The U.S Amphibious Truck That Made German Rhine Defenses Completely Useless in WW2

March 1945. The Third Reich stood on the precipice of total collapse. From the east, Soviet armies crashed through the remnants of German defenses like a tidal wave of steel and vengeance. From the west, Allied forces had pushed through France, Belgium, and the Netherlands, liberating territory mile by bloody mile.
But between the Western Allies and the heart of Nazi Germany stood one last formidable barrier. a barrier that had protected Germanic lands for over 2,000 years. The Rine River. For German military planners, the Rine represented more than just a river. It was a natural fortress, a liquid wall that stretched over 700 m from the Swiss Alps to the North Sea.
In March of 1945, as American, British, and Canadian forces approached its western banks, German commanders placed their final desperate hopes on this ancient boundary. Field marshal Albert Kessler, recently appointed commander of chief west, understood the strategic reality facing the Third Reich. Every bridge across the Rine had been systematically destroyed.
Every crossing point had been fortified. The river itself became Germany’s last natural line of defense, and the Vermar would make the Allies pay in blood for every foot of German soil. General Alfred Schllem, commanding the German First Parachute Army in the northern sector, had spent weeks preparing his defenses along the Rine’s eastern bank.
Despite the depleted state of his forces after the brutal battle of the Reichkes, SchleM remained a formidable opponent. His paratroopers, though many had never jumped from an aircraft, were elite infantry soldiers who had proven themselves time and again in desperate defensive battles. Schllem positioned these battleh hardardened veterans at key crossing points near Vzel Ree and along the Rine Gorge.
He fortified villages on the eastern bank, established interlocking fields of fire for machine guns and anti-aircraft weapons, and prepared counterattack forces to throw any Allied bridge head back into the river before it could be consolidated. The German defensive doctrine was clear and had been refined over centuries of European warfare.
Rivers, especially rivers as wide and swift as the Rine, were natural killing zones. Any attacking force would be at its most vulnerable during the crossing itself. Boats and rafts would be sitting targets for artillery and machine gun fire. Even if attackers managed to reach the far shore, they would arrive disorganized, wet, and without heavy weapons or vehicles.
German defenders would have precious hours, perhaps even days, to counterattack before the Allies could establish a sustainable bridge head and construct the bridges necessary to bring tanks, artillery, and supply vehicles across. This defensive strategy had one fundamental assumption built into its core.
The Allies would have to make a choice. Either they would cross with infantry and small boats, arriving on the eastern shore without vehicles or heavy equipment, or they would spend days under fire, constructing bridges before they could move mechanized forces across. Either way, the defenders would have time to react, time to concentrate forces, time to counterattack.
German intelligence officers poured over reconnaissance reports and prisoner interrogations, trying to anticipate where and when the Allies would attempt their crossings. What they never anticipated, what they couldn’t have imagined was that the Americans possessed a vehicle that would render their entire defensive strategy obsolete.
The story of that vehicle began 3 years earlier in the spring of 1942 when the United States wasn’t even thinking about the Ryan River. The US military faced a different problem entirely. How could they efficiently resupply troops who had just completed an amphibious landing? The traditional method was painfully slow and vulnerable.
Ships would anchor offshore, lower landing craft filled with supplies, which would then make multiple trips to the beach. Once on the beach, cargo had to be unloaded and transferred to trucks, creating massive bottlenecks. Every stage of this process exposed men and material to enemy fire. The National Defense Research Committee and the Office of Scientific Research and Development recognized this problem and commissioned a solution.
They turned to an unlikely team of designers. Rod Stevens Jr., a yacht designer from Sparkman and Stevens who had won America’s Cup races. Dennis Pston, a British deep water sailor living in the United States, and Frank Spear, a reserve officer from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. These men weren’t traditional military vehicle designers.
They were naval architects and engineers who understood how to make things float and move through water efficiently. Working with engineers from General Motors yellow truck and coach division in Pontiac, Michigan, this team faced a seemingly impossible challenge. They needed to create a vehicle that could drive on roads like a truck, swim like a boat, and transition seamlessly between the two.
