World War II Chronicle

World War II Chronicle: August 16, 1943

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Front page: a bomber crew mistakenly targeted a small Nebraska town instead of the nearby bombing range. The sand-filled practice bombs have a small explosive charge which luckily didn’t detonate, because it would have likely killed the children the bomb landed right next to in the pre-dawn mission. A similar incident occured last month in Boise City, Okla… The Navy is abandoning its history of naming aircraft carriers after famous battles or ships, dubbing the next Essex-class aircraft carrier USS Shangri-La. President Roosevelt threw reporters off the trail by telling them Jimmy Doolittle’s Raid on Tokyo originated at the fictional Shangri-La…

Lt. Gen. George S. Patton is pictured meeting with a 3rd Infantry Division officer near Brolo on page three. Lt. Col. Lyle Bernard commands 2nd Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment and earned a Silver Star in July. He is a graduate of West Point, Class of ’33…

A better view of Patton and Bernard

George Fielding Eliot discusses Rome as an open city on page eight…

Sports on page 14, which features a picture of football’s grand old man, Amos Alonzo Stagg, on his 81st birthday… Meanwhile the Washington Redskins and the College Football All-Star squad are mentioned as they prepare for their Aug. 25 match up.

Roving Reporter by Ernie Pyle

SOMEWHERE IN SICILY — Probably it isn’t clear to you just now how the Army’s setup for the care of the sick and wounded works on a battlefront. So I’ll try to picture it for you.

Let’s take the medical structure for a whole division, such as the 45th, which I have been with recently. A division runs roughly 18,000 men. And almost 1000 of that number are medical men.

To begin right at the front, three enlisted medical-aid men go along with every company. They give what first aid they can on the battlefield. Then litter-bearers carry the wounded back to a battalion aid station.

Sometimes a wounded man is taken back right away. Other times he may be pinned down by fire so that the aid men can’t get to him, and he will have to lie out there hours before help comes. Right there in the beginning is the biggest obstacle, and the weakest feature of the Army’s medical setup.


Once a soldier is removed from the battlefield his treatment is superb. The battalion aid station is his first of many stops as he is worked to the rear and finally to a hospital. An aid station is merely where the battalion surgeon and his assistant happens to be. It isn’t a tent or anything like that — it’s just the surgeon’s medical chest and a few stretches under a tree. Each station is staffed by two doctors and 36 enlisted men. They are very frequently under fire.


At an air station a wounded man gets what is immediately necessary, depending on the severity of his wounds. The idea all along is to do as little surgical work as possible, but at each stop merely to keep a man in good enough condition to stand the trip on back to the hospital, where they have full facilities for any kind of work. Hence if a soldier’s stomach is ripped open they do an emergency operation right at the front but leave further operating to be done at a hospital. If his leg is shattered by shrapnel they bind it up in a metal rack, but the operating and setting isn’t done till he gets back to the hospital. They use morphine and blood plasma copiously at the forward stations to keep sinking men going.


From the battalion aid station the wounded are taken by ambulance, jeep, truck or any other means back to a collecting station. This is a few tents run by five doctors and a hundred enlisted men, anywhere from a quarter of a mile to several miles behind the lines. There is one collecting station for each regiment, making three to a division.

Here they have facilities for doing things the aid station can’t do. If the need is urgent they re-dress the wounds and give the men more morphine, and they perform quite a lot of operations. Then the men are sent by ambulance on back to a clearing station.

The 45th Division has two clearing stations. Only one works at a time. While one works the other takes a few hours’ rest, then leap frogs ahead of the other one, sets up its tents and begins taking the patients. In emergencies both clearing stations work at once, temporarily abandoning their rest-and-leapfrog routine.

All these various crews — the company aid men, the battalion aid station, the collecting station and the clearing station — are all part of the division. They move with it, fight when it does, and rest when it does.


Then back of the clearing stations the hospitals begin. The first hospitals are usually 40 miles or more back of the fighting. The hospitals are separate things. They belong to no division, but take patients from everywhere.

They get bigger as you get back, and in the case of Sicily patients are evacuated from the hospitals right on to hospital ships and taken back to still bigger hospitals in Africa.

The main underlying motive of all front-line stations is to get patients evacuated quickly and keep the decks clear so they will always have room for any sudden catastrophic run of battle casualties.


A clearing station such as the one I was in is really a small hospital. It consists of five doctors, one dentist, one chaplain, and 60 enlisted men. It is contained in six big tents and a few little ones for the flurooscope room, the office, and so forth. Everybody sleeps outdoors on the ground, including the commanding officer. The mess is outdoors under a tree.

The station can knock down, move and set up again in an incredibly short time. They are as proficient as a circus. Once, during a rapid advance, my station moved three times in one day.


Evening star. (Washington, D.C.), 16 August 1943. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1943-08-16/ed-1/

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