U.S. soldiers of Pennsylvania’s 28th Infantry Division march along the Champs-Élysées , the Arc de Triomphe in the background, on Aug. 29, 1944, four days after the liberation of Paris.
"I was marching in the center front row, my head turned facing the reviewing stand as we passed by.
Vivid Memory by Lt. Colonel James Wise Kitchen
"On 27 August 1944 my regiment, the 110Th Infantry of the 28Th Division, was located at Versailles, France.
We were ordered to march directly through Paris to fight on the far side. (The French 2nd Armored division had already cleared the city.) On the night of 28 August, we moved into Paris in drenching rain and prepared for the “parade” through town the next day, 29 August.
This parade through Paris marked one of the high points of our regimental history. We formed near the Bois do Boulogne and marched twenty-four abreast down the Avenue Foch by the Arc de Triomphe to the Place de L-Etoile, architectural hub of the city; then down the Champs-Élysées de to the Place de la Concorde.
Thousands of citizens thronged the streets on this occasion, for it was the official celebration of the liberation of Paris. General De Gaulle, representing the French forces, and Generals Bradley and Hodges, together with our division commander, General Cota, representing the Americans, reviewed the division.
The reviewing stand, boasting the tri-color of France as well as the Stars and Stripes, was set up at the Place de la Concords, the whole an impressive background for the solemn but triumphant occasion.
As the troops approached the reviewing stand the 28th Division Band struck up, amidst the cheers and shouts of “Vive L’Amerique!” Correspondents from all over the world were on hand to record details of the event, and cameramen scrambled for advantageous positions from which to take pictures.
Of the latter, one in particular was to become famous: A U.S. three-cent postage stamp was issued showing our regiment marching down the Champs-Élysées with the Arc de Triumphe towering in the background. I was marching in the center front row, my head turned facing the reviewing stand as we passed by.
The original photograph from which the stamp’s engraving was made came from a two-page photo in Life Magazine published shortly after the event.
The Parisians, who crowded the streets to cheer for these, the first American troops to march through the city in World War II, showered flowers, fruit and bottles of Cognac on the un-protesting soldiers; jumped into vehicles to shake hands with the occupants; urged their pretty French patriots to kiss as many of the grinning G. I.‘s as the willing traffic would bear; and finally, linked arms with their U. S. Allies and marched exuberantly to the far edges of the city.
Whatever has been recorded in the book of international relations before or since, the march through Paris offered a chapter of amity and good will, which, if continued, might have marked a new era in the diplomatic age.
Twenty miles outside of Paris, four men who were in the front row of the photo were killed in action."
(Note added by his son: My father was awarded the French Croix de Guerre medal for action in Colmar, France; capturing 110 German soldiers, taking a town, and an important bridge with 20 of his men.
He was later wounded in the Hürtgen Forest. He was awarded the Purple Heart and two Bronze Stars.)
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