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Jim Sterner Shares His Remarkable World War II Journey

Jim Sterner recounts his harrowing experiences during the Battle of the Bulge, surviving friendly fire, and connecting decades later with a British tank commander’s son.

World War II Veteran Jim Sterner Shares His Battle of the Bulge Experience

Jim Sterner, a 99-year-old World War II veteran, recently shared his compelling experiences from the Battle of the Bulge and other wartime events in an interview on America’s Veteran Stories with Kim Monson. His journey offers a vivid glimpse into the bravery, hardships, and sacrifices that marked one of America’s most pivotal conflicts.

Answering the Call After Pearl Harbor

Born in Philadelphia in 1923, Sterner was a student at the University of Delaware when Pearl Harbor was attacked. Like many young Americans, he felt an immediate call to serve, enlisting in the U.S. Army Reserve Corps in 1942. After basic training, Sterner entered the Army Specialized Training Program, briefly returning to college before being assigned to combat with the 84th Infantry Division—nicknamed “The Railsplitters.”

Facing Fierce Combat in Europe

Sterner arrived at Omaha Beach in November 1944, months after D-Day, struck by the enormity of the earlier sacrifices made there. Soon after, he faced fierce combat near Geilenkirchen, Germany, where his unit encountered a formidable German pillbox, a reinforced concrete defensive structure. Sterner recalled a brutal five-day assault, during which his company sustained devastating losses, reduced from nearly 200 men to fewer than 50. Despite relentless attacks, they failed to take the pillbox directly, highlighting the immense challenges soldiers faced.

Close Calls and Acts of Heroism

Sterner vividly described surviving near misses, notably when he and fellow soldiers took refuge in a German house during heavy shelling. They witnessed intense machine gun fire and a nearby tank battle. Remarkably, decades later, Sterner connected through social media with the son of a British tank commander killed while defending Sterner’s unit. This emotional reconnection illustrated the lasting human impact of wartime heroism.

Wounded by Friendly Fire

In December 1944, during the Battle of the Bulge, Sterner was wounded near Bourdon, Belgium. Ironically, his injury came from friendly fire—a mortar round mistakenly fired by his own forces. Sterner vividly remembered medics rushing to his aid, only to be fatally wounded themselves by a subsequent round. This haunting memory underscored the unpredictable and tragic nature of war.

Reflections on War and Legacy

Throughout his story, Sterner spoke candidly about the emotional toll of combat, the camaraderie among soldiers, and the enduring significance of shared sacrifices. He recalled intimate moments, such as marrying his sweetheart during a brief furlough, defying family concerns about wartime uncertainty. They went on to enjoy 76 loving years together, emphasizing the profound personal stories behind historical events.

Sterner’s wartime experiences, especially his detailed recollections of the Battle of the Bulge and subsequent events, serve as a powerful reminder of the courage and resilience of American servicemen. His story honors those who fought and died, ensuring their sacrifices are never forgotten.

To hear more of Jim Sterner’s story and other remarkable veterans’ experiences, visit America’s Veteran Stories.

Transcript

Announcer
00:13 – 00:35
World War II, Korea, Vietnam, the Gulf War, Afghanistan, and our other wars and conflicts. America’s fighting men and women strapped on their boots and picked up their guns to fight tyranny and stand for liberty. We must never forget them. Welcome to America’s Veteran Stories with Kim Monson.

Announcer
00:36 – 00:45
These stories will touch your heart, inspire you, and give you courage. We stand on the shoulders of giants. Here’s Kim Monson.

Kim Monson
00:50 – 01:13
And welcome to America’s Veteran Stories with Kim Monson. Be sure and check out our website. That is americasveteranstories.com. And the show comes to you because of a trip that I took in 2016 with a group that accompanied four D-Day veterans back to Normandy for the 72nd anniversary of the D-Day landings and returned stateside realizing that we need to hear these stories.

Kim Monson
01:13 – 01:26
We need to record them and broadcast them and archive them. So hence America’s Veteran Stories. I am thrilled and honored to have on the line with me Jim Sterner. He is a World War II veteran.

Kim Monson
01:26 – 01:34
He fought at Battle of the Bulge as well as the Rhineland. And it is great to have you on the line, Jim Sterner. Welcome to the show.

Jim Sterner
01:34 – 01:38
Thank you very much. I’m glad to be here, Kim.

Kim Monson
01:39 – 01:42
Well, let’s start with what year were you born, Jim? I

Jim Sterner
01:43 – 01:48
was born in 1923. So if you do the arithmetic, I’m 99.

Kim Monson
01:51 – 01:55
You sound like you’re 60. Thank

Jim Sterner
01:56 – 01:56
you.