It had to carry troops or cargo, be reliable enough for military service, and be simple enough that it could be mass-produced by the thousands. In March 1942, the team began work. By June, just 90 days later, they had a prototype ready for testing. The vehicle they created looked bizarre. It was a GMC CCC KW 2 and a half ton truck, the reliable workhorse already serving throughout the US Army, but completely reimagined.
The designers had taken the truck’s proven six-wheel drive system, its powerful GMC 270 straight 6 engine, producing 94 horsepower, and its sturdy transmission, and wrapped them in a watertight hull. The hull, designed with Stevens’s experience in yacht design, gave the vehicle respectable seaorthiness. At the rear, a three-bladed propeller provided propulsion in water, while a rudder combined with its steerable front wheels allowed for navigation.
The result was a vehicle that stood over 8 ft tall and stretched 31 ft in length with six massive tires that looked like they belonged on a truck, but a hole that looked like it belonged on a boat. The vehicle’s designation came from General Motors internal nmenclature system. D indicated the year 1942. U stood for utility amphibious.
K signified all-wheel drive. W represented the dual rear axle configuration. dukw. Soldiers would soon simplify this to something easier to remember, the duck. But before the duck could waddle its way into military service, it had to prove itself. And the US army was deeply skeptical. Senior officers looked at the prototype and saw an ungainainely contraption that seemed to be neither a good truck nor a good boat.
Initial demonstrations failed to impress. The army formally rejected the proposal. Then came a November evening in 1942 that would change everything. A fierce Atlantic storm battered the coast of Massachusetts. Wind speeds reached 60 knots. Rain lashed the shoreline. Heavy surf made the waters treacherous. Off Province Town, a United States Coast Guard cutter named the Rose ran ground on a sandbar.
Seven Coast Guardsmen were stranded and the storm made any conventional rescue impossible. Coast Guard boats couldn’t navigate the violent surf. Fire department equipment couldn’t reach the ship. As officers watched helplessly from shore, someone remembered that a DUKW prototype happened to be in the area for testing. The DDKW team with characteristic boldness volunteered to attempt the rescue.
With Coast Guard officers watching from the beach, the duck drove into the churning Atlantic Ocean. The vehicle that the army had rejected as impractical pushed through waves that would have swamped any conventional boat. It reached the stranded cutter, took aboard all seven coast guardsmen, and brought them safely back to shore through conditions that he had defeated every other rescue option.
The observers were stunned. The vehicle had performed beyond anyone’s expectations. Within days, military opposition to the DUKW melted away. Orders were placed for production to begin immediately. General Motors ramped up production at their Pontiac plant and as demand increased brought their Chevrolet facility in St. Louis into the manufacturing effort.
From 1942 to 1945, American factories produced 21,147 DUKWS. These vehicles were distributed to the US Army, the US Marine Corps, and Allied forces through lend lease. Britain received 2,000. Australia acquired 535. The Soviet Union was supplied with 586 which they liked so much that after the war they created their own version called the BAV 485.
The Dukew first saw combat in the Pacific theater at Guadal Canal, but it was in the European theater where the vehicle would prove its true revolutionary potential. During Operation Husky, the invasion of Sicily in July 1943, DUKWS demonstrated their value by fing supplies directly from ships to inland positions, bypassing the vulnerable beaches entirely.
On D-Day, June 6th, 1944, over 2,000 DUKWS participated in the Normandy landings. They carried troops, ammunition, medical supplies, and artillery pieces directly from transport ships to the beaches and beyond. Approximately 40% of all supplies that came ashore in the first weeks after D-Day arrived via duck. But the vehicle had one feature that set it apart from anything the Germans had encountered before.
The Dukw could transition from water to land without stopping. It could drive down a road, roll into a river, motor across while still carrying its full load of troops or cargo, climb up the opposite bank, and continue driving. No unloading, no waiting for bridge construction, no vulnerable bottlenecks for German commanders whose entire defensive strategy relied on rivers serving as obstacles that would slow Allied advances.
The implications were staggering. By March 1945, the strategic situation in Western Europe had reached a critical juncture. The Battle of the Bulge, Germany’s last major offensive, had failed catastrophically. The Vermacht had expended its strategic reserve in a desperate gamble to split the Allied armies and recapture the Belgian port of Antwerp.
