The Longest Winter: The Battle of the Bulge and the Epic Story of World War II's Most Decorated Platoon is a non-fiction book written by
Alex Kershaw and published in 2004 by
Da Capo Press. It became a
New York Times bestseller.
It tells the story of the eighteen men of an intelligence
platoon under the command by Lieutenant
Lyle Bouck. Placed in a front-line position, the soldiers fought fiercely outside the village of
Lansareth to prevent the German advance on the morning of the
Battle of the Bulge.
Platoon's actions
The
Intelligence and Reconnaissance Platoon from the
394th Infantry Regiment of the
99th Infantry Division was the most decorated platoon of
World War II for action on the first morning of the Battle of the Bulge defending a key road in the vicinity of the
Losheim Gap. Led by 20-year old Lieutenant
Lyle Bouck Jr., the unit of 18 men held off an entire German battalion of over 600 men during a 20-hour long fight, inflicting between 400 and 500 casualties on the Germans. The platoon seriously disrupted the entire German Sixth Panzer Army's schedule of attack along the northern edge of the offensive. At 1630 on 16 December, about 50 German paratroopers finally flanked the platoon and captured the remaining 15 soldiers. Two who had been sent on foot to regimental headquarters to seek reinforcements were captured, and a third was killed.
All eighteen survived imprisonment as
prisoners of war. Due to their capture,...
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