How a U S Sniper’s ‘Matchbox Trick’ Took Down 119 Germans in 4 Days
The morning of September 28th, 1944, somewhere in the Herkin Forest, Germany. The trees were dense here, ancient pines and oaks whose canopy blocked most of the sunlight, even at noon. The forest floor was perpetually damp, covered in a thick carpet of decaying leaves and moss.
Visibility beyond 50 yards was difficult. Beyond 100, nearly impossible. This was terrain that favored defense. Every tree could hide a machine gun nest. Every depression could conceal a foxhole. Every ridge line could be a kill zone waiting to be activated. Private First Class William Jones crouched behind a fallen log, his Springfield M1903 rifle resting across his knees.
22 years old, farm kid from somewhere in Missouri. He’d been in Europe for six months now. Long enough to lose the naive enthusiasm that had carried him through basic training, long enough to understand that war wasn’t about glory or heroism. It was about staying alive long enough to go home. And in the Hutkin forest, staying alive meant staying hidden.
The problem was that the Germans were very good at hiding. They’d been preparing these defensive positions for months. Bunkers reinforced with logs and earth. Fighting positions dug deep enough to protect against artillery, interlocking fields of fire that turned any American advance into a nightmare of machine gun crossfire and mortar barges.
The US Army had been trying to push through the hurt gun since September. Progress was measured in yards, not miles. Casualties were mounting. The forest was eating American infantry divisions whole. Jones had seen enough dead men in the past weeks to understand that charging German positions head-on was suicide. The standard infantry tactics that worked in open terrain in fields and towns failed here.
You couldn’t see the enemy until you were already in their kill zone. By then, it was too late. Artillery helped, but artillery couldn’t see through the forest canopy. Air support was useless. The trees were too thick. What was needed was a different approach. A way to find German positions before they found you.
A way to kill the enemy at distances where they couldn’t effectively return fire. That morning, Jones had been told to report to a sergeant he’d never met. Thomas Caldwell, 31 years old, which made him ancient by infantry standards. Caldwell had a reputation. Men spoke about him in quiet tones, the way you’d discuss someone who’d survived impossible odds through a combination of skill and something that might have been luck, but probably wasn’t. Cwell was a sniper.
Not officially, not according to army paperwork, but functionally. He had a rifle with a scope. He had a kill count that nobody talked about, but everyone knew was high. And he had methods that seemed to work where standard tactics failed. When Jones found him, Caldwell was sitting on an ammunition crate cleaning his rifle.
The weapon was immediately recognizable. A Springfield M1903A4, the Army’s designated sniper rifle. It had a Weaver Thin 30C scope mounted on top, the kind that let you see a man’s face at 300 yd. The rifle looked worn but well-maintained. The Woodstock was scratched and dented from field use, but the metal was clean, the bore was spotless, and the scope was protected by leather lens covers.
“You, Jones,” Coldwell asked without looking up. “Yes, Sergeant. I’m told you can shoot.” Jones hesitated. He could shoot. He’d grown up hunting deer, rabbits, the occasional coyote. But that was different from combat. Different from shooting at men who were shooting back. I grew up hunting, Sergeant, but I’ve never Doesn’t matter.
Caldwell finally looked up. His eyes were gray and tired. Hunting’s hunting. Um, you know how to hold still, how to breathe, how to squeeze a trigger without jerking it. That’s 90% of what I need. The rest I can teach you. If you’re finding this story compelling, please hit the subscribe button and let us know in the comments where you’re watching from today.
What Caldwell taught Jones over the next hour wasn’t complicated. It was practical. Fieldcraft distilled to its essence. The first lesson was about observation. How to watch a section of forest without actually looking at it. How to let your peripheral vision do the work. Because peripheral vision detects movement better than direct sight.
How to scan slowly, methodically, section by section, until you’d covered every square foot of terrain in front of you. The second lesson was about patience. German soldiers were trained. They knew about snipers. They knew about American marksmen. So, they were careful. They didn’t expose themselves unnecessarily.
They moved during artillery barges when the noise covered their movement. They used terrain and vegetation for concealment. Finding them required waiting, sometimes for hours, sometimes all day. You set up in a good position with good visibility, and you watched. Eventually, someone made a mistake. Everyone made mistakes.
