BOSTON — The inside of a tank was Clarence Smoyer’s home, and the crew was his family.

In that sense, the 95-year-old veteran returned home Wednesday for the first time since World War II. One of the last surviving WWII tank gunners, Smoyer was surprised with a ride through the streets of Boston in a Sherman tank.

Smoyer fought with the U.S. Army’s 3rd Armored Division, nicknamed the Spearhead Division. In 1945, he defeated a German Panther tank near the cathedral in Cologne, Germany – a dramatic duel filmed by an Army cameraman that was seen all over the world.

Author Adam Makos tells Smoyer’s story in the book “Spearhead,” released Tuesday. Smoyer would make offhand comments to Makos about how he’d like to get aboard his old Sherman tank one last time. Makos started making calls and Smoyer started doing physical therapy, in case it worked out.

Smoyer, who lives in Allentown, Pennsylvania, had expected a taxi to take him from his hotel to the USS Constitution Museum for a book signing Wednesday. Instead, he found a 32-ton Sherman tank from 1944 waiting outside.

A huge smile flashed across Smoyer’s face when he walked outside and saw the tank, saying it was a shock to see it.

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“That tank saved my life,” he said.

The American Heritage Museum in Hudson, Massachusetts, sent the tank and re-enactors representing infantrymen to walk alongside for the short trip to the museum. Service members from the USS Constitution and onlookers came outside to salute Smoyer and the tank as it rolled down the street.

After Smoyer was drafted in 1943, he served on a Sherman tank, first as an ammunition loader and later as a gunner.

Smoyer was such a crack shot that his crew was given one of the Army’s state-of-the-art Pershing tanks. That meant they would always go first into battle against German tanks that often were better equipped. Pershing tanks were rushed to Europe after the bloody Battle of the Bulge.

“My tank commander, Bob Earley, used to smoke a pipe and when he’d go for a briefing in the morning, he’d come back and the pipe was jumping in his mouth,” Smoyer recalls. “He was nervous because he knew we’d be leading and up in the front again.”

Smoyer said he was always scared of rounding a corner and running into the crosshairs of a German tank. He would tell himself to shoot straight and fast before the enemy got his shot in.

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On March 5, 1945, Smoyer heard the company commander say over the radio, “Gentlemen, I give you Cologne. Let’s knock the hell out of it.” They charged into the city.

Smoyer said he traded fire with a German tank, then shot at a building and toppled it onto the Germans. Eighteen-year-old German tank gunner Gustav Schaefer and his tank commander abandoned their tank and surrendered.

Smoyer advanced and encountered the German Panther by the cathedral. The Panther had just knocked out two American Sherman tanks, killing three men.

“We pull out into the intersection and the driver saw the tank. We were looking right into the barrel,” Smoyer said. “I fired once. Hit them. Sparks were flying. I fired another one, back more toward the engine compartment. I fired the third shot.”

Smoyer set the tank on fire so the German crew couldn’t fire back. Smoyer and his crew were photographed victoriously climbing out of their tank.

Smoyer returned to Pennsylvania in August 1945, married and had three children, and worked at an industrial plant. Few knew that he took out five German tanks during the war.

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Makos met Smoyer through a friend in 2012. In 2013, they traveled to Cologne so Smoyer could meet Schaefer, the German tank gunner.

The two veterans shook hands in front of the cathedral and put roses on the grave of a German woman who was killed in their crossfire. They kept in touch through Christmas cards, letters and Skype until Schaefer died at age 90 in 2017.

“Spearhead” is the story of how their lives collided. Makos organized the surprise tank ride to show his appreciation for Smoyer.

“He did great things for this country and took great risks,” Makos said. “Now we’re giving him a last salute.”


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