Encoded for the Experiencing War web site for the Veterans History Project.
The recording of the interview with John Robert Slaughter was digitized.
This transcription was encoded with minimal changes to the original text in an effort to preserve original content and idiosyncrasies of the person interviewed. Period language and terminology are also retained. Encoding is literal with regard to the transcriptionist's capitalization, punctuation, and spelling. Spelling errors are indicated with [sic]; however, recurring errors in spelling within a single document have been marked the first time and not subsequently.
My name's Bob Slaughter. I'm -- I live here in Roanoke. I was born in Bristol, Tennessee. I'm 76 years old. My birthday is February 3rd, 1925. We moved to Roanoke in 1937.
That's Roanoke, Virginia?
Yeah, Roanoke, Virginia. And I went into the -- I joined the National Guard in 1940. I was 15 years old when I came on.
Fifteen?
Yes.
Now, did you have to falsify your records?
A little bit. I falsified it somewhat. I joined in August of 1940, and we were inducted into Federal Service February the 3rd, my birthday, 1941. And we were sent to Fort Meade, Maryland, and -- for one year of training, and we were on our way back from -- that light just now came on.
Yeah, I just turned it on. I thought maybe we needed some light.
Oh, okay. We were on our way back to Fort Meade, Maryland. We'd been down in North and South Carolina on maneuvers, and we were going back to Fort Meade to be discharged on February the 3rd, and the -- and the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, you know, on our way up, so we were -- our discharge was deferred until the end of the war. So in 1942 we went overseas on the Queen Mary, September 29th, and we went over unescorted, and we zigzagged every seven minutes with -- you know, changed course so we wouldn't be hit by a submarine, German submarine, U-boat, and it was about 300 miles from our destination, Greenwich, Scotland, the British sent out an escort, a convoy of about five or six ships, and one of them, the Curacoa, HMS Curacoa, light cruiser, cut in front of our path, we cut it in two and killed 332 British sailors right there in front of our eyes.
You know, it put a big hole in the Queen Mary, and we limped into port the next morning. And as we departed the ship, it was -- and looked back, we could see the hole in the bow. And I don't understand how we stayed afloat, but they had compartments, it was compartmentalized where the doors slammed shut and sealed off the water so that we stayed afloat.
There were 15,000 of us aboard, and if that'd have gone down, would have been -- I'm sure would have delayed the war, so forth. Anyway, we--we--we boarded a train from --at Greenwich, Scotland, down to Tidworth, England, and then from -- we stayed there a few months, and I went into the 29th Ranger battalion for 11 months.
We trained up in Scotland under the No. 4 British Commandos, and then we left after about two months up in -- it was wintertime up in Scotland, by the way, very, very cold up in the Highlands up near Fort Williams on Loch Lochy and close to Ben Nevis, the highest mountain in the British Isles.
We -- after a couple months up in Scotland, we then went down to Bude, Cornwall, in England, and we were training on climbing cliffs, cliff climbing. We were getting ready to do what the Second Rangers eventually did on D-Day, climb the cliffs of Pointe du Hoc. But a little later on we -- we moved from Bude to Eastleigh, England, and then from Eastleigh to Dover, and we were training for a -- training for a raid across the English Channel at Dover when word came down that we were disbanding and going back to our outfits and that the Rangers were no more, the 29th Rangers, so we -- I went back to my D Company.
I was promoted to -- yeah, promoted to squad leader, sergeant, when I got back to the company. And then we -- they were training for the invasion and we took amphibious assault training over at Slapton Sands and Barnstable (ph), and then about the 15th of April we left Ivybridge where we were stationed there in southern England and went over to Dartmouth, or near Dartmouth, where we had a -- a camp set up called a marshaling area where we were getting ready to go across the Channel to the invasion of Normandy. And while we were in this marshaling area, we were incarcerated behind barbed wire and then we were told that we were going to spearhead the invasion of Normandy and that we were going to land on Omaha Beach, which was -- we didn't know at the time, but that -- turned out it was one of the most difficult of all the landing areas on D-Day, and I guess my regiment probably lost more men that day than anybody.