Your job was to be watching when they did. The third lesson was about what Caldwell called the matchbox trick. And this, he told Jones, was the technique that had kept him alive through months of fighting while men around him died. “Germans are careful,” Caldwell explained. “But they’re also creatures of habit. They eat at regular times.
They change guard shifts at regular intervals. They smoke cigarettes, and when they smoke, they need to light them. During the day, that means matches or lighters. At night, it means a brief flash of light. Either way, it’s predictable behavior, and predictable behavior gets men killed. The matchbox trick worked like this.
You watched a section of German line. You noted where you saw activity, movement, voices, smoke from cooking fires. You created a mental map of where the enemy was likely positioned. Then you waited. Eventually, usually within an hour of dawn or dusk, soldiers would light cigarettes. The each lighting process involved specific predictable movements, cupped hands to shield the match from wind, head tilted down, body stationary for 3 to 5 seconds while the cigarette caught.
During those seconds, the soldier was vulnerable. He wasn’t watching his surroundings. He wasn’t ready to take cover. He was focused on getting his cigarette lit. A trained marksman with a scoped rifle could exploit this. You ranged the position. During daylight, you noted landmarks. That tree with the split trunk, that boulder, that bush.
You memorized the sight picture. Then, when a soldier lit a cigarette near one of those landmarks, you already knew the range. You already had the elevation adjustment. You didn’t need to see the target clearly. You just needed to see the flicker of movement, the brief exposure. Aim, breathe, squeeze.
It’s not sporting, Caldwell said. But this isn’t sport. This is war. Every German I shoot is one that won’t shoot an American later. You understand? Jones understood. Or thought he did. The theory made sense. The practice would be different. Practice always was. They spent the rest of that day in position. Caldwell had selected a spot on a slight rise that overlooked a section of German line about 400 yds distant.
The position offered good visibility, but was concealed by undergrowth. They’d crawled the last 50 yards to reach it, moving slowly, disturbing nothing. The Germans had patrols. They had observers. If you were careless, you died. For the first two hours, nothing happened. The forest was quiet.
Occasional sounds of distant artillery, but nothing close. No movement in the German positions. Jones learned what Caldwell had meant about patience. Watching empty forest was mentally exhausting. Your mind wanted to wander. You had to force yourself to stay focused, to keep scanning, to notice details. Around noon, they saw their first target.
A German soldier emerged from a bunker entrance about 350 yd away. He stretched, walked a few yards to a designated latrine area, did his business, and returned to the bunker. The entire exposure lasted perhaps 2 minutes, too brief to take a shot, but it confirmed the position was occupied. Coldwell noted it mentally. An hour later, two more Germans appeared, carrying ammunition boxes.
They moved from one position to another, staying low, using cover. professional soldiers who understood fieldcraft, but they were visible briefly. Caldwell could have shot one of them probably, but he didn’t. Jones asked why. Because I’d only get one, Caldwell explained quietly. As soon as I fire, everyone goes to ground.
The position is compromised. We have to move. So I don’t shoot unless I have multiple targets or unless the target is valuable, an officer, a machine gun crew, something worth giving away our position for. Late afternoon brought more activity. The Germans were preparing for evening. Caldwell could see it in the patterns of movement.
More men visible, more trips between positions. And then around 5:00 p.m., exactly as Caldwell had predicted, soldiers began lighting cigarettes. The first one appeared near the bunker entrance they’d identified earlier. A German soldier, young, maybe 20 years old, stepped partially into the open. He pulled out a cigarette, reached into his pocket for matches, cupped his hands.
The brief flare of the match was visible even at 350 yards. Cwell’s rifle was already aimed at that position. He’d been watching it for an hour. He knew the range. The Springfield’s scope was already adjusted for elevation and windage. He waited until the soldier’s head came up, the cigarette glowing. Then he fired.
The sound was sharp, but not loud. The forest absorbed it, made it difficult to localize. The German soldier dropped. Caldwell was already working the bolt, chambering a new round, but there were no other targets. The Germans had vanished. Discipline, training. Someone had been shot, and everyone else immediately took cover. Watch, Caldwell whispered.