Kim Monson
01:58 – 02:03
I am so excited to hear your story. Where were you born?

Jim Sterner
02:04 – 02:21
I was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. I was raised in Allentown, Pennsylvania and when I went to high school We moved to Wilmington, Delaware. So I was graduated from high school in Wilmington, Delaware.

Kim Monson
02:21 – 02:28
Okay. And do you remember when you heard that Pearl Harbor had been bombed?

Jim Sterner
02:29 – 02:37
Absolutely. Absolutely. It was Sunday. And I was going to the University of Delaware.

Jim Sterner
02:37 – 04:07
And I was, um, eighteen years old physically fit and I was living in a fraternity house and the phone started ringing and all of the fathers were calling down there to plead with their sons not to do anything rash to take it easy and uh… we listened, most of us listened to our fathers and did not quit school and enlist. There was one fraternity brother who two days later he was just about to enter his last semester in chemical engineering and he came in the fraternity house and he had just enlisted in the paratroops he had a toothbrush in his jacket pocket and we all said his nickname was streaky and we all said to him streaky it’s one more semester and you can do a lot more good for your country than you can running away now and joining the paratroops and his answer to us was which was typical for the time my conscience dictates and

Jim Sterner
04:07 – 04:21
Streaky Shorter was off, went through the whole European campaign, D-Day, the bulge and everything else, became a top first sergeant in the paratroops.

Kim Monson
04:23 – 04:26
And he survived World War II?

Jim Sterner
04:28 – 04:33
He survived World War II, that is correct. He’s gone now.

Kim Monson
04:35 – 04:40
That is absolutely remarkable. So then he must have jumped in behind enemy lines on D-Day, yes?

Jim Sterner
04:41 – 04:49
Oh, he did. He did. He has a remarkable record. And as I say, he became a first sergeant.

Jim Sterner
04:51 – 04:58
Now with three and a half years of chemical engineering, I’m surprised he didn’t get a commission. But somehow or other, he didn’t.

Kim Monson
04:59 – 05:02
I can’t remember Kim, I’m sorry. What was a band of brothers?

Jim Sterner
05:26 – 05:31
He was in the same division as the Band of Brothers.

Kim Monson
05:32 – 05:39
I should know that, and I don’t. That will be homework for all of our listeners, Jim. I did not know either. Let’s

Speaker 3
05:39 – 05:40
talk about you. 1941, you are in college. What’s

Kim Monson
05:40 – 05:45
your story? What happens during the war? How did you end up in the Army?

Jim Sterner
05:56 – 06:46
Well, as a teenager, I was bitten by the army bug. And during the between the two world wars, the United States had a program called citizens military training program. It was held in the summers only. And you had to be 16 years old to enlist and when I was 16 I enlisted and I went to Fort Dix, New Jersey for the summer and it was a program looking back on it I think primarily to keep reserve officers up to date but there were

Jim Sterner
06:46 – 07:16
teenage boys from the whole area Most of the people in Fort Dix were from New York City. But we spent a month at Fort Dix learning military discipline, close order drill, open order drill. We went to the rifle range, did all the things that the soldiers did. And in those days, a private’s pay was $21 a month.

Jim Sterner
07:17 – 07:48
Or as a lot of people said, we were paid $21 a day once a month. And so I was red hot to go in the army and I enjoyed that very much. And then when I went to the University of Delaware in September of 41, I had two full years of reserve officer training. It was what was then called the Coast Artillery.

Jim Sterner
07:49 – 08:10
We were dealing with 155 millimeter guns. So while I was at Delaware, we went on a accelerated program. They were turning out college graduates in three years rather than four. So I was able to get in the two years of reserve officer training.

Jim Sterner
08:11 – 09:05
And I enlisted while at the University of Delaware in December of 1942 because I was anxious to go in active duty and I had a guilty conscience I remember getting on a bus or going in a crowd I figured everybody was looking at me and wondering why isn’t he in the service so I enlisted in the Reserve Corps and then quit school so I’d be called up. And I was called up and did basic training in Camp Walters, Texas. And while at Camp Walters, I qualified for the Army Specialized Training Program.

Jim Sterner
09:06 – 09:07
Have you ever heard of it, Kemp?

Kim Monson
09:08 – 09:11
I have heard of it, but I don’t know much about it.

Jim Sterner
09:12 – 10:09
The Army’s ASTP was a program where if you qualified, the Army sent you back to college. But while you were in that program, you could not even get a promotion to private first class. But it was a good deal because the Army sent me back to college and I was in college again for six months until that program was discontinued. As I understand it, the army was looking ahead to D-Day and they were scraping the bottom of the barrel for personnel and some general looked over his shoulder and he saw 10 or 15,000 physically fit young men that the Army was sending to college.

