Tony and 10th Armored Division with Third Army (Patton) in France:
From Army records after the war, it appears that Tony was a Tech 5 (a Corporal with
special duties) in the Headquarters Company of the 21st Tank Battalion of the 10th
Armored Division.
As for specifics during the time period of these letters, we have the following notes from ArmyDivs.com:
The 10th Armored Division entered France through the port of Cherbourg,
23 September 1944, and put in a month of training at Teurtheville, France,
before entering combat. Leaving Teurtheville, 25 October, the Division moved to
Mars-la-Tour, where it entered combat, 1 November, in support of the XX Corps,
containing enemy troops in the area. In mid-November it went on the offensive, crossed the
Moselle at Mailing, and drove to the Saar River, north of Metz.
The Division was making
preparations for the Third Army drive to the Rhine when it was ordered north to stop the
German winter offensive, 17 December. The 10th held defensive positions against heavy
opposition near Bastogne, Noville, and Bras. Resting briefly in early January, the 10th
moved out again to defensive positions east of the Saar, south of the Maginot Line. On 20
February 1945 the Division returned to the attack, and took part in the clearing of the
Saar-Moselle triangle. The Division then attacked north and captured Trier, 15 March.
Driving through Kaiserlautern, it advanced to the Rhine, crossed the river at Mannheim,
28 March, turned south, captured Oehringen and Heilbronn, crossed the Rems and Fils Rivers,
and reached Kirchheim, meeting waning resistance. The Division crossed the Danube, 23-25 April,
and took Oberammergau. In May, the 10th drove into the famed "Redoubt," and had reached Innsbruck
when the war in Europe ended.
Another chronicle of the activities of the 10th Armored Division follows from Wikipedia:
The 10th Armored Division entered France through the port of Cherbourg-en-Cotentin,
23 September 1944, and put in a month of training at Teurtheville, France, before entering
combat, as part of the Third Army under General George S. Patton. Leaving Teurtheville,
25 October, the Division moved to Mars-la-Tour, where it entered combat, 2 November, in
support of the XX Corps, containing enemy troops in the area. Later that month, the 10th
participated in the capture of Metz. After fierce fighting, the 10th moved to the Siegfried
Line and led the Third Army into Germany on 19 November 1944.
Bastogne: Combat Command-B's lead Sherman tanks, tank destroyers and half-tracks entered
Bastogne 18 December 1944. These were the first combat troops to reach the threatened
town. CCB's commander, Col. William L. Roberts, split his command to form a crescent-shaped
arc facing eastward five miles from the city. A task force commanded by Maj. William R.
Desobry went north to Noville, while a similar group under Lt. Col. Henry T. Cherry wheeled
east to Longvilly. Lt. Col. James O'Hara's group shifted southeast to Bras.
At the same time, German forces moved westward with increasing momentum. Bastogne, a
hub from which seven main roads diverged, was essential to the swift movement of Rundstedt's
panzers. Before dawn of 19 December five German divisions attacked CCB. Bazooka-armed
American soldiers and a single platoon of tank destroyers fought a column of German Panzer IV
tanks on the Houffalize-Noville highway, turning them back. More enemy armor followed and with
the road blocked, the battle spilled into the snow-covered fields and woods. For eight hours,
CCB alone withstood multiple German attacks before reinforcements arrived from the 101st Airborne
Division, which had moved into Bastogne under the screen of the 10th's actions.
The Germans still maintained an advantage and the outnumbered Americans withdrew closer to
Bastogne. The Germans sent pincers to the north and south. The night of 21 December, the pincers
met and closed west of the city. In the surrounded city, the 10th assembled a mobile reserve force
to strike in any direction.
CCB endured the cold, artillery barrages and bombing while their supplies and ammunition
dwindled. Fourth Armored Division tanks finally broke through on 26 December, but CCB continued to
fight until 18 January.
After the battle, the 10th Armored Division's 21st Tank Battalion and Combat Command B were awarded
the Presidential Unit Citation for their actions from 17 to 27 December 1944 Battle of the Bulge.
The 101 Airborne Division was also honored with the Presidential Unit Citation for their actions at
Bastogne. Years after the war, General Anthony McAuliffe said "In my opinion, Combat Command B of the
10th Armored Division was never properly credited with their important role in the Bastogne battle."
Across the Saar: In early February 1945, the 10th reassembled at Metz and was able to rest briefly
after rejoining the XX Corps. On 20 February 1945, the 10th again attacked the German defenses.
In one day, they broke the German lines, and after 48 hours, the division advanced 85 miles, overran
the Saar-Moselle Triangle, and reached the Saar River. The 10th then crossed the Saar and captured
Trier and a bridge across the Moselle River. The loss of this heavily defended city caused German
defenses to collapse. Generals Dwight Eisenhower and Patton visited the 10th Armored Division to
congratulate them.
The division raced through Kaiserslautern, crossed the Rhine River on 28 March 1945, and
continued east. The division helped to seize Heilbronn, defended the Crailsheim Salient, and moved
south to isolate Stuttgart. As part of the VI Corps the 10th crossed the Danube River on 23 April 1945.
By 27 April 1945 it was one of several Seventh Army corps headed towards the Alps to seal off passes
out of Germany, reaching Innsbruck, Austria by early May.[3] By 9 May 1945, elements of the 10th had
reached Mittenwald, Bavaria, where they halted. The 10th occupied southern Bavaria until September 1945.
The 10th Armored Division had captured 650 towns and cities along with 56,000 German prisoners.
In one week, the 10th advanced 100 miles and captured 8,000 prisoners from 26 different enemy divisions.
After a four-day respite, the 10th was one of several divisions spearheading the Seventh Army drive under
General Alexander Patch into Bavaria. With rapid night movements, the "Tigers" continually surprised the
Germans. German dispatches referred to the 10th as the "Ghost Division." As it drove into Bavaria,
the division overran one of the many subcamps of Dachau concentration camp in the Landsberg area on 27
April 1945, earning it recognition as a liberating unit.