Chap30.htm
Chapter XXX
The Battle for Brest
The Post‑OVERLORD Decision
Near the end of August the Allies
could consider Operation OVERLORD virtually complete. They had secured a
continental lodgment area from which to mount an assault against the heart of Germany.
The next step, according to plans, was to transform the lodgment into a
continental base to support the blow that was to lay the enemy prostrate and
allow Allied troops to overrun the German homeland.
To prepare for the final attack
toward Germany, the Allies had intended, even as late as mid‑August, to
halt for several weeks at the Seine. But developments on the battle front during the second half of
August ‑ the partial destruction of two German armies in Normandy and the
landings in southern France ‑ had prompted German withdrawal along the
entire front. This made it imperative for the Allies to deny the enemy the
chance to recover and make a stand at any of several terrain features along the
path of retreat that were favorable for defense. Logistical considerations not withstanding,
pursuit operations had to be undertaken at once. (See Maps 1, VIII, X11.)
When the Allies reached the Seine,
the logistical situation was far from satisfactory. With the exception of
Cherbourg, the Allies had no major ports. Preinvasion planners had assumed that
the conclusion of OVERLORD would find the Americans in possession of the Breton
ports of St. Malo, Brest, Quiberon Bay, and Nantes, and the British in position
to take Rouen and Le Havre. Although by
mid‑August the British could anticipate quick capture of the Seine ports
and even the Channel ports, the Americans possessed only Cherbourg and the
destroyed and useless harbor facilities at St. Malo. Strong German garrisons
still held Brest, Lorient. (and the Quiberon peninsula), and St. Nazarie (which
barred the mouth of the Loire River and therefore access to Nantes). All Allied
supplies were still coming across the beaches, with the exception of inconsequential
quantities arriving through such minor ports as Isigny, Granville, and Cancale,
and somewhat larger amounts discharged at Cherbourg. Although the tonnage
landed with such limited facilities exceeded all expectations, the approach of
autumn weather cast a shadow on future prospects.
The logistical apparatus on the Continent
was also deficient. The spectacular
nature of the breakout from the cramped pre-COBRA beachhead had made it
impossible for supply installations to keep up with the combat units, supply
distances having suddenly changed from tens of miles to hundreds. The First
Army had relinquished logistical responsibilities to the Communications Zone at
the end of July, just when the demands of the static battle of the hedgerows
were giving way to the different requirements of mobile warfare. The Communications
Zone, instead of expanding the depot system as planned, had to assume the more
pressing task of delivering supplies directly to the consumers. The result was
not the most secure logistical base from which to launch post-OVERLORD
operations.
Despite his awareness of the logistical
flaws, General Eisenhower on 17 August felt that "the beating" the
Allies were administering the enemy in Normandy would enable the Allies to
"dash across the Seine." Two days later he decided to cross the Seine
in strength. On 20 August, while the
79th Division was securing the first Allied bridgehead over the Seine, the
Allied command was giving serious consideration to the next goal ‑ the Rhine
River, more than two hundred and fifty miles to the east.
The decision to cross the Seine
necessitated little soul searching. The example of McClellan at Antietam was
too well known. Pursuit of a defeated enemy was axiomatic.
General Eisenhower's decision to pursue
the enemy across the Seine changed neither the port development plans nor the
prevalent feeling that the Breton ports were vital for the development of the
campaign. According to the Allied troop
dispositions and the plans for post-OVERLORD operations, the 21 Army Group
would advance up the Channel coast while the 12th Army Group drove eastward
away from the coast and across northern France. By liberating and opening the
Seine and Channel ports, which had been reserved in the OVERLORD planning for
British and Canadian logistical operations, the 21 Army Group would ease its
supply problems. In contrast, the American forces would be moving away from the
coast and lengthening their supply lines. Since in August Cherbourg was still
handling less cargo than anticipated and since the gales of September might
disrupt and even terminate the beach operations on the invasion coast,
sheltered waters and port unloading facilities in Brittany, despite their increasing
distance from the front, remained objectives of vital importance.
"We are promised greatly
accelerated shipments of American divisions directly from the United
States," General Eisenhower explained to General Montgomery as he set
forth his thoughts on pursuit operations beyond the Seine, "and it is
mandatory that we capture and prepare ports and communications to receive them.
This has an importance second only to the destruction of the remaining enemy
forces on our front." The speed of Bradley's advance east of Paris, General
Eisenhower felt, would be governed by the speed with which the Breton ports
could be secured and the supply situation improved.
The opening attack on the most important
of the Breton ports, Brest, coincided on 25 August with the start of the
pursuit beyond the Seine. Generals Eisenhower, Bradley, and Patton anticipated
quick success on both fronts, and the Supreme Commander talked of sending the
VIII Corps to secure Bordeaux very soon‑as soon as the Breton ports fell."
A fortress city of 80,000 people
situated on the northern shore of an excellent landlocked roadstead of ninety
square miles, Brest had been a major base of the French Navy. Because it was
primarily a naval base and remote from the industrial centers of France, Brest
had never attained commercial importance. In World War I, the American Expeditionary
Force had used it as the principal port for the direct movement of troops from
the United States to France. Though the cargo‑handling facilities were
not as good as at other French ports, Brest offered the Allies an excellent
deep water harbor. The railroad from Brest to Rennes, along the north shore of
Brittany, had been captured in good condition, and supplies discharged at Brest
could easily be transported to the troops in the interior of France.

Conscious of the deficiency of
unloading equipment at Brest and of the probability that the Germans would
destroy all facilities before letting the port fall into Allied hands, the
Allies had drawn plans for constructing a port complex at Quiberon Bay. Yet in
order to use not only Quiberon but also Lorient, St. Nazaire, and Nantes, the
Allies first had to clear the sea lanes around the Brittany tip ‑ that
is, eliminate the German naval base at Brest and seize the submarine pens
there.
In the same way that the Allies
thought the fall of St. Malo would weaken the German will to resist at the
other port cities, they hoped that the reduction of Brest would affect the
morale of the garrisons at Lorient and St. Nazaire. After Brest, the Allies intended
to attack Lorient "if it was still holding out."
