T26A3 (later M26) Pershing of E Company, 32nd Armored Regiment,Third Armored Division, attached to First Army, Twelfth Army Group, commanded by Sergeant Robert Early, approaches Koln Domplatz (Cologne Cathedral Square) on Gladbacherstrasse (where Gladbacherstrasse becomes Christophstrasse, as it crosses Kaiser-Wilhelm-Ring). This view is a still from a combat camera film. The tank appears to have a bullet or shell hole in the left track guard. Publicly ridiculed for the lack of a suitable American tank that could stand up to German armor, the United States Army‘s Ordinance Department initiated the “Zebra“ Mission, which would analyze American tank performance in the European Theatre of Operations and field combat test the T26E3 Pershing, which was armed with a 90 mm (3.54 inch) gun. In the States, many supporters of the M4 Sherman refused to accept that it was deficient against German tanks; because of political pressure, constricted supply lines, and the fast-moving battlefield preventing crew training, only twenty Pershings were made available through Antwerp in January 1945. These tanks equipped theThird and Ninth Armored Divisions of the First Army, who issued them one to each of ten companies. Early and his crew were combat veterans selected for the “Zebra“ Mission. On March 2, 1945, the First Army began to attack Cologne, and by March 6,Third Armored had secured most of Cologne except the city center. After engaging a civilian automobile and killing the woman inside (extreme left), the 32nd Armored Regiment, moving down the Marzellenstrasse, identified what looked like a knocked-out Panther Panzerkampfwagen Ausf A on the Domplatz with its main gun depressed and the engine off. As two M4 Shermans approached, the Panther opened fire, knocking out both tanks and killing Second Lieutenant Karl E. Kellner, Private First Class Julian Patrick and Technician Fifth Grade Curtis Speer. Kellner‘s leg was traumatically amputated by the Panther‘s shell, and he was able to crawl out on the Sherman‘s engine deck before he died. The other Sherman crew went to help Kellner and get medics. Early‘s tank approached and opened fire before even waiting to stop moving; the Panther‘s turret traverse wasn‘t fast enough to engage the Pershing first. Early‘s gunner Clarence Smoyer hit the Panther on its flank armor. The Panther crew exits the vehicle and the Pershing opens fire with machine guns. The entire 48-second sequence, as well asThird Armored‘s advance into Cologne, was filmed by Signal Corps photographer Sergeant James Bates. The film is widely shown in documentaries, often without proper identification. Bates claimed the crew was killed by machine gun fire as they exited the tank, other sources claim the wounded men were sheltered by Koln Politzei (Cologne Police) and surrendered a few days later. Only three Pershings were knocked out during World War II. On February 26, aThird Armored Pershing, “Fireball,“ was hit three times by a Tiger I in Elsdorf, killing the loader and gunner; the tank was repaired and returned to service. On March 1, a Ninth Armored Pershing in Remagen was hit by 150 mm (5.9 inch) artillery fire. Some of the crew were killed, but the tank returned to service. In Niehl, also on March 6, aThird Armored Pershing was hit by a “Naschorn“ (Rhinoceros) tank destroyer; the round hit the 90 mm ammunition, igniting it. The tank burned and was a total loss. Despite efforts to re-equip the tank divisions with Pershings, only 310 were available in Europe on V-E Day. Only 200 were forward deployed, and none of those saw combat. The Pershing was also deployed to Okinawa but arrived too late to see action. | |
Image Filename | wwii0078.jpg |
Image Size | 150.88 KB |
Image Dimensions | 600 x 335 |
Photographer | Bates, James |
Photographer Title | Sergeant, United States Army Signal Corps |
Caption Author | Jason McDonald |
Date Photographed | March 06, 1945 |
Location | Kaiser-Wilhelm-Ring and Christophstrasse |
City | Cologne |
State or Province | Rhine Westphalia |
Country | Germany |
Archive | United States Army Signal Corps |
Record Number | |
Status | Caption ©2007, ©2024 MFA Productions LLC Image in the Public Domain |
Author of the World War II Multimedia Database