The 44th Combat Engineers were in The Bulge and fought off the Germans in the Wiltz area (Luxembourg) together with the 28th Infantry Division.
About 1000 on 18 December, General Cota received the welcome word that acombat command of the 10th Armored Division was moving forward to his
assistance, probably to be in position to give support by the late
afternoon. Middleton had ordered the 44th Engineer Combat Battalion (Lt.
Col. Clarion J. Kjeldseth) to Wiltz on the previous evening with about
six hundred men (it had been operating sawmills and rock crushers,
working on roads, and the like). This unit now relieved the provisional
battalion, hastily formed from the 28th Division headquarters, by
setting up positions north and east of the town. There were also
available some tanks and guns to help the engineers, bandsmen, telephone
linemen, and paymasters who composed the defense. All that remained of
the 707th Tank Battalion-some six crippled tanks and five assault guns-
was gathered in Wiltz after a rear guard action in Wilwerwiltz. Six
three-inch towed tank destroyers from the 630th Tank Destroyer
Battalion, weapons of the 447th Antiaircraft Battalion, and light
armored cars of the 28th Reconnaissance Troop reinforced the perimeter.
Southeast of the town the undergunned batteries of the 687th Field
Artillery Battalion held firing positions along the road, sited to cover
the Wiltz perimeter or support the 3d Battalion, 110th Infantry,
fighting at Consthum.
December 19: The 44th was hit from the northeast and east byinfantry armed with machine pistols charging in alongside single tanks.
As American riflemen and machine gunners cut down the German assault
teams, they saw their own ranks thinning. In this fight the crossroads
near Erpeldange changed hands four times. The assault gun platoon gave
good support wherever the line was threatened, but by the end of the
afternoon its fuel and ammunition were nearly gone and the gunners,
after four days of nearly continuous action, were approaching complete
exhaustion. When darkness finally came, the 44th withdrew with the
assault guns into Wiltz, having lost four officers and 150 men.
While elements of the 26th Volks Grenadier Division were attacking onthe north side of the Wiltz, detachments of the 5th Parachute Division
struck the American perimeter on the south and southeast.
Information from various sources.
It is possible that this GI was captured during the Ardennes Offensive.
Erwin