincere
and simple good-will with which we were received has
put us under a lasting debt which we should be only
too glad to cherish and acknowledge.
Saumur is a delightful old town in
the heart of the chateau country. The river Loire
runs through it, and along the banks are the caves
in some of which have been found the paintings made
by prehistoric man picturing the beasts with which
he struggled for supremacy in the dim dark ages.
The same caves are many of them inhabited, and their
owners may well look with scorn upon the chateaux
and baronial castles of whose antiquity it is customary
to boast. There is an impressive castle built
on a hill dominating the town, and in one of the churches
is hung an array of tapestries of unsurpassed color
and design. The country round about invited rambling,
and the excellent roads made it easy; particularly
delightful were the strolls along the river-banks,
where patient fisherfolk of every sex and age sat
unperturbed by the fact that they never seemed to
catch anything. One old lady with a sunbonnet
was always to be seen seated on a three-legged stool
in the same corner amid the rocks. She had a
rusty black umbrella which she would open when the
rays of the sun became too searching.
The buildings which were provided
for the artillery course had formerly been used by
the cavalry school, probably the best known in the
world. Before the war army officers of every
important nation in the Occident and Orient were sent
by their governments to follow the course and learn
the method of instruction. My old friend Fitzhugh
Lee was one of those sent by the United States, and
I found his record as a horseman still alive and fresh
in the memory of many of the townspeople.
Soon after the termination of my period
of instruction I was in command of C Battery of the
Seventh Field Artillery in the Argonne fighting.
I was standing one morning in the desolate, shell-ridden
town of Landres et St. George watching a column of
“dough-boys” coming up the road; at their
head limped a battered Dodge car, and as it neared
me I recognized my elder brother Ted, sitting on the
back seat in deep discussion with his adjutant.
I had believed him to be safely at the staff school
in Langres recuperating from a wound, but he had been
offered the chance to come up in command of his old
regiment, the Twenty-Sixth, and although registered
as only “good for light duty in the service of
supply,” he had made his way back to the division.
While we were talking another car came up and out
from it jumped my brother-in-law, Colonel Richard Derby at
that time division surgeon of the Second Division.
We were the only three members of the family left
in active service since my brother Quentin, the aviator,
was brought down over the enemy lines, and Archie,
severely wounded in leg and arm, had been evacuated
to the United States. I well remember how once
when Colonel Derby introduced me to General Lejeune,
who was commanding his division, the general, instead
of making some remark about my father, said:
“I shall always be glad to meet a relative of
a man with Colonel Derby’s record.”
On the 11th of November we had just
returned to our original sector after attacking Sedan.
None of us placed much confidence in an armistice being
signed. We felt that the German would never accept
the terms, but were confident that by late spring
or early summer we would be able to bring about an
unconditional surrender. When the firing ceased
and the news came through that the enemy had capitulated,
there was no great show of excitement. We were
all too weary to be much stirred by anything that
could occur. For the past two weeks we had been
switched hither and yon, with little sleep and less
food, and a constant decrease in our personnel and
horses that was never entirely made good but grew steadily
more serious. The only bursts of enthusiasm that
I heard were occasioned by the automobile trucks and
staff cars passing by after dark with their headlights
blazing. The joyous shouts of “Lights out!”
testified that the reign of darkness was over.
Soon the men began building fires and gathering about
them, calling “Lights out!” as each new
blaze started a joke which seemed a never-failing
source of amusement.
We heard that we were to march into
Germany in the wake of the evacuating army and occupy
one of the bridge-heads. All this came through
in vague and unconfirmed form, but in a few days we
were hauled back out of the line to a desolate mass
of ruins which had once been the village of Bantheville.
We were told that we would have five days here, during
which we would be reoutfitted in every particular.
Our horses were in fearful shape constant
work in the rain and mud with very meagre allowance
of fodder had worn down the toughest old campaigners
among them. During the weary, endless night march
on Sedan I often saw two horses leaning against each
other in utter exhaustion as if it were
by that means alone that they kept on their feet.
We were told to indent for everything that we needed
to make our batteries complete as prescribed in the
organization charts, but we followed instructions
without any very blind faith in results nor
did our lack of trust prove unwarranted, for we got
practically nothing for which we had applied.
There were some colored troops near
by engaged in repairing the roads, and a number of
us determined to get up a quartet to sing for the men.
We went to where the negroes had built themselves
shelters from corrugated-iron sheets and miscellaneous
bits of wreckage from the town. We collected
three quarters of our quartet and were directed to
the mess-shack for the fourth. As we approached
I could hear sounds of altercation and a voice that
we placed immediately as that of our quarry arose in
indignant warning: “If yo’ doan’
leggo that mess-kit I’ll lay a barrage down
on yo’!” A platform was improvised
near a blazing fire of pine boards and we had some
excellent clogging and singing. The big basso
had evidently a strong feeling for his steel helmet,
and it undoubtedly added to his picturesqueness setting
off his features with his teeth and eyes gleaming
in the firelight.
