Activation and deployment The 735th Tank Battalion was activated at
Fort Lewis, Washington on 10 January 1943 as the 735th Tank Battalion (Medium), drawing its initial cadre of officers from the
743rd Tank Battalion After undergoing basic training for the new recruits and draftees, then tank training, the battalion rail-loaded in late summer to
La Pine, Oregon to conduct large scale maneuvers. On 1 November 1943, the unit was redesignated as the 735th Tank Battalion and adopted the organization in which it would fight throughout the European Campaign. The battalion left La Pine and rail loaded to
Yakima Anti-Aircraft Artillery Range in November. While at Yakima the company of light tanks, Company D, was formed, although they did not receive the M5 Stuart tanks until they returned to Fort Lewis in December. On 23 January 1944, the 735th boarded a troop train at Fort Lewis, bound for
Camp Myles Standish, Massachusetts, en route for the
European Theater of Operations. The 735th embarked in
Boston aboard the
USAT Henry Gibbins on 11 February 1944 and arrived in
Glasgow, Scotland on 22 February, though they did not disembark until the following day. Once back on land, the battalion immediately boarded a troop train for
Nuneaton, England and occupied a camp set up on
Arbury Estate. The battalion conducted individual and small unit training, much of it dismounted, and performed maintenance on their tanks while waiting to go into combat in France. While at Nuneaton, they were also informed they would support the
5th Infantry Division, which at the time was bivouacked in
Northern Ireland. While a few liaison trips were made, no combined training was conducted before deployment. In early July 1944, the 735th Tank Battalion was alerted to road march to
Weymouth, where they boarded LST's (
Landing Ship Tank) and for Company D, LCT's (
Landing Craft, Tank), bound for France.
Early combat in France The 735th Tank Battalion disembarked at
Utah Beach on 13 July 1944 and was attached to the
5th Infantry Division the same day. Their task organization with the division was as follows: :*Battalion Headquarters, Service Company, Company A and Company D –
2nd Infantry Regiment (after 30 July, the Headquarters and Service companies were relieved of attachment to the 2nd Infantry and were attached directly to 5th Infantry Division.) :*Company B –
10th Infantry Regiment :*Company C –
11th Infantry Regiment On 15 July, the battalion relieved the
745th Tank Battalion in the vicinity of
Sallen, France and their assault gun platoon fired the unit's first combat mission supporting the division's artillery. The tankers and the infantry they were supporting battled through the end of July to break out of the bocage against dogged German defense by the crack 9th and 15th Parachute Regiments. However, by the beginning of August 1944, the German resistance began to crumble, and the 735th began to race south with Companies D and B assisting the 10th Infantry Regiment in taking
Angers on 11 August. At Angers, the 5th Infantry Division and the 735th Tank Battalion reoriented sharply to the left and began advancing northeast toward
Paris. By 15 August, the Battalion had reached the vicinity of
Chartres, and assisted the division in first enveloping then liberating the city. including one company in which 14 of 17 tanks ran out of gas as they approached
Verdun. A final dash from 5–8 September allowed the battalion to reach the western approaches to
Metz, but German resistance had already stiffened. The battalion supported the 10th Infantry Regiment in crossing the
Moselle River south of Metz at
Arnaville on 11 September, with Companies B and C fording the barely passable river, with several tanks swamped in midstream. In defending the bridgehead to the east of the river, Company D, whose light tanks were generally too thinly armored for most offensive operations but light enough to cross the bridges over the Moselle, was deployed for the first time as a separate unit in order help protect the southern flank of the bridgehead. On 20 September, Companies B and A supported the 10th Infantry and 2nd Infantry Regimental Combat Teams (RCT's), as they attacked east toward
Pournoy-la-Chétive and
Coin-sur-Seille, respectively. The 2nd RCT reached its objective after heavy fighting, but Company A suffered no casualties. The attack on Pournoy met stiff resistance. Although the town was taken the same day, in the ensuing two days of counterattacks Company B took heavy casualties and had to be replaced by Company C in order to reorganize. Despite the heavy cost to seize the two towns, the 5th Infantry Division withdrew from both positions because of their untenable exposure to counterattack and artillery fires. In early October, a composite company consisting of the 76 mm gunned tanks recently fielded in the battalion and the 105 mm assault guns was formed to support the attack on
Fort Driant. The tanks received special concrete piercing ammunition and towed “snakes”, long tubes of explosive similar to