That gamble had failed. Now depleted German forces faced the full weight of Allied military power pressing against the Rine from multiple directions. In the north, field marshal Bernard Montgomery prepared operation plunder, a massive setpiece assault across the Rine near Visel that would rival the Normandy invasion in scale and complexity.
Montgomery, methodical and cautious after hard-learned lessons from earlier operations, assembled over a million troops, thousands of artillery pieces, bombers, and two full airborne divisions for the assault. In the center, the US first army had achieved an unexpected coup.
On March 7th, advanced elements of the 9inth Armored Division discovered that the Ludenorf Bridge at Remigan was still standing. German demolition charges had failed to destroy it completely. In a dramatic action, American troops charged across the damaged bridge under fire, secured it, and established a bridge head on the eastern bank.
Within days, six divisions and 25,000 troops poured across, creating a dangerous salient deep into German held territory. The bridge itself would collapse 10 days later under the strain of heavy traffic and German artillery fire, but by then the Americans had constructed pontoon bridges and the bridge head was secure. In the south, Lieutenant General George S. Patton Jr.
commanded the US Third Army with his characteristic aggression and flare for dramatic gestures. Patton had been racing across France since the previous summer, his armor smashing through German defenses faster than his supply lines could keep up. Now, as his forces approached the Rine in the region between Mates and Cablls, Patton saw an opportunity not just for military success, but for personal glory.
He wanted to beat Montgomery across the Rine. He wanted headlines. He wanted to prove that American audacity could achieve what British caution could only dream about. On March 19th, General Dwight D. Eisenhower, Supreme Commander of Allied forces in Europe, gave Patton permission to cross the Rine as soon as the opportunity presented itself.
Patton needed no more encouragement. He immediately ordered Major General Mantinei commanding 12 core to prepare for an assault crossing. The location Patton selected was Oppenheim and the nearby town of Nearstein. Here, the Rine was about 800 ft wide with a relatively gentle current. More importantly, German defenses in this sector had been shattered by weeks of fighting in the Sar Palatinate region.
Vermacked units were fleeing eastward in disorder, trying to reach the supposed safety of the Rine’s eastern bank. Patton ordered the crossing for the night of March 22nd, one day before Montgomery’s carefully planned Operation Plunder was scheduled to begin. Major General S. Loy Irwin, commanding the fifth infantry division, protested that such short notice made a wellplanned crossing impossible.
Patton didn’t care about wellplanned. He wanted speed. He wanted surprise. He wanted to be first. Get some sort of bridge head, Patton told Owen. That’s all I need. On the evening of March 22nd, 1945, as darkness fell over the Rine, assault boats began moving toward the water. The fifth division’s 11th infantry regiment would lead the crossing.
Colonel Paul Black’s battalions assembled in the towns of Nearstein and Oppenheim. Artillery observers scanned the far shore looking for German positions, but saw little activity. The Vermuckt was in such disarray that even its artillery fire was sporadic and disorganized. At 2200 hours, 10:00 at night, the first assault boats pushed off from the western shore.
Soldiers huddled in the small craft as they crossed the dark water. They expected withering fire, a storm of machine gun bullets and artillery shells. Instead, they encountered almost no resistance. The far shore was virtually undefended. German troops who might have contested the crossing were still reeling from their recent defeats, disorganized, undersupplied, and in many cases simply trying to survive rather than fight.
Within 3 hours, 3,500 men had crossed to the eastern bank. By morning, pontoon bridge construction was underway. When Patton called General Omar Bradley the next morning, and his satisfaction was palpable. Brad, don’t tell anyone, but I’m across. Bradley was stunned. Well, I’ll be damned.
You mean across the Rine? Sure am, Patton replied. I sneaked a division over last night. But there are so few cruts around, they don’t know it yet. So don’t make any announcement. We’ll keep it a secret until we see how it goes. The secret didn’t last long. By evening, German forces had discovered the crossing and began rushing whatever reserves they could scrape together to contain it, but it was already too late.
