[At Anzio] once in awhile some new recruit would come in and we would tell him, dont be so particular; wait until dark. Dont throw your urine or defecation away in the day, but you put your arm out there or stick your head up, youre going to get killed.
(Audio Interview, 20:59)
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Harold Conan Hammil |
Harold Hammil, 2002 | World War, 1939-1945
Army
34th Infantry Division, 135th Regiment, 3rd Battalion, Headquarters Company
Anzio, Rome, Florence and Po Valley, Italy; Alps Mountains
Private First Class
IN
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Harold Hammils experience of Anzio was much like that of other soldiers there: he spent almost four months in a foxhole, never coming out during daylight hours. However, Hammils depiction of the feelings and actions of the ordinary combat soldier offer some surprising insights into the mental state of men at war. Hammil tells of the inhumanity of living in a foxhole, where even bowel movements must be postponed, if possible, until after dark; and he tells of the gruesomeness of the euphemistically named clean up detail. A story notably lacking in tales of heroics, Hammil instead tells us of deserters, suicides, and men who attempt to wound themselves in the hopes of escaping combat. This is war as it was experienced by an observant and sensitive twenty-year old man who recognizes that people are not natural born killers.
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