On the evening of the second day orders
came to move off on the following morning. We
were obliged to discard much material, for although
the two days’ rest and food had distinctly helped
out the horse situation, we had many animals that
could barely drag themselves along, much less a loaded
caisson, and our instructions were to on no account
salvage ammunition. We could spare but one horse
for riding my little mare and
she was no use for pulling. She was a wise little
animal with excellent gaits and great endurance.
We were forced to leave, behind another mare that I
had ridden a good deal on reconnaissances, and
that used to amuse me by her unalterable determination
to stick to cover. It was almost most impossible
to get her to cut across a field; she preferred to
skirt the woods and had no intention of exposing herself
on any sky-line. In spite of her caution it was
on account of wounds that she had eventually to be
abandoned. I trust that the salvage parties found
her and that she is now reaping the reward of her
foresight.
We were a sorry-looking outfit as
we marched away from Bantheville. My lieutenants
had lost their bedding-rolls and extra clothes long
since as every one did, for it was impossible
to keep your belongings with you and although
authorized dumps were provided and we were told that
anything left behind would be cared for, we would
be moved to another sector without a chance to collect
our excess and practically everything would have disappeared
by the time the opportunity came to visit the cache.
But although the horses and accoutrements were in
bad shape, the men were fit for any task, and more
than ready to take on whatever situation might arise.
Our destination was Malancourt, no
great distance away, but the roads were so jammed
with traffic that it was long after dark before we
reached the bleak, wind-swept hillside that had been
allotted to us. It was bitterly cold and we groped
about among the shattered barbed-wire entanglements
searching for wood to light a fire. There was
no difficulty in finding shell-craters in which to
sleep the ground was so pockmarked with
them that it seemed impossible that it could have been
done by human agency.
This country had been an “active”
area during practically all the war, and the towns
had been battered and beaten down first by the Boche
and then by the French, and lately we ourselves had
taken a hand in the further demolition of the ruins.
Many a village was recognizable from the encompassing
waste only by the sign-board stuck in a mound announcing
its name. The next day’s march took us
through Esne, Montzeville, and Bethainville, and on
down to the Verdun-Paris highway. We passed by
historic “Dead Man’s Hill,” and not
far from there we saw the mute reminders of an attack
that brought the whole scene vividly back. There
were nine or ten tanks, of types varying from the little
Renault to the powerful battleship sort. All
had been halted by direct hits, some while still far
from their objective, others after they had reached
the wire entanglements, and there was one that was
already astride of the first-line trench. The
continual sight of ruined towns and desolated countryside
becomes very oppressive, and it was a relief when we
began to pass through villages in which many of the
houses were still left standing; it seemed like coming
into a new world.
At ten in the evening I got the battery
into Balaicourt. A strong wind was blowing and
the cold was intense, so I set off to try to find billets
for the men where they could be at least partly sheltered.
The town was all but deserted by its inhabitants,
and we managed to provide every one with some degree
of cover. Getting back into billets is particularly
welcome in very cold or rainy weather, and we all
were glad to be held over a day on the wholly mythical
plea of refitting. Although the time would not
be sufficient to make any appreciable effort in the
way of cleaning harness or materiel, the men
could at any rate heat water to wash their clothes
and themselves.
The next day’s march we regarded
as our first in the advance into Germany to which
we had so long looked forward. We found the great
Verdun highway which had played such an important
part in the defense that broke the back of the Hun
to be in excellent shape and a pleasant change from
the shell-pitted roads to which we had become accustomed.
It was not without a thrill that I rode, at the head
of my battery, through the missive south gate of Verdun,
and followed the winding streets of the old city through
to the opposite portal. Before we had gone many
miles the road crossed a portion of the far-famed
Hindenburg line which had here remained intact until
evacuated by the Boche a few days previously under
the terms of the armistice.
We made a short halt where a negro
engineer regiment was at work making the road passable.
A most hospitable officer strolled up and asked if
I wanted anything to eat, which when you are in the
army may be classified with Goldberg’s “foolish
questions.” A sturdy coal-black cook brought
me soup and roast beef and coffee, and never have
I appreciated the culinary arts of the finest French
chef as I did that meal, for the food had been cooked,
not merely thrown into one of the tureens of a rolling
kitchen, which was as much as we had recently been
able to hope for.
The negro cook looked as if he would
have been able to emulate his French confrere of whom
Major de Caraman told me. The Frenchman was on
his way to an outpost with a steaming caldron of soup.
He must have lost the way, for he unexpectedly found
himself confronted by a German who ordered him to
surrender. For reply the cook slammed the soup-dish
over his adversary’s head and marched him back
a prisoner. His prowess was rewarded with a Croix
de Guerre.
