09/09/2024
Part of the Original Church Bell that was destroyed during the Fighting between the 9th infantry Regiment and the German 3rd Para who occupied the small hamlet of St Germain ‘D’ Elle during the fighting in June 1944.
The Church was completely raised to the Ground while the German troops used the Bell tower as a forward observation point to call in mortar and Artillery fire down on the 9th Infantry Reg who had advanced only a few fields away.
It was from this Bell tower that Sgt John Simonetti of Company G would be shot on 16th June 1944 and mortally wounded by the German Sniper hiding there.
How many other American soldiers would be shot from this position is anyones guess but taking out the Bell tower would have been High priority for the 2nd Division HQ.
Like most Church Bell towers during WW2 they were used as excellent viewing platforms for German spotters and Snipers on advancing troops.Many Churches in France and Europe would be destroyed for this reason.
Only recently being found in the original grounds of the Church that once the Church sat upon the new church of St German D Elle was rebuilt a short distance away.
It’s lucky that the Bell even existed as between 1939 and 1945, the National Socialist German Workers' Party under Adolf Hi**er – the N***s – confiscated over 175,000 bells from towers throughout Europe. That staggering sum is only part of the devastation and horror exacted by the N***s during World War II, but it speaks to the plundering of identity and soul that made the N**i occupation so catastrophic.
Of the 175,000 bells seized, postwar figures estimate that over 150,000 were destroyed. With bombings and air raids levelling additional towers throughout the war, the number of lost bells is even greater.