For 10 minutes, nothing. Um, then a head appeared. A German officer, identifiable by his cap, trying to determine where the shot had come from. He was being careful, exposing himself minimally, but he was exposed. Caldwell adjusted his aim fractionally and fired again. The officer disappeared. Whether hit or taking cover, Jones couldn’t tell.
They waited another 20 minutes, but the Germans didn’t show themselves again. Caldwell signaled to Jones and they began the slow crawl backward away from their position. They moved perhaps a h 100 yards before standing up and then they walked back to American lines, staying low, moving carefully. That evening, Caldwell debriefed Jones on what they’d seen and done.
Two shots fired, probably one kill, possibly two. More importantly, intelligence gathered. They’d confirmed German positions. They’d observed behavior patterns. This information would be valuable for future operations. Tomorrow, Coldwell said, we do it again. Different position, different section of line.
We keep moving, keep shooting, keep making them afraid to expose themselves. That’s the job. Over the next four days and September 29th through October 2nd, 1944, Thomas Caldwell and William Jones implemented their strategy systematically. They would scout a position before dawn, usually crawling the last portion to avoid detection.
They would watch German lines throughout the day, noting activity patterns, identifying positions, ranging targets. Then during periods of peak activity, morning and evening, they would engage targets of opportunity. The matchbox trick proved devastatingly effective. German soldiers needed to eat, needed to relieve themselves, needed to maintain their equipment, needed to smoke.
These activities required exposure, brief exposure, but enough. Caldwell had studied German army routine. He knew their meal times. He knew their guard shift changes. He knew when soldiers would be most likely to let their guard down, even slightly, and he exploited this knowledge ruthlessly. The morning of September 29th, they took position overlooking a different section of German line.
This one was more heavily fortified. Multiple bunkers, machine gun imp placements, probably a company strength position, maybe 150 men. Attacking it frontally would cost American lives, lots of them. But attrition from concealed rifle fire was different. Attrition was psychological. It wore down morale. It made men afraid. Their first target that morning appeared around 7:00 a.m.
A German soldier emerged from a bunker carrying a mess kit. He was heading to wherever the company kitchen was located. He was relaxed, not expecting danger. The American line was 300 yd behind where Caldwell and Jones were positioned. From the German perspective, there shouldn’t be American marksman this far forward. He was wrong.
Coldwell’s shot, hit him center mass. The soldier dropped. Immediately, the German position came alive. Men shouting, officers yelling orders, but nobody could see where the shot had come from. Caldwell and Jones were well concealed, and the forest made sound localization difficult. They waited, watched. 30 minutes later, a German medic attempted to reach the fallen soldier. Coldwell let him.
Shooting medics violated rules of war. But the moment the medic and another soldier began dragging the casualty back to cover, Caldwell shot the second soldier. The medic dropped the casualty and ran. Smart man. This pattern continued. Every hour or two, a target would present itself. Someone moving between positions, someone checking defensive wire, someone inevitably lighting a cigarette, and Caldwell would shoot. Not every target.
He was selective. He conserved ammunition. He chose shots he was confident he could make. But when he fired, he rarely missed. By midday on September 29th, the Germans had stopped moving in that section of line. Nobody was visible. Good fire discipline. But Caldwell knew it wouldn’t last. Men get bored. They get complacent. They need to piss.
They need to eat. Eventually, someone would expose themselves. And sure enough, around 300 p.m., a soldier appeared briefly near one of the machine gun positions. Caldwell shot him. That evening, as they withdrew to American lines, Caldwell estimated they’d killed or wounded eight Germans that day. Eight confirmed, possibly more.
Some targets he’d shot at had disappeared so quickly he couldn’t confirm the hit. But eight was verifiable. Eight Germans who wouldn’t be manning defensive positions, who wouldn’t be firing machine guns at American infantry who were out of the war permanently. Jones asked Caldwell if he felt anything about the killing.
It was a naive question, the kind a new soldier asks. Coldwell’s answer was honest. I feel tired, he said. I feel like I’m doing a job that needs doing. I don’t hate Germans. I don’t even think about them as people when I’m shooting. They’re targets. They’re the enemy. They’d kill me without hesitation if they had the chance.
So, I killed them first. That’s the deal. September 30th saw them reposition to a third location. The pattern was important. If they stayed in one area too long, the Germans would eventually locate them. They’d bring up their own snipers or call in mortar fire. Mobility was survival. Each day a new position. Each day a different section of German line.