The fifth division was ashore in strength. The 90th Infantry Division followed immediately behind them. The fourth armored division prepared to cross and exploit into the German rear. This was where the DUKW would demonstrate its warwinning potential. Following behind the initial assault waves came the logistical tale.
The vast quantities of ammunition, food, medical supplies, fuel, and equipment that a modern army requires to sustain combat operations. Traditionally, this cargo would have to wait for bridged construction. Engineers would spend days under fire, laboriously constructing pontoon bridges strong enough to support truck traffic.
During that vulnerable period, the bridge head would be undersupplied, unable to build up the strength necessary to break out and exploit success. The DUKWS changed this equation completely. These amphibious trucks began rolling toward the Rine and convoys. They drove to the W’s edge, splashed into the river without slowing down, motored across while still carrying their cargo, climbed up the eastern bank, and continued driving in land to deliver their loads directly to frontline units.
There was no waiting, no bottleneck, no vulnerable concentration of vehicles at a single bridge crossing point. The DUKWS created in effect a moving bridge, a constant stream of supplies flowing across the river at multiple points along the shoreline. German commanders watching this development were baffled.
Intelligence reports spoke of American trucks that could swim. Frontline observers reported vehicles driving into the river and simply continuing to the other side. This wasn’t supposed to be possible. Vermark defensive doctrine had no answer for it. Machine guns and artillery that would have devastated troops unloading from boats onto beaches found far fewer targets.
The DUKWS crossed quickly, their high sides providing some protection for the soldiers crouched inside and dispersed immediately upon reaching the far shore rather than concentrating at vulnerable landing sites. Over the following days, Patton’s Third Army conducted three more Rine crossings. On March 24th, the 87th Infantry Division crossed at Board.
On March 26th, the 89th Infantry Division attempted crossings at St. Gurr Velmik Oberves Vessel and St. Gershousen. This last crossing proved to be one of the costliest of the campaign. The 89th Division initially tried to cross using standard army assault boats and unprotected DUKWS in the Rine Gorge where steep vineyard covered hills overlook the river.
German defenders positioned on these heights had clear fields of fire on the river below. The result was catastrophic. As the first waves pushed into the current, German machine guns, 20 mm anti-aircraft guns, and artillery opened fire, the assault boats were torn apart. Dukws were hit and began taking on water.
Ben died in the boats or drowned in the river. The division failed to establish a bridge head on the first attempt and suffered over 200 casualties in a matter of hours. Only when US Navy LCVPs, the same landing craft used on D-Day, took over the operation, did the crossing succeed. The Navy crews with their experience in amphibious operations and their armored landing craft fied the entire 89th Division across within 48 hours.
This bloody lesson at the Ry Gorge highlighted an important point about the DUKW. It was a logistics vehicle, not an assault craft. Its thin hull offered minimal protection against enemy fire. When used in its proper role, following behind initial assault waves to sustain advances with steady flows of supplies, the duck was brilliant.
When pushed into contested assault crossings without proper support, it became a death trap. The US Army learned this lesson again on March 28th when the 80th Infantry Division attempted a crossing at Mines using assault boats. The first wave was virtually wiped out by German artillery fire in the pre-dawn darkness. But despite these costly failures, the overall Rine crossing campaign was an overwhelming Allied success, and the DUKW played a crucial role in that success.
By the end of March, multiple Allied bridge heads stretched along the Rine from the Netherlands to the Swiss border. Pontoon bridges connected these bridge heads to the Western Shore, and over these bridges poured an endless stream of men and equipment. But the DUKWS had provided the crucial advantage in the critical first days and weeks.
They had sustained the initial bridge heads, delivered the supplies that allowed attacking forces to fight off German counterattacks, and maintained momentum during the vulnerable period before bridge construction was complete. In the northern sector, Montgomery’s Operation Plunder kicked off on the night of March 23rd with overwhelming force.
Over 5,000 artillery pieces bombarded German positions for 4 hours. Royal Air Force bombers pounded the city of vessel into rubble. At dawn on March 24th, Operation Vasti began. The largest single day airborne operation of the war. 16,000 paratroopers from the British 6th Airborne Division and the US 17th Airborne Division dropped directly onto German positions east of the Rine, seizing key terrain and creating chaos in the German rear areas.
