Surrounded by Nazis at the Volturno

Molly Martin
3 min read5 days ago

Chapter 6: My Mother and Audie Murphy

Murphy lands at Salerno during the Allied invasion of the Italian mainland in October 1943.

Italy has surrendered, and the road to Rome appears deceptively simple. Yet, the journey is anything but straightforward. Many thousands of lives will be lost on the road to the Eternal City.

Life Magazine story from my mother Flo’s WWII album

“We land with undue optimism on the Italian mainland near Salerno. The beachhead, bought dearly with the blood and guts of the men who preceded us, is secure. The Italian government has surrendered. We are prepared for a quick dash to Rome,” wrote Murphy in his autobiography.

This optimism is misplaced. The Third Division will fight and die on the Italian beaches and mainland until May 1944.

Life Magazine story pasted in Flo’s album

The troops of the Third Division must first push through Salerno, cross the Volturno River, and take Anzio, Mignano, Cassino and Cisterna before they can approach Rome.

Audie Murphy leads a small, diverse squad of men. Among them are an Italian immigrant, a Cherokee Indian manning the machine gun, an Irishman, a Pole, a Swede, and a Smoky Mountain bootlegger.

Members of Murphy’s squad begin to fall almost immediately. One soldier hesitates under heavy Nazi fire as he runs for a bridge and is cut down. The squad carries his body to the highway where it can be easily found. “In death, he still bears the look of innocent wonder. He could not have lived long after tumbling. The bullet ripped an artery in his throat,” wrote Murphy.

Another fighter takes out a German machine gun nest and a foxhole with grenades, killing five Germans. The small victory is short-lived.

From Flo’s album

Later, the five remaining men find themselves trapped in a cave, surrounded by the enemy. The cave is infested with fleas, and the men are bitten mercilessly as they wait, parched and desperate.

Reading Murphy’s autobiography, we come to know and care for the men in his squad, only to witness their deaths or injuries that force them out of the fight. Murphy becomes the last man standing.

“All my life I wait to come to Italy,” says the Italian soldier. “I write my old man that the country stinks. Wait till you get to Rome, he says. Wait’ll you see your grandfather’s place. Then you’ll see the real Italy.”

The Italian never makes it to Rome. After three days without water, he breaks under the strain, running out of the cave only to be hit and killed by enemy fire. “He has come home to the soil that gave his parents birth,” wrote Murphy.

Finally, American troops break through the German lines and rescue the remaining men. Relief arrives with rations, water, and ammunition.

The next morning, they cross the Volturno River and join the push toward their next major objective: the communications center at Mignano.

Quotes are from Audie Murphy’s autobiography, To Hell and Back

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Molly Martin
Molly Martin

Written by Molly Martin

I’m a long-time tradeswoman activist and retired electrician/electrical inspector in Santa Rosa CA.

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