How many did they lose?
We lost 800.
Out of how many?
Out of about -- well, actually the assault troops, we probably had about 2,400 or something like that, about a third of our forces.
And when you say lost, you mean that many were killed or killed and wounded?
Killed and wounded. I don't think we had anybody that was captured on D-Day that I know of, but we did have -- and more -- we had more kills than we did wounded, because most of the men that got wounded died of their wounds because we couldn't get -- you know, couldn't get first aid to them, so many of them that ordinarily would be saved bled to death or went into shock or whatever. But we landed right at the Vierville draw, which A Company landed first and they lost 91 men killed and most of the rest of the company was wounded except maybe about 15 I think were able to continue at the end of the day.
What was it like coming in?
Well, the water -- you know, the sea was very rough and everybody got seasick and we were soaking wet, cold and miserable. It was June, but it was -- it felt like November, December because it couldn't have been much more than fifties, the temperature, and we were wet anyway and the wind blowing and it was just -- everybody was shivering and very cold. Over to our right about half a mile or so the Battleship Texas was -- had turned broadside, and it was dark when we, you know, disembarked from the Empire Javelin and we were -- we were on -- we were let down to the sea by davits. We were on a British ship and the other two battalions of the 116th were on British -- on American ships, but the British had LCAs instead of LCVPs. We --
How were they different?
Well, the difference was they were a little wider and lower, and I think they were a better landing craft than the LCVP. The LCVP was a -- was made of plywood, too, and I think these are a little bit more substantial than that. We had about a -- I guess maybe a half inch armor on the -- for the ramp. When the ramp went down, of course, it was our method of getting off the ship, off the boat, carried 30 men, and --
It would make trips back and forth to get --
Well, I'm sure most of them didn't make but one trip because most of them didn't get back. I think ours was hit as it -- after we were let off, it limped -- they had to back out and get back in, you know, and somebody told me that it was -- it was hit and sunk, but we -- we were under fire all the way. When we got, you know, two, three hundred yards from shore we started taking artillery and mortars, and then as we got closer in and we -- and the ramp went down, that's when the small arms opened up. And they cut us down pretty good. The men -- some of the men couldn't swim and we were carrying 60 pounds of equipment or weapons, and most everybody had to dump their loads in order to get in, you know, and it was -- it was a tough deal. I laid on the -- as soon as I got off the landing craft, I was about fifth from the left -- people will hear all this tonight, so I don't want to give it all away, but --
No, I want it on the tape too.
Well, you can tape it in there then.
Well, I probably can't because I -- I think I won't then because I'll be so tired -- I won't -- well, this is my last tape, so this is --
Well, this is -- I'm tired of this too. I've been doing it for a long, long time. But, anyway, we -- when we got to the -- I just worked my way in. I went into the water, you know, first, because the first man off of our landing craft was -- he was hit in the head with the flailing ramp, it hit him in the head and killed him, so the rest of us went off to the sides. And I just went into the water. There's no way that we could have gone straight to the beach and crossed and up on the bluffs like they told us we were supposed to do, so we just -- I just stayed in the water and kept my head, you know, just above the water until I got -- until I could see, you know, that things were calming down a little bit.
Were there waves and everything, too, hitting you?
Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. There was six feet tide, you know, that would crash over you and then, you know, you would be underwater, then you'd be over and then it'd be down to your waist and it was up and down, up and down. And people were screaming, hollering, you know, drowning, some hit, bleeding, and it was -- they were hanging all over me trying to stay -- stay afloat, their head above water, and they were pulling me under and I was -- you know, it was terrible. And finally worked my way, you know, to the edge of the water and I just waited. The first man I saw trying to cross the beach was hit just about 25 yards -- the beach was about 400 yards of flat sand, because we landed at extreme low tide. The beach had land ops, had landing obstacles on the beach.
Now, those are things like we saw over there yesterday?
That was -- that was the hedgehogs.
