When Private Charles H. Kuhl of the
Twenty-Sixth Infantry Regiment, First Infantry Division, checked himself into
an aid station in Sicily, doctors believed he suffered from “psychoneurosis
anxiety state, moderately severe (soldier has been twice before in hospital
within ten days). He can’t take it at the front, evidently. He is repeatedly
returned.”
Doctors transferred the combat-stressed soldier to the Fifteenth
Evacuation Hospital near Nicosia for further evaluation. “I never did like war
or being overseas,” Kuhl, a Mishawaka, Indiana, native told an interviewer
years after the war. “I never could get used to it.” Even as a civilian, he could
remember the awful screams of wounded on the Normandy beaches and the shells streaming
overhead.
Admitted on August 3, 1943, Kuhl, who had been
serving in the army for eight months, had the misfortune of being at the
hospital the same day that the commander of the Seventh Army in Sicily,
Lieutenant General George S. Patton, decided to visit. The general had already
earned fame for his leadership in North Africa, invigorating dispirited U.S.
troops and defeating the vaunted German Tenth Panzer Division at the Battle of
El Guettar in Tunisia. One of the officers who served under him, Lucian
Truscott, described Patton as “perhaps the most colorful, but certainly the
most outstanding battle leader of World War II.”
Others, however, were disgusted by
Patton’s combative personality. Beloved columnist Ernie Pyle “hated Patton’s
guts,” remembered Pyle’s friend and fellow correspondent Don Whitehead of the
Associated Press. According to Whitehead, the officer’s “bluster, show and
complete disregard for the dignity of the individual was the direct antithesis
of Ernie’s gentle character.” Soldier-journalist for the Star and Stripes newspaper
Andy Rooney, best known for his 60 Minutes commentaries, also loathed
Patton “and everything about the way he was. It was because we had so few
soldiers like him that we won the war.” While soldiers in the Seventh Army were
justifiably proud of their battle record under Patton, they bristled at his
strict discipline and hunger for glory. “He likes to be called Blood and Guts
Patton—his guts and our blood,” a soldier told war correspondent Quentin Reynolds of Collier’s magazine.
While battling German and Italian troops
as part of Operation Husky in Sicily, Patton had repeatedly urged his troops forward,
advising them to never “take counsel of your fears. The enemy is more worried
than you are.” He desperately hoped to beat the British Eighth Army under
General Bernard Montgomery to the critical city of Messina. “This is a horse
race in which the prestige of the US Army is at stake,” Patton wrote one of his
officers. “We must take Messina before the British.” When one of the American
armored columns had to halt its advance because some balky Sicilian mules blocked
the way on a one-way bridge, Patton handled the problem by taking out his
revolver, shooting the mules and having soldiers throw the carcasses and the
cart they were pulling off the bridge. He wrote in a letter to his wife
Beatrice that he had also struck the mules’ owner with his walking stick,
breaking it in the process, adding, “Human rights are being exalted over
victory.”
A few days before visiting the Fifteenth,
Patton had been informed by a major in the First Division that the front lines
had been thinned out, not only because of casualties caused by enemy fire but also
due to “a very large number of ‘malingerers’ at the hospitals, feigning illness
in order to avoid combat duty.” According to Colonel F. Y. Leaver, the Fifteenth’s
commanding officer, Patton came into a tent full of wounded GIs and made sure
to praise each of them, either shaking their hands or patting their heads and thanking
them for what they had done in the war. Patton’s mood changed drastically when
he encountered Kuhl, sitting on a stool fully clothed and appearing to have no visible
injuries. Upon questioning by Patton, the private tried to explain about his
nervous condition, finally noting, “I guess I can’t take it.” An officer accompanying
Patton remembered hearing Kuhl comment that he “wasn’t hurt, he was nervous,
and added that he had been to the front three times but couldn’t stay there.”