Jim Sterner
10:11 – 10:48
And he figured, man, if we stop this program, we can fill three infantry divisions, which are around the country, that are all about half full. And we can get two men for every man that’s in college. And I think the divisions that we were sent to were the 84th, which was my division. the 106th, which you may recall was the first division to take the brunt of the German attack in the Ardennes and the 102nd.

Jim Sterner
10:51 – 11:37
And so that program was discontinued in May of 44. And I personally was sent to Camp Claiborne, Louisiana, which is near Alexandria. and I was a private in a frontline infantry rifle company much to my amazement because I had thought with my two years of reserve officer training and my summer of citizens military training camp I figured I was a pretty much of a hotshot and I was a shoo-in to get a commission but I found myself as a buck private and a frontline infantry rifle company.

Kim Monson
11:39 – 11:47
Wow, and that’s May of 1944 as they’re preparing for D-Day. So what happens then, Jim Sterner?

Jim Sterner
11:49 – 12:48
Well, we trained in Camp Claver, Louisiana. We reported there on April Fool’s Day. and some of us thought the army was playing an April Fool’s joke on us by sending us to the infantry but they were not so it was dead serious and that was April and I have to interject here that on July 1st my girlfriend and I decided to get married on my overseas furlough so I was married on July 1st, 44 and went back to Camp Claiborne and my wife was still going to the University of Delaware and in September of 44 we sailed out of New York City to Scotland and got on a train

Jim Sterner
12:48 – 13:26
in the Firth of Clyde to an army base in southern England. We were there about a month and I think it was October 30th, we went to Southampton, got on a ship and crossed the channel. I somehow or other got picked to drive a Jeep. So I went over on an LST and landed on Omaha Beach.

Jim Sterner
13:29 – 13:31
in November 1st, 1944.

Speaker 8
13:47 – 14:15
Remax Realtor Karen Levine helps bring to life the individual stories of our servicemen and women. With her sponsorship of America’s Veteran Stories with Kim Monson, Karen honors the sacrifices of our military and is grateful for our freedom. As a member of the National Association of Realtors Board of Directors, Karen works to protect private property rights for all of us. Karen has a heart for our active duty military and veterans and is honored to help you buy or sell your home.

Speaker 8
14:16 – 14:18
Call Karen Levine at 303-877-7516 to help you navigate buying or selling your home. That’s 303-877-7516.

Speaker 5
14:28 – 14:47
All of Kim’s sponsors are an inclusive partnership with Kim and are not affiliated with or in partnership with KLZ or Crawford Broadcasting. If you would like to support the work of the Kim Monson Show and grow your business, contact Kim at her website, kimmunson.com. That’s Kim Monson, M-O-N-S-O-N dot com.

Kim Monson
15:00 – 15:15
Welcome back to America’s Veteran Stories with Kim Monson. Be sure and check out our website. That is AmericasVeteranStories.com. I’m thrilled and honored to have on the line with me 99-year-old or 99-year-young Jim Sterner, World War II veteran.

Kim Monson
15:15 – 15:28
We’re talking about his experiences. Jim, just a couple of questions. First thing, on your overseas furlough, You married your girlfriend. She became your wife.

Kim Monson
15:28 – 15:33
There had to be a lot of emotion between the two of you because there was a lot of unknowns, correct?

Jim Sterner
15:34 – 16:20
Kim, you hit the nail on the head. There was a tremendous amount of family pressure on both sides against us getting married because, as I said, I was a private in a frontline infantry company. I was gun fodder. There was a tremendous amount of pressure from our parents to not do such a dumb thing as to get married and of course everybody just knew that I might be crippled or blind or whatever, return home and have a young, beautiful wife.

Jim Sterner
16:21 – 16:40
And they thought we should wait till after the war. But I don’t know whether you can take this comment or not, but that was 1944. We were madly in love. We wanted to sleep together.

Jim Sterner
16:41 – 17:27
and we wouldn’t do it unless we were married so we decided to get married and to us it was that simple to the parents it wasn’t quite that simple but they did put on a big wedding in Wilmington in a very short time and my father-in-law actually at one point was going to refuse to give away his daughter but he did and everything. And we had 76 years of beautiful, wonderful married life. We have five daughters and from my point of view, a wonderful life together.

Kim Monson
17:28 – 17:42
That is a remarkable story, Jim Stirner. I just got chills as you were telling me that. That is just amazing, so thank you. I’m just thinking about your wife saying goodbye.

