Monday, October 13, 2008
June 2



Sunday, October 12, 2008
Dessau
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
Monday, October 6, 2008
May 9

May 8 was VE day. Victory in Europe. However, the German Army group continued to fight until May 12.

This letter was on paper that wouldn't fit into my scanner so it is two halves to make one letter. Hitler committed suicide 30 April, 1945. Dad makes no reference to it here on this date, nor to the truce that claimed victory in Europe.
Sunday, October 5, 2008
March 29


After breaking out of the Remagen bridgehead, the 9th assisted in the sealing and clearing of the Ruhr Pocket, then moved 150 miles east to Nordhausen and attacked in the Harz Mountains, 14-20 April. On 21 April the Division relieved the 3d Armored along the Mulde River, near Dessau, and held that line until VE-day.

From the best I can tell, Company B of the 15th Engineering Battalion was assigned to the 9th Infantry Division which is assigned to the V Corps, First Army, 12th Army Group. from 17 February 1945 to March 31. Following the Rhine crossings in March 1945, the Allies fanned out with columns of armor and motor-borne infantry and soon were making advances. The U.S. Ninth and First Armies, with the help of the new U.S. Fifteenth Army, encircled the Ruhr (an industrial section of the country) and took more than 325,000 prisoners. They were racing across Germany to take the agreed upon land before the Russians could arrive.
Saturday, October 4, 2008
Combat engineers could act as infantry and did so frequently. In the Battle of the Bulge, a handful of engineer battalions proved to be a vital asset to the American Army.
Arriving in Europe, March 11
Saturday, August 16, 2008
World War II
For my first blog I thought I would try to honor a request I received in June to share some of the details of a trip John McNallie took on October 28, 1945 while stationed in Germany with the occupying forces. On October 28, he and some of the friends in his unit visited the small town of Berchtesgaden in the German Alps.
Adolph Hitler had built his home, Berghof, nearby in Ober Salzberg. Berghof meant "mountain house".
Near Hitler's home was a home for Hess, Hitler's second in command. Also living nearby were Field Marshals Goering and Borman. Next to Hitler's house were SS barracks for 800 men, the administrative building, the motor pool, and a hothouse for the plants that Hitler loved. There was also a guesthouse. Tunnels connected all these buildings and in the last months before Germany's defeat these tunnels held huge amounts of food. In the basement was a shooting gallery. Nearby was a guest hotel for 350 people. That hotel is open today.

Some people say Goering enjoyed walking in the alpine hills wearing shorts with a hunting gun.


The man on the right is my father, John McNallie.
This is Adlerhorst--Eagle's Nest--Hitler's hideout. It was a short distance away from the Berghof. The road ended a 100 feet below the house. An elevator took you to the rest of the way up.

Here are three of my father's friends posing in the window at the Berghof with the Alps in the background.