As the airborne forces secured their objectives, amphibious crossings began along a 22-mile front. British and American infantry crossed in Buffalo, amphibious tracked vehicles in Navy LCVPs and yes, in DUKWS. The British 79th Armored Division, commanded by Major General Percy Hobart, deployed its specialized armored vehicles, including swimming Sherman tanks with inflatable flotation screens.
These DD tanks for duplex drive could be launched from ships offshore, propel themselves through the water using propellers, and then shed their flotation screens and fight as normal tanks once ashore. The combination of overwhelming firepower, tactical surprise achieved through the airborne operation, and the rapid buildup of forces across the Rine shattered German resistance.
General Alfred Schllem, wounded in an Allied air attack on his command post, was forced to hand over command of the first parachute army to General Gunther Blumenrit. The depleted German forces, already exhausted from weeks of continuous combat, couldn’t contain the multiple Allied breakthroughs.
Within days, the bridge head was 35 mi wide and 12 mi deep. Allied armor broke out and began racing eastward into Germany. To the south, Patton’s third army expanded its bridge heads with characteristic speed and aggression. The fifth division, 90th division, and fourth armored division pushed deep into the German rear, bypassing strong points, cutting lines of communication, and creating havoc far beyond what their numbers alone could explain.
Patton famously stopped his jeep in the middle of a pontoon bridge at Nearstein on March 24th, unzipped his trousers and urinated into the Ryan River in full view of his staff and news photographers. “I’ve been looking forward to this for a long time,” he announced. He then crossed to the eastern bank, feigned stumbling, and grabbed two handfuls of German soil in deliberate imitation of William the Conqueror.
That evening he sent a message to Eisenhower. Dear Sha, I’ve just pissed into the Ryan River. For God’s sake, send some gasoline. The gasoline arrived. Patton’s forces drove eastward, eventually liberating some of the most horrific concentration camps the Allies would discover. On April 4th, elements of the fourth armored division and the 89th Infantry Division liberated Erduff, a sub camp of Bkhenvald.
It was the first concentration camp liberated by American troops advancing from the west. General Eisenhower, General Bradley, and General Patton personally visited the camp to bear witness to the atrocities. Patton, who had seen combat in two world wars, became physically ill at the site. Eisenhower ordered that as many American soldiers as possible should visit the camps, and that German civilians from nearby towns should be forced to see what had been done in their name.
As the Allied armies pushed deeper into Germany in April and May of 1945, the DUWs continued their unglamorous but essential work. They fed supplies across rivers throughout Germany. They hauled cargo across the Ela. They moved ammunition to forward positions and evacuated wounded to rear area hospitals.
They operated with such reliability that by the war’s end, the US Army had organized 70 amphibious truck companies with over 12,000 soldiers assigned to operate and maintain them. The German military never developed an effective counter to the DUKW. By the time they understood what the Allies possessed, it was too late. Germany’s industrial capacity had been shattered by years of Allied bombing.
Its fuel supplies were exhausted. Its army was in full retreat on all fronts. Even if German engineers had designed their own amphibious vehicle, there was no capacity to produce it, no fuel to operate it, and no intact river lines left to defend. The broader strategic implications of the Rine crossings were profound.
For the German military and political leadership, the breaching of the Rine meant the end. Ysef Gerbles, Hitler’s propaganda minister, recorded in his diary on March 24th, the day after Montgomery’s crossing began, “The situation in the West has entered an extraordinarily critical, ostensibly, almost deadly phase.
” He foresaw Allied attempts to encircle the rurer industrial heartland, Germany’s last major source of war material. Within weeks, that encirclement was complete. Over 300,000 German soldiers were trapped in the rurer pocket. Field Marshal Valter Model, commanding Army Group B, refused Hitler’s orders to break out westward, recognizing that such an attempt would only produce more useless bloodshed.
