The
British Army in Italy 1945
A
Jeep supply train wends its way up a steep road over the Monte Di Rontana with
75mm and 3.7-inch ammunition for 85th Mountain Regiment, Royal Artillery, 2
February 1945. The ammunition was transferred to mules for the final part of
the journey. The guns were firing at German positions in Isola. Photo by Sergeant Menzies, No. 2 Army Film
& Photographic Unit. © IWM (NA
22042)
This is an excerpt from The Pigeons That Went to War by Gordon
H. Hayes. Hayes is recalling his
experiences with the pigeons during the invasion of Italy
“This reminds me of the times when the
birds were entrusted with special assignments by the Allied Forces. What follows is an account of possibly the
most difficult of them all:
It was early January, 1945, in the Italian
alps. The British 8th Army
was caught in the jaws of a blizzard, blustering and brutal. The troops were in action on a wide
front. But cold was becoming bitter and
forbidding. All means of communication
were paralyzed. Drifts of snow and ice---12
feet deep---rendered movement impossible.
Communication lines lay buried.
It was impossible to find them, let alone repair them. The chilling weather had affected the radio
communication damagingly…so that our radio relays were open to all ears.
As a last resort, therefore, a special
call was made for our pigeons. But we
were hesitant, apprehensive that the stinging cold and the stunning blizzard
would freeze our birds to death, or that their legs would be frozen or
frost-bitten. However, we agreed, albeit
reluctantly, to brush aside our anxieties and abide by the imperatives of the
exigency. We knew that the maneuvers of
the British division would have a significant bearing on the course of the
war. Hence we were duty bound to contribute
our share.
This realization led to the organization
of a special task force consisting of Harold Tagert (the Vhip), Ed Bradlo and
Roman Bradlo, Rusty Hemsath, and Walt Haid.
The Vhip, our leader, had the combat mobiles pulled to the front. We had the night as our cover.
The event, remembered by Rusty Hemsath,
reads in retrospect ‘… the intense cold
almost froze us to death, but we made it without any loss of life.’
After just two days the pigeons were ready
for action. So each battalion of the
British brigade was given a flight of pigeons on the fourth day. The fifth morning of their arrival, i.e. just
the second day of their draft, the birds began bringing urgent and secret
messages. Tearing their way through
blinding blizzards, their eyes blazing, feathers snow-shrouded, these doughty
birds delivered the goods. And what
birds they were! How would we ever
forget them? We could not then and
cannot now. After almost half a century,
their courage must give us pause to wonder if there is an affinity among all
living things. Our birds were fighting,
as we were. They died, as many of my
comrades did. We were called to war and
we came as did our valiant feathered friends.
There can be nothing nobler in human existence than to do one’s
duty. Perhaps those pigeons understood
that better than we did---or do now. It
might be that the fight for a free world was a concept that they who knew the
limitless sky and oceans of unbounded air could imagine. It may be our mistake to mourn those who were
lost---pigeons and men---for they have their honor. No more beautiful orison could be sung than
that they knew their duty and did it.
Amen. “
Photo courtesy of the Hayes
family.
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