Kim Monson
17:42 – 18:03
I just can’t imagine the emotion. So you’re off to Europe and you go on to Omaha Beach in November after the initial landings were in June. What did you see and what did you think when you were landing this LST with this LST on Omaha Beach?

Jim Sterner
18:05 – 18:22
My biggest thought was, my God, how did they do it? I’m glad I wasn’t here. and I was a guy who was gung-ho in the army. I was a guy who was anxious to get into combat.

Jim Sterner
18:22 – 18:53
I had ups and downs, Kim. There were times when I didn’t want to go to fight and there were other times when I did. In Claiborne, I became convinced that the 84th Division wasn’t going to get to get overseas while the war was still on. So I actually volunteered for the paratroops so I could get over and do some fighting.

Jim Sterner
18:54 – 19:43
And yet I took advantage of the Army Specialized Training Program where I let them send me to college, which was a long way from any injury. in fact one of the theme songs we used to sing in ASTP was take down your service flag mother your son’s in the ASTP he won’t get hurt by a slide rule so the gold need never be so we were a little bit self-conscious about not being in the war but on the other hand we were greedy enough to take advantage of a free college education.

Kim Monson
19:44 – 19:51
If there was going to be a free college education, I think this is one I could probably get behind because of your service on that.

Jim Sterner
19:54 – 20:15
I certainly did. Luckily for me, I guess, after my initial interviews, to go into the paratroops, the division was alerted for overseas and all transfers were cancelled. And so I did get to go overseas.

Kim Monson
20:17 – 20:18
But not as a paratrooper, correct?

Jim Sterner
20:19 – 21:01
But not as a paratrooper, as an infantry private and K company of the 333rd Infantry Regiment, 84th Division. Okay. The 84th Division was nicknamed the Rail Splitters because it was in World War I an infantry division from Illinois and it was called the Abe Lincoln Division. You may recall Abe Lincoln was a rail splitter and our patch had a white axe into a log and so we were called the Rail Splitters.

Kim Monson
21:04 – 21:11
We got on trucks and had a convoy across France into Holland. I think we spent the best part of a week in that convoy going across France.

Jim Sterner
21:34 – 22:22
A lot of rain, a lot of mud, and we got into Holland, and we were in a little town called Heeren, H-E-E-R-L-E-N, and we lived in a schoolhouse, and getting ready to go into action, and it was mid-November, I think it was November 17, that we cross the border from Holland into Germany. And at that time, the 333rd Regiment was on loan to the British Army. So we were really, in fact, we were Sherwood Rangers Yeoman.

Jim Sterner
22:24 – 23:04
and the only difference we really saw between being in the British Army and the American was that we got a rum ration from the British. So every morning we had about a half a canteen cup of rum while we were in reserve. When we actually got into the battle on November 17, the rum ration quit coming up to the front But we started the attack and we were supposed to take a little town named Wurm. W-U-R-M.

Jim Sterner
23:06 – 23:29
And we went through a pretty sizable city of Geilenkirchen. We had no trouble capturing Geilenkirchen. The Germans just completely withdrew the battalion. which was four companies, had one casualty in the capture of Guylan Kirkan.

Jim Sterner
23:29 – 23:51
That casualty was the Catholic chaplain. Nobody knows to this day how in the world he got wounded. But we took Guylan Kirkan and then proceeded through some fields and we ran into a German pillbox. Do you know what a pillbox is, Kim?

Kim Monson
23:52 – 23:54
I do, but explain that to our listeners.

Jim Sterner
23:57 – 24:04
Well, easiest way to explain it is to think of Jackie Kennedy. She wore a pillbox hat.

Speaker 3
24:05 – 24:05
It’s

Jim Sterner
24:05 – 24:58
a round, a pillbox in Germany was part of the Siegfried line, which was a row of these concrete, reinforced concrete houses maybe 20 feet in diameter reinforced concrete walls. Very, very thick reinforced concrete walls. They were built so strong that I actually saw a American dive bomber come in and drop a bomb on this pillbox that I’m talking about. and the pillbox looked to me as though it raised up about six inches, shook a little bit, and went right back down.

Jim Sterner
24:58 – 25:01
And the firing from the pillbox never stopped.

Speaker 6
25:02 – 25:03
Wow.

Jim Sterner
25:04 – 25:40
They were magnificent structures. And K Company attacked that pillbox for five days and five nights. And when we started the attack on November 17, there were about 197 men in the company at full strength. After five days and nights of attacking, we were pulled back into reserve and we got our mail.

Jim Sterner
25:40 – 26:03
And at that time, there were only 44 of us left on our feet to receive our mail. And we had not captured the pillbox. So this was one little battle that I think you have to say the Germans won. And

Kim Monson
26:04 – 26:17
I’m just thinking and just describe this five days, five nights. You’re sleeping on the ground food. Tell us about that during this battle.