Those sort of --
Where we landed there were more telephone pole like things. They were -- had a bipod and they were facing the -- and they were facing the ocean like this and the big Teller mine sitting on top, and they were designed to snag a landing craft in high tide. If we had landed in high tide, they would have been submerged and you couldn't see them and then you'd hit one of those mines and blow up. The hedgehogs were designed to snag the bottom of the landing craft and knock a hole in it.
But, anyway, we landed at extreme low tide, so all those were exposed and we could see them and avoid them. But the first person I saw running across the beach started stumbling and he was shot and he fell and he started screaming for a medic, and one of our medics went over to help him, and the medic was also shot and both of them screaming, and finally both -- within five or six minutes, they died, both of them, and so that put a chill in my thinking.
You know, I was getting ready to run across and then I thought I'll wait a minute, so I waited a little while till the machine guns died down a little bit and then I -- my squad was around me, two or three of them were. I told them I was going to take off and follow behind me, so I started running as fast as I could and as low as I could, and I started stumbling and I had my rifle with a bullet in the chamber and the safety off and my bayonet was fixed and I was ready -- you know, I thought I was going -- I didn't know what I was going to run into.
And I started stumbling, you know, through a little run of water and I almost stumbled and fell, but I didn't, and I accidentally fired my rifle, and that scared me because I was -- happened to be out in front, so nobody in front of me was shot or anything. But, anyway, I just started running, just kept running until I got to the seawall, which was about two-thirds of the way across the beach, and it was about five or six feet high, and there was a promenade road over this wall. And so I got behind the wall and I was going to take my raincoat off to clean my rifle because it became full of sand and water and it wouldn't fire after it jammed, after it fired and jammed. And so I -- I took my raincoat off to spread that out to clean my rifle, and my raincoat was full of bullet holes. I didn't realize that we had been under fire all the way across.
But you didn't get hit?
No, I didn't get hit. And so I caught my breath there at the seawall and my number one gunner and number two gunner right behind me and the rest of them were still back at the water's edge, and so I caught my breath and we continued on to the end of the -- till we got across the beach, and we got in behind the sand dune and we had a -- we lost our machine gun. We had a -- we had a tripod and a box of ammo and no -- nothing with it to fire, so we just stayed there right next to this sand dune right at the foot of the cliffs, the bluffs, and, you know, just kind of waited until some of the other people got across the beach, found somebody from H Company who had a gun, no tripod; we had a tripod and no gun, so we put them together and we had a gun and had one box of ammo.
And we could see this pillbox firing, you know, down on the beach about ten o'clock from where we were. And so my number one gunner started, you know -- started firing on this pillbox. And we could tell that it was indirect fire, he wasn't watching his target. He was -- probably had a periscope or something he was looking through or aiming through something, but he didn't have the exposure to it.
But, anyway, we were -- I could see the tracer bullets ricocheting in the opening of the pillbox, but they kept firing the 88, it's an 88 that they were firing out of there, and so we finally had to move our guns in and we had to move our position. And then we -- at the foot of the hill we saw a dead sailor laying head first down the hill and he was an officer and he had a big radio on his back, and so I didn't pay much attention to it. We found a path going up the -- up the bluff with mines on both sides and there was white tape, that the Germans had used this path to -- for the workers to work on the fences, and so we -- we went up this path and -- and met with the first sergeant of B Company and two or three of his men and I had three or four of my men by then, and so that was our -- our little band of brothers, so to speak.
And so we went up on top of the hill. And as soon as we got up on the hill, I could see this Nebelwerfer firing, we called it screaming meemies. It's a six-barreled mortar and it's fired electronically. And he was just plastering the beach, and it looked like it was about a hundred yards from where we were. We didn't have anything to knock it out with, so Presley, the first sergeant of B Company, remembered that radio down on the bottom of the hill, and we sent one of the men down to get it, brought it up and found out there was a destroyer on the other end of it, and he had the destroyer fire a couple of rounds and got to see where he was and then he just walked it in to where the Nebelwerfer was and he fired perfect and knocked it out with that, so that was a tremendous thing that he did.
