Bloody Battle at Colmar Pocket

Third Division fights its toughest battle of the war

My Mother and Audie Murphy Ch. 53

The fight for the Colmar Pocket rages through late January 1945, a brutal campaign largely overshadowed by the final days of the Battle of the Bulge. Audie Murphy, then a young lieutenant in the 15th Infantry Regiment, endures the worst days of his war.

Bailey bridge built next to the bridge over the Ill River destroyed by a tank falling in. Photo: Dogface

Through the freezing night he and his men take turns on watch. He nods off, his hair freezing to the ground, and wakes with a jerk when gunfire cracks, leaving patches of hair in the ice. By morning, a bridge over the Ill River is finally usable; a few tanks cross to join them—comforting, but also a sign that there will be no retreat.

They form up for another attack. The quiet woods erupt—mortars, machine guns, rifle fire. Murphy watches two lieutenants leap into the same foxhole; a shell follows them in and ends their lives instantly. He is knocked down by another blast, his legs peppered with fragments, but still able to fight. Tanks push forward, only to be hit and burst into flames. Crewmen stumble out, burning, screaming, cut down by enemy bullets as they roll in the snow.

Communications wire strung over German materiel. Photo: Dogface soldier collection

By nightfall the company is shattered. They huddle in the cold, eating greasy rations, waiting for ammunition and replacements. Company B has lost 102 of its 120 men; every officer but Murphy is gone. With only seventeen men left in his zone, he receives orders: move to the edge of the woods facing Holtzwihr, dig in, and hold.

The ground is too frozen to dig, so they stamp along the road to stay warm, waiting for daylight—the most dangerous hour. Their promised support does not arrive. Two tank destroyers move up, but by afternoon the situation worsens. Six German tanks roll out of Holtzwihr and fan across the field, followed by waves of infantry in white snowcapes.

Crew with an 8 inch howitzer and a heavy machine gun. Photo: Dogface soldier collection

One tank destroyer slides uselessly into a ditch; the crew bails out. Artillery begins to fall on Murphy’s position. A tree burst wipes out a machine-gun squad. The second tank destroyer takes a direct hit; its surviving crew staggers away. Murphy realizes the line is collapsing. Of 128 men who began the drive, fewer than forty remain, and he is the last officer. He orders the men to pull back.

While directing artillery fire by telephone, he fires his carbine until he runs out of ammunition. As he turns to retreat, he sees the burning tank destroyer. Its machine gun is intact. German tanks veer left, giving the flaming vehicle a wide berth. Murphy drags the field phone up onto the wreck, hauls a dead officer’s body out of the hatch, and uses the hull for cover.

Loading an M-2 chemical mortar. Photo: Dogface soldier collection

From the turret he mans the machine gun, calling artillery on the field while firing into the advancing infantry. Smoke swirls; the heat of the fire warms his frozen feet for the first time in days. He cuts down squad after squad, sowing confusion; the Germans cannot locate him and expect the burning vehicle to explode at any moment.

When the smoke lifts briefly, he spots a dozen Germans crouched in a roadside ditch only yards away. He waits for the wind to clear the haze, then traverses the barrel and drops all twelve. He orders more artillery. Shells crash around him; the enemy infantry is shredded, and the German tanks pull back toward Holtzwihr without support.

A tank destroyer in the Colmar battle. Photo: Dogface soldier collection

Another bombardment knocks out his telephone line. Stunned, Murphy finds his map shredded with fragments and one leg bleeding. It hardly registers. Numb and exhausted, he climbs off the tank destroyer and walks back through the woods, indifferent to whether the Germans shoot him or not.

Stretcher crew of medics. Photo: Dogface soldier collection

Murphy was 19 years old. These are the actions that win him the Congressional Medal of Honor.

Ch. 54: https://mollymartin.blog/2025/09/11/flo-and-janet-shoot-guns/

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Author: Molly Martin

I'm a long-time tradeswoman activist, retired electrician and electrical inspector. I live in Santa Rosa, CA. molly-martin.com. I also share a travel blog with my wife Holly: travelswithmoho.wordpress.com.

7 thoughts on “Bloody Battle at Colmar Pocket”

  1. That was some story. Horrible having to kill all those people and getting wounded in the process and seeing buddies killed. Indeed, war is hell. It’s a miracle he survived all this. (I had a cousin who was killed in the Battle of the Bulge. His parents never got over it.) Minerva

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  2. Oh heck, Molly. For some reason I’m unable to sign in; it’s not recognizing me. Here’s my comment: My father was just 20 serving in the army as an infantryman and carrying his squad’s BAR in the Battle of the Bulge. He didn’t speak about his war experience until his surviving squad members found him 40 years after the war. Murphy’s account echoes everything my father said about the horrors of war. It’s devastating to read – and I think of how I wouldn’t be here had he not survived, and how many lives he touched in beautiful ways because he did, and how the horror of his killing, as he put, “so many of God’s children” haunted him his whole life.

    Mary Huber Graham, BA, CI, CTR.I.D. Certified Hearing Interpreter since 1987American Sign Language / English

    “Let the beauty we love be what we do…” ~ Rumi

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    1. Mary, it worked! I know sometimes it’s hard to post messages on WordPress. I don’t know why. But thank you for your comment. Audie Murphy was deeply traumatized and it affected him his whole life. And as I record her story, I see how traumatic it was for my mother too.

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