Cher Ami - The Little Pigeon That Could, And Did
Cher Ami
(Dear Friend)
The ability to communicate is essential to soldiers in the field. Without communications to their commanders or support units in the rear area, soldiers on the front line can't send messages about their progress, request needed supplies, or call for help when things reach their worst.
During World War I, messages were sometimes transmitted by wire (telegraph of field phone), but two-way radio communications had not yet become available. Sometimes a unit was ordered to attack over a broad and often difficult terrain, making it impossible to string the wire necessary for communications. In these situations, a field commander often carried with him several carrier pigeons.
Pigeons served many purposes during the war, racing through the skies with airplanes, or even being fitted with cameras to take pictures of enemy positions. But one of the most important roles they served it was as messengers. An important message could be written on a piece of paper, then that paper neatly folded and secured in a small canister attached to a pigeon's leg. Once the pigeon was released, it would try to fly to its home back behind the lines, where the message would be read and transmitted to the proper military planners.
The United States Army is divided among several different specialties, the men from each specialty trained for a particular kind of work. Infantrymen are trained to fight on the ground, artillerymen are responsible for the big guns, armor refers to the men who fight in tanks, and the Air Service was the name for the group of soldiers who fought in the air during World War I. One of the oldest of these groups of soldiers was the members of the U.S. ARMY SIGNAL CORPS. Since the birth of our Nation, it was these men that were responsible for insuring that messages between all units, (including messages to other branches of service like the Navy and Marines), got through. The Army Signal Corps identifies itself by a torch with two crossed flags. These represent SIGNAL FLAGS, a common way that messages were passed using code.
When the United States entered World War I in 1917, the Army Signal Corps was given 600 pigeons for the purpose of passing messages when it couldn't be done by signal flag or field phone. The pigeons were donated by bird breeders in Great Britain, then trained for their jobs by American soldiers.
During the Meuse-Argonne Offensive, the 2-month battle that finally ended World War I, 442 pigeons were used in the area of Verdun to carry hundreds of messages. This is how the system worked:
When a commander in the field needed to send a message, he first wrote it out on paper, trying to be both brief and yet as detailed as possible. Then he called for one of his Signal Corps officers, who would bring one of the pigeons that went with the soldiers into battle. The message would be put in the capsule on the birds leg, and then the bird would be tossed high in the air to fly home.
The carrier pigeon would fly back to his home coop behind the lines. When he landed, the wires in the coop would sound a bell or buzzer, and another soldier of the Signal Corps would know a message had arrived. He would go to the coop, remove the message from the canister, and then send it by telegraph, field phone or personal messenger, to the right persons.
Carrier pigeons did an important job. It was also very dangerous. If the enemy soldiers were nearby when a pigeon was released, they knew that the bird would be carrying important messages, and tried their best to shoot the pigeon down so the message couldn't be delivered.
Some of these pigeons became quite famous among the infantrymen they worked for. One pigeon named "The Mocker", flew 52 missions before he was wounded. Another was named "President Wilson". He was injured in the last week of the war and it seemed impossible for him to reach his destination. Though he lost his foot, the message got through to save a large group of surrounded American infantrymen.
C h er A mi
Probably the most famous of all the carrier pigeons was one named Cher Ami , two French words meaning "Dear Friend". Cher Ami several months on the front lines during the Fall of 1918. He flew 12 important missions to deliver messages. Perhaps the most important was the message he carried on October 4, 1918.
Mr. Charles Whittlesey was a lawyer in New York, but when the United States called for soldiers to help France regain its freedom, Whittlesey joined the Army and went to Europe to help. He was made the commander of a battalion of soldiers in the 77th Infantry Division, known as "The Liberty Division" because most of the men came from New York and wore a bright blue patch on their shoulders that had on it the STATUE OF LIBERTY.
On October 3, 1918 Major Whittlesey and more than 500 men were trapped in a small depression on the side of the hill. Surrounded by enemy soldiers, many were killed and wounded in the first day. By the second day only a little more than 200 men were still alive or unwounded.
Major Whittlesey sent out several pigeons to tell his commanders where he was, and how bad the trap was. The next afternoon he had only one pigeon left, Cher Ami.
During the afternoon the American Artillery tried to send some protection by firing hundreds of big artillery rounds into the ravine where the Germans surrounded Major Whittlesey and his men. Unfortunately, the American commanders didn't know exactly where the American soldiers were, and started dropping the big shells right on top of them. It was a horrible situation that might have resulted in Major Whittlesey and all his men getting killed--by their own army.
Major Whittlesey called for his last pigeon, Cher Ami. He wrote a quick and simple note, telling the men who directed the artillery guns where the Americans were located and asking them to stop. The note that was put in the canister on Cher Ami's left leg simply said:
"We are along the road parallel to 276.4. |
As Cher Ami tried to fly back home, the Germans saw him rising out of the brush and opened fire. For several minutes, bullets zipped through the air all around him. For a minute it looked like the little pigeon was going to fall, that he wasn't going to make it. The doomed American infantrymen were crushed, their last home was plummeting to earth against a very heavy attack from German bullets.
Somehow Cher Ami managed to spread his wings and start climbing again, higher and higher beyond the range of the enemy guns. The little bird flew 25 miles in only 25 minutes to deliver his message. The shelling stopped, and more than 200 American lives were saved...all because the little bird would never quit trying.