It was interesting to see the German
system of defense when it was still intact and had
not been shattered by our artillery preparation as
it was when taken in an attack. The wire entanglements
were miles in depth, and the great trees by the roadside
were mined. This was done by cutting a groove
three or four inches broad and of an equal depth and
filling it with packages of explosive. I suppose
the purpose was to block the road in case of retreat.
Only a few of the mines had been set off.
Passing through several towns that
no longer existed we came to Étain, where many
buildings were still standing though completely gutted.
The cellars had been converted into dugouts with passages
and ramifications added. We were billeted in
some German huts on the outskirts. They were
well dug in and comfortably fitted out, so we were
ready to stay over a few days, as we had been told
we should, but at midnight orders were sent round
to be prepared to march out early.
The country was lovely and gave little
sign of the Boche occupation except that it was totally
deserted and when we passed through villages all the
signs were in German. There was but little originality
displayed in naming the streets you could
be sure that you would find a Hindenburg Straße
and a Kronprinz Straße, and there was usually
one called after the Kaiser. The mile-posts at
the crossroads had been mostly replaced, but occasionally
we found battered metal plaques of the Automobile Touring
Club of France. Ever since we left Verdun we had
been meeting bands of released prisoners, Italians
and Russians chiefly, with a few French and English
mingled. They were worn and underfed their
clothes were in rags. A few had combined and
were pulling their scanty belongings on little cars,
such as children make out of soap-boxes. The motor-trucks
returning to our base after bringing up the rations
would take back as many as they could carry.
We came across scarcely any civilians
until we reached Bouligny, a once busy and prosperous
manufacturing town. A few of the inhabitants had
been allowed to remain throughout the enemy occupation
and small groups of those that had been removed were
by now trickling in. The invader had destroyed
property in the most ruthless manner, and the buildings
were gutted. The domestic habits of the Hun were
always to me inexplicable he evidently
preferred to live in the midst of his own filth, and
many times have I seen recently captured chateaux
that had been converted into veritable pigsties.
The inhabitants went wild at our entry in
the little villages they came out carrying wreaths
and threw confetti and flowers as they shouted the
“Marseillaise.” The infantry, marching
in advance, bore the brunt of the celebrations.
What interested me most were the bands of small children,
many of them certainly not over five, dancing along
the streets singing their national anthem. It
must have been taught them in secret. In the
midst of a band were often an American soldier or two,
in full swing, thoroughly enjoying themselves.
The enthusiasm was all of it natural and uninspired
by alcohol, for the Germans had taken with them everything
to drink that they had been unable to finish.
Bouligny is not an attractive place few
manufacturing towns are but we got the
men well billeted under water-tight roofs, and we were
able to heat water for washing. My striker found
a large caldron and I luxuriated in a steaming bath,
the first in over a month, and, what was more, I had
some clean clothes to pull on when I got out.
One evening, when returning from a
near-by village, I met a frock-coated civilian who
inquired of me in German the way to Étain.
I asked him who he was and what he wanted. He
answered that he was a German but was tired of his
country and wished to go almost anywhere else.
He seemed altogether too apparent to be a spy, and
even if he were I could not make out any object that
he could gain. I have often wondered what became
of him.
The Boches had evidently not expected
to give up their conquests, for they had built an
enormous stone-and-brick fountain in the centre of
the town, and chiselled its name, “Hindenburg
Brunnen.” Above the German canteen
or commissary shop was a great wooden board with “Gott
strafe England” a curious proof of
how bitterly the Huns hated Great Britain, for there
were no British troops in the sectors in front of
this part of the invaded territory.
We worked hard “policing up”
ourselves and our equipment during the few days we
stayed at Bouligny. One morning all the townsfolk
turned out in their best clothes, which had been buried
in the cellars or hidden behind the rafters in the
attics, to greet the President and Madame Poincare,
who were visiting the most important of the liberated
towns. It was good to hear the cheering and watch
the beaming faces.
On November 21 we resumed our march.
Close to the border we came upon a large German cemetery,
artistically laid out, with a group of massive statuary
in the centre. There were some heroic-size granite
statues of Boche soldiers in full kit with helmet
and all, that were particularly fine. As we passed
the stones marking the boundary-line between France
and Lorraine there was a tangible feeling of making
history, and it was not without a thrill that we entered
Aumetz and heard the old people greet us in French
while the children could speak only German. The
town was gay with the colors of France produced
from goodness knows where. Children were balancing
themselves on the barrels of abandoned German cannon
and climbing about the huge camouflaged trucks.