Thus it came about that as the
Allies plunged into pursuit of the retreating enemy east of the Seine, more
than fifty thousand U.S. troops became involved in sieore operations against
the fortress of Brest, three hundred miles west of the front.
The
Problems at Brest
Brittany had become the province of
General Middleton and the VIII Corps when they entered the peninsula by way of
Avranches on the first day of August. Before the first week was over, the majority
of the Germans had fled the interior portions and taken refuge in ports
designated by Hitler as fortresses: St. Malo, Brest, Lorient, and St. Nazaire.
The only enemy forces in the interior were small detachments that hid by day
and attempted to reach a fortress port by night.

Though the Germans inside the fortresses
displayed little penchant for sallying forth, they had to be contained until
means to eliminate them became available. Excluding those at St. Malo and a
small force at Paimpol, Middleton estimated that approximately 35,000 Germans
(about 10,000 field forces and 25,000 naval, marine, and miscellaneous garrison
troops) remained in Brittany. He judged that about 16,000 troops (half of which
were field forces) garrisoned Brest, 9,500 the Lorient area (including
Concarneau and Belle‑Isle), and 9,500 St. Nazaire. (See Map VIII.)
Middleton's primary mission, after
the fall of St. Malo, would be the capture of Brest, but the forces then
available to him were insufficient for this and his other tasks. The whirlpool
that was sucking Allied forces eastward to the Seine and beyond left the VIII
Corps with responsibility for a widening gap between its forces in Brittany and
the southern flank of the Third Army. Eventually Middleton guarded a southern
flank two hundred and fifty miles long. When he received, because of a
typographical error, a telegram intended for the VII Corps, telling him to
"take over the Melun bridgehead" on the Seine, he replied,
"Can't do it; stretched too far already."
Having lost the 4th Armored Division to the XII Corps, Middleton covered the Nantes‑Angers area with the 2d Cavalry Group and a regiment of the 80th Division. He had the bulk of the 6th Armored Division at Lorient, a small combat command of the 6th and a few 8th Division troops at Brest. With Task Force A clearing the Paimpol area, the 83d Division heavily engaged at St. Malo, and the 8th Division protecting Rennes, the capture of Brest and the protection of an ever‑extending front along the Loire River were beyond the capacities of the corps. To permit the 83d Division (upon the reduction of St. Malo) to assume the less wearing mission of patrolling the Loire River, and to reinforce the 8th Division and Task Force A scheduled for action at Brest (several thousand FFI members under Colonel Eon were also available for action on the periphery of Brest), Bradley transferred from the First Army to Middleton the 2d and 29th Divisions, which had been pinched out near Tinchebray during the reduction of the Argentan‑Falaise pocket, and two Ranger battalions, which had been performing rear‑area guard duty.

At Lorient General Grow, the 6th
Armored Division commander, chafed under his static containment mission and
wrote Middleton "a plea for the characteristics of the Division to be
exploited to the maximum at the earliest practicable date." Middleton appreciated Grow's eagerness to get
into the main operational stream outside Brittany, but considered the presence
of an armored reserve essential. Grow then went to see Patton, who told Grow to
move a combat command to Orleans; on the way, the troops were to clear small
German groups that were still a nuisance along the Loire River. At least part
of the 6th Armored Division would thus be closer to the main body of the Third
Army and more quickly available to Patton. CCB started out of Brittany on 28
August, forced a small group of Germans on the north bank to evacuate to Saumur,
found no other enemy forces north of the Loire River, and eventually moved to
Montargis."
Meanwhile forces gathered for the attack on Brest. The Communications Zone headquarters took responsibility for Rennes and relieved the 8th Division, which reached Plabennec by 18 August. The 2d Division arrived at Landerneau on 19 August, and the 29th Division assembled just south of Larmilis four days later. With Task Force A and contingents of the FFI also nearby, Middleton was ready to commence his operation against Brest as soon as adequate supplies could be stocked. (Map XV)
Adequate supplies were as much a
problem for Middleton as they were for the commanders driving east from the
Seine. By far the most serious shortage for the siege‑type action about
to take place at Brest was in artillery ammunition. The shortage was already
plaguing the corps at St. Malo, and on 10 August Middleton had warned the Third
Army that he foresaw heavy ammunition expenditures at Brest. Patton promised
that even though the Third Army might be rationed in ammunition, lie would see
to it that the VIII Corps was supplied.
When the army requested formal
estimates of the Brest requirements, Middleton based his reply on the St. Malo
experience and on the expectation of using an armored division and three
infantry divisions supported by thirteen battalions of corps artillery. He
requested an initial stock of 8,700 tons of ammunition, plus a replenishment
allowance of 11,600 tons for the first three days.
The Third Army staff considered the
request excessive on two grounds. It anticipated that only two divisions and
ten corps artillery battalions would take part in the operation against Brest,
and it believed that the corps had overestimated the strength of the enemy
garrison and its will to resist. Setting 1 September as the target date for the
fall of Brest, Third Army allotted only about 5,000 tons for the entire
operation‑less than a quarter of what Middleton considered essential for
the first three days. As it turned out, three divisions and a separate task
force supported by eighteen corps artillery battalions‑division artillery
and tank destroyer battalions brought the total to thirty ‑ four battalions
‑ were eventually to take part in the battle, a force that further empliasized
the discrepancy between requirements and stocks.
Third Army's unwillingness to send
more than 5,000 tons of ammunition to the VIII Corps reflected the critical nature
of supply transportation for the main Third Army drive to the east. In
addition, co‑ordination between Third Army and VIII Corps was difficult
because of the growing distance between the two headquarters. On 25 August the
army and corps command posts were two hundred and seventy miles apart. Hoping
to alleviate the difficulties, Third Army arranged to have the Brittany Base
Section of the Communications Zone provide direct administrative support to
VIII Corps. A slight increase in ammunition stocks resulted.
When Generals Bradley and Patton
visited the VIII Corps headquarters on 23 August, General Middleton convinced
them he needed more ammunition. They immediately authorized 8,000 tons, which
they thought would be sufficient for six days, the length of time they considered
reasonable for the operation. Expecting the ammunition to be delivered,
Middleton launched his attack on 25 August. When all the authorized supplies
did not arrive, he had to suspend operations. Three days later he learned that
what he had regarded as minimum, Bradley and Patton had considered adequate.
