General
Ben Lear, commander of the
U.S. Second Army, rated the unit "superior" after a special review and deemed the unit "combat ready." After the two-year training session in Texas, 761st Tank Battalion received the order in 9 June 1944 for overseas movement three days after the
D-Day landings in Normandy. The battalion left aboard the British troop carrier
Esperance Bay from New York and arrived in Britain on 8 September 1944 and was initially assigned to the
Ninth Army. After a brief deployment to England, the 761st landed in France via
Omaha Beach on 10 October 1944. The unit arrived (with six White officers, thirty black officers, and 676 black enlisted men) and was assigned to General
George Patton's
US Third Army at his request, attached to the
26th Infantry Division. The unit saw action in Northern France from October 1944, it fought in the
Battle of the Bulge, later proceeding to the
Rhineland, and spent the final months of the war on German soil.
George S. Patton As the 761st was about to enter combat, General
George S. Patton reviewed the battalion and made a speech to the men which offered a guarded vote of confidence in their abilities:Men, you're the first Negro tankers to ever fight in the American Army. I would never have asked for you if you weren't good. I have nothing but the best in my Army. I don't care what color you are as long as you go up there and kill those Kraut sonsofbitches. Everyone has their eyes on you and is expecting great things from you. Most of all your race is looking forward to your success. Don't let them down and damn you, don't let me down! They say it is patriotic to die for your country. Well, let’s see how many patriots we can make out of those German sonsofbitches. However, like most American military officers of the era, Patton expressed his doubts about using black men in combat. On returning to headquarters following the review, he remarked, "They gave a good first impression, but I have no faith in the inherent fighting ability of the race." Patton's biographer
Carlo D'Este explained that "on the one hand he could and did admire the toughness and courage" of some black soldiers, but his writings can also be frequently read as "disdaining them and their officers because they were not part of his social order." Historian Hugh Cole pointed out that Patton was also the first American military leader to integrate rifle companies "when manpower got tight." Retired NBA Hall-of-Famer
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, co-author of ''Brothers in Arms: The Epic Story of the 761st Tank Battalion, WWII's Forgotten Heroes'', agreed that although Patton was a bigot the fact remains that he did lend his name to the advancement of blacks in the military at the time, unlike most other military officers (Patton did prevent a black soldier from being lynched while serving as commander of a fort in
El Paso before the war). Most of the veterans of the 761st that Abdul-Jabbar interviewed stated they were proud to have served under Patton. During the Battle of the Bulge, German soldiers who had raided American warehouses were reported to have
disguised themselves as Americans guarding checkpoints in order to ambush American soldiers. Patton solved this problem by ordering black soldiers, including the 761st, to guard the checkpoints, and gave the order to shoot any White soldiers at the checkpoints who acted suspiciously.
Combat record , Germany, April 1945 The battalion first saw combat on 7 November 1944, fighting through towns such as
Moyenvic,
Vic-sur-Seille, often at the leading edge of the advance. The fighting that 761st engaged in at
Morville-lès-Vic was particularly brutal. The unit endured 183 days of continuous operational employment. The 761st Tank Battalion suffered 156 casualties in November 1944; 24 men
killed, 81 wounded, and 44 non-battle losses. The unit also lost 14 tanks evacuated and another 20 damaged in combat. In December, the battalion was rushed to the aid of the
101st Airborne Division at
Bastogne. As part of the effort to drive the Germans from the vicinity of Bastogne, the battalion fought to capture the municipality of , less than 15 km west of the town, in early January 1945. Supporting the elements of the 87th Infantry Division with just eleven tanks, the battalion took control of the city from the
113th Panzer Brigade through 2 days of combat, losing 9 tanks in the process. After the Battle of the Bulge, the unit opened the way for the
U.S. 4th Armored Division into Germany during an action that breached the
Siegfried Line. The 761st smashed through dozens of German cities and towns in their rapid advance through the Reich. In the final days of the war in Europe, the 761st was one of the first American units to reach
Steyr,
Austria, at the
Enns River, where they met with the 1st Ukrainian Front of the Soviet
Red Army. On 4 May 1945, the 761st, along with the 71st Infantry Division, liberated the
Gunskirchen concentration camp; the German guards had fled not long before. The 761st was deactivated 1 June 1946 in Germany. Writer Logan Nye opined they were "one of the most effective tank battalions in World War II." In all, the battalion earned about 300 Purple Hearts.
Presidential Unit Citation After decades of racial tensions in the United States began to ease, the battalion was belatedly awarded the
Presidential Unit Citation by President
Jimmy Carter on 24 January 1978, for their World War II service. The 761st Tank Battalion's award became official on 10 April 1978 by the Department of the Army under
General Orders Number 5. ==After World War II==