A World War II Tank Platoon by Ken Scar, U.S. Army Cadet Command
February 8, 2020
U.S. Army Captain William Cline, who served in World War II, was a lot of things
... husband,
father, proud Clemson Tiger, war hero and ... thankfully for future
generations of Clemson students and researchers ... a meticulous
cataloger and avid photographer.
Several years ago, his son,
William “Bill” Cline Jr., a 1970 Clemson graduate, discovered a
stack of dusty boxes hidden in the shadows of his mother’s attic.
He dug through the contents of the boxes and pulled out one
amazing discovery after another: his father’s Clemson graduation
program, report cards, Christmas cards, a job recommendation letter
from one of his father’s professors, World War II-era Clemson
decals, military orders and two albums of letters Cline wrote to his
parents from the battlefield.
Downstairs in the living room,
two albums of photographs that had been resting on a shelf for
decades took on a whole new meaning. They were full of pictures his
father took while serving in Europe in WWII.Put together, the
collection is a remarkable archive of one of the most significant
times in American history.
“It was kind of an accident,”
Cline Jr. explained. “It had all been sitting right over our heads
for 30 years after dad passed away.”
As a second-generation
Clemson graduate, Cline Jr. spent his life filled with pride in his
dad’s character and service to the nation, but the contents inside
those thin cardboard containers revealed a side of his father he had
never known.
“I’ve always felt the story of my dad is very
unique,” he explained. “But it was very emotional to discover the
whole truth of his service in WWII.”
William Cline Sr. grew
up in Newton, N.C. and was commissioned into the Army upon
Graduation from Clemson in May 1941. From there, he was sent to Fort
Knox to train in tank tactics and mechanized warfare. In 1943 he was
assigned to the 758th Tank Battalion, a rare all African American
unit that was part of the fabled 92nd “Buffalo” Infantry Division.
 U.S. Army Cpt. Bill Cline (right) stands on an M5 light tank stuck in the mud during training exercises at Fort Knox, KY, 1942. (Photo from the William Cline Collection)
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At the time, the Army often assigned white officers to segregated
units. The Army had three segregated tank battalions in WWII - the
758th, 761st and 784th. By 1945, the 761st had African Americans in
most of its officer positions, while the 784th was led only by white
officers. Officer positions in the 758th were split half-and-half,
with the black company commanders commanding combat units while the
white officers commanded service and administrative units. Cline was
assigned to the 758th Service Company, which recovered damaged
vehicles and provided maintenance and repairs.
The 758th
deployed to the Mediterranean Theater of Operations in 1944 and
became the only all-black armored unit to fight in Italy in World
War II. This was during the Germans' last desperate stand in Italy
and the fighting was fierce. The 758th used M5 light tanks and
fought the Nazis and the Fascists in northern Italy, from the
beaches of the Ligurian Sea through the Po Valley and into the
rugged Apennine Mountains, where they helped breach the Gothic Line
... the Germans’ last major defensive line of the Italian Campaign.
Cline carried a small Leica camera with him and snapped photo
after photo, some in the thick of combat. In that, too, he was rare.
Very few soldiers thought to document the war from their own eyes.
The photos Cline took ... a destroyed tank on the side of a dirt
road, soldiers going about seemingly mundane chores, buildings and
towns they traveled past, an enemy shell exploding in a field ...
stand as a testament to the bravery of the 758th.
Cline Jr.
says that his father was offered a position in another unit but
refused it. “The bottom line is those men formed a relationship.
They worked together, they trained together, they fought together.”
White officers assigned to segregated units in WWII didn’t have
it nearly as hard as minority enlisted men, who had to endure the
systematic racism that pervaded the U.S. military at the time. In
spite of that, the three all-black tank battalions performed
valiantly, with individual soldiers racking up a slew awards for
valor including Purple Hearts, Bronze Stars, Silver Stars, and a
Medal of Honor. Nevertheless, it was unusual for the white officers
to stick with segregated units any longer than they absolutely had
to.
“For a white officer to be assigned to segregated troops
was a hardship obligation. They normally served their time and
immediately displaced back into the Army’s mainstream where their
careers could excel,” said Joe Wilson Jr., author of the book The
758th Tank Battalion in World War II and son of Joe Wilson Sr., an
African American soldier who served in the 761st in WWII and later
became an instructor in the 758th. “There were some exceptions like
Cline. A few others come to mind, including Captain David J.