As a result of better co‑ordination,
better arrangements for ship and rail transportation to the Brest area were
made on 29 August. Still, not until 7 September did the corps have enough
ammunition stocks to permit resumption of a sustained full‑scale attack.
Even then, so many agencies were involved that no one knew the exact status of
supply or what was en route or on order. Hoping nevertheless that a steady flow
of ammunition had been established, Middleton launched another attack on 8
September. He was not disappointed. By 10 September Bradley had assigned the
Brest operation first priority on supply. When the operation finally terinitiated,
25,000 tons of ammunition were in the corps supply point, much of which was
later reshipped to the active front, hundreds of miles away."
The difficulties in
fulfilling the VIII Corps requirements had come from intense competition among
the armies engaged in the pursuit for the severely limited overland transport
available. Ammunition shortages in Brittany occurred at the same time that
gasoline crises affected the pursuit. The VIII Corps used the beach of St.
Michel‑en-Greve (near Morlaix) to receive LST shipped items, but the
seaborne cargo was not adequate to supply all needs, and trains and trucks had
to bring most of the supplies to Brest from Normandy. An airfield near Morlaix
was used to bring in emergency supplies and to evacuate wounded.
Poor communications, long distances, and
weather contributed their adverse effects, but at the bottom of the
difficulties was improper co‑ordination for the Brest operation at all
the echelons of higher command due to the optimistic initial belief that Brest
would fall quickly.
Another headquarters became involved in the Brest operation on 10 September, when VIII Corps passed from Third Army control to Lt. Gen. William H. Simpson's Ninth U.S. Army, operational five days earlier at Rennes. The Ninth Army assumed responsibility for protecting the southern flank of the 12th Army Group and for conducting operations in Brittany. In addition it had the task of receiving, processing, and training units arriving in France. General Bradley had thought of inserting the Ninth Army into the line during the pursuit east of Paris, but the speed of the advance and logistical difficulties prompted him to assign it to Brittany. To permit Middleton to give undivided attention to Brest, General Simpson placed the 6th Armored and 83d Divisions, which were not involved at Brest, directly under his own control. Almost immediately afterwards, when Bradley called for troops to augment the forces in the pursuit, Simpson accelerated the movement into Brittany of the 94th Division, commanded by Maj. Gen. Harry J. Malony, in order to release the 6th Armored Division. Around the middle of September, after the newly arrived division assumed the job of guarding Lorient, the 6th Armored Division finally moved eastward to rejoin the Third Army.

The problems of getting the
operation started and keeping it in motion were matched by the task of reducing
the defensive complex of the fortress of Brest. (Map XIV) The city itself, originally on the slopes of hills on
both sides of the Penfeld River, spread over several neighboring communities,
among them Recouvrance and St. Pierre‑Quilbignan on the west, Lambezellec
on the north, St. Marc on the east. The city proper and the small commercial
port area are east of the river; the western side, known as Recouvrance,
includes the naval base, with extensive repair shops, drydocks, quays,
barracks, storehouses, and U-boat shelter pens.
The countryside around Brest, a
gently rolling plateau, presents a pattern of small hills and low ridges
separated in some places by narrow deep‑cut valleys, the whole criss‑crossed
by numerous streams. The Germans used these terrain features to good advantage
and organized a system of positions of various kinds and in varying strengths
to establish a defense in depth.
The defensive works ranged from
simple trenches to concrete pillboxes, casemates, and gun emplacements. Obstacles
included barbed wire entanglements, mine fields, and antitank ditches. The
Germans incorporated into their defensive system a number of old French forts,
built before the Franco‑Prussian War and located in the western and
northwestern suburbs of the city. Even the high ramparts of an ancient fortress
at the mouth of the Penfeld, a work constructed by Vauban in the seventeenth
century, had a role in the defense scheme ‑ in some places thirty five
feet high, fifteen feet thick, and protected by a moat, overgrown with grass,
vines, and flowers, and serving as a promenade for Sunday strollers, the walls
sheltered gun emplacements.
The Germans integrated into their
land defenses dual‑purpose antiaircraft guns and guns stripped from ships
sunk in the harbor by Allied planes. Batteries of coastal and field artillery
on the Daoulas promontory and the Quelern peninsula provided additional fire
support. Heavy guns near le Conquet, intended primarily to protect the sea approaches
to Brest, could also help the landward defenses. Although the Germans
considered their twelve batteries of Army field artillery and eighteen batteries
of Navy Flak inadequate for the task
of defending Brest, the Americans were to find them more than troublesome.

Approximately thirty thousand troops
defended Brest, nearly twice the number estimated by the Americans. The core of
the defense was the 2d Paratroop Division,
composed of tough young soldiers. Their commander, Ramcke, who had gained
prominence in the German airborne attack on Crete in 1940, was also the
fortress commander. His chief of staff was Colonel von der Mosel who, before
Ramcke's appointment, had commanded the fortress. Generalmajor Josef Rauch, the
commander of the 343d (Static) Division, was
charged with the Daoulas and Crozon sectors.
Ordered by Hitler to hold to the
last man, Ramcke was determined to do so. If he needed to justify resistance
that could count victory only in the number of days the garrison held out,
Ramcke could feel that the Allied forces he tied down at Brest and the
ammunition he caused the Allies to expend there would constitute just that much
less that could be brought to bear on the German homeland. Having evacuated all
the French civilians who might encumber his defense, Ramcke used his paratroopers
as nuclei to stiffen the defense of strongpoints held by the miscellaneous
naval and static personnel of the garrison.
Between 13 August, when the 6th Armored Division had started to displace
from Brest to Lorient, and 18 August, when the bulk of the 8th Division began
to arrive near Brest, the presence of little more than a combat command of
Allied troops near Brest led the German garrison to make raids on the
countryside. These came to an end as U.S. forces gathered. On 18 August the
VIII Corps command post moved one hundred and twenty miles to Lesneven, fifteen
miles from Brest, to undertake the siege of the fortress. Though Bradley and
Patton thought the Germans would soon capitulate, Middleton figured that Brest
would be little different from St. Malo. Several days before the operation
began, planners at the 12th Army Group also concluded that the Brest garrison
would probably fight to the last man.