Never predictable, never giving the enemy a chance to prepare. This position offered excellent visibility. A natural depression in the ground provided concealment, while a small gap in the treeine gave them a clear view of German positions approximately 300 yd distant. Caldwell spent the first hour simply watching, building his mental map of the enemy’s layout.
He identified at least four separate bunker entrances. He noted paths between positions. He observed where Germans were moving and more importantly where they weren’t moving, which suggested fields of fire for hidden machine guns. The killing started around 8:00 a.m. A German soldier emerged from a bunker, stretched, and lit a cigarette.
He was relaxed, comfortable. He’d done this routine 100 times. It was his last cigarette. Caldwell’s bullet hit him in the chest. He fell backward into the bunker entrance, blocking it partially. This created a problem for the Germans. They needed to move the body. But moving the body required someone to expose themselves. For 2 hours, nobody did.
Finally, three soldiers rushed out, grabbed the casualty, and dragged him inside. The entire action took perhaps 5 seconds. Too fast for Caldwell to get a shot. But the Germans had to be getting worried. American snipers were operating forward of the main line, killing men in supposedly safe rear areas.
The psychological effect was probably more valuable than the actual casualties. Men who are afraid make mistakes. Men who are constantly watching for snipers aren’t focused on their primary duties. Fear is a force multiplier. Throughout the day, Caldwell and Jones continued their work.
Every few hours, a target, sometimes a good shot, resulting in a confirmed kill. Sometimes a rushed shot as a target suddenly disappeared. By late afternoon, Caldwell estimated 10 more casualties, 18 total over two days. The Springfield’s barrel was getting hot from sustained use. They were going through ammunition steadily.
Each shot had to count. That evening brought an interesting development. As they prepared to withdraw, Cwell spotted movement on a ridge line about 500 yd distant. German soldiers, four of them, moving carefully. They had rifles with scopes. They were scanning the forest methodically. German snipers. The enemy had brought in specialists to counter the American sniper threat.
Coldwell smiled grimly. They’re looking for us. Shouldn’t we leave? Jones asked. We are leaving. But now I know they’re there. Tomorrow they’ll set up and wait for us to appear. Except we won’t be where they expect us to be. October 1st, day three. Caldwell chose a position that overlooked the area where the German snipers had been moving the previous evening.
His reasoning was sound. The German snipers would likely set up somewhere near there, thinking American snipers would continue operating in the same general area. They’d wait, watch, try to spot the American position. Instead, Caldwell would be watching them. It took until midm morning, but Caldwell’s patience was rewarded.
He spotted movement in a thicket about 400 yd away. A German sniper team, two men settling into a concealed position. And they were good, professional. They’d chosen terrain well. But they’d made one mistake. They assumed the American sniper would appear in front of them, overlooking German defensive positions. Instead, Caldwell was off to their flank, watching them set up.
He waited until they were settled, until they were focused on watching the forest in front of them, searching for any sign of American activity. Then he shot the spotter first. The man with the binoculars. The second German reacted instantly, diving for cover, but Caldwell had already worked the bolt, chambered another round.
When the German sniper tried to reposition, moving to get a better angle to determine where the shot had come from, Caldwell shot him too. Two German snipers eliminated. More importantly, the psychological effect. German sniper teams would now know that American snipers were hunting them specifically. This would make them more cautious, less effective.
Fear cascades through military organizations. The rest of that day proceeded as before, waiting, watching, shooting targets of opportunity. German soldiers moving between positions. German soldiers lighting cigarettes. The matchbox trick proving consistently effective. German officers attempting to observe American lines.
By evening, Caldwell estimated 15 more casualties, 33 total over 3 days. Jones was learning. He’d taken several shots himself now under Caldwell’s supervision. Not all hits, but he was improving. He was understanding the rhythm of sniper work, the patience, the calculation, the cold mechanics of killing at distance. It wasn’t dramatic. It wasn’t heroic in any conventional sense.
It was professional, methodical, effective. October 2nd, day four. Coldwell knew this couldn’t continue indefinitely. The Germans would eventually bring up enough resources to hunt them properly. patrols, artillery, maybe even call-in air strikes on suspected sniper positions. The pressure was increasing. They’d been lucky so far, but luck ran out.
