Activation and deployment The 741st Tank Battalion was activated at
Fort Meade, Maryland, on 15 March 1942. Its initial cadre was formed from members of the
751st Tank Battalion and complemented by draftees. The battalion criss-crossed the country as it moved from one training station to another developing its maneuver and gunnery skills. Training camps included
Camp Young, California,
Camp Polk, Louisiana,
Camp Pickett, Virginia, and
Camp Wellfleet, Massachusetts. At Camp Bradford, Virginia, it also began practicing amphibious training, including loading and unloading aboard Navy craft, and practice assault landings at
Little Creek, Virginia and
Solomons Island, Maryland. Finally, in August 1943, the battalion arrived at
Fort Dix, New Jersey, to make final pre-embarkations preparations. From there, the battalion moved to the embarkation station at
Camp Shanks, and boarded the
Capetown Castle, departing New York on 20 October 1943 and arriving at Liverpool, England on 2 November 1943. The battalion continued its training in England, where it was selected to become part of the D-Day assault force. Training first with British
Valentine tanks specially equipped with the
duplex drive amphibious propulsion system beginning in January 1944, they later received similarly equipped M4s with which to continue training. The units loaded out their equipment in late May and waited in port for the final order for the assault landings.
D-Day landings and Normandy For D-Day, the battalion was attached to the
1st Infantry Division to support the
16th Infantry Regimental Combat Team landings on
Omaha Beach. Company A was equipped with Deep Wading M4 Sherman tanks, while Companies B and C were equipped with the amphibious Sherman DD tanks. Company D, equipped with M5 light tanks, and the battalion headquarters were not part of the initial landing force. The Company A tanks, along with a platoon of bulldozer-blade equipped Shermans, were brought ashore by LCTs, while the DD tanks were launched from about 6,000 yards offshore, which was considerably further out than originally planned, and in rougher seas than those in which the unit had trained, resulting in the loss of 27 of the 32 DD tanks before they reached shore. Only two of the launched DD tanks reached the beach; another three were carried ashore when their LCT was unable to lower its ramp at sea. By the end of D-Day, the battalion had three combat ready tanks; 48 had either been sunk or destroyed in combat. Personnel losses were nearly as high, with 45 men killed and another 60 wounded during the day's action. For its actions on Omaha Beach on 6–7 June, the battalion was awarded the
Presidential Unit Citation. After its initial assault and consolidation of the beachhead with the 1st Infantry Division in Normandy, the battalion was detached from the 1st Infantry Division on 15 June and attached to the
2nd Infantry Division. The initial coordination of the tanks with the infantry units as they began to fight inland in the
bocage country of Normandy was not well executed and both infantry and tanks suffered casualties until the tactics and procedures of operating together were put in place. The tankers practiced with infantry and engineers at the platoon and tank/squad level for the remainder of June to perfect their techniques in working together. During this period, the battalion suffered numerous equipment losses due to tanks mired in the soft boggy soil; and personnel casualties as well, due to artillery barrages when the crews had to abandon the mired tanks. After taking Hill 192, the 2nd Infantry Division went on the defensive until the start of Operation Cobra. On 26 July, the 2nd Infantry Division, with the 741st Tank Battalion continuing to provide direct fire support, advanced slowly, anchoring the left flank of the main assault of Operation Cobra, which took place to the west of St. Lõ. The division and the 741st advanced together as far as
Tinchebray before new orders temporarily sent them on divergent paths. The 2nd Infantry Division was withdrawn from the line in order to reduce the fortress at
Brest while the 741st Tank Battalion reverted to 3rd Armored Group control, under whose direction the battalion raced across western France to the outskirts of Paris at
Sceaux. On 27 August, it was attached to the
28th Infantry Division After a brief two-day respite, the battalion was on the march again; this time through
Compiègne, the
Aisne valley and
Belgian Luxembourg and into the
Duchy of Luxembourg, reaching the
West Wall in Germany by 9 September in the vicinity of Sevenig and Roscheid. On 2 October, the 741st Tank Battalion was relieved from attachment to the 28th Infantry Division and again attached to the 2nd Infantry Division, with which it remained until the end of the war.
Battle of the Bulge ''. The entire crew perished in the battle. The company was attached to the 23rd Infantry Regiment, 2nd Infantry Division. (T/5 R. W. Crampton) In support of the
2nd and
99th Infantry Divisions, the 741st, along with a company of the 644th
Tank Destroyer Battalion, was instrumental in helping hold the northern shoulder of the Bulge in vicious fighting in and around
Rocherath-Krinkelt during the German
Ardennes Offensive (Battle of the Bulge) in December 1944. By now battle-seasoned veterans, tankers from the battalion resisted repeated numerous hard-pressed attacks by spearheading elements of the SS-heavy
Sixth Panzer Army from 16 to 19 December. Facing superior German
Panther and
Tiger tanks (among others) supported by infantry, the battalion fought many small unit engagements, deftly stalking the German tanks in twos and threes until they could destroy or immobilize them with shots from the flanks or rear. On 19 December, elements of the battalion were the rear guard of an orderly withdrawal from Rocherath-Krinkelt to positions behind Wirtzfeld to the west and northwest. The resistance put up by the 2nd Infantry Division, along with the attached tanks and tank destroyers, thwarted the northern penetration of the German offensive, delaying their advance by three days, and caused them to side step to a less suitable road network, allowing allied reinforcements to prepare positions further to the west with which to blunt the attack. For their role at Rocherath, Companies A, B, and C of the 741st Tank Battalion were awarded the Presidential Unit Citation.
Advance into Germany After the Battle of the Bulge, the battalion refitted and resupplied in the vicinity of Berg and Robertville, Belgium, still in support of the 2nd Infantry Division – A Company was attached to the 99th Infantry Division near Elsenborn, but it was soon returned to battalion control. Beginning on 15 January 1945, the battalion was gradually recommitted to combat operations in support of the 2nd Infantry Division as it once again began advancing eastward into Germany. In supporting the 2nd Infantry Division, the 741st Tank Battalion followed the division's path, entering Germany at Gemünd on 4 March 1945. It reached the Rhine at Bad Breisig on 10 March, and briefly guarded the
bridge at
Remagen from 12 to 20 March. The division took
Göttingen on 8 April and
Leipzig on 18 April. The battalion's tanks transported lead elements of the division some 200 miles from 1–3 May 1945 all the way to the Czech border, and had reached
Plzeň, Czechoslovakia, by 6 May, two days before hostilities ended on 8 May.
Post war The battalion was withdrawn to Germany and briefly took up occupation duties before returning to the United States. The unit arrived in New York on 25 October and was inactivated at
Camp Kilmer, New Jersey, on 27 October 1945. ==Unit awards and decorations==