Williams II from Pittsburgh, PA. who recommended Staff Sgt. Ruben
Rivers for the Medal of Honor.”
[Rivers, who served in the
761st, was killed on the battlefield leading an attack on German
anti-tank guns, and posthumously received the Medal of Honor in
1997. Two other African American tankers from the 761st were also
nominated for the Medal of Honor – Sgt. Warren G.H. Crecy and 1st
Sgt. Samuel Turley - but only Rivers received it. Of the three black
tank divisions, the 761st is the best known as it saw the most
conflict. In the end, the 98 black enlisted men of the 761st were
awarded a pile of awards for valor including 11 Silver Stars, 69
Bronze Stars and more than 300 Purple Hearts.]
Wilson Jr.
estimates soldiers from the 758th earned at least ten Bronze Stars,
three Silver Stars and 20 Purple Hearts. Unlike the 761st, the 758th
was broken up and cross-attached as separate companies throughout
its combat tour and thus never fought as a battalion. Perhaps as a
result of this, the 758th’s tour of duty was poorly documented –
making the William Cline Collection all the more important.
After he returned from the war, Cline carefully placed his photos in
two neatly organized albums and kept them in a place of honor in his
home.
 Bill Cline Jr. shows a collection of his father’s mementos from WWII to Clemson University's Dean of Libraries Christopher Cox, August 25, 2019. Cline’s father was U.S. Army Cpt. William Cline, a 1941 Clemson College graduate, who was a company commander for the 758th Tank Battalion, the only black tank battalion in Italy during WWII. (Photo by Ken Scar, U.S. Army Cadet Command)
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Some three decades after his passing, his son took a
closer look at those albums, which he’d seen on his father’s shelves
since he was a child. For the first time, he pulled one of the
photographs out of its sleeve and turned it over. His father had
inscribed the back with a carefully written caption that included a
description, date, place, and names. In minutes he knew every photo
in the albums held the same revelation.
“I want this to be
for my dad’s legacy. Unfortunately, he passed away in 1987 when he
was only 67 years old. I lost him way too young,” said Cline Jr. “He
was a quiet man. He did the right things in life; came back from the
war, went to work for GE for 40 years, raised a family, did the best
he could.”
But, he says, there’s a greater meaning in his
father’s story that he wants to pass on to the world.
“I’m
not looking for glory for my dad,” said Cline Jr. “It’s not just the
story of Captain Cline - it’s the story of the 758th Tank
Battalion.”
Clemson benefited from Cline’s meticulous nature
and love for photography as his son presented his father’s treasures
to the Clemson Library’s Special Collections and Archives Monday,
Oct. 28, 2019.
“This is full documentation of someone’s life
and what they accomplished in it,” Clemson’s Dean of Libraries
Christopher Cox told Cline Jr. “I think the real value comes from
the detail being provided. It’s not just the history of this
individual at Clemson, it is history of the war. Someone that’s
doing research here could learn about WWII, mechanical engineering
in WWII, tactics, African-American history . . . there’s just so
many layers that get put together with this. People will be able to
do all kinds of original research, and your dad will be at the
center of it all.”
It is an astonishingly well-preserved body
of work that’s sure to captivate WWII historians, but there is one
photograph in particular that Cline’s living son would like you to
look closely at.
“The picture that’s the most phenomenal was
taken in Genoa at the end of the war,” he said. “It’s a group photo
of his unit, and he is the only white soldier in it. Every name is
written on the back. That picture tells the whole story of my
father.”

U.S. Army Cpt. William Cline (crouching lower left corner),
a 1941 Clemson College graduate, poses with his unit, part
of the 758th Tank Battalion, in Genoa, Italy just after the
war. The 758th was the only all-black tank battalion in
Italy in WWII and served alongside the 92nd “Buffalo”
Infantry Division. (Photo courtesy of Bill Cline Jr.)
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This summer he will take a dream trip to Italy to follow his
father's path through the war and get an even better sense of what
the men of the 758th experienced.
In the meantime, he’s ready
to pass on his father’s things to a place he trusts.
“I
need somebody to take it from here,” he explained. “I want the world
to know about the 758th, and that my dad was a Clemson man.”
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