Bangalore torpedoes to be used for clearing obstacles. The tankers supported the 2nd Battalion, 11th Infantry Regiment in the assault starting on 3 October. The tankers cleared a number of obstacles and helped beat back a number of determined German counterattacks with use of their coaxial machine guns. Both the special ammunition and the snakes were disappointing failures. The tankers suffered heavy losses, losing nine of sixteen tanks and 24 men killed, wounded or captured by 7 October, but enabled the infantry to penetrate the outer reaches of the fort. Afterward, while the infantry were able to make modest gains against fierce German resistance, the tankers were not able to play a further role in the pitched battles in and under the bunkers, and the remaining tanks were kept on as part of the mobile reserve for the attack. After the infantry suffered heavy losses attempting to penetrate into the main bunkers, the attack was abandoned and the infantry withdrew on 13 October. After the unsuccessful attack on Fort Driant, the medium tank companies were attached to the division artillery and fired indirect fire missions in support of the infantry in contact or as interdictory fires. This indirect fire support quickly totaled over a thousand rounds of high explosive or smoke ammunition per day. While operating with the 95th, the tank companies were attached to the Infantry Regiments as follows: • Company A – 377th Infantry Regiment • Company B –
378th Infantry Regiment • Company C – 379th Infantry Regiment • Company D – 3rd Battalion, 377th Infantry Regiment in division reserve The tankers continued their artillery fire support for the 95th Infantry Division, and fired in excess of 10,000 rounds of 75 mm and 76 mm ammunition before being withdrawn on 27 October to a rear assembly area for maintenance. On 19 November, in the vicinity of
Retonfey, the assault gun section met the lead element of the 90th Reconnaissance Troop,
90th Infantry Division, attacking from the northern flank of Metz, and completed the encirclement of the city. The battalion then assisted in the reduction of the city, firing many hundreds of rounds of primarily captured French 75 mm
white phosphorus (WP) rounds (which were of questionable quality and which required special firing pins) at the remaining German held forts of Driant,
Jeanne d’Arc, and Privot. The WP rounds were intended to create sufficient heat and smoke within the underground bunkers to drive the defenders out, a tactic which was at least partially successful, and Fort Privot surrendered to a representative of the battalion and of the 11th Infantry Regiment on 29 November.
Battle of the Bulge Even as the battalion assisted with mopping up operations around Metz, the tankers began to advance into Germany. Company B joined the 10th RCT and was attached to the 95th Infantry Division, forming the core of “Task Force Bell,” augmented further by Company D, the 6th Cavalry Group, a company of tank destroyers, a troop of the 28th Cavalry, and a direct support artillery battalion. TF Bell crossed the border into Germany between
Creutzwald and
Völklingen on 5 December with the objective of overwhelming German resistance along the upper
Saar River. Over the next three days, TF Bell pushed steadily east and reached the Saar on 8 December. The remainder of the battalion crossed into Germany by 9 December 1944 and conducted maintenance on their vehicles over the next week while the 5th Infantry Division was again relieved by the 95th Infantry Division and went into reserve. On 16–17 December, Companies A and C moved to
Saarlouis (then called Saarlautern), Germany to relieve the 778th Tank Battalion. The remainder of the battalion remained in the 95th Infantry Division's sector, even though still attached to the 5th. The 95th however wanted them out of sector, and the battalion finally cleared their sector on 19 December. Only briefly halting at Stuckange, the 735th rolled in battalion formation through
Thionville and
Luxembourg City, to
Hagen, Luxembourg, which they reached in the early morning hours of 21 December. Upon reaching Hagen, the battalion was attached to the
26th Infantry Division. Upon attachment, the tank companies were assigned as follows: • Company A –
101st Infantry Regiment • Company B –
104th Infantry Regiment • Company C –
328th Infantry Regiment • Company D – Division Headquarters Command Post (for security) Beginning on 22 December, the infantry with tank support advanced to
Rambrouch and
Grosbous with limited attacks further to the northwest. The 26th was still a mostly untried unit, and the tankers were surprised at the infantry's lack of fluency in working with tanks, and by their reluctance to enter towns in the area, and on several occasions the tankers fought unsupported in the towns. They also encountered numerous
Panther,
Tiger, and even
King Tiger tanks. Despite the inferiority of their Sherman tanks, the tankers were able to account for some dozen tanks by the end of the year against the loss of 5 Shermans.