We were now where France, Luxemburg, and Lorraine
meet, and all day we skirted the borders of first
one and then the other, halting for the night at the
French town of Villerupt. The people went wild
when we rode in we were the first soldiers
of the Allies they had seen, for the Germans entered
immediately after the declaration of war, and the
only poilus the townsfolk saw were those that were
brought in as prisoners. We were welcomed in the
town hall the German champagne was abominable
but the reception was whole-hearted and the speeches
were sincere in their jubilation.
I was billeted with the mayor, Monsieur
Georges. After dinner he produced two grimy bottles
of Pol Roger he said that he had been forced
to change their hiding-place four times, and had just
dug them up in his cellar. They were destined
for the night of liberation. Monsieur Georges
was thin and worn; he had spent two years in prison
in solitary confinement for having given a French
prisoner some bread. His eighteen-year-old daughter
was imprisoned for a year because she had not informed
the authorities as to what her father had done.
No one in the family would learn a single word of
German. They said that all French civilians were
forced to salute the Germans, and each Sunday every
one was compelled to appear in the market-place for
general muster. The description of the departure
of their hated oppressors was vivid the
men behind the lines knew the full portent of events
and were sullen and crestfallen, but the soldiers fresh
from the front believed that Germany had won and was
dictating her own terms; they came through with wreaths
hung on their bayonets singing songs of victory.
I had often wondered how justly the
food supplies sent by America for the inhabitants
of the invaded districts were distributed. Monsieur
Georges assured me that the Germans were scrupulously
careful in this matter, because they feared that if
they were not, the supplies would no longer be sent,
and this would of course encroach upon their own resources,
for even the Hun could not utterly starve to death
the captured French civilians. The mayor told
me of the joy the shipments brought and how when the
people went to draw their rations they called it “going
to America.” We sat talking until far into
the night before I retired to the luxury of a real
bed with clean linen sheets. There was no trouble
whatever in billeting the men the townsmen
were quarrelling as to who should have them.
Next morning, with great regret at
so soon leaving our willing hosts, we marched off
into the little Duchy of Luxemburg. We passed
through the thriving city of Esch with its great iron-mines.
The streets were gay with flags, there were almost
as many Italian as French, for there is a large Italian
colony, the members of which are employed in mining
and smelting. Brass bands paraded in our honor,
and we were later met by them in many of the smaller
towns. The shops seemed well filled, but the prices
were very high. The Germans seemed to have left
the Luxemburgers very much to themselves, and I have
little doubt but that they would have been at least
as pleased to welcome victorious Boches had affairs
taken a different turn. Still they were glad
to see us, for it meant the end of the isolation in
which they had been living and the eventual advent
of foodstuffs.
As we rode along, the countryside
was lovely and the smiling fields and hillsides made
“excursions and alarums” seem remote indeed.
It felt unnatural to pass through a village with unscarred
church spires and houses all intact such
a change from battered, glorious France.
We were immediately in the wake of
the German army, and taken by and large they must
have been retiring in good order, for they left little
behind. Our first night we spent at the village
of Syren, eight kilometres from the capital of the
Duchy. Billeting was not so easy now, for we were
ordered to treat the inhabitants as neutrals, and when
they objected we couldn’t handle the situation
as we did later on in Germany. No one likes to
have soldiers or civilians quartered on him, and the
Luxemburgers were friendly to us only as a matter
of policy. Fortunately, the chalk marks of the
Boche billeting officers had not been washed off the
doors, and these told us how many men had been lodged
in a given house.
In my lodging I was accorded a most
friendly reception, for my hostess was French.
Her nephew had come up from Paris to visit her a few
months before the outbreak of the war, and had been
unable to get back to France. To avoid the dreaded
internment camp he had successfully passed as a Luxemburger.
In the regiment there were a number of men whose parents
came from the Duchy; these and a few more who spoke
German acquired a sudden popularity among their comrades.
They would make friends with some of the villagers
and arrange to turn over their rations so that they
would be cooked by the housewife and eaten with the
luxurious accompaniment of chair and table. The
diplomat would invite a few friends to enjoy with him
the welcome change from the “slum” ladled
out of the caldrons of the battery rolling kitchen.
I had always supposed that I had in my battery a large
number of men who could speak German a glance
over the pay-roll would certainly leave that impression but
when I came to test it out, I found that I had but
four men who spoke sufficiently well to be of any use
as interpreters.
Next morning we made a winding, roundabout
march to Trintange. Here we were instructed to
settle down for a week or ten days’ halt, and
many worse places might have been chosen. The
country was very broken, with hills and ravines.
Little patches of woodland and streams dashing down
rocky channels on their way to join the Moselle reminded
one of Rock Creek Park in Washington. The weather
couldn’t be bettered; sharp and cold in the
early morning with a heavy hoarfrost spreading its
white mantle over everything, then out would come
the sun, and the hills would be shrouded in mist.
