The war of liberation in the province of Vercelli In the
province of Vercelli, the first partisan action in the liberation war was the attack launched on Dec. 2, 1943 against a garrison of
blackshirts in
Varallo, following which the fascists reported their first casualty in the area. On December 10, a second fascist was killed, engaged with his unit in repressing a strike in
Tollegno. The next day, however, the commissioner of the
Republican Fascist Party in
Ponzone di Trivero, Bruno Ponzecchi, was killed by partisans. These partisan actions preceded and were accompanied by general strikes by workers in the Biellese and Valsesia areas. On December 19, the
Tagliamento Legion was flocked to
Vercelli, which through the posting of notices threatened the shooting of ten hostages for every
RSI soldier or German soldier killed. The threat was first implemented in
Borgosesia on December 22, following the previous day's killing of two militiamen from the 63rd "M" Battalion. The Tagliamento was also guilty of massacres, fires and looting from its first days of activity in the province. The partisan war in the Vercelli area was characterized by the presence of multiple partisan units in the area, which engaged not only in classic local guerrilla actions, but also in mountain and lowland open field combat operations, with some local successes alternating with defeats. In addition to this, the partisan forces attempted to liberate some areas of the province, coming to constitute real
enclaves within the territory controlled by the republican fascists and the Germans: this is the case, for example, of the
Republic of Valsesia and
Valsessera, which were free between June and July 1944 and then - the latter - from March 1945. The last reprisal perpetrated by the fascists in the province took place on March 9, 1945 in
Salussola with the shooting of twenty or twenty-one partisans, in response to a partisan ambush conducted on March 6 in the same locality and resulting in the death of four fascists.
The last month of the war in the Vercelli area By mid-April 1945, the Germans and fascists had in the Biella and Vercelli areas about 4,500 men, whom the partisans were opposing in the area militarily called "Biellese" - also including Vercelli and its environs - six Garibaldi brigades, a
Giustizia e Libertà brigade, a police brigade and two SAP brigades. On April 18 in Biella there were a few isolated strike actions: despite a prompt reaction from the fascist authorities in the area - led by the head of the province
Michele Morsero - the next day the strike became widespread, expanding also to the
Mosso Valley and Valsessera - already a free zone since the previous March - where a massive popular demonstration took place, during which partisan commanders Francesco Moranino and
Cino Moscatelli spoke. The abstention from work lasted until April 20, eventually slowly resuming. Meanwhile, on April 19, Germans and fascists had unleashed a final offensive against the partisan formations, with the aim of opening an escape route and blocking preparations for insurrection. The concentric attack, from Biella and Ivrea, involved the 75th "Maffei" Brigade, the 76th and 183rd Brigades of the 7th Garibaldi "Aosta" Division and a unit of the 182nd "Camana" Brigade. After fierce clashes, at dawn on April 24, the Germans left Biella, paralyzed by the insurrectionary strike, while the fascists remained in the city until, following lengthy negotiations with the partisan command, they were allowed to leave: a fascist column composed of the "Pontida" and "Montebello" battalions of the
National Republican Guard and some units of the
Black Brigades then moved in the direction of Vercelli between 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. On April 25, Biella paid tribute to the partisans in the liberated city. The partisan forces then decided to converge on Vercelli, passing mainly through the localities of
Cavaglià and
Santhià (liberated on the evening of the 25th): the first sporadic clashes on the outskirts of the capital took place that same evening. Meanwhile, in Vercelli were concentrated from various localities in the area, in addition to a garrison of 500 Germans, the remaining forces of the RSI: various divisions of the Black Brigades, soldiers of the "
Monterosa" and "Littorio" divisions, grenadiers, militiamen of the "Muti" Legion and the Republican National Guard, as well as various survivors of various garrisons, for a total of about 2,500 men. Along with them, some had their own families. On the morning of the 26th, negotiations took place between the partisan commands and Morsero: the latter proposed not to fight in the city, but the proposal was rejected to the sender with an
ultimatum: capitulation of the fascists or departure from Vercelli by 3 p.m. In the afternoon, the Fascist column - comprising some 2,000 soldiers and 200 women as well as children - left the city. Also on the afternoon of the 26th, the German garrison in Vercelli surrendered: the city was liberated. Attacked repeatedly by partisans, the column stopped near the town of
Castellazzo Novarese, surrendering on the morning of April 28.
The massacre of Santhià The province of Vercelli was later traversed by another strong column, consisting of German units retreating from
Liguria,
Turin and the
Aosta Valley, which on April 28 occupied the towns of
Cigliano and
Tronzano Vercellese: on the 29th it reached
Borgo d'Ale,
Cavaglià and
Salussola, later entering
Santhià in the evening. Between April 29 and 30, the Germans attacked some farmsteads occupied by partisans, at the same time committing a series of atrocities against civilians. At the end of the fighting there were forty-eight dead: twenty-one partisans and twenty-seven civilians. The subsequent attack by the Allied air force against the German forces prompted the commander of the column, General
Hans Schlemmer, to accept the proposed surrender into the hands of the Allies. The Santhià massacre is considered by some to be the trigger for the subsequent Vercelli massacre. == The "Morsero Column" ==