On April 21st, Model dismissed his remaining forces, ordering them to try to make their way home, and then walked into a forest and shot himself. Adolf Hitler, isolated in his bunker beneath the shattered ruins of Berlin, raged against the generals he believed had betrayed him. He issued orders for scorched earth policies, demanding that all infrastructure be destroyed before Allied forces could capture it.
Most of these orders were ignored by commanders who recognized that the war was lost and further destruction would only harm Germany’s eventual recovery. On April 30th, as Soviet troops fought their way into the government district above his bunker, Hitler committed suicide. A week later on May 7th, 1945, Germany surrendered unconditionally.
The war in Europe was over. The DUKW continued serving long after World War II ended. During the Korean War, the US military reactivated and deployed several hundred DUKWs, using them in the Inchron landings and to supply forces throughout the campaign. Australia used DUKWs for Antarctic expeditions. They served as rescue vehicles during floods and natural disasters.
Many were eventually sold as surplus and found new lives as tourist attractions in harbor cities around the world, giving civilians rides through city streets that then splashed into rivers or harbors, showing in a playful way what had once been a serious military capability. But it’s in March 1945 during the Rine crossings that the DUKW achieved its finest hour.
This unlikely vehicle, born from a collaboration between yacht designers and truck engineers, proved to be exactly what the Allied armies needed. It didn’t win battles by itself. It didn’t destroy enemy tanks or shoot down aircraft. What it did was solve a fundamental problem of warfare that had existed since ancient times.
How do you maintain momentum when you reach a river barrier? How do you keep armies supplied during the vulnerable period after a river crossing, but before bridge construction is complete? The DUKW answered these questions elegantly. It simply drove through the water. In doing so, it rendered obsolete defensive strategies that had protected Germanic land since the time of the Roman Empire.
The Rine, which had been Germany’s shield for two millennia, became just another river that American logistics could cross without breaking stride. German commanders had prepared for conventional river crossings. They had planned to counterattack bridge heads before they could be consolidated. They had positioned their artillery to destroy pontoon bridges under construction.
They had done everything their doctrine and experience told them to do. What they had never imagined was that the Americans would arrive with 21,000 swimming trucks that could cross their defensive barrier as easily as driving down a road. The allies had transformed the nature of river crossing operations and the vear had no answer.
The 249th Engineer Combat Battalion, supporting the Fifth Infantry Division at Oppenheim completed construction of a floating bridge across the Rine in just 18 hours, working under sporadic German artillery fire. This remarkable engineering feat allowed Patton’s armor to cross and begin its exploitation eastward.
But for those critical first hours and days, while engineers worked, it was the DUKWs that sustained the bridge head. It was the DUKWs that delivered the ammunition, medical supplies, and rations that kept American soldiers fighting. It was the DUKWs that gave the Allies their decisive advantage. In the end, the DUKW represents something quintessentially American about World War II.
It wasn’t the product of military genius or brilliant general ship. It was practical engineering applied to a specific problem. It was mass production leveraging America’s industrial might. It was improvisation and innovation, taking a standard truck design and reimagining it to meet new requirements. And it was fundamentally democratic, a vehicle that didn’t require elite training to operate, that could be manufactured by the thousands, that gave ordinary soldiers extraordinary capabilities.
When German defenders on the Rine’s eastern shore saw those first DUKWs emerge from the river and drive in land as if nothing unusual had happened, they were witnessing the future of warfare. They were seeing how industrial democracy could overcome Marshall tradition. They were watching as American ingenuity applied to the unglamorous work of logistics and supply defeated German tactical brilliance and defensive doctrine.
The Allies didn’t just defeat Germany on the battlefield. They out produced them, outs supplied them, and out innovated them. The DUKW is one small example of that larger reality. So the next time you see a duck boat filled with tourists splashing into a harbor, remember that descendants of these vehicles once carried soldiers across the Rine River into Nazi Germany.
Remember that German defenders never knew Americans had amphibious trucks that could cross their final natural barrier as easily as crossing a street. Remember that sometimes the unglamorous support vehicle, the logistics workhorse, the humble supply truck can be just as important to victory as the most fearsome tank or fighter plane.
The DUKW may have looked ridiculous, but in March 1945, those swimming trucks helped end a world war, and that’s no laughing matter.