The Fight for Brest
Even before the arrival of all his
forces in the Brest area, General Middleton launched a preliminary operation designed
to protect his flanks, isolate his objective, prevent the escape of the garrison
across the harbor, and secure observation points on the promontory between
Brest and Daoulas. Combining the 2d
Division's 38th Infantry, plus additional units, with General Earnest's long-standing
Task Force A, General Middleton created a unit called Task Force B under Brig.
Gen. James A. Van Fleet, the assistant commander of the 2d Division. [Other components were:
three field artillery battalions (from the 2d Division) , the 50th Armored
Infantry Battalion, a company each of the 68th Tank Battalion and the 603d Tank
Destroyer Battalion, and a battery of the 777th AAA AW SP Battalion (from the
6th Armored Division). The components of Task Force A were: the 1st Tank
Destroyer Brigade, controlling the 6th Tank Destroyer Group, the 705th Tank
Destroyer Battalion, a battalion of the 330th Infantry (83d Divission) , the
15th Cavalry Group, and an engineer combat battalion.]
He instructed Van Fleet to attack from Landernau to Hill 154, a
dominating feature on the approaches to Brest south of the Elorn River. (See map VIII.)

Task Force B jumped off on 21 August
and advanced rapidly for several miles until stopped by a massive volume of
fire from positions on Hill 154 and from artillery north of the Elorn. The
defenders, soldiers of the 353d Division,
were well dug in on a strong position that included a network of trenches
around the crest of the hill, eight steel and concrete reinforced pillboxes,
and barbed wire entanglements. They had more than twenty‑five machine
guns, several antitank weapons, and mortars. The strength of the position and
the fire power allocated to its defense indicated the importance the Germans
attached to its possession.
Supported by tank destroyer and
artillery fire, a battalion of the 38th Infantry assaulted on 23 August over
rocky terrain that afforded scant cover and concealment. Success was in large
part attributable to the action of Staff Sgt. Alvin P. Casey, who though
mortally wounded destroyed a pillbox with grenades. Against a total loss of 7
dead and 28 wounded, Task Force B took ‑ 143 prisoners and counted about
a hundred German bodies on the crest of the hill.
Having deprived the Germans of an
excellent observation post on the eastern approaches to Brest,, Task Force B
pushed forward to clear the remainder of the promontory. By forcing the Germans
to demolish the reinforced concrete bridge over the Elorn River and thereby cut
land communication between the promontory and Brest, the force secured
Middleton's left flank. The task force used flame throwers, demolitions, and
tank destroyer and artillery fire to destroy pillboxes and emplacements, It
cleared the entire peninsula by the last day of August and took 2,700
prisoners. Characterizing the action an "outstanding success," Middleton
dissolved the task force, sending the 38th Infantry to rejoin the 2d Division,
Task Force A to guard the approaches to the Crozon peninsula, and the 50th
Armored Infantry Battalion to, Lorient to rejoin the 6th Armored
Division."
Because the Daoulas promontory juts
out into the roadstead southeast of Brest, it provided excellent artillery
positions. Middleton dispatched a corps artillery group there to take under
fire the rear of the landward defenses around Brest and also German positions
on the Crozon peninsula. On the basis of plans drawn by Task Force B, Middleton
formed a provisional battalion of fifty‑seven machine guns, twelve tank
destroyers, and eight 40‑mm. Bofors guns to provide security for the
artillery group and to engage targets of opportunity in and around Brest.
The success of Task Force B led to
the formation of a similar unit for action on the right flank. Known as Task
Force S and commanded by Col. Leroy H. Watson, the assistant commander of the
29th Division, the regimental‑sized force was to clear the tip of
Brittany, specifically the coastal area between Brest and le Conquet. [Task
Force S had a variable composition but in general consisted of a battalion of
the 116th Infantry, the 2d and 5th Ranger Battalions, the 224th Field Artillery
Battalion, parts of the 86th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron, the 29th Division
Reconnaissance Troop, and a company each of engineers, antiaircraft artillery,
and 4.2‑inch mortars. The task force was aided by two hundred Russians
who had deserted the German Army.] Cutting the Brest‑le Conquet highway on 27 August, the
troops moved westward to the coast, captured the small fort at Pointe de Corsen
(an important radar station) and isolated le Conquet and the nearby important
artillery batteries at Lochrist (dual‑purpose 88‑mm. guns and four
280-mm. pieces in open pits). Siege action against the defenses of le Conquet
and Lochrist came to an end on 9 September after a four‑man patrol led by
1st Lt. Robert Edlin entered the main position of the Lochrist fort and burst
into the commandant's office. Pulling the pin of a hand grenade he carried,
Edlin called for surrender or death. The commandant surrendered his forts and
more than a thousand men. Task Force S was then dissolved.
After several postponements because
of the difficulties of securing ammunition and of co‑ordinating air,
naval, and ground forces, General Middleton set the date of the main attack
against Brest for the afternoon of 25 August. He planned to attack the city
with three infantry divisions abreast, the 29th Division on the right, the 8th
Division in the center (the main effort), and the 2d Division on the left. By
then the divisions were in contact with the forward edge of the German defense
perimeter, which formed a rough semicircle four to six miles around the mouth
of the Penfeld River. In that area were two defense belts. The outer line
consisted of field fortifications developed in depth and reinforced with
antitank obstacles, concrete works, and emplacements, most of which were built
during the few previous months. The inner belt, about four miles wide but only
3,000 yards deep, strongly fortified throughout with field works and permanent‑type
defenses, had been built long before the Allied landings in Normandy for close‑in
protection of the naval base. Because of the shallowness of the defense area,
the outer belt was the main battle ground on which the Germans had to fight the
battle of Brest. (See Map XIV.)
Middleton arranged to have heavy and
medium bombers attack targets in the city as well as on the peninsulas of the
Brest complex and obtained enough fighter ‑ bombers (some with 5-inch
rockets, some with jellied gasoline bombs) for a constant four‑plane air
alert in support of each division. In addition, Middleton secured the
assistance of' the British battleship H.M.S. Warspite for a 15‑inch‑gun
bombardment of the heavy coastal batteries, particularly those near le Conquet.
