Tomorrow we remember the heroes of the invasion of Normandy on June 6th, 1944. My flag is flying in remembrance.
My Brother in laws father was a glider pilot.Tomorrow we remember the heroes of the invasion of Normandy on June 6th, 1944. My flag is flying in remembrance.
Dangerous job, flimsy aircraft, carrying troops. Cut loose from the drag plane and then having to land under hostile fire in small spaces. Many of those aircraft didn't make it.My Brother in laws father was a glider pilot.
+1. The mortality rate was very high.Dangerous job, flimsy aircraft, carrying troops. Cut loose from the drag plane and then having to land under hostile fire in small spaces. Many of those aircraft didn't make it.
If I ever get to Lubbock I will check it out.+1. The mortality rate was very high.
There is an excellent glider pilot museum in Lubbock, TX.
Its very nice...If I ever get to Lubbock I will check it out.
My uncle was a Bataan Death March survivor. In my family you didn't buy anything Japanese for a long, long time. In the end he still died of malaria 20 years after the war so they still killed him. I had another uncle who was in the Battle of the Bulge. My grandfather was a legion commander and we were raised to serve this great country to give back. God bless all those that served or are serving in the US military.My dad and my uncles are all gone now. Army, Army Air Corps, Navy, and Marines. Between them they saw N. Africa, Sicily, Italy, France, Germany, the Murmansk convoys to Russia, Normandy, and the island-hopping campaign in the Pacific.
One killed when his B-17 was shot down, one wounded at Iwo Jima.
All so we could live in peace.
Bastogne, major battle, that took momentum from the Nazis.My FIL…. 101st… 502nd… I-Company…wounded in Bastogne, honored to have known him. 9pm there right now,,, would love to know what he was doing at this moment in 1944.
Korea, so many incredible battles and back & forth. Kinda forgotten vets like many who fought in Vietnam.Aug 2, 1950…6500 Marines deployed to Korea, known as the Fire Brigade… my dad was one of those guys. Greatest guy I have ever known
Humble hero.None of our family members knew that my Uncle, then just 19 serving as a bomber pilot, had been shot down over France on two occassions. Somehow he was smuggled out, back to England only to fight again. He never spoke of it. At his funeral in 1990 his friend, who he confided to about his awful memories, told us the history.
My friends father was in the Battle of the Bulge and was awarded a Bronze Star. Those men endured horrendous weather conditions, lacking proper clothing and equipment against a German force with superior equipment. Bravery!My uncle was a Bataan Death March survivor. In my family you didn't buy anything Japanese for a long, long time. In the end he still died of malaria 20 years after the war so they still killed him. I had another uncle who was in the Battle of the Bulge. My grandfather was a legion commander and we were raised to serve this great country to give back. God bless all those that served or are serving in the US military.
Any who survived that brutality are to be honored as are those who were murdered or died during the death march.My uncle was a Bataan Death March survivor. In my family you didn't buy anything Japanese for a long, long time. In the end he still died of malaria 20 years after the war so they still killed him. I had another uncle who was in the Battle of the Bulge. My grandfather was a legion commander and we were raised to serve this great country to give back. God bless all those that served or are serving in the US military.
It's not a pleasant thing to say but Marines in the Pacific that I talked to and learned from in documentaries indicated they stopped taking Japanese prisoners after learning of the horrendous treatment of American POWs. That's war and it's never pretty.Any who survived that brutality are to be honored as are those who were murdered or died during the death march.
Exactly. A very old friend of mine, now in heaven, was also a Marine in the Pacific theatre and said after a couple Japanese surrenders, came close to Marines, and detonated grenades killing or wounding Marines, it angered the Marines, and therafter many Japanese were not given the opportunity to surrender.It's not a pleasant thing to say but Marines in the Pacific that I talked to and learned from in documentaries indicated they stopped taking Japanese prisoners after learning of the horrendous treatment of American POWs. That's war and it's never pretty.