Jim Sterner
26:18 – 27:06
Well, there’s a whole lot to tell about that battle. There’s a lot of stories from five days. We captured a German Chateau, a beautiful structure, one wing of which was totally on fire. The Chateau was the company headquarters and it was the aid station and we attacked out of there across a field which was planted with sweet beets and we crossed the stream.

Jim Sterner
27:06 – 27:38
It was called the Wurm, W-U-R-M river, but it really wasn’t a river as we think of one. It was more of a stream about waist or chest deep. And we crossed it, and there were six of us that got within about 30 feet of the pillbox. It was night.

Jim Sterner
27:38 – 28:22
This was all done in the dark. And we were receiving a lot of artillery fire. The German 88mm gun, which was probably the best weapon in Europe in World War II, was firing at us. And when we got to within about 30 feet of the pillbox, the machine gun fire and the small arms fire was so heavy that we ducked into a German house and we were lined up in the house and I was on the we were in an alleyway that

Jim Sterner
28:22 – 29:16
went across the back of the house to the street and I was standing on the left end of the line with our backs against the brick wall which was facing the Germans and a good buddy of mine was on my right and another guy from Wilmington, Delaware on his right and the Germans let loose with an 88 which hit right behind the man two doors, two down from me and just totally shattered him and wounded everybody on his right. So there were six of us left in the house and we decided the place to go was in the crawl space. So we found a door in the living room.

Jim Sterner
29:17 – 29:42
We stayed in the crawl space for 24 hours having a discussion about what to do. And I was all for making a run for it. But cooler minds prevailed and they decided we should stay there until the shelling let up a little bit. There’s a little bit of a side story here.

Jim Sterner
29:42 – 29:44
Do we have another couple of minutes, Kim?

Kim Monson
29:45 – 29:56
You know what? Let’s go to break and come back and we’ll keep that as a cliffhanger on the side story on this. I’m talking with World War II veteran Jim Sterner. We’ll be right back with Jim Sterner.

Speaker 6
29:57 – 30:20
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Speaker 6
30:21 – 30:41
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Speaker 7
30:43 – 31:17
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Speaker 7
31:18 – 31:23
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Kim Monson
31:39 – 31:59
And welcome back to America’s Veteran Stories with Kim Monson. Be sure and check out our website, that is americasveteranstories.com. On the line with me is 99-year-old Jim Sterner, World War II veteran. We’re talking about this battle regarding a pillbox, correct, Jim?

Jim Sterner
32:00 – 32:01
That’s correct.

Kim Monson
32:02 – 32:13
Okay, before we went to break, you said there was a side story regarding you’re in this crawl space trying to determine what to do. You said cooler heads have prevailed. So what’s this side story?

Jim Sterner
32:14 – 33:35
Well, while we were in that alleyway, before the 88 shell hit and killed some people, I was standing at a position where I could look out the side door across the street and I saw as I said we were in the British Army at the time we were assigned to the Brits I saw the Sherwood the Sherman tank which was manned by British soldiers come up and the tank commander was standing up in the turret of the tank and he was directing fire at the pillbox and the reason I could see this all at night is because the Germans were firing tracer bullets and they were firing so many hundreds of tracer bullets that it was really lit up at night and I could see the tank commander who was trying to give us relief he was directing fire and I saw him get killed and slump over in the turret of the tank.

Jim Sterner
33:37 – 33:51
And I think he recognized that we were in the house and in a jam and he was trying to give us relief so that we could stay alive.

Speaker 3
33:51 – 33:53
Wow.

Jim Sterner
33:55 – 34:46
I have thought about this man ever since this was November 22nd 1944 and through the miracle of Facebook and your friend and mine Ralph Peters in Holland I have met this tank commander’s son who lives outside of Nottingham, England. His name is Michael Augustus Butler. His father was Gus Butler Sr. The boy, who’s now 82, was five years old when his father was killed.

Jim Sterner
34:48 – 35:35
And through the miracle of Facebook, Gus and I have become friends visiting each other in electronically and on the telephone and I have been able to tell him exactly the situation of his father’s death the fact that his father was there to help out six Americans and we have visited the father’s grave with Ralph and for me very emotional and Gus and I have shed a few tears together. In fact, I’m moved right now. I am too.

Kim Monson
35:38 – 36:03
I am too, Jim Stirner. And this has got to be so powerful for Gus, just a five-year-old kid when his father was killed in World War II, and then to connect with you after all these years. And the work that Ralph Peters is doing is absolutely amazing. And so at this point in time, I’d like you to share with our listeners what’s going to be happening here within the next few days.