Part of the bombing program had to
be canceled because of adverse weather conditions, but seven groups of medium
bombers and 150 Flying Fortresses struck Brest and started a large fire in
Recouvrance, west of the Penfeld River. The Warspite hurled some three hundred
shells into the coastal batteries near le Conquet and after scoring several
direct hits shifted to forts in Recouvrance. Fifteen medium and heavy
battalions of the corps artillery were also active. Fighter‑bombers
strafed and bombed, and sank several ships in the harbor near the Crozon peninsula.
Despite this heavy volume of
preparatory fire, the well‑coordinated ground attack of the three
divisions made little progress.
Attempting to soften the will to
resist, RAF heavy bombers struck Brest around midnight of 25 August, and on the
following morning American and RAF heavies blasted targets again. The resumption
of the ground attack on26 August, however, brought little change. The German
garrison remained firm. [2d
Lt. Earl 0. Hall of the 13th Infantry, who participated in vicious fighting for
trenches and concrete emplacements until killed by artillery fire, was
posthumously awarded the DSC.]
The attack on 26 August displayed the kind of combat that was to predominate during the siege of Brest. Because ammunition stocks were low, the artillery reduced its activity to direct support missions. As the Americans came to a full realization of the strength of the German opposition, and as the pattern of the enemy defense system emerged, commanders on all echelons saw the necessity of changing their own tactics. The units turned to more detailed study of their tactical problems with the purpose of reaching intermediate objectives. The nature of the battle changed from a simultaneous grand effort to a large‑scale nibbling‑a series of actions dictated by the local problems of each sector commander.

The divisions began to probe to locate and systematically destroy pillboxes, emplacements, fortifications, and weapons, moving ahead where weak spots were found, overwhelming pillboxes with flame throwers and demolitions after patient maneuver and fire. Small sneak attacks, the repulse of surprise counterattacks, mine field clearance, and the use of smoke characterized the slow squeeze of American pressure. Fog, rain, and wind squalls during the remainder of August restricted air support, while continued shortages of ammunition curtailed the artillery. Yet on 28 August, a regiment of the 29th Division bounded toward Brest on the le Conquet highway for almost two miles against virtually no resistance. On the following day, the 8th Division gained on one front, but the Germans cut off two leading companies of infantry and marched them into Brest as prisoners. In the 2d Division sector, the troops were in the midst of dogged fighting to reduce strong positions. Typical of the fighting was the action of Lt. Col. H. K. Wesson of the 9th Infantry, who reorganized a rifle company reduced to forty‑six men, then led the unit in an assault across hedgerowed terrain, destroyed a machine gun position, and took fourteen German paratroopers prisoner.
On 1 September, the expected completion
date of the siege, as ammunition prospects seemed momentarily improved and with
the divisions in the main German defenses, General Middleton again launched a
co‑ordinated attack after a strike by medium bombers and a fortyfive‑minute
preparation by the division artillery pieces and nine corps artillery
battalions. Although the VIII Corps Artillery fired 750 missions, including 136
counterbattery, in twenty‑four hours, and although single pieces,
batteries, and sometimes battalions kept known enemy gun positions under
continuous fire, the only apparent result of the attack was a gain of several
hundred yards by the 8th Division. Even this small gain was almost immediately
lost to counterattack.
Discouraged, General Middleton wrote "a rather pessimistic letter" to General Bradley. He reported that his troops were "none too good," that replacement arrivals were behind schedule, that ammunition supply was poor though improving, and that air support "left much to be desired." The Germans had .,no intention to fold up right away, having shown no signs of weakening." Middleton requested more 4.2‑inch mortars, more artillery, and more and better air support. General Bradley talked to Maj. Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg, the commander of the Ninth Air Force, in an attempt to improve the air support, and several days later General Eisenhower authorized Vandenberg to "utilize maximum number of aircraft which can be effectively employed in support of this operation."

Middleton's letter was like the darkness
before dawn. The first real break occurred on 2 September when the 2d Division
captured Hill 105 southwest of Guipavas. A month earlier the 6th Armored
Division commander, General Grow, had recognized the hill as a key terrain
feature in the defense of Brest, one of two hills dominating the eastern
approaches to the city. As the Germans fell back from Hill 105 several hundred
yards in the center of the corps zone, the 8th Division advanced and took
another of the fortified hills in the outer defense ring. Yet the 29th
Division, facing Hill 103 east of the village of Plouzane, had no such success.
For five more days the divisions continued
their individual efforts. While medium and heavy bombers attacked Brest every
day save one, local ground attacks inched the front toward the port. By the end
of the first week in September, the grip around the Brest garrison had
tightened. The 2d Division was within reach of Hill 92 (the second hill
dominating the northeastern approaches); the 8th Division was on the approaches
to the village of Lambezellec (the gateway to Brest from the north); and the
29th Division, still denied Hill 103 ("we're on it, but so are the Jerries"),
stood before Fort de Mengant, five miles west of the Penfeld River. By
then the besieged area was so small that heavy bombers could no longer attack
without endangering the American ground troops.
On 7 September Middleton judged that
lie had enough ammunition on hand (and assurance of more to come) to sustain
another effort on the whole front. Securing six planes per division for constant
air alert, he launched a co‑ordinated attack on 8 September after a
strong artillery preparation. The weight of all three divisions carried a
number of positions that previously had been denied. The 2d Division captured
strongly fortified Hill 92; the 8th Division‑to a great extent because of
the actions of Pfc. Ernest W. Prussman, who was virtually the leading man in
the attack‑advanced two regiments several hundred yards toward Lambezellec
and Hill 82; and the 29th Division finally took an important strongpoint at
Kergonant, just north of the village of Penfeld. [Pfc. Prussman was
posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor. S. Sgt. George T. Scanlon of the 121St
Infantry, who led an assault on enemy dugouts, was awarded the DSC.]
Prisoners totaled close to one thousand
men; American casualties numbered two hundred and fifty.