Enraged by what he
heard, Patton responded by smacking Kuhl in the face and roughly removing him
from the tent—a court-martial offense under army regulations. “I gave him the
devil,” Patton wrote in his diary, “slapped his face with my gloves and kicked
him out of the tent. Companies should deal with such men and if they shirk
their duty they should be tried with cowardice and shot.” Patton later added:
“One sometimes slaps a baby to bring it to.” Kuhl ended up being shipped to
North Africa to undergo treatment as doctors had diagnosed him as being
afflicted with chronic dysentery and malaria, maladies that had plagued Allied
forces on the island. On August 5 Patton issued a directive to his command that
read:
“It has come to my attention that a very
small number of soldiers are going to the hospital on the pretext that they are
nervously incapable of combat. Such men are cowards and bring discredit on the
army and disgrace to their comrades, whom they heartlessly leave to endure the
dangers of battle while they, themselves, use the hospital as a means of
escape. You will take measures to see that such cases are not sent to the
hospital but dealt with in their units. Those who are not willing to fight will
be tried by court-martial for cowardice in the face of the enemy.”
The incident involving the Hoosier soldier
might have been enough on its own to endanger Patton’s military career, but he
made matters worse a week later when he visited the Ninety-Third Evacuation
Hospital near Sant’Agata di Militello and encountered Private Paul G. Bennett
of C Battery, Seventeenth Field Artillery Regiment. Although Bennett, a North
Carolina native, showed signs of nervousness and confusion, he had repeatedly
told doctors he did not want to be evacuated, asking instead to be returned to
his unit.
Coming upon the shivering Bennett, who had seen his buddy wounded in
action, Patton heard him complain about his nerves and the constant shelling at
the front. The general repeated his performance with Kuhl, slapping the
enlisted man and threatening him: “You’re going back to the front lines and you
may get shot and killed, but you’re going to fight. If you don’t, I’ll stand
you up against a wall and have a firing squad kill you on purpose. In fact, I
ought to shoot you myself, you goddamned whimpering coward.” Patton even
started to make good on his threat with the pistol he carried until Colonel
Donald E. Currier, the hospital’s commander, and other medical personnel stopped
him. After a week’s rest, Bennett returned to the front, pleading with
authorities not to tell his wife what had happened. Patton had no regrets about
his actions, telling his staff, “I may have saved his soul, if he had one.”
Although correspondents covering the
Seventh Army uncovered details about the slapping incidents, and medical
officers issued scathing reports decrying Patton’s actions as incalculably
harmful “upon the wellbeing of patients, upon the professional morals of
hospital staffs and upon the relationship of patients to physicians,” no dispatches
about the general’s behavior reached the American public for three months. On
November 21 broadcaster and newspaper columnist Drew Pearson, on his
fifteen-minute national radio program, broke the news about Patton slapping a
soldier—an action Pearson incorrectly predicted would sideline the general from
any important command for the rest of the war.
The story quickly blew up, embroiling all
of those involved, especially Patton and Kuhl. Even years after the war ended,
and Patton’s untimely death in a car accident at the age of sixty in 1945, the matter
continued to dog the mild-mannered Kuhl as he reestablished his civilian life
in Mishawaka after seeing additional combat in France. “I think it should be
forgotten and dead,” he told a reporter in 1970 upon the release of the film Patton,
which included one scene of the general berating and slapping a crying soldier.
“I’ve been trying to keep it quiet and I wish sometimes that everyone in the
world would too. The whole experience is still nerve-wracking.”
Before enlisting in the army on December
11, 1942, Kuhl had worked for a floor- covering business in South Bend. He
received his basic training at Camp Wheeler in Georgia, with additional service
at Camp Shenango in Pennsylvania. Sent overseas by the army on Mother’s Day
1943, Kuhl joined the First Division in June. He was one of more than 150,000
American, British, and Canadian forces involved in the amphibious landings on
the island of Sicily in early July, battling Axis troops.