My billeting officer had arranged
matters well, so we were comfortably installed and
in good shape to “police up” for the final
leg of the march to Coblenz. I had now my full
allowance of officers Lieutenants Furness,
Brown, Middleditch, and Pearce. In active warfare
discipline while stricter in some ways is more lax
in others, and there were many small points that required
furbishing. Close order drill on foot is always
a great help in stiffening up the men, and such essentials
as instruction in driving and in fitting harness required
much attention. In the American army much less
responsibility is given to the sergeants and corporals
than in the British, but even so the spirit and efficiency
of an organization must depend largely on its non-commissioned
officers. We were fortunate in having an unusually
fine lot Sergeant Cushing was a veteran
of the Spanish War. He had been a sailor for
many years, and after he left the sea he became chief
game warden of Massachusetts. In time of stress
he was a tower of strength and could be counted upon
to set his men an example of cool and judicious daring.
The first sergeant, Armstrong, was an old regular
army man, and his knowledge of drill and routine was
invaluable to us. He thoroughly understood his
profession, and was remarkably successful in training
raw men. Sergeants Grumbling, Kubelis, and Bauer
were all of them excellent men, and could be relied
upon to perform their duty with conscientious thoroughness
under the most trying conditions.
One afternoon I went in to Luxemburg
with Colonel Collins, the battalion commander.
The town looks thoroughly mediaeval as you approach.
It might well have been over its castle wall that
Kingsley’s knight spurred his horse on his last
leap; as a matter of fact the village of Altenahr,
where the poet laid the scene, is not so many miles
away. The town is built along the ragged cliffs
lining a deep, rocky canyon spanned by old stone bridges.
The massive entrance-gates open upon passages tunnelled
through the hills, and although the modern part of
the town boasts broad streets and squares, there are
many narrow passageways winding around the ancient
quarter.
I went into a large bookstore to replenish
my library, and was struck by the supply of post-cards
of Marshal Foch and Kitchener and the King and Queen
of Belgium. All had been printed in Leipzig, and
when I asked the bookseller how that could be, he
replied that he got them from the German commercial
travellers. He said that he had himself been surprised
at the samples shown him, but the salesman had remarked
that he thought such post-cards would have a good
sale in Luxemburg, and if such were the case “business
was business,” and he was prepared to supply
them. There was even one of King Albert standing
with drawn sword, saying: “You shall not
violate the sacred soil of my country.”
A publication that also interested me was a weekly
paper brought out in Hamburg and written in English.
It was filled with jokes, beneath which were German
notes explaining any difficult or idiomatic words
and phrases. With all their hatred of England
the Huns still continued to learn English.
Thanksgiving Day came along, and we
set to work to provide some sort of a special feast
for the men. It was most difficult to do so, for
the exchange had not as yet been regulated and the
lowest rate at which we could get marks was at a franc,
and usually it was a franc and a quarter. Some
one opportunely arrived from Paris with a few hundred
marks that he had bought at sixty centimes.
For the officers we got a suckling pig, which Mess
Sergeant Braun roasted in the priest’s oven.
He even put the traditional baked apple in its mouth,
a necessary adjunct, the purpose of which I have never
discovered, and such stuffing as he made has never
been equalled. We washed it down with excellent
Moselle wine, for we were but a couple of miles from
the vineyards along the river. In the afternoon
I borrowed a bicycle from the burgomaster and trailed
over to Elmen, where I found my brother just about
to sit down to his Thanksgiving dinner served up by
two faithful Chinamen, who had come to his regiment
in a draft from the West Coast. After doing full
justice to his fare I wended my way back to Trintange
in the rain and dark.
The next day we paid the men.
For some it was the first time in ten months.
To draw pay it was necessary to sign the pay-roll at
the end of one month and be on hand at the end of
the following month to receive the money. No
one could sign unless his service record was at hand,
and as this was forwarded to the hospital “through
military channels” when a man was evacuated
sick or wounded, it rarely reached his unit until several
months after he returned. It may easily be seen
why it was that an enlisted man often went for months
without being able to draw his pay. This meant
not only a hardship to him while he was without money,
but, it also followed that when he got it he had a
greater amount than he could possibly need, and was
more than apt to gamble or drink away his sudden accession
of wealth. We always tried to make a man who had
drawn a lot of back pay deposit it or send it home.
Mr. Harlow, the Y.M.C.A. secretary attached to the
regiment, helped us a great deal in getting the money
transferred to the United States. The men, unless
they could spend their earnings immediately, would
start a game of craps and in a few days all the available
cash would have found its way into the pocket of the
luckiest man. They would throw for appallingly
high stakes. On this particular pay-day we knew
that the supply of wine and beer in the village was
not sufficient to cause any serious trouble, and orders
were given that no cognac or hard liquor should be
sold. A few always managed to get it all
precautions to the contrary notwithstanding.