Later that afternoon we went back down to the beach to get -- our mission was to get up on the hill as quickly as possible and dig in and get ready for the counterattack that we felt was coming, so we didn't have very many weapons and very much ammo and not many men, so I went back down on the beach to try to get -- you know, to round up some people and try to get more automatic weapons up there.
Wasn't that pretty scary to go back down there, because I guess they were still firing down there?
Well, they were still -- but it was scary up where I was anyway. I mean we were getting shot at up on the hill too, I mean, you know, so we had to go back and get some ammo. We didn't have any weapons. So I went back down, and that's when I saw -- the tide had already come in by then and it was just washing up all these dead GIs. I could tell then that we were really in bad shape because it looked like the whole regiment was just about wiped out, and all I could see down on the beach was dead men and wounded men, and very few, you know, healthy people.
And we did find a few weapons. There were all kinds of debris down on the beach. We picked up a few and took them back up the hill. But, anyway, that's the way we -- that was our D-Day. I looked out over the Channel, I could see all those 5,000 ships out there. It was an awesome sight. That gave us a little bit of courage, but I thought sure we were going to get pushed back into the ocean because we didn't have enough -- we didn't have enough men to -- to do anything with and we weren't organized at all.
All the officers, just about, were killed, most of the sergeants. We had -- out of my company, we had -- five of nine of our officers were killed including the captain; ten of the sergeants including the first sergeant was killed, two corporals, so all of our leaders were gone. It was just -- just a bunch of privates and sergeants and corporals trying to, you know, get something going and trying to get it to succeed.
Had you been trained well for what was going to happen?
Oh, yeah, but not for that, no. Nobody could possibly be trained for what we found that day. But you learn fast, you know. It's a quick study when your life's on the line, so we -- we finally organized a little bit. And the next morning, by the next morning we started moving inland and getting on down toward Pointe du Hoc. We went through Vierville and then down to Pointe du Hoc and then we relieved some Rangers down there who had been trapped, and then we went from there to Grandcamp, from Grandcamp to Maisy and then on up to Couvains and then towards Saint Lo.
Now, were you being fired on by Germans all the way?
Just about. Oh, yeah, yeah, they were -- see, they were -- had defensive depths. Not only did they have a defensive line right at the beach, but they also had -- they'd go back several hundred yards and they'd set up another defensive line and then another one behind that, so, you know, we were hitting -- then we got into the hedgerows, and then that was another obstacle that we had a terrible time with.
You weren't prepared, hadn't been warned about the --
We were not prepared for the obstacles -- I mean the hedgerows, no. They were -- we were very well trained about the beach and the pillboxes and how to -- you know, how to neutralize barbed wire and mines and so forth, but the hedgerows were strange to us. We didn't know how to operate with them until -- almost we were out of them before we actually learned how to use them.
And when we took Saint Lo the 18th of July, we -- by then we were -- somebody had invented these, you know -- took the jack rocks or whatever you call those hedgehogs and made, you know, prongs on the front of the tanks, they welded them on the front of the tanks so they could push through the hedgerows. That helped us a lot when we could get their tanks, you know, to help support the infantry.
I got wounded on the 5th of July in the hedgerow. I was -- a sniper shot me through my helmet, hit -- blasted through my head. And then on the 7th of August up to Vire I got a piece of shrapnel in the back and went back to England for -- from August the 7th until October the 10th. And then I was shipped out back to -- back to the outfit. We were then up to the German border, Aachen, and then I stayed with them the rest of the way.
Now, would you -- I guess it's probably useless to say your most memorable experience probably was D-Day, I would think, or was that --
Well, I tell you, we had so many, many of them. I mean every day was a memorable experience. They were all bad. I mean I've had, you know -- I didn't get hit on D-Day, but I sure did get hit up at Vire and up at Saint Lo.
Now, tell us what happened on each of those occasions. You said that -- how did it -- it grazed your forehead. Did it hurt you very badly?
No, actually it didn't. It actually -- the bullet went through my helmet, cut my strap on my liner, and either two or three pieces of my helmet went in my head or the bullet shattered. I think my helmet must have shattered a little bit and then it went into my head. Both of my eyes were blackened and, you know, I couldn't see for a couple days.