Accompanying members
of the First Division engaged in close combat with the enemy in the hilly,
rocky countryside, correspondent Richard Tregaskis of the International News
Service remembered that the conditions at the front were so tough that the
vaunted American Jeeps could not get through to deliver rations and ammunition.
After an intense shelling, Tregaskis observed a GI stumbling with his “head
bowed, arms dangling like an ape’s, short legs swaying and slipping like rubber
things as the little figures stumbled down the side of the mountain.” His
comrades grabbed the man by his arms and helped him sit. “The strain of the
fighting on this knoll had been too great for one man on this day,” Tregaskis
reported. Lamenting the casualties his unit had endured, a sergeant told the
veteran correspondent: “If we keep on like this, we won’t have any platoon
leaders left.”
During the Sicilian campaign Kuhl had been
admitted three times to Company C, First Medical Battalion, for exhaustion,
eventually receiving a dose of amytal sodium to help calm his nerves. His experience
with Patton at the evacuation hospital did not help his fragile condition, as the
general not only slapped him across the face with his gloves but also shouted
at the private: “You can’t stay in here with these brave, wounded Americans.” Patton
went as far as to grab Kuhl by the collar and drag him out of the tent,
finishing off by kicking him in the rear with his cavalry boots. According to a
report about the incident from Lieutenant Colonel Perrin H. Long of the Medical
Corps, after being kicked out of the tent Kuhl had been picked up by a corpsman
and taken to another ward. “There he was found to have a temperature of 102.2
degrees F and he gave a history of chronic diarrhea for about one month, having
at times as high as ten or twelve stools a day,” Long wrote. “The next day his
fever continued and a blood smear was found to be positive for malarial
parasites. The final disposition diagnosis was chronic dysentery and malaria.”
Details of the slapping episodes had reached
not only fighting men in Sicily and North Africa but also reporters covering
the Seventh Army, with some, including Demaree Bess of the Saturday Evening
Post and Merrill “Red” Mueller of the NBC network, investigating the
incidents by interviewing witnesses at the hospitals. A delegation of
correspondents—Bess, Mueller, and Reynolds—flew to Algiers, Algeria, in North
Africa to discuss the situation with Patton’s superior and commander of Allied
forces in the region, General Dwight D. Eisenhower. The general already knew
about his subordinate’s belligerent conduct, as he had received a detailed
report from Long on August 16. With the fighting on Sicily about to end with an
Allied victory, and busy with planning for the invasion of Italy, Eisenhower
wanted to save Patton for “service in the great battles still facing us in
Europe, yet I had to devise ways and means to minimize the harm that would
certainly come from his impulsive action and to assure myself that it would not
be repeated.”
Instead of sending Patton home in
disgrace, Eisenhower wrote him “a sharp letter of reprimand,” warning him that
the conduct he had displayed at the hospitals “will not be tolerated in
this theater no matter who the offender may be.” Provided that the reports he
had received about the incidents were true, Eisenhower told Patton to make an
apology “or other such personal amends to the individuals concerned as may be
within your power.” No letter he had been called upon to write in his long
military career, said Eisenhower, had “caused him the mental anguish” of the
one he had to write Patton, “not only because of my long and deep personal
friendship for you but because of my admiration for your military qualities.” Patton
did apologize to those involved, but privately believed that he had been justified
in doing what he did “because one cannot permit skulking to exist. It is just
like any communicable disease.” He admitted, however, that his actions had been
wrong, and he would make “what amends I can. I regret the incident as I hate to
make Ike mad when it is my earnest study to please him . . . I feel very low.”
Remembering what had happened between him
and Patton, Kuhl theorized that the general, who apologized and shook hands with
him on August 23, might well have been “battle fatigued. He seemed about
halfway nuts at the time.” Charles Daly, a CBS correspondent who had
investigated the incidents, also believed that Patton had gone “temporarily
crazy.” According to Eisenhower, he would have understood if Patton’s assault
had been at the front with a combat platoon. “It would merely have been an
incident of battle—no one would have even noted it, except with the passing
thought that here was a leader who would not tolerate shirking,” Eisenhower
wrote in his memoirs. But to abuse an enlisted man in a hospital, he added, was
“nothing less than brutal, except as it was explained by the highly emotional
state in which Patton himself then existed.”