II
On the 1st of December we once more
resumed our march and at Wormeldange crossed over
the Moselle River into Hunland. The streets of
the first town through which we passed were lined
with civilians, many of them only just out of uniform,
and they scowled at us as we rode by, muttering below
their breath. A short way out and we began to
meet men still in the field-gray uniform; they smiled
and tried to make advances but our men paid no attention.
When we reached Onsdorf, which was our destination,
the billeting officer reported that he had met with
no difficulty.
The inhabitants were most effusive
and anxious to please in every way. Of course
they were not Prussians, and no doubt were heartily
tired and sick of war, but here, as throughout, their
attitude was most distasteful to us it
was so totally lacking in dignity. We could not
tell how much they were acting on their own initiative
and to what extent they were following instructions.
Probably there was something of both back of their
conduct. Warnings had been issued that the Germans
were reported to be planning a wholesale poisoning
of American officers, but I never saw anything to
substantiate the belief.
Next morning we struck across to the
Saar River and followed it down to its junction with
the Moselle. The woods and ravines were lovely,
but from the practical standpoint the going was very
hard upon the horses. We marched down through
Treves, the oldest town in Germany, with a population
of about thirty thousand. In the fourth century
of our era Ausonius referred to it as “Rome
beyond the Alps,” and the extent and variety
of the Roman remains would seem to justify the epithet.
We were halted for some time beside the most remarkable
of these, the Porta Nigra, a huge fortified
gateway, dating from the first century A.D. The
cathedral is an impressive conglomeration of the architecture
of many different centuries the oldest
portion being a part of a Roman basilica of the fourth
century, while the latest additions of any magnitude
were made in the thirteenth. Most famous among
its treasures is the “holy coat of Treves,”
believed by the devout to be the seamless garment worn
by Christ at the crucifixion. The predominant
religion of the neighborhood is the Roman Catholic,
and on the occasions when the coat is exhibited the
town is thronged by countless pilgrims.
Leaving Treves we continued down along
the river-bank to Rawen Kaulin, where we turned inland
for a few miles and I was assigned to a village known
as Eitelsbach. The inhabitants were badly frightened
when we rode in most of the men hid and
the women stood on the door-steps weeping. I
suppose they expected to be treated in the manner that
they had behaved to the French and Belgians, and as
they would have done by us had the situation been
reversed. When they found they were not to be
oppressed they became servile and fawning. I
had my officers’ mess in the schoolmaster’s
house. He had been a non-commissioned officer
of infantry, and yet he wanted to send his daughters
in to play the piano for us after dinner. We
would have despised the German less if he had been
able to “hate” a little more after he
was beaten and not so bitterly while he felt he was
winning.
The country through which we marched
during the next few days was most beautiful.
We followed the winding course of the river, making
many a double “S” turn. The steep
hills came right to the bank; frequently the road
was cut into their sides. A village was tucked
in wherever a bit of level plain between the foot
of the hill and the river permitted. When the
slopes gave a southern exposure they were covered with
grape-vines, planted with the utmost precision and
regularity. Every corner and cranny among the
rocks was utilized. The original planting must
have been difficult, for the soil was covered with
slabs of shale. The cultivator should develop
excellent lungs in scaling those hillsides. The
leaves had fallen and the bare vines varied in hue
from sepia brown to wine color, with occasional patches
of evergreen to set off the whole. Once or twice
the road left the river to cut across over the mountains,
and it cost our horses much exertion to drag the limbers
up the steep, slippery trail. It was curious
to notice the difference between those who dwelt along
the bank and the inhabitants of the upland plateau.
The latter appeared distinctly more “outlandish”
and less sleek and prosperous. The highlands
we found veiled in mist, and as I looked back at the
dim outlines of horse and man and caisson, it seemed
as if I were leading a ghost battery.
We were in the heart of the wine country,
and to any one who had enjoyed a good bottle of Moselle
such names as Berncastel and Piesport had long been
familiar. In the former town I was amused on passing
by a large millinery store to see the proprietor’s
name was Jacob Astor. The little villages inevitably
recalled the fairy-tales of Hans Andersen and the Grimm
brothers. The raftered houses had timbered balconies
that all but met across the crooked, winding streets
through which we clattered over the cobblestones.
Capping many of the beams were gargoyles, demons, and
dwarfs, and a galaxy of strange creatures were carved
on the ends of the gables that jutted out every which
way. The houses often had the date they were
built and the initials of the couple that built them
over the front door, frequently with some device.
I saw no dates that went further back than the late
sixteen hundreds, though many of the houses doubtless
were built before then. The doors in some cases
were beautifully carved and weathered. The old
pumps and wells, the stone bridges, and the little
wayside shrines took one back through the centuries.
To judge by the records carved on wall and house,
high floods are no very uncommon occurrence the
highest I noticed was in 1685, while the last one of
importance was credited to 1892.