With that achievement on 8 September
and the arrival of eight LST's and two trainloads of ammunition that night, the
corps commander was optimistic for the first time since the beginning of the
operation. Furnished at last with adequate artillery support on the following
day, the 2d Division reached the streets of Brest, the 8th Division, after
securing Lambezellec, launched a two‑regiment attack and entered the city
also, and the 29th Division secured the village of Penfeld. Prisoners that day
totaled more than 2,500.
As the numbers of prisoners rose,
hopes of victory quickened. The battle for Brest entered its final but most
painful stage. The 2d and 8th Division became involved in street fighting
against troops who seemed to contest every street, every building, every
square. Machine gun and antitank fire from well concealed positions made
advances along the thoroughfares suicidal, and attackers had to move from house
to house by blasting holes in the building walls, clearing the adjacent houses,
and repeating the process to the end of the street. Squads, and in some
instances platoons, fought little battles characterized by General Robertson,
the 2d Division commander, as "a corporal's war.” A typical obstruction was a concrete
reinforced dugout no higher than ten inches above ground, which was built on a
street corner with an opening for a heavy machine gun at street level. Eight
men (with two flame throwers, a bazooka, and two BAR's) made a wide detour,
neutralized several small nests of resistance, came up behind the pillbox, and
flamed the position until thirteen Germans surrendered.
Because the 2d Division had a larger
section of the city to reduce before reaching the old wall, the 8th Division
completed its street fighting and arrived at the fortified city wall first, at
Fort Bougen on 10 September. An infantry assault, preceded by an artillery
preparation, failed to breach the wall, which was 25 to 35 feet high and behind
a dry moat 15 to 25 feet deep. General Stroh prepared an attack for the
following day, but after direct fire from heavy‑caliber corps artillery
pieces tore gaps in the upper portion of the wall without effect on the lower
sections, it was obvious that an infantry assault would be costly and of
doubtful success. Since the converging movement on the city compressed the
division fronts and deprived the divisions of sufficient maneuver room, General
Middleton decided to withdraw the 8th Division. This took place in several
stages. Two battalions assumed part of the 29th Division front west of the
Penfeld around midnight, 10 September. On the following night the 2d Division
relieved the 8th Division cast of the Penfeld. Two days later the advance of
the 29th Division pinched out the two battalions still in line, and the 8th
Division, no longer in contact with the enemy, began to move to Crozon to
secure the peninsula, to eliminate the guns there that fired on the troops
attacking Brest, and to prevent escape of the Brest garrison across the harbor.
The change proved beneficial. General
Gerhardt attacked at midnight, ii September (in part to cover the displacement
of the 8th). Crossing an antitank ditch near the village of St. Pierre, men of
the 29th on 12 September advanced toward Hill 97 from the north and west and
toward two old French fortifications, Forts Keranroux and Montbarey. While the
2d Division still was involved in vicious street fighting, the 29th Division
faced the necessity of reducing these and other forts.
Hoping that the Germans might be ready to surrender, General Middleton sent a proposal to Ramcke while guns remained silent on the morning of 13 September. When Ramcke declined, Middleton published the letters of parley for distribution to his troops. "Take the Germans apart," he told his men.
Fort Keranroux was the first
objective on the 29th Division's list. A battalion of the 175th Infantry, which
for three days had been denied a close approach because of strong outer works,
attacked again on the afternoon of 13 September. Staff Sgt. Sherwood H. Hallman
leaped over a hedgerow and eliminated a German machine gun emplacement by
grenades and rifle fire that killed several men and forced the surrender of
twelve others. About seventy-five nearby Germans, who had until then defended
the approaches, followed suit. [Hallman received the Medal of Honor.]
The entire battalion advanced two
thousand yards to Fort Keranroux, which was under bombardment from planes and
artillery and covered by smoke shells. Two infantry companies, crossing the
open ground immediately in front of the fort, lost but ten men and gained the
entrance in fifteen minutes. A hundred Germans surrendered. The fort had been
so blasted by bombs and shells that the original outlines of the main emplacements
were no longer recognizable.
Fort Montbarey was more difficult.
An old French casemated fort with earth filled masonry walls some twenty‑five
feet thick, surrounded by a dry moat fifty feet in width, and garrisoned by
about a hundred and fifty men, Montbarey was protected by outlying positions
that included riflemen and 20-MM. guns covering a mine field of 300 pound naval
shells equipped with pressure igniters. Even the preliminary task of approaching
the fort seemed impossible. The VIII Corps engineer, Colonel Winslow, had early
recognized the difficulties posed by the forts and had requested a detachment
of flame-throwing tanks. The aid came in the form of a squadron of the 141st
Regiment, Royal Armoured Corps, which was attached to the 116th Infantry, the
regiment charged with capturing Montbarey. The British unit had fifteen
Crocodiles ‑ a Churchill tank mounting a flame gun in place of a machine
gun and towing a trailer with flame ‑ throwing fuel. Their function was
to scorch the firing positions of the outer wall of the fort and cover engineers
who were to place charges to breach the wall in advance of an infantry assault.
On 14 September, after men of the 121
st Engineer Combat Battalion cleared a path through the mine fields under the
cover of artillery high-explosive and smoke shells, four Crocodiles advanced in
file toward the fort. When two tanks wandered from the path and struck mines
and another was destroyed by enemy fire, the attack was suspended. For the rest
of the day and the next, artillery, tank destroyers, and mortars pounded the
fort. Although eight fighter-bombers assigned to work with the 29th Division
were grounded by weather, they were able to give support when the infantry
resumed the attack on the following day.
Meanwhile, Engineer troops, working
at night, improved the path through the heavily mined and shell-pitted fields.
At dawn on 16 September, the Crocodiles advanced to within eighty five yards of
the fort. After an intensive artillery preparation, smoke shells were placed to
cover the outer wall. Concealed by the smoke, three Crocodiles advanced,
reached the moat surrounding the wall, and flamed the apertures. At the same
time, engineers placed 2,500 pounds of explosive at the base of the wall and
tank destroyers and a 105-mm. howitzer of the regimental cannon company hurled
shells against the main gate from a distance of two hundred yards. A breach was
torn in the main gate, and the engineer demolition charge opened a hole in the
fortress wall large enough for infantry assault. Battered by almost constant
fire from the ground and the air for several days, and dazed by the shock of
the explosion, the surviving eighty members of the German garrison surrendered.