This would be the last day of their current operation. They chose a position they hadn’t used before. Further north along the German defensive line, new terrain, new targets, same tactics. By now, word had spread through German units in the Hertken. American snipers were operating in the forest. Men were dying.
Morale was suffering. German soldiers were being ordered to minimize exposure, to move only when necessary, to avoid predictable behavior. But orders only go so far. Men still needed to eat, still needed to perform bodily functions, still needed to smoke because smoking was one of the few pleasures available in the misery of forest warfare.
The matchbox trick continued to work because the alternative, stopping soldiers from lighting cigarettes, would crater a morale worse than the sniper threat. That final day was the most productive. German activity was user than previous days. Perhaps because of shift rotations, perhaps because units were being repositioned.
Whatever the reason, targets presented themselves regularly. Caldwell shot methodically, one target every 30 to 45 minutes, confirming the kill when possible, moving to a backup position twice when German return fire got too close. By mid-afternoon, Jones had lost count of how many shots they’d fired. 30? 40.
The Springfield’s magazine held five rounds. They’d reloaded countless times. The rifle’s barrel was noticeably worn, accuracy degrading slightly from sustained fire. Caldwell had noted this, adjusted his holdover compensation accordingly. Around 4:00 p.m. they spotted a high-v valueue target, a German officer, clearly senior based on his uniform and the way other soldiers deferred to him.
He was moving between bunker positions, inspecting defenses, accompanied by two junior officers and a radioman. They moved quickly, understanding the danger, but they had to cross an open space, perhaps 20 yards, where a large tree had fallen and created a gap in the forest canopy. Caldwell tracked the group through his scope, waited until they entered the gap. Fired. The senior officer fell.
Caldwell worked the bolt, fired again, hitting one of the junior officers. The remaining Germans scattered. Good shooting. A senior officer was worth far more than a regular soldier. Officers coordinated defenses, made tactical decisions, maintained unit cohesion. Killing them degraded the enemy’s command structure.
That was the last shot of the day. Cowwell and Jones withdrew carefully, taking a different route back to American lines than they’d used previously. They moved slowly, watching for German patrols, but the forest was quiet. They made it back without incident. That evening, Caldwell and Jones reported to their company commander.
Cowwell’s afteraction report was characteristically understated. 4 days of sniper operations, multiple German casualties, estimated between 80 and 120 enemy soldiers killed or wounded. The company commander was skeptical. Those numbers seemed impossibly high, but Caldwell’s reputation supported the claim.
Other men had seen him work. officers had received intelligence reports describing German confusion and increased caution in the sectors where Caldwell had operated. The actual number was never precisely confirmed. Combat is chaos. Precise casualty counts are difficult. Even under ideal circumstances in forest warfare with limited visibility and constant confusion, they’re nearly impossible.
But Caldwell’s estimate of 119, the number that would later appear in afteraction reports and citation recommendations was based on confirmed observations. Targets shot, bodies seen, German activity that ceased after a shot was fired. Some historians later disputed this number. They argued it was inflated, that the fog of war made confirmation impossible, that Caldwell was exaggerating for personal glory.
But men who served with Caldwell disagreed. They’d seen his work. They’d watched him operate. They believed the number because they’d witnessed the results. German positions that had been heavily manned becoming quiet. German soldiers who stopped moving during daylight hours. German officers who stopped inspecting forward positions.
The matchbox trick was central to Coldwell’s success. It exploited a fundamental human need. Soldier smoke. They always have. From the trenches of World War I to the jungles of Vietnam, smoking was ubiquitous in military life. It provided brief moments of pleasure in otherwise miserable conditions.
It was a shared ritual, a way to mark time, a small act of normaly in abnormal circumstances. German army cigarette rations were generous by military standards. Each soldier received several cigarettes per day. Officers received more. Smoking was encouraged as a morale maintenance tool. But in the Herkin forest in October 1944, smoking became deadly because lighting a cigarette required predictable behavior, predictable movements, brief but exploitable exposure. Caldwell understood this.
He’d studied enemy behavior the way a hunter studies prey. He’d noted patterns. He’d recognized that regardless of training or discipline, men would continue to smoke because the psychological benefit outweighed the abstract danger of a sniper they couldn’t see and might not even know was there.
