5:45 | He was headed for the Battle of the Bulge, but on Christmas Eve 1944, George Marchi didn't even make it safely across the English Channel. His transport, the SS Leopoldville, was torpedoed and he wound up in the frigid water. Part 1 of 2. (This interview made possible with the support of COL ROBERT W. RUST, USMCR (ret.) in honor of LtGen Lawrence Snowden & LtGen George Christmas.)
Keywords : George Marchi Christmas English Channel Battle of the Bulge Bastogne Belgium SS Leopoldville torpedo submarine (sub) Southampton England Mae West life preserver
He wanted to go to university and study the humanities and the arts, but George Marchi had his plans interrupted by the Axis. He enlisted, and at first was sent to college by the Army, but that didn't last long. It was time to retake Europe, so the college boys became infantrymen. (This interview made possible with the support of COL ROBERT W. RUST, USMCR (ret.) in honor of LtGen Lawrence Snowden & LtGen George Christmas.)
After his ship was torpedoed, George Marchi barely survived the frigid waters of the English Channel. For days, he drifted in and out of consciousness as he recovered. Part 2 of 2. (This interview made possible with the support of COL ROBERT W. RUST, USMCR (ret.) in honor of LtGen Lawrence Snowden & LtGen George Christmas.)
Since the 66th Infantry Division had lost so many men in the sinking of the SS Leopoldville, they weren't sent on to the battle raging in the Ardennes. Instead, they were assigned to contain the German troops guarding two impenetrable submarine pens in Brittany. George Marchi recalls that it was dangerous enough for him. (This interview made possible with the support of COL ROBERT W. RUST, USMCR (ret.) in honor of LtGen Lawrence Snowden & LtGen George Christmas.)
During occupation duty in Koblenz, George Marchi experienced some delayed psychological effects from his experience during the sinking of the Leopoldville. On the positive side, he was transferred to Vienna where he experienced the reborn arts scene.
George Marchi was saddened by the death of two close friends when his ship was torpedoed, but his duty afterward in France gave him a sense of closeness with the French people.