Kim Monson
36:03 – 36:10
with Ralph and Ron over in Europe. I think it’s super important if you let people know about that.

Jim Sterner
36:11 – 36:14
I will do that, but may I interject something before that?

Kim Monson
36:15 – 36:16
Absolutely.

Jim Sterner
36:17 – 36:40
Ralph and I have become friends. In fact, Ralph has visited me here in my cottage. I’m in a retirement community in Pennsylvania, and Ralph has visited me here. Ralph and Ron took me on a tour of this area.

Jim Sterner
36:40 – 37:46
This little, this house that we were in was in a little village called Mühlendorf, Germany. Ralph and Ron took me on a tour of the fields which look the same today as they did in 1944. He has taken me to the house where we were in the crawl space and I have guided him again through the miracle of Facebook I have guided him to that exact spot and I have told him where the tank was where Gus Butler was killed and I said now Ralph if you walk up that street in front of you about 30 meters or 40 meters something like that that’s where the pillbox was Ralph and Ron walked up there and it was silence on the phone for two minutes maybe and all of a sudden I hear

Jim Sterner
37:46 – 39:03
this yelling and screaming they had found the remains of the pillbox it’s still there Wow What a thrill. And they pushed back some weeds, and I actually saw the reinforced concrete remains of part of the pillbox. Now, what’s going to happen on Sunday is Ralph and Ron are going to Belgium, I think for some Battle of the Bulge type of reunion. but they’re going to go and they’re going to visit a village named Bourdon B-O-U-R-D-O-N Belgium which is the largest city near there is a city called Marche M-A-R-C-H-E I think if you want to get a little Frenchy you call it Marche en Femmande and Ford Dunn is the

Jim Sterner
39:03 – 39:47
little village where on December 26 1944 I was wounded and Ralph and Ron are gonna go to the spot on the road which we know exactly where it is where I was wounded and they’re gonna relay this scene back here to my cottage and one of my daughters, I guess the one that you’re in contact with, Tamsin, is going to be here at 8 o’clock Sunday morning and we’re going to revisit Bourdon, Belgium at that time with Ron and Ralph.

Kim Monson
39:49 – 40:19
Well and Ralph I know well when I was over in Normandy in 2016 he traveled with our group and so he he is a friend and he actually was stateside here in Denver a few years ago and spoke at some different organizations here and he is he is just a gem and also I’ve interviewed Ron and I just love the work that they’re doing so this is so exciting what’s going to be happening with this Jim Sterner. Oh,

Speaker 3
40:19 – 40:21
it’s terrific to

Kim Monson
40:21 – 40:38
me. What kind of emotions are you feeling as you’re going back via Facebook, via technology to when you were doing battle in World War II? What’s going through your mind?

Jim Sterner
40:38 – 40:48
Totally amazed. I wish I could understand it. Very emotional. In fact, it’s a tearful emotion.

Jim Sterner
40:50 – 41:25
and uh… but to think that i was there when we were there we used to pull up which turned out to be sugar beets we thought they were rutabagas but turns out that Ralph went there and while Ralph was showing me the chateau which i knew quite well and We were talking, I was telling him how we would pull rutabagas out of the ground. He pulled one out of the ground and he said, the only problem is it isn’t a rutabaga,

Speaker 3
41:25 – 41:25
it’s

Jim Sterner
41:25 – 41:58
a sweet pea. But we went back and I say, unbelievable emotional to see the pillbox. Incidentally, I think the Americans never did conquer that pillbox. The Battle of the Bulge came and then we went in and around it and eventually shut it down by coming in from the rear, from the German side.

Jim Sterner
41:59 – 43:17
But that was a tough battle and a lot of memories. One of the things that happened in the battle, a group of us, Somehow, and this is totally unexplainable, some of us got out in front of the rest of the American lines and we ended up about two or three hundred yards behind German lines and we came upon a house and we started receiving a lot of small arm fire from this house and We jumped in shell holes and started firing back and it was at that time that the tank commander, Gus, saw what was happening and he pulled his tank up on our left flank and started rapid fire 75mm gun into the house and he was going kapow, kapow, kapow and after a little bit a white flag came out of the house and 36 Germans surrendered to us.

Kim Monson
43:19 – 43:19
What did

Jim Sterner
43:19 – 43:19
you do

Kim Monson
43:19 – 43:21
with 36 Germans then?

Jim Sterner
43:23 – 43:26
Well, we lined them up in a column or two and searched them for souvenirs.