The assault battalion of infantry had sustained about eighty casualties during
the preparatory stage of the attack but took none in the final assault.
With Fort Montbarey in friendly
hands, the main Recouvrance defenses were open. Before dark on 16 September,
combat patrols were over the wall and in the old city. Resistance disintegrated.
Over a ten-day period the 5th Ranger Battalion, in a series of actions that
came to be known as the battle of the forts, had captured the fort at Pointe du
Petit Minou and Forts de Mengant and de Dellec and thereby cleared the western
shoreline of the harbor of Brest. By
the end of 17 September only the submarine pens and Fort du Portzic remained in
enemy hands. The groups holding these capitulated on the following morning.
Meanwhile, the 2d Division had fought
through the streets of Brest to reach the city wall on 16 September. After a
strongpoint near the railroad station was eliminated, and after a patrol
exploited an unguarded railroad tunnel through the wall into the inner city,
troops climbed the wall and swept the remaining half mile to the water's edge.
As the battle for Brest had been
fought in two sectors separated by the Penfeld River, so the, German
capitulation occurred in two parts, both on 18 September. Von der Mosel
surrendered all the troops in Recouvrance to the 29th Division; Col. Erich
Pietzonka of the 7th Parachute Regiment surrendered
the eastern portion of the city to the 2d Division, appropriately enough in
President Wilson Square. Nearly ten thousand prisoners, who had prepared for
capitulation by shaving, washing, donning clean uniforms, and packing
suitcases, presented a strange contrast to the dirty, tired, unkempt, but
victorious American troops. Ramcke,
however, escaped across the harbor to the Crozon peninsula.
A cavalry squadron of Task Force A
had cut the base of the Crozon peninsula on 27 August and patrolled there until
Task Force B completed the Daoulas operation. Task Force A then moved onto
Crozon. General Earnest took Hill 330, the dominating terrain near the base,
then contented himself with patrolling since he knew he could expect no
assistance from the forces in the main battle at Brest.
When the 8th Division, pinched out
before Brest, arrived on Crozon in mid September, General Stroh (supported by
the attachment of Task Force A and the 2d Ranger Battalion) directed an attack
that overran a defensive line maintained by the 343d Division. The German division commander, Rauch, surrendered on 17
September, a day before the garrison in the city of Brest capitulated. The
final action on Crozon occurred on 19 September when troops scaled the wall
across the throat of the Quelern and pushed to the Pointe des Espagnols. Only a
group of diehards about Ramcke remained. That Ramcke too was ready to surrender
was obvious when he sent a message asking Brig. Gen. Charles D. W. Canham, the
8th Division's assistant commander, for his credentials. Canham replied that
his troops served to identify him. Claiming later to have fired the last shell
from his remaining 75‑mm. assault gun, Ramcke surrendered during the
afternoon of 19 September.
The action on Crozon had been far
from easy. In taking 7,638 prisoners on the peninsula, for example, the 8th
Division between 15 and 19 September incurred casualties of 72 killed and 415
wounded.
The final action occurred on 20 September
when Task Force A drove down to Douarnenez to demand the surrender of an
isolated group of three hundred Germans. Though they refused at first to
surrender, a few artillery rounds and the threatening presence of a single
fighter-bomber overhead proved sufficient persuasion.
The operations against Brest had
been a series of actions against approximately seventy‑five strongpoints.
The heavy-walled forts of massive stonework were for the most part pivots of
resistance rather than bastions of a line, their real importance coming from
their dominating sites. The Americans had generally advanced after probing for
weak spots, moving against open flanks, turning those flanks, and finally
reducing outer works by fire before destroying the individual strongpoints at
close range. Local actions, often seemingly unrelated ‑ "At one time
we had three separate wars going in the division," General Gerhardt later
stated ‑ produced an over-all pressure that was hammered home by
increasing amounts of artillery fire and by air attacks. The actual conquest of
the garrison had come as the result of action by the combined arms heavy
artillery fire, infantry assault, engineer blasting operations, and the use of
flame throwers. Bunkers and pillboxes of reinforced concrete, sometimes nine
feet thick, did not always require close-in action toward the last because in
many instances the constant pounding of bombs and shells had prepared the Germans
mentally for capitulation.
Air support normally did not
directly aid the advance of small units in the same way that close support
artillery, mortars, and machine guns did. The principal function of the planes
was to destroy or neutralize strong points a thousand yards or more behind the
enemy front, though the immediate effect weakened morale among the Germans in
close contact. Air also restricted enemy movement, (particularly of reserves),
kept gun crews under cover and away from firing positions, and limited hostile
observation.
From 25 August through 19 September,
the VIII Corps received continuous air support except during periods of
inclement weather. Fighter-bombers on alert status alone flew approximately 430
separate missions involving more than 3,200 sorties. Fighter-bombers of the IX
and XIX Tactical Air Commands also attacked fifty targets on planned missions
between 4 and 7 September. Medium and heavy bombers of the Eighth and Ninth Air
Forces and of the Royal Air Force attacked coastal and heavy antiaircraft
batteries, forts, blockhouses, strongpoints, and defensive installations in the
inner ring of the Brest defenses.
Despite the impressive amount of air
power employed at Brest, difficulties had ensued because of inadequate communications
and because the corps was conducting an independent operation hundreds of miles
from the main front. Aircraft had to be diverted to Brest, and good weather on
one front did not always signify the same for the other. The heavy and medium
bomber effort had been less effective than expected because the planes were
sometimes assigned tasks beyond their capabilities. Yet if certain selected
targets proved invulnerable to bombardment and shelling, the effect of tons of
explosives dropped from the air and the expenditure of almost 500,000 rounds of
artillery had lent authority to the tightening grip around the city.
American casualties totaled 9,831;
prisoners numbered 38,000, of which more than 20,000 were combat troops. The 2d
Division had advanced approximately eight miles at a cost of 2,314 casualties.