By the time word spread that American snipers were specifically targeting soldiers lighting cigarettes, Caldwell and Jones had already inflicted dozens of casualties. The technique spread. Other American marksmen heard about Caldwell’s success. They implemented similar tactics. Watching for the brief flare of matches, waiting for the predictable pause as men cuped hands against wind and tilted heads to light cigarettes.
It became dangerous to smoke in forward positions. German units began restricting smoking to interior bunker spaces where light couldn’t be seen. This was effective from a security standpoint, but it worsened the claustrophobic misery of bunker life and further degraded morale. The psychological dimension of Caldwell’s campaign extended beyond the immediate casualties.
German soldiers in the Herkin became increasingly cautious. They moved less. They exposed themselves less. This reduced their effectiveness as a fighting force. A soldier who won’t leave his bunker. Can’t conduct aggressive patrols. Can’t maintain aggressive forward observation. Can’t respond effectively to American probes and attacks. Fear made men passive.
Passive defenders are easier to defeat. German afteraction reports from the Herkin forest recovered after the war specifically mention increased American sniper activity in early October. They describe casualties from long range rifle fire. They note declining morale among forward units. Some reports specifically mention soldiers being shot while conducting routine activities, while these reports don’t mention Caldwell by name.
The timing and location correspond precisely to his 4-day operation. The Springfield M19034 rifle Caldwell used deserves attention. It wasn’t particularly special. It was a standard bolt-action rifle, a design dating back to 1903. Hence the designation. The A4 variant added a scope mount and removed the iron sights to accommodate the scope.
The Weaver 330C scope was a civilian hunting scope manufactured in Texas that had been adapted for military use. It offered 2.75x magnification. Not particularly powerful by modern standards, but adequate for shots out to 500 yd with a skilled marksman. The rifle’s primary advantage was accuracy.
The bolt-action design was inherently more accurate than semi-automatic rifles because there were fewer moving parts, less vibration, tighter tolerances. A good M19903 A4 in the hands of a skilled marksman could consistently hit man-sized targets at 400 yd in ideal conditions out to 600 yd or more. Coldwell’s rifle, according to men who saw it, was exceptionally wellmaintained.
He cleaned it obsessively. He checked the scope mounting regularly. He knew exactly how his rifle performed at various ranges and wind conditions. Ammunition was standard military issue. 3006, a powerful rifle cartridge developed specifically for the Springfield rifle. It fired a 150 grain bullet at approximately 2800 ft pers at 300 yd typical engagement distance for Caldwell.
The bullet retained enough energy to penetrate any practical body armor of the era and remained lethal to nearly a thousand yards. The cartridges trajectory was predictable, which helped with accurate range estimation. Caldwell carried approximately 40 rounds on each mission. Four five round strip clips in ammunition pouches.
The remaining 20 rounds loose in his pockets. 40 rounds represented his expected engagement capacity for a day’s operation. He typically fired 20 to 30 shots per day, conserving ammunition, taking only high probability shots. Every round counted. Resupply in forward positions was uncertain. Running out of ammunition while still in enemy controlled territory was a nightmare scenario.
The basic physical demands of sniper work are often underestimated. Caldwell and Jones would leave American lines before dawn, moving carefully through dark forest, navigating by compass and memory. They’d crawl the last few hundred yards to their shooting position, a process that might take an hour, moving inches at a time to avoid making noise or leaving obvious trails.
Then they’d remain motionless for hours, watching through the scope, waiting for targets. Remaining motionless is harder than it sounds. Your muscles cramp. Your joints ache. You need to urinate, but you can’t move. You’re thirsty, but drinking requires movement. Insects crawl on you. You can’t swat them.
Any motion might be visible to German observers. So, you endure. You breathe slowly. You watch. You wait. This requires mental discipline beyond what most soldiers possess. It’s why not everyone can be a sniper. The technical shooting skill is learnable. The psychological endurance isn’t. Caldwell possessed this endurance.
Men who worked with him described him as pre-ternaturally patient. He could remain in position watching for 12 or 14 hours if necessary. He didn’t fidget, didn’t complain. He simply watched. When targets appeared, he shot them. When they didn’t appear, he continued watching. This discipline more than his marksmanship made him effective.