We were much surprised at the well-fed
appearance of the population, both old and young,
for we had heard so much of food shortages, and the
Germans when they surrendered had laid such stress
upon it. As far as we could judge; food was more
plentiful than in France. Rubber and leather were
very scarce, many of the women wore army boots, and
the shoes displayed in shop-windows appeared made
of some composition resembling pasteboard. The
coffee was evidently ground from the berry of some
native bush, and its taste in no way resembled the
real. Cigars were camouflaged cabbage-leaves,
with little or no flavor, and the beer sadly fallen
off from its pre-war glory. Still, in all the
essentials of life the inhabitants appeared to be
making out far better than we had been given to believe.
We met with very little trouble.
There were a few instances where people tried to stand
out against having men billeted in their houses, but
we of course paid no attention except that we saw
to it that they got more men than they would have
under ordinary circumstances. Every now and then
we would have amusing side-lights upon the war news
on which the more ignorant Boches had been fed.
A man upon whom several of my sergeants were quartered
asked them if the Zeppelins had done much damage
to New York; and whether Boston and Philadelphia had
yet been evacuated by the Germans he had
heard that both cities had been taken and that Washington
was threatened and its fall imminent.
Our men behaved exceedingly well.
Of course there were individual cases of drunkenness,
but very few considering that we were in a country
where the wine was cheap and schnapps plentiful.
There were the inevitable A.W.O.L.’s and a number
of minor offenses, but I found that by making the
prisoner’s life very unattractive seeing
to it that they performed distasteful “fatigues,”
giving them heavy packs to carry when we marched,
and allowing them nothing that could be construed as
a delicacy I soon reformed the few men
that were chronically shiftless or untidy or late.
When not in cantonments the trouble with putting men
under arrest is that too often it only means that
they lead an easier life than their comrades, and
it takes some ingenuity to correct this situation.
Whenever it was in any way possible an offender was
dealt with in the battery and I never let it go further,
for I found it made for much better spirit in a unit.
The men were a fine lot, and such
thoroughgoing Americans, no matter from what country
their parents had come. One of my buglers had
landed in the United States only in 1913; he had been
born and brought up on the confines of Germany and
Austria, and yet when a large German of whom he was
asking the way said, “You speak the language
well your parents must be German,”
the unhesitating reply was: “Well, my mother
was of German descent!” The battery call read
like a League of Nations, but no one could have found
any cause of complaint in lack of loyalty to the United
States.
The twelfth day after we had crossed
over the river from Luxemburg found us marching into
Coblenz. We were quartered in large brick barracks
in the outskirts of the city. The departing Germans
had left them in very bad shape, and Hercules would
have felt that cleaning the Augean stables was a light
task in comparison. However, we set to work without
delay and soon had both men and horses well housed.
Life in the town was following its normal course;
the stores were well stocked and seemed to be doing
a thriving trade. We went into a cafe where a
good orchestra was playing and had some very mediocre
war beer, and then I set off in search of the Turkish
bath of which I was much in need. The one I found
was in charge of an ex-submarine sailor, and when
I was shut in the steam-room I wondered if he were
going to try any “frightfulness,” for I
was the only person in the bath. My last one
had been in a wine-vat a full week before, and I was
ready to risk anything for the luxury of a good soak.
Orders to march usually reached us
at midnight why, I do not know; but we
would turn in with the belief that we would not move
on the following day, and the next we knew an orderly
from regimental headquarters would wake us with marching
instructions, and in no happy frame of mind we would
grumblingly tumble out to issue the necessary commands.
Coblenz proved no exception to this rule. As
we got under way, a fine rain was falling that was
not long in permeating everything. Through the
misty dripping town the “caissons went
rolling along,” and out across the Pfaffendorf
bridge, with the dim outlines of the fortress of Ehrenbreitstein
towering above us. The men were drowsy and cold.
I heard a few disparaging comments on the size of
the Rhine. They had heard so much talk about it
that they had expected to find it at least as large
as the Mississippi. We found the slippery stones
of the street ascending from the river most difficult
to negotiate, but at length everything was safely
up, and we struck off toward the bridge-head position
which we were to occupy for we knew not how long.
The Huns had torn down the sign-posts at the crossroads;
with what intent I cannot imagine, for the roads were
not complicated and were clearly indicated on the
maps, and the only purpose that the sign-posts could
serve was to satisfy a curiosity too idle to cause
us to calculate by map how far we had come or what
distance lay still before us. A number of great
stone slabs attracted our attention; they had been
put up toward the close of the eighteenth century
and indicated the distance in hours. I remember
one that proclaimed it was three hours to Coblenz and
eighteen to Frankfort. I have never seen elsewhere
these records of an age when time did not mean money.