Patton may also have been driven
by his combat experience in World War I. One of his friends suffered from what
was then known as shell shock, a condition called battle fatigue or exhaustion in
World War II and today commonly known as Post-traumatic stress disorder. Patton’s
friend and the doctors who treated him later shared their belief that if “he
had been roughly checked at the time of his first misbehavior, he would have
been restored to a normal state,” Patton recalled.
By 1943 army psychiatrists had abandoned
what Patton had been told by medical personnel in the previous conflict.
Instead, they stressed treating the exhaustion of soldiers who suffered a
mental breakdown in battle—an important point considering a study found that
out of the 75 percent of the men in a rifle company expected to be wounded in
action, 18 percent were put out of action due to combat fatigue. As historian
John C. McManus discussed in his work on American soldiers in World War II, combat
exhaustion “almost always occurred not because a man was psychologically unfit
but because he was physically or mentally exhausted. This exhaustion had
lowered his resistance to stress the same way it would to disease.” If given
time away from the front, fed good food, and offered plenty of rest, most combat-exhaustion
cases would recover and rejoin their units. “It was found that the farther
behind the lines battle fatigue cases were shipped,” McManus noted, “and the
longer they were held out of combat, the less inclined they were to ever
function effectively again.”
Correspondents Reynolds, Mueller, and Bess
Meeting met with Eisenhower at his headquarters at the Hotel Saint George in
Algiers, outlining what witnesses had told them about Patton’s outbursts. Reynolds
remembered that when he telephoned Captain Harry C. Butcher, naval aide to
Eisenhower, for an appointment, Butcher immediately knew the meeting’s purpose.
“The general hasn’t slept for two nights, worrying about it,” Reynolds
remembered Butcher saying about Patton’s actions. Reynolds let the military men
know that Patton was not universally loved by GIs, stating that “at least
50,000” of them would be happy to shoot the general “if they had the slightest
chance.” Despite this, Bess told Eisenhower that he and Mueller had discussed
what might happen if they reported the story. They had concluded, he said, they
were “Americans first and correspondents second. Every mother would figure her
son is next.”
Although there were approximately sixty
correspondents in Algiers and Sicily, the story, for a time, remained untold,
until Pearson’s dramatic broadcast. Eisenhower later insisted that he had told
the newsmen to use “their own judgment” on whether to print the story, and his
staff and Patton had been told that “under no circumstances was there to be any
effort to suppress the story.” Ed Kennedy of the Associated Press did point out
that while military censors had not “specifically ruled” about dispatching
articles about the uproar, the army had “made it plain that it looked with
disfavor on seeing the news of the incident in print.”
Pearson’s report unleashed a flood of news
stories, including reports in Indiana. Kuhl’s father, Herman F., a casket maker
and a German-born naturalized American citizen, shared with the South Bend
Tribune an August 4 letter from his hospitalized son in which the Hoosier
soldier had written that Patton had “slapped my face yesterday and kicked me in
the pants and cussed me. This [his letter] probably won’t go through. But I
don’t know. But just forget about it in your letters.”
Other letters from Kuhl informed
his family, including his wife, Luretta, who worked at the Studebaker
automobile plant in South Bend, that the general had apologized to him in
person and had told him that he had acted in haste. Later, the
sixty-six-year-old Herman indicated to Tribune reporters that he and his
family held no grudge against Patton. “If he is a good man, as they say, let’s
keep him,” Herman said. “We need good men. I’m willing to leave the case rest
as is and drop the whole thing and get on with the war. He [Patton] was good
enough to apologize.” Herman went on to say that his family had made the letter
from his son public not to spite Patton, “otherwise we would have made it
public long ago. As it was, we kept silent about the whole affair until the
report of the incident was made in the newspapers. Then we felt we could inform
The South Bend Tribune of the letter we had from our son.”
