Sunday, March 17, 2019

The battle of Palma di Montechiaro

An American tank drives through a street in Palma di Montechiaro


After seizing control of the road and railway that connected Licata to Agrigento, in the morning of 10 July the Americans started to advance inland: towards the north, with Colonel Charles E. Johnson’s 15th Regimental Combat Team, and towards the west, with Colonel Harry B. Sherman’s 7th Regimental Combat Team. The latter advanced towards Contrada Sillitti Alta, with the task of capturing Palma di Montechiaro, a town of some 15,000 inhabitants to the north-west of Licata. General Ottorino Schreiber, commander of the 207th Coastal Division, sent the scouting platoon of the 1st Motorized Machine-Gun Centuria (Company) of the 17th Blackshirt Battalion, commanded by capomanipolo (Lieutenant) Fausto Maianti, from Agrigento. Maianti took position east of Palma, but was soon forced to retreat westwards, while Schreiber sent more troops towards Palma in an attempt to stop the American advance: the 2nd Battery of the 223rd Skoda 100/22 mm Artillery Group, commanded by Captain Giorgio Rota, from Aragona; a 105/28 mm battery from the 22nd Artillery Group, from Chiusa Sclafani; and most importantly the 523rd and 525th Truck-Borne Bersaglieri Battalions, both part of Colonel Alessandro Venturi’s 177th Bersaglieri Regiment. The Bersaglieri arrived near Palma but ran into American troops coming from Licata, supported by tanks, and suffered heavy losses in the subsequent fighting. Most of Major Mario Salvatore’s 525th Battalion was surrounded and overrun after bitter fighting; the survivors, with just one gun from the 105/28 battery (which had taken position west of Licata and was also destroyed in the fighting) and the entirety of the 100/22 mm battery, retreated towards the bridge of the Naro river. To make up for these losses, more reinforcements were sent: the rest of the Motorized Machine-Gun Centuria, under the command of Blackshirt centurione (Captain) Roberto Grandi; Major Giuseppe Maritati’s 526th Bersaglieri Battalion; and eight 90/53 mm self-propelled guns from Major Carlo Bosco’s 161st Group, which General Mario Arisio, commander of the Twelfth Corps, had sent only after refusing three previous requests. These troops took position in Favarotta, blocking Highway 123, where they were repeatedly attacked by the 15th RCT and by the 3rd Rangers Battalion, supported by 105 mm howitzers from the 77th Field Artillery Regiment. The death toll so far amounted to 409 men: 123 Italian soldiers, 40 Germans, 73 civilians and 173 Americans.

The Italian counterattack towards Palma di Montechiaro, on 11 July, was carried out by troops from Colonel Goffredo Ricci’s Raggruppamento Mobile Ovest (Mobile Group “West”): Major Mario Sabatini’s 527th Bersaglieri Battalion, coming from Masseria Giudice; a tactical group under Colonel Tito Verratti, advancing from Chiusa Sclafani with the 35th and 73rd Bersaglieri Battalions (both belonging to Colonel Pio Storti’s 10th Bersaglieri Regiment), the 22nd 105/28 mm Artillery Group from Favara, and the 12th Battery of the 103rd Guardia alla Frontiera (Frontier Guard) 75/27 mm Group (Captain Massimo Olivieri); and thirteen AB 41 armoured cars from Captain Carlo Alberto Orsi’s 10th Cavalleggeri di Lodi squadron (but these never reached Palma).
In the morning of 11 July, the 527th Bersaglieri Battalion advanced from Cozzo Mosé and managed to force Major Everett W. Duvall’s 2nd Battalion of the 7th Regimental Combat Team to retreat from Palma di Montechiaro, thus recapturing the town. Fighting continued south of the town and on the surrounding heights for the rest of the morning and the afternoon. Colonel Venturi praised Major Sabatini for the recapture of Palma, but this success was short-lived: in a few hours, the 527th Battalion was badly mauled by the American reaction and left with only a hundred uninjured men, who eventually surrendered at 15:30, after being surrounded by superior forces supported by tanks. Major Sabatini, a great-grandson of Giuseppe Garibaldi, managed to evade capture; he would be taken prisoner a week later, in Agrigento.
 
Crown prince Umberto of Savoy visits the barracks of the 527th Bersaglieri Battalion a few weeks before the invasion of Sicily. Facing him is Major Mario Sabatini (Alberto Sabatini collection, from www.militarystory.org)

The 73rd Bersaglieri Battalion was more fortunate; left with just one 105/28 mm gun (the rest of the battery had been destroyed by repeated air attacks along Highway 115, unopposed by the Axis air forces despite several requests), it was able to reach the Naro river together with the 2nd 100/22 mm Battery of the 103rd Group. The 35th Bersaglieri Battalion and the 12th Battery, instead, coming from Castrofilippo, had been delayed by air raids. Colonel Sydney R. Hinds’ 41st Infantry Regiment, advancing along with a company of Sherman tanks from the 66th Armor Regiment (Lieutenant Colonel Lindsay C. Herkness) and supported by the 14th and 62nd Field Artillery Regiments (under the command of Carl I. Hutton and Donald V. Bennett, respectively), entered Naro at noon. The 35th Bersaglieri Battalion, having finally reached the area, took position in the heights north of this town at 13:30 and resisted there under fire for the rest of the day, but was forced to withdraw during the night.