On his last mission, Cher Ami was badly wounded. When he finally reached his coop, he could fly no longer, and the soldier that answered the sound of the bell found the little bird laying on his back, covered in blood. He had been blinded in one eye, and a bullet had hit his breastbone, making a hole the size of a quarter. From that awful hole, hanging by just a few tendons, was the almost severed leg of the brave little bird. Attached to that leg was a silver canister, with the all-important message. Once again, Cher Ami wouldn't quit until he had finished his job.
Cher Ami became the hero of the 77th Infantry Division, and the medics worked long and hard to patch him up. When the French soldiers that the Americans were fighting to help learned they story of Cher Ami's bravery and determination, they gave him one of their own country's great honors. Cher Ami, the brave carrier pigeon was presented a medal called the French Croix de guerre with a palm leaf.
Though the dedicated medics saved Cher Ami's life, they couldn't save his leg. The men of the Division were careful to take care of the little bird that had saved 200 of their friends, and even carved a small wooden leg for him. When Cher Ami was well enough to travel, the little one-legged hero was put on a boat to the United States. The commander of all of the United States Army, the great General John J. Pershing, personally saw Cher Ami off as he departed France.
Back in the United States the story of Cher Ami was told again and again. The little bird was in the newspapers, magazines, and it seemed that everyone knew his name. He became one of the most famous heroes of World War I. Years after the war a man named Harry Webb Farrington decided to put together a book of poems and short stories about the men and heroes of World War I. When his book was published, it contained a special poem dedicated to Cher Ami:
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200 American soldiers have this little bird to thank for their lives.
VERY interesting stuff!! I find it amazing that these birds were trained.....The poor thing was injured, but continued to so it's job!! Bravo Cher Ami !!!!
They did a movie on that action called "The Lost Battalion" A little more history is in order.
That battalion, the first of the 308th Infantry (with parts of the 2nd) consisted of nine companies of soldiers approximately 550 men from two regiments of the 77th division with attached supporting units.
In the final offensive of the war, the Argonne offensive 1918, they were attacking German positions and assigned the objective of taking Charlevaux Mill. Behind this mill was the Binarville-La Viergette road. Taking the mill was required to control the road and a rail line to the north of it.
They had to approach the mill up a ravine that had been heavily fortified by the Germans to prevent just such advance. The attack stalled and a group of troopers became surrounded by the German counterattack. Unfortunately for the troopers, no one except the Germans knew exactly where they were. the Americans took up defensive positions on a hill next to the ravine that they were trying to exploit in their attack. The Germans understood that they had a sizable force of Americans cut off and surrounded and their destruction would severely damage the effectiveness of the American forces in the area. So, they threw everything they had at them in successive assaults to eliminate them. Including their limited reserves.
They paid a very heavy price being stuck out there all alone for four days under constant attack. They were asked to surrender on numerous occasion, not responding to any of them. Finally, elements broke thru the German lines and relieved them. Their leader Major Whittlesey was promoted to Colonel on the spot. 190 men came off that hill. 35 men received either the Medal of Honor or the Distinguished Service Cross for their actions in the battle.
Medal of Honor:
Maj. Charles White Whittlesey (Commander, 1st Battalion)
Capt. George G. McMurtry (Commander, 2nd Battalion)
Capt. Nelson M. Holderman (Commander, Company K, 307th Infantry Regiment)
1Lt. Harold E. Goettler (Pilot, 50th Aero Squadron)
2Lt. Erwin R. Bleckley (Observer, 50th Aero Squadron)
Sgt. Benjamin Kaufman (Company K, 307th Infantry Regiment)
Pvt. Archie A. Peck (Company A, 308th Infantry Regiment)
Distinguished Service Cross:
Pvt. William Begley,
Sgt. Raymond Blackburn,
Pvt. George W. Botelle,
Pvt. James W. Bragg,
Pvt. Clifford R. Brown,
Pvt. Philip "Zip" Cepaglia,
1Lt. William J. Cullen,
Cpl. James Dolan,
Cpl. Carmine Felitto,
Pvt. Joseph Friel,
Pfc. Jack D. Gehris,
Sgt. Jeremiah Healey,
Cpl. Irving Klein,
Pvt. Stanislaw Kosikowski,
Pvt. Abraham Krotoshinsky,
Pvt. Irving Louis Liner,
Pvt. Henry Miller,
Cpl. James J. Murphy,
Cpl. Holger Petersen,
Pvt. Frank J. Pollinger,
2Lt. Harry Rogers,
Cpl. Haakon A. Rossum,
Cpl. Joseph C. Sauer,
2Lt. Gordon L. Schenck,
Pfc. Irving Sirota,
Pvt. Sidney Smith,
Pvt. Albert E. Summers and
1Lt. Charles W. Turner
Whittlesey was also recognized by being a pallbearer at the ceremony interring the remains of the Unknown Soldier after the war. However, it appears that the experience weighed heavily on him. Whittlesey disappeared from a ship, in what is believed to have been (and was reported as) a suicide, in 1921.
The object of the story above Cher Ami? what happened to her?
Cher Ami was not the only pigeon used in the battle but is by far the most famous. Her stuffed body is still displayed today at the Smithsonian . She received the French Croix for completing 11 missions during the Verdun and Argonne campaigns.
This was done in a TV Movie in 2001 named "The Lost Battalion" I consider it a great movie...
Thank you for this additional info...
Kavika
Very interesting!
Thanks for sharing
When I read a story like this, my mind goes back to recall from my childhood a line, perhaps from a song or a poem:
RW, Nona, many forget the loyalty and bravery of our animal friends.
There are 200 men, that will never forget though.
RW, Nona, many forget the loyalty and bravery of our animal friends.
And , that's a shame!!
Your welcome RIO. A small tribute to an amazing little bird.