The march was in the nature of an
anticlimax, for we had thought always of Coblenz as
our goal, and the good fortune in which we had played
as regarded weather during our march down the valley
of the Moselle had made us supercritical concerning
such details as a long, wearisome slogging through
the mud in clumsy, water-logged clothes. At length
we reached the little village of Niederelbert and
found that Lieutenant Brown, whose turn it was as
billeting officer, had settled us so satisfactorily
that in a short time we were all comfortably steaming
before stoves, thawing out our cramped joints.
With the exception of Lieutenant Furness
my officers belonged to the Reserve Corps, and we
none of us looked forward to a long tour of garrison
duty on the Rhine or anywhere else. Furness, who
had particularly distinguished himself in liaison
work with the infantry, held a temporary commission
in the regular army, but he was eager to go back to
civil life at the earliest opportunity. In Germany
the prospect was doubly gloomy, for there would be
no intercourse with the natives such as in France had
lightened many a weary moment. Several days later
regimental headquarters coveted our village and we
were moved a few miles off across the hills to Holler.
We set to work to make ourselves as snug and comfortable
as possible. I had as striker a little fellow
of Finnish extraction name Jahoola, an excellent man
in every way, who took the best of care of my horse
and always managed to fix up my billet far better than
the circumstances would seem to permit.
The days that followed presented little
variety once the novelty of the occupation had worn
off. The men continued to behave in exemplary
fashion, and the Boche gave little trouble. As
soon as we took up our quarters we made the villagers
clean up the streets and yards until they possessed
a model town, and thereafter we “policed up”
every untidiness of which we might be the cause, and
kept the inhabitants up to the mark in what concerned
them. The head of the house in which I was lodged
in Niederelbert told me that his son had been a captain
in the army but had deserted a fortnight before the
armistice and reached home in civilian clothes three
weeks in advance of the retreating army. Of course
he was not an officer before the war not
of the old military school, but the fact that he and
his family were proud of it spoke of a weakening discipline
and morale.
Now that we had settled down to a
routine existence I was doubly glad of such books
as I had been able to bring along. Of these, O.
Henry was the most popular. The little shilling
editions were read until they fell to pieces, and
in this he held the same position as in the British
army. I had been puzzled at this popularity among
the English, for much of his slang must have been
worse than Greek to them. I also had Charles
O’Malley and Harry Lorrequer, Dumas’
Dame de Monsereau and Monte Cristo,
Flaubert’s Education Sentimentale, Gibbon’s
Rise and Fall, and Borrow’s Zincali.
These with the Oxford Books of French and English
verse and a few Portuguese and Spanish novels comprised
my library, a large one considering the circumstances.
It was always possible to get books through the mail,
although they were generally many months en route.
Soon after we reached the bridge-head,
officers of the regular army began turning up from
the various schools whither they had been sent as
instructors. We all hoped to be released in this
manner, for we felt that the garrison duty should
be undertaken by the regulars, whose life business
it is, in order to allow the men who had left their
trades and professions to return to their normal and
necessary work. In the meantime we set out to
familiarize ourselves with the country and keep our
units in such shape that should any unforeseen event
arise we would be in a position to meet it. The
horses required particular attention, but one felt
rewarded on seeing their improvement. There were
many cases of mange which we had been hitherto unable
to properly isolate, and good fodder in adequate quantity
was an innovation.
For the men we had mounted and unmounted
drill, and spent much time in getting the accoutrements
into condition for inspection. During part of
the march up rations had been short, and for a number
of days were very problematical. Sufficient boots
and clothing were also lacking and we had had to get
along as best we could without. Now that we were
stationary our wants were supplied, and the worst
hardship for the men was the lack of recreation.
A reading-room was opened and a piano was procured,
but there was really no place to send them on short
passes; nothing for them to do on an afternoon off.
When I left, trips down the Rhine were being planned,
and I am sure they proved beneficial in solving the
problem of legitimate relaxation and amusement.
My father had sent my brother and
myself some money to use in trying to make Christmas
a feast-day for the men. It was difficult to get
anything, but the Y.M.C.A. very kindly helped me out
in procuring, chocolates and cigarettes, and I managed
to buy a couple of calves and a few semi-delicacies
in the local market. While not an Arabian Night
feast, we had the most essential adjunct in the good
spirits of the men, who had been schooled by their
varied and eventful existence of the past eighteen
months to make the most of things.
In the middle of January my brother
and I left for Paris. I was very sorry to leave
the battery, for we had been through much together,
but in common with most reserve officers I felt that,
now that the fighting was over, there was only one
thing to be desired and that was to get back to my
wife and children. The train made light of the
distance over which it had taken us so long to march,
and the familiar sight of the friendly French towns
was never more welcome. After several months on
duty in France and Italy, I sailed on a transport
from Brest, but not for the wonderful home-coming
to which I had so long looked forward.