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The
Cappellen Lodge
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While
here the battalion built an 8 mile 10 circuit lead from Garnich,
East to the city of Luxembourg where it was to be terminated into
Twelfth Army Group TAG headquarters. This job was started on the
6th of October and finished on the 9th. The next build that was
assigned the Battalion was a 27 mile line from South of Arlon, Belgium,
North to Bastogne. No suitable bivouac sight could be found, along
the line which afforded warmth and protection from the elements,
so it was decided to operate from billets already occupied in Capellen.
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Communications
job in the Benelux
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the 5th of November the Battalion moved North, from Capellen to Chenee,
Belgium. All companies were billeted in school buildings. The assigned
job was a ten circuit double arm lead from Liege, Belgium to Aachen,
Germany, a build of about twenty seven (27) miles. The Battalion worked
the West end of the line from these billets until the 22d of November. |
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More
lines put up over the Wall
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From these billets Company "B" continued on to the Aachen-Liege
build, while Company "A" took over a fourteen mile line
from Maastricht, East to Heerlen, Holland. This line was begun by
the 459th Signal Construction Battalion but was left uncompleted
when they were reassigned to the First Air Force and ordered to
abandon the build and join their new command.
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Sgt.
Dieckow by a truck that was hit by a landmine
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The
40th Signal Construction has the distinction, by the construction
of the Liege-Aachen line, of building the first open wire pole line
into Germany by the Allied Forces.
Company
"A" continued work on the Maastricht-Heerlen, Holland
line until December 6, when the line was completed and turned ever
to Twelfth Army Group.
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On
11 December, Hq and Hq Company moved from Epen, Holland to Aachen,
Germany and settled down to what was expected to be about a months
stay.
Companies
A and B continued on the line East of Aachen toward Duren, but on
the outskirts of the city of Aachen, the battalion began running
into mines, and worked was slowed while the Engineers cleared paths
for the survey crews.
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The
Duchy of Luxembourg was the next stop for the Battalion. On the 2nd of
October the Battalion moved 25 miles Northeast to the village of Capellen,
Luxembourg where the companies were billeted in two large mansions and
a small caretakers house, formally occupied by the Germans as schools.
This billet was also equipped with all the comforts and conveniences of
the two mansions.
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The
Duchy of Luxembourg
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The line from Arlon to Bastogne, Belgium, was completed without incident
on 25 October. The two construction companies devoted the succeeding
days to policing up the build and servicing equipment. |
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antilifting
device fitted onto a landmine
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On about the 19th of November, the Germans began to drop Robot bombs
into the city of Liege, only three miles away. The tempo of the
bombing grew until on the 20th and 21st between forty five and fifty
bombs fell on Liege and surrounding towns, including Chenee and
Beyne Heusay. On the 2nd of November, Hq, Hq Co and "B"
Co, moved twenty five miles Northeast to Epen, Holland, a quiet
little town seven miles West of Aachen, Germany Company "A"
remained in Chenee until the 25th, when they moved to Mheer, Holland,
twenty seven miles Northeast of Chenee.
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A
Tellermine 44 landmine
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Company
"B" completed the Aachen-Liege build on the 30th of November,
but not without incident. On the 27th, while working in the city
of Aachen on a side street, a K-43 line construction truck ran onto
a German Teller Mine. The right front wheel assembly was completely
blown off, with the right front fender, windshield and windows broken,
but the driver, Tec 5 Thomas McKinley, was uninjured. On the 27th,
a robot bomb hit "A" Companies line near Mickeroux, Belgium,
destroying one pole completely and breaking all the wires and losing
the sag for about ten spans each way.
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Dieckow
by a minefield
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The
Battalion's next assignment was the Aachen-Cologne lead, the latter
part of which was still in enemy territory. On the 5th of December,
Company "B" began surveying around the city of Aachen,
beginning from the last pole of the Liege-Aachen lead and circling
the city to the North.
Company
"A" moved from Valkenburg, Holland to Brand, Germany,
Southeast of Aachen, on 8th of December and on the 9th of December
joined Company "B" on the Aachen-Cologne build.
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Troop
Movements
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| Verdun,
France |
13
Sept 44 to 21 Sept 44 |
| Longuyon,
France |
21
Sept 44 to 3 Oct 44 |
| Capellen,
Duchy of Luxembourg |
3
Oct 44 to 5 Nov 44 |
| Liege,
Belgium |
5 Nov 44 to 22 Nov 44 |
| Epen,
Holland |
22
Nov 44 to 11 Dec 44 |
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Aachen(Aix
la Chapelle) Germany
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11
Dec 44 to 19 Dec 44
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