By the end of November Kuhl had been sent
to an army replacement center in England, where he expressed surprise about the
attention the slapping incident had received from the press. According to an
article from Joseph Azrael, a special correspondent for the Baltimore
News-Post and the International News Service, officials at the center had
issued an order prohibiting anyone from talking to newspapermen. The order also
directed that “any reporters appearing at the camp [should] be taken to the
battalion commander.” One soldier at the center did describe to Azrael what he
had seen when Patton apologized to members of the First Division:
“The division was assembled on a hillside
between Palma and Licatta [Sicily]. Gen. Patton arrived and we were told to sit
down. Patton spoke from a platform equipped with amplifiers. It was the same
place and platform on which Bob Hope had performed for a week. Patton spoke for
almost half an hour. He complimented us on our work and talked in general terms
about army discipline. Toward the end, Patton said: “Many of you men have heard
me curse you occasionally and get angry with you. But for every time I cursed a
soldier there were hundreds of times when I’ve given you praise. And as for
getting angry, I’m trying to get results and when things aren’t done right I’m
likely to lose my temper. That’s the way I am.”
Although Reynolds believed that Eisenhower
had managed a difficult situation “as well as a commander could hope to handle
it,” Pearson’s report created an uproar. General Walter Bedell Smith,
Eisenhower’s chief of staff and a Hoosier, issued a statement that Patton had
not been reprimanded for his actions. Although the statement was technically
correct, as no such mark had been made on the general’s official army record,
Eisenhower himself called the statement “factually wrong,” and recalled that a
reporter had called him after the conference to complain about what he called
“the shabby treatment of the press.” Eisenhower admitted that he and Smith had
learned a valuable lesson: “In dealing with them [reporters] we plainly had to
be right the first time.” Smith apologized to correspondents for what he called
his “tongue-in-cheek” communique. Some of the reporters who had sat on the
story paid a price for their inaction, with Kennedy noting that his AP
superiors chastised him for “not having informed the home office on the
situation” before Pearson’s scoop.
Patton played no role in Operation Avalanche, the Allied landings near the port of Salerno, Italy, on September 9,
1943, led by General Mark Clark. Patton remained without a combat command for
eleven months, serving as a decoy in part to fool German officials, who were always
fearful of the general’s battle expertise. Following the D-Day landings on June
6, 1944, the Allies were bogged down in the tough Normandy countryside. Patton
swung back into action as commander of the Third Army, whose men during nine
months and eight days of campaigning in Europe liberated or captured 12,000
cities, towns, and villages and killed 47,500 enemy soldiers, wounded 115,700,
and captured approximately 1.3 million. Even Joseph Stalin, leader of the
Soviet Union, was impressed, noting that his “Red Army could not have conceived
and certainly could not have executed” what Patton’s soldiers had accomplished.
Discharged from the army on September 27,
1944, Kuhl returned to Mishawaka and found a job with the South Bend Carpet and
Window Shade Company. He had to quit the firm due to his nerves, eventually finding
work as a janitor at Bendix. The stress he endured during the war, Kuhl
believed, might have been responsible for a heart attack he suffered in 1953
after years of what had been good health. Most of his fellow workers at Bendix
had been unaware of the slapping incident until the release of the hit Patton
movie in 1970 and a subsequent appearance Kuhl made on the David Frost
television show. “I’m not a glory hunter,” he told reporters, “and I’ve been
hesitating about giving out information to keep this thing alive but there are
so many, too many, who have been after me.”
Kuhl died on January 31, 1971, and was
buried in Mishawaka’s Fairview Cemetery. Asked for a comment about the general
who had shamed him following Patton’s death in 1945, Kuhl had been magnanimous.
“General Patton was a very good leader for his country,” he said. “It was with
deep regret that I heard of his passing.”
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