The battle for Palma di Montechiaro is thus described in the American official history (Albert N. Garland, Howard Mcgraw Smith, “U.S. Army in World War II – Mediterranean Theater of Operations – Sicily and the Surrender of Italy”):

General Truscott, meanwhile, had called his senior commanders together on the evening of 10 July and issued his orders for the next day's operation. The 7th Infantry was to thrust westward to take Palma di Montechiaro and the high ground just beyond; the 15th Infantry was to continue north along Highway 123 to seize Campobello; General Rose's CCA, operating between these two combat teams, was to seize Naro, then assemble on the high ground to the north and east and prepare for further action. The 30th Infantry, guarding the division's exposed right flank, was to send one battalion cross-country to seize Riesi, there blocking an important avenue of approach into the division's eastern flank. The 3d Battalion, 7th Infantry (Lt. Col. John A. Heintges), led the advance on Palma di Montechiaro early on 11 July. Crossing the Palma River bridge without incident, the battalion encountered heavy fire from Italian troops who occupied strong positions along a line of low hills just south of the town. Deploying his troops, building up a base of fire, and using supporting weapons to excellent advantage, Heintges pushed slowly ahead and drove the Italians into the town itself. As the battalion prepared to push into Palma around 1100, numerous white flags appeared on buildings in the town. Colonel Heintges dispatched a small patrol to accept the surrender. Unfortunately, civilians, not soldiers, had displayed the white flags, and the small American patrol came under fire. Two men were killed, another two were wounded. Enraged, Heintges gathered together ten men and personally led them across an open field to a building which seemed to house the heaviest fire. They reached the building safely, planted demolitions on the lower floor, withdrew a short distance, and set off the explosives. The blast signaled start of the attack, and the battalion swept into town behind its commander. The Palma defenders had been reinforced by a task force that had moved down from the Naro River, and heavy fighting erupted up and down the main street. For two hours the battle raged from house to house. Around 1300, having had enough, the surviving Italians began pulling out westward along Highway 115. Quickly reorganizing his battalion, Heintges followed in close pursuit, rapidly cleared the hills on the south side of the highway, and dug in there to await the rest of the combat team”.

Italian POWs carry their wounded in Palma di Montechiaro

The fall of Monterosso Almo and Licodia Eubea

Monterosso Almo as it looks today

In the morning of 13 July 1943, Colonel Anckorn sent Colonel Murphy’s 1st Battalion towards Monterosso Almo.
Monterosso Almo was garrisoned by the 75th Infantry Regiment’s recruit battalion, green soldiers commanded by Major Rosario Catanzaro. Catanzaro had been first ordered to reach the regimental command in Solarino, and later to join the battered remnants of the 146th Coastal Regiment that were defending Vizzini Scalo, but the battalion did not move. In the report he later wrote, General Giulio Cesare Gotti Porcinari, commander of the 54th Infantry Division “Napoli”, wrote that “the recruit battalion in Monterosso Almo was unable to move to Solarino due to lack of vehicles and ammunition. The latter were sent by the divisional command just in time for it to be deployed in defense around the town, as two patrols had already come into contact with enemy forces near the Giarratana crossroads. The subsequent actions prevented its transfer”. (The 146th Coastal Regiment, commanded by Colonel Felice Bartimmo Cancellara, had sustained heavy losses in the fighting in the Gulf of Noto and had now withdrew to Vizzini Scalo, where they had taken defensive position along with a German machine gun unit).
In the evening of 12 July, some troops from the recruit battalion had fought a brief skirmish against a scouting platoon from the Canadian 1st Brigade, deployed near Giarratana. A Canadian soldier had been killed, some others had been wounded, and the Canadian platoon had withdrawn. The Canadians were replaced by a tactical group fromed from Colonel Anckorn’s 157th Regiment; coming from Chiaramonte, this group had sent the 1st Battalion towards Monterosso and the 2nd and 3rd Battalions towards Licodia Eubea.
Monterosso Almo fell without fighting. The Americans entered the town around noon on 13 July; Major Catanzaro and his 800 demoralized rectuits surrendered without resistance. The only casualty was apparently an unfortunate Italian soldier, whose futile death is thus remembered by local Santo Canzoniero, then a young boy: “Near the mill in Contrada Acquasanta, a little out of the town, there was an ammunition depot. A young northern soldier had been left guarding it; when the first American soldiers approached, a group of elderly women shouted to him in their dialect “Surrender, drop your rifle, the Americans are here”. The poor soldier, who being from the north probably did not understand their Sicilian dialect, held on to his Carcano mod. 91 rifle, confused and hesitant. A burst of rifle fire killed him at his post”.
After seizing the town, the 1st Battalion advanced a further five kilometres along the road to Vizzini, until they ran into a German combat group commanded by Captain Robert Rebholz.
Meanwhile, the 2nd and 3rd Battalion, moving from Chiaramonte Gulfi, headed towards Licodia Eubea. This town, located on top of a 630-metre hill, was defended by a German rearguard from Rebholz’s group, well armed with machine guns, submachine guns and flamethrowers, and supported by artillery. Behind them, to the north-east, were Vizzini Scalo and the remains of the 146th Coastal Regiment.
The battle for Licodia Eubea was brief but bitter; by the evening of 13 July, the 3rd Battalion of the 157th Infantry Regiment had taken the town, for the loss of 20 men killed and 40 wounded. Angered by their losses, the Americans shot seven Germans that had been taken prisoner. Then they advanced towards Vizzini, where they were engaged by the 146th Coastal Regiment and by more German troops.

(Source: “La battaglia degli Iblei”, by Domenico Anfora)