Did you go to a hospital?
I went back to the aid station about two hedgerows behind the front lines and I stayed back there until -- until my eyes, you know, got --
How long was that?
About three days, three or four days. And then I went back, and then I got hit again up at Vire.
And how did that happen?
Well, we were attacking Hill 203 and we were on this one hill and then there was a ravine and then another hill, and there was a crossroad down here, and the crossroad was under German, you know, they were -- had it zeroed in, and we were taking -- we were trying to count, you know, we could hear the gun fire and then they -- in three or four seconds it would hit, you know, explode, so we were trying to time our sprint across that ravine, you know, and I was doing that, and my number one -- my -- I was a section sergeant then, I had two squads, and one of my squad leaders, Charlie Culley, who was from Roanoke, he ran across and made it okay and then he got hit just as soon as he got across the road.
He was climbing the hill and a shell hit and a piece of shrapnel hit him in the thigh and it almost tore his leg off. Anyway, I went -- I went next after him and I was sprinting across and Charlie was lying there with his -- you know, all bloody and screaming, he was hollering, so I took his belt off and I tied a tourniquet around his leg and I put sulphadiazine on -- on his wound and I gave him a drink of water, and I took off running, trying to catch up with my section.
And I guess I'd gone about a hundred yards up this incline about like this (indicating) and I was puffing, and I didn't hear the mortar shell when it came. It just dropped in, a little 50 mortar, exploded, killed two or three and wounded two of us, so -- Bob Bixler and me. A piece of shrapnel hit me in the back and hit him in the -- I can't remember where he was hit. But, anyway, we laid up there until -- that was about four o'clock in the afternoon, and we laid up there on the side of this hill and there was a little stream of water running down the hill, a stream of water running down the hill, and that was the only protection I could see anywhere and the Germans still dropping mortars all around, so I crawled over into that streambed, I just got into the streambed, and it was about that deep (indicating), you know, and I mean not in the water, but it was just kind of a -- and it was -- the water wasn't very swift or anything, just a little trickle of water, got hit in August and I guess it was dry period.
Anyway, I laid there until after dark when the medics finally came up to get us. There were several of us up there wounded. And they had a little old Jeep with two stretchers on the hood of the Jeep, and it was rocky, you know. He was -- that thing was bouncing, and he hollered "Anybody over there," and I hollered, "Yeah, over here," and so he came over and put me on the stretcher and gave me first aid, you know, he looked at my back, and so they put me in one of the stretchers and Bixler in the other one, and he put that thing in reverse and down that hill he went, and I mean I thought sure in the heck we were going to wreck because the thing was bouncing up and down like that (indicating).
That must have not been fun when you were wounded.
Forty miles an hour down that little old rocky slope, and -- and we got down to the bottom of the hill there and then we were out of it and they took us over to the evacuation hospital, which was about two or three miles away, and they were just -- I bet there was a thousand men laying out there in that field on stretchers, you know, and moaning and groaning and some of them were dying, you know, some of them were already dead, and I think I -- in about half hour, forty-five minutes after laying there, a nurse came and got me and took me to the operating tent.
And there was a tent that -- there was a makeshift operating room and had a couple surgeons and a couple of nurses in there. And the first thing you know, he put some ether over my nose and said count, you know, from a hundred backwards. I think I got to 98 and I was gone, that tent started going around and around.
The next thing I remember, I was waking up, and I was so thirsty, you know. I asked the nurse, "Any chance of getting any -- a glass of orange juice." She laughed and she said, "No, you can't have anything to drink." She said, "You've got a abdominal wound. You can't -- we can't give you anything to drink," so she gave me a little piece of folded gauze that had been -- you know, damp gauze and put it in my mouth and I tried to suck on that a little bit. That was as much as she'd give me. Anyway, I stayed in that evacuation hospital ten days because I was an abdominal case. And while I was there, there was a German prisoner in the bed next to me and he was wounded in Vire too and we got to be pretty good friends in those ten days. Nice man, he was an ambulance driver.
[END OF INTERVIEW]