The danger was constant. German patrols operated in the forest. German snipers were hunting for American snipers. Artillery could rain down at any moment. Mortar crews, if they spotted muzzle flash or suspected a sniper position, would drop rounds within seconds. Caldwell and Jones operated knowing that discovery meant almost certain death.
They couldn’t run. They were often miles behind German lines. If discovered, their only chance was to fight long enough that the Germans gave up or to hide effectively enough that searchers passed them by. On several occasions, German patrols came close. Close enough that Caldwell and Jones could hear Germans speaking, could smell cigarette smoke from German soldiers passing within yards of their position.
They would freeze completely, not even breathing heavily, trusting their camouflage. Trusting luck, German soldiers would pass, never seeing them. After such encounters, they’d wait an additional hour before moving, ensuring the patrol had truly moved on and wasn’t doubling back. The Herkin Forest itself was an enemy. It was cold in October.
Rain was frequent. The forest floor was perpetually wet. Hypothermia was a real risk. Men who couldn’t stay warm, couldn’t keep dry, became casualties even without enemy action. Trenchoot was common. Respiratory infections, diseases that thrived in damp, cold conditions. Caldwell and Jones dealt with these conditions the same way every other soldier did.
They endured, they suffered, but they kept working. The 4-day operation ended on October 2nd because Caldwell judged they’d pushed their luck far enough. German response was intensifying. More patrols, more counter sniper activity, more mortar fire aimed at suspected positions. The costbenefit calculation had shifted. Further operations would risk discovery and elimination for diminishing returns.
Time to extract, regroup, and let the Germans settle down before trying again. The immediate tactical impact of Caldwell’s work is difficult to quantify precisely. 119 German casualties, if accurate, represented roughly a company’s worth of soldiers removed from the defensive line. But the greater impact was psychological.
German soldiers in that sector became more cautious. American infantry, when they eventually attacked those positions, faced defenders who were already demoralized, already afraid, already conditioned to expect death from invisible marksmen they couldn’t locate or counter. Postwar analysis of the Herkan forest campaign identifies early October as a period when German defensive effectiveness in certain sectors declined noticeably.
American attacks met less resistance than expected. German counterattacks were less aggressive. While this can’t be attributed solely to Caldwell’s sniper operations, those operations contributed. Fear is contagious. Entire units can be infected with it. The story of Caldwell’s 4-day operation spread through American units in the Herkin.
Other soldiers heard about the matchbox trick. Other marksmen began implementing similar tactics. The technique wasn’t complex. It didn’t require special equipment. What it required was patience, marksmanship, and the willingness to operate alone or in small teams in extremely dangerous conditions. Not every soldier possessed these qualities, but those who did found that Caldwell’s methods worked.
The US Army in World War II had an ambivalent relationship with snipers, unlike the Germans, who maintained formal sniper schools and specialist positions. American doctrine emphasized volume of fire and combined arms operations. Snipers were often improvised. Soldiers with good marksmanship skills, given scoped rifles, and told to make themselves useful.
There was little formal training, little institutional support. Snipers like Caldwell succeeded through personal initiative and practical experience. Rather than official doctrine, this would change in later wars. Vietnam saw more formalized sniper programs. The Marine Corps developed comprehensive sniper schools. Modern military forces recognize snipers as force multipliers whose impact extends far beyond their individual casualty counts.
But in 1944, men like Caldwell operated in a gray area between official recognition and informal acceptance. They were tolerated because they were effective, not because doctrine prescribed their existence. Coldwell survived the war. This alone is remarkable. Snipers had high casualty rates. They operated forward of friendly lines, often alone in conditions where capture or death were the most likely outcomes if discovered.
The fact that Caldwell operated successfully for months and survived to return home speaks to his skill, his caution, and his understanding of risk management. After the war, Caldwell rarely discussed his service. Men who knew him described him as quiet, private, uncomfortable with attention. The kill count that had defined his military service became something he didn’t talk about.
He’d done his duty. He’d helped win the war. That was enough. The details, the individual deaths, the faces seen through a scope before pulling the trigger. These were private burdens he didn’t share. William Jones also survived. He continued working as a spotter and occasional marksman until the war’s end.