Kim Monson
43:30 – 43:30
Did

Jim Sterner
43:30 – 43:30
you get

Kim Monson
43:30 – 43:31
any souvenirs?

Jim Sterner
43:32 – 44:07
I got a watch which I did not have a wristwatch at the time for some reason so I borrowed a German’s wristwatch that he had and after I had time when we were pulled back in reserve I examined the wristwatch and I found French and engraving on the back of it. I don’t know the truth, of course, but I’d like to believe that the German took it from a French soldier. I took it from him.

Jim Sterner
44:07 – 44:16
And when I was wounded, the medics took it from me. But he probably bought it in Paris is what really happened.

Kim Monson
44:17 – 44:24
Okay, well that’s quite a story. Hey, let’s go to break. I’m talking with Jim Sterner, World War II veteran. We’re going to go to break.

Kim Monson
44:24 – 44:25
We’ll be right back with Jim Sterner.

Speaker 10
44:28 – 44:47
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Speaker 10
44:47 – 44:51
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Speaker 9
44:58 – 45:13
You’d like to get in touch with one of the sponsors of the Kim Monson Show, but you can’t remember their phone contact or website information. Find a full list of advertising partners on Kim’s website, KimMonson.com. That’s Kim, M-O-N-S-O-N, dot com.

Kim Monson
45:22 – 45:34
And welcome back to America’s Veteran Stories with Kim Monson. Be sure and check out our website. That is americasveteranstories.com. On the line with me is Jim Sterner, a World War II veteran, 99 years old.

Kim Monson
45:35 – 45:46
And Jim Sterner, you’re over in, we’re talking about November 1944 into December 1944. What’s the next story that you have that you can share with our listeners?

Jim Sterner
45:48 – 46:31
Well, I think a story that people seem to enjoy is After we finished with that pillbox, we got a bunch of replacements to get the company back near full strength and we moved across some muddy fields into a town called Lindern, Germany. Our mission in Lindern was a holding action. We had foxholes around the perimeter of the city of the village, what I call it. It was big enough to have a railroad station.

Jim Sterner
46:32 – 47:24
It’s about as much as I can say about Lindern. But we stayed in that position for I think it was nine days actually, at which time we would spend half our time in a foxhole and half our time in a cellar in the village and one time I was in a foxhole and for some reason didn’t get relieved so instead of spending about 12 hours I spent 24 hours in that foxhole and it just happened I was with a buddy from Texas who had a mental problem. In those days we called it shell shock.

Jim Sterner
47:24 – 47:45
I think today the polite thing is post-traumatic stress syndrome. And he could not stand watch. So I stood on my feet for 24 hours. And when I was relieved, I went back into the village and I went into the first cellar I could find.

Jim Sterner
47:47 – 48:28
and in that part of Germany most cellars were built like forts. They were built with stones in archways with the house built above it. The cellar I happened to go into was built with concrete block like an American cellar and the owner of the house had coated the concrete block with plaster so that every time a German artillery shell hit anywhere around town, the concrete blocks vibrated a little bit, and the atmosphere in the cellar was a fog of plaster.

Jim Sterner
48:30 – 49:06
And a very close buddy of mine, in fact, the man who was my best man when my wife and I were married the previous July 1, came into the cellar with me and he looked around and he said, Jim, I can’t stay in this place. This is a death trap. He said, I’m going to go look for a better cellar. So I at that point was so tired that I lay down on the cellar floor and I was out of it.

Jim Sterner
49:07 – 49:30
A couple of minutes later, Don came back in and he said, hey, I just found a great cellar right across the street. Let’s go over there. And I said, Don, I am so tired that I don’t care if I get killed. I cannot walk up those steps and across the street.

Jim Sterner
49:31 – 49:46
I’m staying here no matter what happens. Well, here’s this guy that he and I had taken basic training together. We were roommates in college. We are in the same platoon in the division.

Jim Sterner
49:46 – 50:56
He was my best man and I refused to move and he doesn’t want to stay in a death trap. So he thought about it a little bit and finally said, well, if you’re going to stay, I’ll stay with you. and I was glad because against all army regulations Don carried a blanket in his combat pack so I knew that if he stayed there I would be able to sleep under a blanket that night on the dirt floor so Don decided to stay and somehow while all this was going on a third member of our platoon Faustino Guetta from San Antonio came in so Faustino and Don and I slept under Don’s blanket and I always like to add that Faustino and I insisted that Don sleep in the middle where it was less cold than on

Jim Sterner
50:56 – 51:40
the outsides the next day when we got out and about in the village we found out that during the night that cellar across the street had been hit right in the cellar steps in the cellar door with a big artillery shell the house collapsed there were eight men killed and everybody else in the cellar was wounded to one degree or another Lots of concussions. And our seller, our seller, the Death Trap, came through with flying colors.

