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Devil's Brigade being Honored,

Sean the Nailer

Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
  • May 20, 2006
    6,896
    10,676
    Winnipeg, Mb.
    In the hopes that everything works out as it should, check this out:

    <span style="font-size: 14pt"><span style="font-weight: bold">Canada joins push for rare congressional honour for WW2 Devil’s Brigade force</span></span>

    Its official designation was the First Special Service Force, a prosaic name that hardly begins to describe a unit that served as a model for the Green Berets, U.S. Navy Seals and Canada's Joint Task Force 2.

    Perhaps you know them better as the Devil's Brigade.

    The joint Canadian-American unit cut a legendary swath through German forces during the Second World War's Italian campaign, and later France and Germany.

    They earned the nickname "black devils" from their enemy because of the stealthy attacks the soldiers with blacked-out faces made behind the lines. They covered themselves in glory with the capture of the supposedly impregnable Monte la Difensa bastion.

    The unit came to wide public attention thanks to a 1968 Hollywood movie staring William Holden and Cliff Robertson.

    Now Canada is putting its weight behind an effort to have the force recognized with a U.S. Congressional Gold Medal, a rarely bestowed honour whose recipients include aviation pioneers the Wright Brothers, inventor Thomas Edison, Winston Churchill and Nelson Mandela.

    The Toronto Star reports Canadian diplomats in Washington are holding a Feb. 29 reception at the embassy for Canadian and U.S. lawmakers to raise awareness for the initiative.

    The prime movers behind the effort are U.S. Senators Max Baucus and Jon Tester of Montana, where the Devil's Brigade had its headquarters in Helena.

    A spokesman with the Canadian embassy told the Star that the story of the force was inspirational and the government was happy to help the senators' efforts.

    Representatives of Canadian Special Operations Force Command, home to JTF2 and the Canadian Special Operations Regiment, also will be at the event.

    It's estimated about 230 veterans of the force are still living in Canada and the United States. Iowa's Waterloo Courier reported two state residents who were in the unit are heartened by the effort to honour its exploits.

    "The Canadians have always been gung-ho for anything regarding the First Special Service Force," said John Tedore of Des Moines. "They were very proud, the Canadian people."

    The gold medal requires approval from both the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. Joint bills are working their way through the legislative process and supporters hope to pass them in time for the unit's reunion in Washington at the end of September.

    "The one big challenge we have is that many people don't know the story" of the unit, said Bill Woon of Helena, Mont., secretary treasurer of the First Special Service Force Association, whose late father served in the force. "It was kept secret during the war. The men were so well trained that when they came home, the didn't talk about it."

    As linked from here


    So, how many of ya'll have a story or two about this that can be shared, here?
     
    Re: Devil's Brigade being Honored,

    Just saw this - good read.

    I have (Canadian) in-laws, one of whom was a member of the Brigade back in the day.

    Will make sure to let his widow know, thx for the info.
     
    Re: Devil's Brigade being Honored,

    I thought as much. One hell of a man. I am glad I had the chance to meet him and enjoy breaking bread with him

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    Re: Devil's Brigade being Honored,

    A deep bond exists to this day between the Canadians and US 1st Special Forces Group.

    Hoisted from another site:

    ====

    "Menton Day commemorates the inactivation of the combined U.S. and Canadian First Special Service Force in Menton France on December 5th, 1944. The unit was commonly referred to as the "Devils Brigade" during its service in WWII. The brigade was one of the first Special Forces units activated and is credited with a distinguished record of unconventional operations behind enemy lines."

    Despite the fact that their missions were not as much Special Forces as they were Commando, we in the Special Forces Regiment trace a good chunk of our lineage through this distinguished unit. As a matter of fact, the two most prominent features of our DUI (Distinctive Unit Insignia), the Crossed Arrows and the V42 Stilletto are taken directly from the FSSF. We don't observe this day as we really should, but the surviving members of the FSSF commemorate it every year. So, please take a minute today to remember these pioneers and maybe lift a glass in their memory.

    <span style="font-weight: bold">Aleutians campaign, 1943.

    Italian campaigns 1943-1944
    Naples-Foggia, Anzio, Rome-Arno

    Southern France campaign 1944
    Alpes-Maritimes

    Rhineland campaign, 1944</span>

    Intrepid men, well-trained and well-armed, their unconventional tactics and fiercenesss in combat made them feared by the enemy.

    "The black devils are all around us every time we come into the line and we never hear them."

    =====

    I served as part of the burial honor guard for Canadian Lieutenant General Stan Waters. He went to England to enlist in the British Army as a private. When Canada entered the war he returned to take a commission as a lieutenant in the Canadian Army and was assigned to the 1st Special Service Force.

    In Commonwealth practice members of a senior officer's first unit march before the caisson -- by lineage US Special Forces marched at the fore. Before establishing Joint Task Force 2 the lineage followed through the Canadian Paratroops of Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry -- they marched behind the casket on the caisson.

    General Waters willed that those military men who presented full military honors would drink on him (all night) at the Officer's Mess after the funeral. The enmity and deplorable behavior of the Canadian Senior Noncommissioned Officers to attempt to kill my Command Sergeant Major by alcohol poisoning is epic and will stand in history as a reminder of how Yanks and Canucks cannot stand each other.

    My liver is still recovering.