Photo By Kare Lohse
FREDERICK MESSING
“WWII Attu Scrapbook, by Frederick “Andy” Messing, Jr.”
Fred Messing was with the 50th Combat Engineers on Attu in May of 1943. He was a 1st
Lieutenant at the time. Fred helped stop a Banzai attack of up to 600 Japanese soldiers on
Engineer Hill. He was awarded the Purple Heart as a result of wounds received in the left
arm by rifle fire. He later received a Bronze Star with "V" for that action. In March of 2000,
then Lt. Colonel Messing, USA (Ret.), was receiving a physical exam at Bethesda Navel
Medical Center from Cmdr. Marlene DeMaio, USNR (the Ortho there) and it was revealed
through X-Rays that he had also taken shrapnel in his right thigh from grenades thrown
onto the bulldozer he and his fellow Engineers were fighting from. Later, on 22 May 2000,
his son, Major Andy Messing, visited the actual battle site on Attu, and took dirt from that
site for placement in now Colonel Messing's grave at Arlington Cemetery on 21 November
2000...where he was interred in a full Military Honors burial, along with his wife of 59 years,
Anne. These pictures were sent to us by Major Messing, and are from his dad's collection.
Thank you Andy for sharing these.
eMail Major Andy Messing
No 1.
The aftermath of the Battle for Engineer Hill.
No. 2
This battle sealed the fate of the Japanese Army on
Attu. It was their last stand.
No. 3
Trenches were dug for the mass burials that followed.
No. 4
Fred Messing standing on the right holding on to a knife
that later saved his son’s life in Vietnam.
No. 5
Engineer Hill was so named in honor of the 50-th Regt.
(combat) which repulsed the last desperate counterattack
launched by the Japanese. Here, early on the morning of 29
May 1943 the bloodiest engagement of the battle was fought.