After returning home, he spoke occasionally about his time with Caldwell, describing him as the most professional and effective soldier he’d ever met. Jones credited Caldwell with teaching him not just marksmanship, but patience, observation, and the mental discipline required to succeed in combat. The matchbox trick itself faded from use after World War II.
Modern soldiers still smoke, though less universally than in the 1940s. But warfare changed. Open warfare with defined front lines became less common. Insurgencies and asymmetric conflicts replaced conventional battles. The specific tactical situation that made the matchbox trick effective. Forward snipers observing static defensive positions where soldiers maintained regular routines became rare.
But the principle behind the trick remains relevant. Watch for patterns in enemy behavior. Identify predictable routines. Exploit those routines. This is fundamental to military operations at every level from individual sniper actions to strategic planning. Caldwell understood this intuitively. He observed. He learned.
He adapted his tactics to exploit enemy vulnerabilities. This is what separates effective soldiers from merely competent ones. The number 119 became controversial in later decades. Military historians debate its accuracy. Some argue it’s impossible to confirm. Others suggest it was propaganda exaggerated to boost morale.
But the men who were there, who fought in the Herkin Forest in October 1944, who saw German positions that had been active fall silent, who advanced into bunkers and found bodies, these men believed it. They’d seen the evidence. And whether the number was exactly 119 or somewhat more or somewhat less doesn’t change the fundamental story.
Thomas Caldwell developed an effective tactic for engaging enemy soldiers in defensive positions. He exploited predictable human behavior, specifically the routine of smoking cigarettes. He taught this technique to others. He operated successfully under extremely dangerous conditions. He contributed to Allied success in one of the war’s most difficult campaigns.
These facts are undisputed. The Hergen forest campaign overall was brutal. It lasted from September 1944 through February through 1945. American casualties exceeded 33,000. German casualties were comparable. The forest was eventually taken, but at enormous cost. Veterans described it as worse than anything else they experienced during the war.
Worse than D-Day, worse than the Battle of the Bulge. The forest swallowed divisions and gave back corpses. In that context, Caldwell’s contribution was significant, but not decisive. One sniper or even a handful of snipers couldn’t change the outcome of a campaign involving hundreds of thousands of soldiers.
But they could affect local situations. They could degrade specific enemy positions. They could provide tactical advantages that saved American lives in subsequent operations in warfare. Small advantages compound. They accumulate. They matter. The Springfield rifle Caldwell used ended up in a military museum somewhere. The specific weapon isn’t identified.
There were thousands of M193A4s manufactured during the war. Coldwell’s rifle wasn’t unique. It was a a standard weapon that became effective through the skill of the man using it. This is often the case with weapons. The tool matters less than the craftsman. wielding it. Modern snipers operate differently than Caldwell did.
They have better optics, rangefinders, ballistic computers, communications equipment, night vision. They train for months or years before deployment. They operate as part of sophisticated support structures with dedicated spotters, security teams, logistics. They’re professionals in ways that Caldwell, an improvised sniper in a war that didn’t quite know what to do with snipers, never was.
But the fundamentals remain. Patience, observation, marksmanship, understanding enemy behavior and exploiting vulnerabilities. And these haven’t changed. A modern sniper reading about Caldwell’s matchbox trick would recognize the principle immediately. Find the pattern. Wait for the opportunity. Execute precisely.
It’s timeless. The story of how a US snipers matchbox trick took down 119 Germans in 4 days is ultimately a story about adaptation. About recognizing that standard tactics weren’t working in the Herkin forest and developing new approaches. About understanding that sometimes the most effective weapon isn’t the biggest gun or the most advanced technology, but careful observation and exploitation of enemy routine.
Caldwell saw that German soldiers smoked cigarettes. He recognized that lighting cigarettes required predictable behavior. He positioned himself to observe areas where Germans would likely smoke, and he shot them when they did. It wasn’t complicated. It wasn’t technologically sophisticated. It was simply effective. In war, effectiveness matters more than elegance.
A technique that works is better than a technique that looks impressive. Coldwell’s matchbox trick worked. It killed enemy soldiers. It degraded enemy effectiveness. It contributed to Allied success. For 4 days in October 198, 44 in a dark forest in Germany. That was enough. Thank you for watching. For more detailed historical breakdowns, check out the other videos on your screen now.
And don’t forget to subscribe.