After the flag raising, Sgt. Joe Caserta, Carol Westberg, Tom Caserta, Cpl. Clarence Smoyer and Cindy Smoyer. (Courtesy of Tom Caserta)
By LISA SPENGLER
Cpl. Clarence Smoyer, America’s most famous tank gunner and the subject of the new book “Spearhead: An American Tank Gunner, His Enemy and a Collision of Lives in World War II,” surprised his friend and comrade, Sgt. Joseph Caserta, at his home on Wednesday.
Smoyer, 95, a Sherman tank gunner from Leighton, Pa., and Caserta, 97, a Sherman tank driver and commander from Ocean City, were part of the famous 3rd Armored Division (3AD) called “Spearhead.”
They share a unique history and deep personal bond.
The last time they were together was at a book signing for “Spearhead” in Allentown, Pa., in early 2019.
“It was a circus,” said Caserta. “We really didn’t have time to talk.”
That’s when 3rd Armored Division Association Board Member Carol Westberg “hatched this plan” to reunite Smoyer and Caserta.
Westberg is from Montevideo, Minn., and daughter of the late Neil Westberg, also a member of E-Company, 32nd Armored Regiment, 3rd Armored Division.
Westberg emailed Smoyer’s daughter Cindy, who in turn contacted the Caserta family.
In just a few months they planned out how Smoyer would be head to Ocean City and Caserta would open his front door to his dear friend and fellow decorated patriot.
The reunion was made possible by Carol Westberg (left) next to Joe Caserta and Cindy Smoyer with Clarence Smoyer.
While the Ocean City resident and World War II veteran was being honored last week by City Council and U.S. Army Brotherhood of Tankers at VFW Post 6650, Caserta’s sons finalized the plans for the special surprise reunion.
As with most WWII veterans, Smoyer and Caserta were young strangers, becoming young soldiers brought together in battle with unforeseeable sacrifice.
Cpl. Smoyer, at 18, and Sgt. Caserta, at 19, went from training in the United States to landing in France.
Smoyer started out as a loader on a Sherman tank crew and Caserta was a replacement as a Sherman tank driver.
Both men were assigned to E-Company, 32nd Armored Regiment, 3rd Armored Division and landed at Omaha Beach two weeks after D-Day.
In March 1945, the "Spearhead Division" entered the German city of Cologne. At 21, Smoyer was the gunner on a Pershing, a top secret experimental American tank. There was only one of 20 sent over for testing in battle during February 1945.
As a gunner in the Pershing tank, Smoyer earned the reputation as “the best gunner in the world.” The Pershing tank and a German Panther faced off in a brutal battle for the city of Cologne.
That epic tank fight was known as the last battle of World War II.
During the Battle of Cologne, a combat photographer, Jim Bate, who parachuted into France with the 82nd Airborne on D-Day, followed troops all the way to the fall of Berlin.
Specifically, Bates followed one tank throughout the Battle of Cologne, the lead tank. That lead tank had Smoyer’s crew. Bates' footage captured their defeat of a German tank, one of two, near the city’s famous cathedral. Those images played in movie theater newsreels during the war and now exist in digital form.
Before the book was published, Caserta was asked to write a testimony about his friend and comrade. Actually, it was a testimony to prove that Clarence Smoyer was in fact the tank gunner from the Battle of Cologne.
“He was offered a Bronze Star but never got it,” said Caserta.
Smoyer was told to get three affidavits to prove that he was there, even though the Battle of Cologne was captured in pictures and video taken by Bates, the American war correspondent. Even now with a best-selling book detailing the Battle of Cologne. Bates is the only man who received a Bronze Star for his actions during the duel at Cologne.
Smoyer is still waiting for his Bronze Star.
Clarence Smoyer (top middle, no helmet) sits atop this T26E3 Pershing tank with fellow tank crew members in Cologne, Germany, in 1945. (Courtesy of the National Archives)
Smoyer and Caserta sat in silence after recounting details surrounding the Battle of Cologne and the yet to be received Bronze Star.
The look of admiration for each other captured the attention of all those around them, especially Matthew (Caserta) Styer, a 9-year-old grandson of Sgt. Caserta.
Matthew listened intently as the two men spoke. When asked if he read “Spearhead,” he proudly exclaimed, “Oh yes.”
“I love history. I may even be a history major in college,” he said.
Matthew has his own signed copy of “Spearhead” from Smoyer with the inscription, “To the grandson of my true hero.”
Cindy Smoyer then shared a story about a 15-year-old who calls her father every week.
“He took on a shop project of building a tank. Once it was graded, he sent it to my dad and still keeps in touch,” she said.

After a flag-raising ceremony on the Ocean City Boardwalk, Sgt. Joe Caserta, Carol Westberg, Tom Caserta, Cpl. Clarence Smoyer and Cindy Smoyer pose for a photo. (Courtesy of Tom Caserta)
Smoyer told the story of when a man approached him and said, “You saved my butt.” Smoyer replied, “No, I saved mine and you came along for the ride.”
That reunion saw at least 750 veterans. Two years ago, there were three.
As the number of living tank crewman grew smaller, the “Young Guys,” the Association of the 3rd Armored Division from the Cold War Era and Persian Gulf War, recently merged with the 3rd Armored Tank Division Association.
Due to a number of factors, both men are not able to attend the association’s reunions as much as they did in the past.
Sgt. Caserta attends the patriotic flag raising on the Boardwalk at OC Waterpark at Plymouth Place every morning. He goes to watch his friend J.R. Robinson, a recipient of three Purple Hearts, raise the flag.
But on Thursday, nothing could make Caserta prouder than to sit beside his dear friend and “battle buddy” during the song, “Proud to be an American.”
Surrounded by family and friends, Cpl. Clarence Smoyer and Sgt. Joseph Caserta stood at attention and watched proudly while the “Star-Spangled Banner” played over the loudspeakers.
Editor's note: Cpl. Clarence Smoyer and Sgt. Joseph Caserta, thank you for your service and your sacrifice. More importantly, thank you for sharing your stories with generations to come.
There were tears of joy as Joe Caserta (left) and Clarence Smoyer met. (Courtesy Tom Caserta)
“Battle Buddies” reunited.