Kim Monson
51:42 – 51:56
Boy, it seems like the hand of divine providence was upon you that night, Jim Sterner. That is an amazing story. Let’s talk about Battle of the Bulge. We’ve got a few minutes left.

Kim Monson
51:56 – 51:57
Tell us about that.

Jim Sterner
51:58 – 53:11
Well, the Battle of the Bulge We didn’t get there until about the 22nd of December and by then the Germans were pretty well beat. So we didn’t really see intense fighting. We were stationed along a road which had been dug into the side of a hill and we could walk up and down that road freely and the Germans couldn’t hit us even with a mortar. One of the stories that we tell is that this gentleman, Don, of whom I’m speaking in the cellar, on Christmas Day, 1944, Don and I were assigned to a bazooka and there was a German tank with an 88mm gun on it about 50 yards in front of us.

Jim Sterner
53:13 – 54:02
We were assigned to the bazooka and told if the tank moves, knock it out. Don and I, the place was frozen, you couldn’t dig a foxhole and we were lying on top of the ice. and after about 10 minutes I said to Don I hope you know how to fire this thing because I’ve never even seen a bazooka fired before in any way shape or form and he said I don’t know how to fire a bazooka so here are two guys on the front line assignment to knock out a tank that we don’t know how to fire a bazooka But we took the rockets out of the ammunition bag.

Jim Sterner
54:03 – 54:30
We examined it and decided what we would do in case the tank moved, which it didn’t, by the way, luckily. And it turned out that we analyzed it properly. So if the tank had moved, we could have at least gotten a shot off. Now, what damage it would do was another story.

Jim Sterner
54:33 – 55:00
Years later, some people found out who the tank commander was of that tank. His name was Gerhard Tebbe. And he came over to the United States to a reunion, which unfortunately I did not go to. and Gerhard Tebbe told us at that time that he was a tank commander and there were 12 tanks.

Jim Sterner
55:01 – 55:18
The one that we saw was right in front of us. The other 11 were in the woods behind him. And we said, why didn’t you just roll over us and kill us all? And he said, well, we couldn’t because we were out of gas.

Jim Sterner
55:20 – 55:25
You may remember the story, Kim, about the Americans burning our gas?

Speaker 3
55:26 – 55:26
Yes.

Jim Sterner
55:27 – 55:30
Well, that decision probably saved my life.

Kim Monson
55:31 – 55:41
Wow. Okay, yeah. A tank’s not of much use if it doesn’t have any gas. We’ve got two minutes left, Jim.

Kim Monson
55:41 – 55:43
You were then wounded, correct?

Jim Sterner
55:44 – 56:49
Well, in two minutes I can tell you that our artillery decided they were going to knock out the tank. So a 4.2 inch mortar about a mile to the rear fired a shot to knock out the tank and that shot hit on the road that I’m talking about and hit me in the right calf. and I sat down to take check the wound and my friend Don was sitting on my right and two medics came out to look at me and at that time a second shot came in at the same place and it killed both those those two medics took all the shrapnel which would have killed Don and me and those two medics fell over my legs and I pushed them off my legs and started crawling down the road and the artillery forward observer came up and said, don’t worry.

Jim Sterner
56:49 – 57:04
He said, I didn’t see the first round come in. So I called a second round at the same spot, but there won’t be any more. I know what’s going on now. And so that’s how I got wounded by friendly fire.

Kim Monson
57:06 – 57:15
Wow, that is quite a story. Jim Sterner, thank you so much for sharing this story with us. Your final thought you’d like to leave with our listeners?

Jim Sterner
57:20 – 57:21
I don’t know what to say, Kim. It’s

Kim Monson
57:22 – 57:45
been my pleasure, Kim. I enjoyed it. I hope somebody listens. They will.

Kim Monson
57:46 – 57:52
I guarantee it. I guarantee it. So Jim Sterner, thank you so much. My friends, indeed, we stand on the shoulders of giants.

Kim Monson
57:52 – 57:55
So God bless you and God bless America.

Announcer
57:57 – 58:07
Thank you for listening to America’s Veteran Stories with Kim Monson. Be sure to tune in again next Sunday, 3 to 4 p.m. here on KLZ 560 and KLZ 100.7.

Speaker 1
58:16 – 58:30
The views and opinions expressed on KLZ 560 are those of the speaker, commentators, hosts, their guests, and callers. They are not necessarily the views and opinions of Crawford Broadcasting or KLZ Management, employees, associates, or advertisers. KLZ 560 is a Crawford Broadcasting God and country station.

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