Advance into Germany The month of February started with a flurry of detachment and attachment to other units. Two platoons of tanks from Companies B and C that had been attached to the
17th Airborne Division returned to the battalion on 1 February. That same day the battalion was attached to the 95th Infantry Division, but on 2 February they were informed they had been attached to the
87th Infantry Division, effective the previous day. The 735th Tank Battalion would maintain their relationship with the 87th until after the end of the war. When they reported to the 87th, the tank companies were further attached as follows: • Company A –
345th Infantry Regiment • Company B –
346th Infantry Regiment • Company C –
347th Infantry Regiment The remainder of the battalion was under division control as division reserve. Initially, the battalion's tank companies spanned the Belgian-German border between
Manderfeld and
Auw. The battalion spent most of the month in defensive positions, with limited offensive action at the beginning and end of the month. Their forced inactivity was primarily due to rainy and snowy weather and the resulting poor road conditions, but did allow them to perform much needed maintenance on the vehicles. By the end of February the tankers had only moved about 10 miles eastward, suffering light losses, with only one killed and no tank losses. Having penetrated the West Wall, the 87th discovered effective German resistance had nearly collapsed. The division commander organized Task Force Muir from elements of the 345th RCT, Company B of the 735th, and other supporting elements, to exploit the breakthrough. On 7 March, TF Muir crossed the
Kyll River and on 8 March seized intact a bridge across the
Ahr River at
Dollendorf. This advance of some 30 km over 3 days represented a modest gain, but foreshadowed a return to the rapid advances not seen since before the battalion ran out of gas at the approaches to Verdun in early September. TF Muir was dissolved on 8 March and the division was squeezed out of sector and went into corps reserve, the tankers along with them. Back on the offensive on 13 March, the division continued east with the mission of taking
Koblenz. Company A supported the 345th RCT north of the
Moselle River to the west bank of the
Rhine. By 16 March, the 345th RCT with Company B was across the Moselle in the vicinity of
Kobern and
Winningen and had effectively encircled Koblenz. Most of Koblenz had been taken by 18 March and on the following day
Fort Konstantin, overlooking the city from above, finally surrendered. Company C supported the 347th RCT as they advanced south along the left bank of the
Rhine and cleared German resistance as far south as
Boppard. With just a few days to regroup and prepare for a forced crossing of the Rhine, the division crossed at Boppard the night of 24 March, with the tanks providing fire support from the west bank. The tanks of Company B were the first ones ferried across, soon after the initial infantry assault. After consolidating its positions on the east bank of the Rhine, the division moved out on 28 March in the direction of
Limburg, with the battalion helping screen the division's left flank along the
Lahn River. The tankers penetrated into the heart of Germany, encountering sporadic strongpoints along their route of march. Also on 28 March, Company C was attached to the
76th Infantry Division, with the platoons parceled out to the division's three infantry regiments. With the company so thoroughly dispersed, support for the tanks and crews was nearly impossible, and the battalion complained bitterly to not permit platoon attachments when a company is detached outside the division they are supporting. For the first few days of April 1945, the division regrouped one last time and launched from south of Limburg starting on 3 April. The battalion supported the division's advance past
Giessen toward
Eisenach through
Thuringia and
Saxony, taking
Plauen on 17 April. The tankers continued past Plauen, advancing as far as
Klingenthal on the Czech border at by 6 May. They halted short of the border to prevent crossing into Russian area of operations and were in these positions on
V-E Day on 8 May 1945.
Post war The 735th Tank Battalion went immediately into occupation duties upon cessation of hostilities. Initially the battalion helped the infantry receive and guard the persistent stream of surrendering German soldiers. With an eye on the planned
invasion of Japan, key leaders, including 3 out of 4 tank company commanders and 12 of 15 lieutenant platoon leaders, were stripped from the battalion and assigned to the 771st Tank Destroyer Battalion, destined for duty in the
Pacific Ocean Theater of Operations. As a relatively senior unit, the rest of the 735th was slated to return to the United States and presumed deactivation. The battalion withdrew gradually from what was to become the
Soviet occupation zone already agreed at the
Yalta Conference. While still in the Soviet zone, the battalion was given the unique mission of transporting repatriated eastern European slave laborers from Plauen to
Chomutov in
Czechoslovakia using the battalion's trucks. After displacing to the US zone, on 12 July 1945, the battalion was given another unusual mission and was tasked to return to the Soviet zone to pick up German prisoners, wounded, and attending medical staff located at
Gera and
Grimma which had fought the Americans. Although the Russians at Gera refused to hand over the Germans, the patients and staff at Grimma were duly handed over on 13 July and the convoy returned to
Hersfeld in the American zone on 14 July. As preparations for return to the United States continued, one of the major tasks was to turn in tanks and equipment. In the process of turning in the battalion's ammunition, estimated at about 10,000 main gun rounds and a million rounds of small arms ammunition, one of the ammunition handlers spotted a round of high-explosive ammunition whose fuze was smoking. After a quick warning the ammunition team evacuated the site just as the round exploded, setting off a series of explosions. Even with such short warning, there were no injuries, though damage to nearby buildings was severe. In early fall 1945, the battalion redeployed to one of the
cigarette camps located around
Le Havre to await their ship back to the United States. In mid-October, the battalion boarded the
Kingston Victory at Le Havre, bound for Boston. The 735th Tank Battalion arrived in Boston on 24 October and was inactivated at
Camp Myles Standish, Massachusetts, on 25 October 1945. == Unit awards and decorations ==