It had expended more than 1,750,000 rounds of small arms ammunition, 218,000
rounds of heavy caliber, had requested 97 air missions‑fulfilled by 705
fighter‑bombers, which dropped 360 tons of bombs. The 29th Division,
expending a similar amount of ammunition, had lost 329 killed and 2,317
wounded. Casualties of the 8th Division for the month of September were close
to 1,500.
The VIII Corps turned over the captured
fortress of Brest and the prisoners to the Brittany Base Section of the Communications
Zone on the evening of 19 September, and the combat troops moved into assembly
areas to rest, receive winter clothing, and repair armament and transport. Task
Force A was soon dissolved. The 29th Division departed on 24 September to
rejoin the First Army, and on 26 September the VIII Corps headquarters and the 2d and 8th Divisions began to move
by rail and motor to Belgium and Luxembourg for commitment in a new zone, still
under Ninth Army control.
In an
unrelated action occurring at the same time as the capture of Brest, the 83d
Division, which was protecting the Third Army south flank, had accepted a mass
German surrender at the Loire River. Allied successes in Normandy and on the
Mediterranean shores of France had prompted German forces in southern France to
withdraw. The German prisoners taken at the Loire were from the rearmost
portion of troops that had been withdrawing from southwest France since mid August,
a group, mostly noncombatant military personnel, under Generalmajor Botho H.
Elster, formerly commandant of Biarritz. When the Germans lost contact with a
screening force that was to have provided escort to Dijon, they became
increasingly harassed by Allied planes and the FFI. By 5 September, Elster's
columns stretched virtually unprotected more than thirty miles along the roads
generally between Poitiers and Chiteauroux. The commander of twenty-four men of
the Intelligence and Reconnaissance Platoon, 329th Infantry, 1st Lt. Samuel W.
Magill, displayed initiative and daring by taking his unit south of the Loire
to make contact with Elster on 8 September. Two days later Elster surrendered
to General Macon, the 83d Division commander. Elster conducted his force ‑
754 officers, 18,850 men, and 10 women, plus 400 civilian automobiles, 500 trucks, and 1,000 horse-drawn wagons in
three columns across the Loire at Orleans, Beaugency, and Mer into hastily constructed
prisoner of war enclosures.
The Best Laid Plans
The capture of Brest gave the Allies
a totally destroyed city and a thoroughly demolished port. The desolation was
appalling. The Germans had wrecked everything that might be of any use to the
Americans, Ramcke later boasting that he had done so "in good time." Twisted bridge structures blocked the Penfeld
River channel. The wharves, drydocks, cranes along the waterfront, even the
breakwaters enclosing the naval basin and the commercial port, had been ruined.
Scuttled ships lay in the harbor.

The American operation had also contributed to the destruction. Bombs and shells from air and ground, including white phosphorus and jellied gasoline, had burned and gutted practically every building in the downtown section of Brest as well as in Recouvrance. Demolished houses had tumbled into the streets, filling thoroughfares with rubble. Even after bulldozers cut paths through the piles of brick and masonry, weakened and collapsing walls made passage hazardous. The French inhabitants who had been evacuated before the siege returned to find their city virtually obliterated.
The vast amount of reconstruction
and repair necessary to rehabilitate the port led the Allies to confirm a
decision already made ‑ that use of Brest was not necessary. The
difficult operation at Brest had contrasted bleakly with the triumph of the
pursuit, and Allied commanders had been as disappointed by the siege of Brest
as they had been elated by the surge toward the Rhine. Interest in the
geographically remote ports of Brittany had begun to wane toward the end of
August as unabashed Allied optimism raised hopes that the Channel ports, including
even Rotterdam and Amsterdam, would soon come within reach.
On 3 September SHAEF planners recommended
the abandonment of plans to use the ports of Lorient, Quiberon Bay, St.
Nazaire, and Nantes, a recommendation SHAEF accepted four days later. Had the
battle of Brest not been in progress, the planners might well have withdrawn
their approval of Brest also, a conclusion they finally reached on 14
September, even before capture of the city. Yet only a day before, General
Eisenhower had said that since no one could predict with certainty when the
Channel ports would be taken and opened, he still felt that he needed Brest to
receive newly arriving troops and their organizational equipment that were
scheduled to come directly from the United States. Thus the continuing idea of taking Brest was like insurance that
everyone hoped he would not have to collect.
Whatever the actual value of Brest
in retrospect, it appeared with certainty at the end of August that Brest and
the other ports were needed to supplement the far from adequate port capacity
of Cherbourg and the minor harbors of Normandy. Yet soon afterwards, port plans
for Lorient and St. Nazaire were scrapped, and the 15,000 man German force at
Lorient and the 12,000 man force at St. Nazaire, together with a small pocket
northwest of Bordeaux, were contained until the end of the war.
Since the Breton ports, on which the
Allies had counted so heavily, were not put to use, what had been accomplished
by the siege of Brest? The immediate result was the elimination of a strong
German garrison of aggressive, first-rate soldiers. Containment of the Brest
garrison, according to General Bradley, would have required "more troops
than we could spare on an inactive front." According to Patton, he and
Bradley agreed that Brest was useless, but they felt that "when the
American Army had once put its hand to the plow, it should not let go." In any event, completion of the operation
freed VIII Corps for action in the operations directed toward Germany. The
charge was later made that the employment of three divisions and valuable
transport and supplies at Brest adversely affected pursuit operations, for just
at that time troops, vehicles, and supplies were desperately needed on the main
Allied front. Yet the resources used at Brest, slender when compared to the
total effort, could hardly have altered the pattern of a pursuit that was
destined to run a limited course.
The serious Allied problem of port
capacity had prompted the Brest operation. The Allied commanders who had
initiated the operation had not been able to foretell exactly when and to what
extent the Channel ports would alleviate the situation. Thus they looked upon
Brest as a port in reserve. The fact that capture of neither the destroyed
harbor of Brest nor the Channel ports proved to be an immediate solution did
not vitiate their wisdom and vision. For, as it turned out, the problem
persisted. Not until November, when Antwerp was opened, was the problem of port
capacity finally solved.
If it seemed in retrospect that the
commanders erred in starting the siege of Brest, they did so on the side of caution,
preferring to be safe rather than sorry. If they displayed any recklessness at
all, it was in the pursuit beyond the Seine, where that kind of behavior was
understandable.