The 94th Infantry Division was a unit of the United States Army in World War II, and of the United States Army Reserve from 1956 until 1963. It continued in the Army Reserve as the 94th Command
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illie Daulton Griffen was born August 16, 1925 in Poyner, Henderson County, Texas. The son of Willie Spivey Griffen (1890-1960) and Mary Elizabeth Congleton (1891-1982). His family moved to Douglas, Texas in 1930 when he was five years old where his father worked as a Post Man. Daulton entered the Army in 1943, trained at Camp Fanin, Breckinridge Ky., Camp McCain, Mississippi. He was assigned to the 301 Infantry Regiment, 94th. Infantry Division. Following a brief stay in England the 94th. landed on Utah Beach France on the 8th. of September 1944 and moved into Brittiany, The 94th. was known as "Patton's Gold Nuggets" moving east, the division relieved the 90th. Infantry Division on 7 January 1945 taking positions in the Saar-Moselle Triangle south of Wasserbillig, facing the Sigfried Line. On January 14 they seized Tettingen and Butzdorf. On January 15, they took Nenning-Berg-Weis. Several counter offensives followed. It was at Nennig that the Germans gave the 94th. the nick name "Roosevelts Butchers" for refusing quarter as they did not have the resources to take prisioners. Berg and most of Nennig changed hands several times before being taken by the Americans on 20 Jan 1945. an unsuccessful battalion attack against Orscholz, eastern terminus of the switch position, resulted in loss of most of two companies. In early February, the division took Campholz Woods and seized Sinz. On 19 February 1945, supported by heavy artillery and air support, the division launched a full-scale attack with all three regiments, storming the heights of Munzigen Ridge, to breach the Siegfried Line defenses and clear the Berg-Munzingen Highway. At Ayl, General Patton ordered troops to cross the Saar immediately, against the advice of many of his officers. Under command of Lieutenant Colonel William A. McNulty, the 94th's 3rd Battalion, 301st Infantry Regiment crossed the icy and swollen Saar on 23 February 1945. Despite Lt. Col. McNulty's own preparatory reconnaissance in absence of other adequate intelligence and undertaken at considerable personal risk, many men and materiel were lost during the very ill-prepared Saar crossing. Two of the three crossings sites were eventually abandoned due to heavy and pinpoint German artillery and machinegun fire. Daulton was killed in action February 28, 1945 near Trier Germany. He was buried at The Luxembourg American Cemetery and Memorial in Hamm, Canton de Luxembourg. Block H Row 1 Grave 25. (Biography researched and written by CJ McLaughlin for https://nacogdochestexas.blogspot.com/)
Medics remove a wounded infantrymen of the 94th Division from a jeep at an aid station near Trier, Germany, in the U.S. Third Army sector. 28 February, 1945.
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