My Maternal Grandfather went ashore 13-June-1944 at Omaha with the 30th ID,and was KIA 25-July-1944 in Operation Cobra,the Break Out of St.Lo
My mother was born 6-Feb-44 and as he had already shipped to England,he never saw her.
http://life.time.com/history/before-...ay-in-color/#1
these pictorials in color from WW2 always amaze me.
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My Maternal Grandfather went ashore 13-June-1944 at Omaha with the 30th ID,and was KIA 25-July-1944 in Operation Cobra,the Break Out of St.Lo
My mother was born 6-Feb-44 and as he had already shipped to England,he never saw her.
It goes without saying that I love this stuff.
Might steal a few of those for enquiry skills lessons![]()
We have one colour photo of my late grandfather in (I think) New Delhi, where he was part of the Tenth Air Force.
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FS: Apogee Duet (ver. 1) w/ duet:BREAKOUT box. All boxes, manuals, and cables included. $350 + shipping. Pics are here.
My great grandfather side went in to the British army as a boy soldier in 1914 and made it out, he then lied about his age saying he was younger so he could go back into combat in WW2. Got out of both of them unscathed and died in his late 90s though I was too young to really get to know him before he died.
The other one was a life time soldier and spent 48 hours standing in the channel at Dunkirk before he was picked up. Pretty sure he was involved in the Normany landings in some capacity too. I never met him and apparently when he got out of the army he hit the bottle hard and had to pawn his medals for booze money
One of my favourite parts about Christmas is listening to my gran talking about what it was like to be a little girl during the war.
Thanks for sharing these, Mark.
One of the photos is of a group of Germans captured by the Allied troops. That photo really struck me. My father was about that age during the war. He served in the German army and was captured by the British. Getting captured saved his life.
Originally Posted by Chet Atkins
/l、Let go or be dragged.
゙(゚、 。 7
l、゙ ~ヽ
じしf_, )ノ
Excellent photos.
One of my uncles fought in Italy and brought back a German helmet and flag for my Dad. We still have the swastika flag.
Another uncle was lost aboard the Arizona.
My dad fought at Hollandia in '44 and the Philippines at Lingayen Gulf in '45. He was an anti-aircraft/artillery gun crewchief (corporal) on a 90mm gun.
He was there when General Yamashita surrendered to some U.S. troops, his gun actually fired on the generals small group several times before they surrendered. His gun was just doing fire by map coordinates and they had no idea they kept targeting, purely by accident, General Yamashita and his staff![]()
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Really great photos. The addition of color just makes the whole thing seem more 'real'. Not that it wasn't real, but color pics make it look more like family snapshots of people I might know.
My grandmother re-married in 1948,and he was an MP in the 29th ID. He brought home a big trunk full of flags,medals,coins ,insignia and knives he had taken from prisoners. It was a BIG deal when i was a kid for him to open the trunk and show me his trophies.
My other hobby aside from music is Imperial German Militaria,I loves me some medalbars!
Grandfather on my dad's side was in the Phillipines. He survived the Bataan Death March. He would never speak of the war, unless he had a lot of booze in him. Then it was lookout cuz grampa is drunk and angry.
I've always been fascinated with WWII. Partly because of my grandfather, partly becausse it created so many other things. Nuclear weapons, the Cold War, Rockets, Jets...
Thanks for sharing the pictures
"Many have quarreled about religion that never practiced it "- Benjamin Franklin
Very cool photos.
Amazingly, to my knowledge, none of my relatives fought in WWII. Both of my grandfathers fought in WWI, and my Dad fought in Korea - but no WWII vets in the family line.
Yet another friend of Jack...
Those are awesome...I always enjoy seeing those kind of pics. Helping my son earlier this year do a report about a great uncle who was a POW in WWII, captured during the Battle of the Bulge was an eye opener.
I'm always amazed by stuff like this. My dad forged my grandfathers signature to join the navy while he was still underage and ended up in the Sea Bees in the Pacific theater. Even though he wasn't a combat troop apparently he was in enough combat zones that he had extra points at the end of the war and was able to go home after only 14 months. He told me the only time he was ever really shot at though was by MP's in the Phillipines for being out after curfew.
He was incredibly proud of his service though and while he didn't talk about it too much until the end of his life he had a ton of papers and other items in his belongings that we found after he passed. It's amazing how young so many of the troops were in that war. My dad was 16 when he entered boot camp and not even 19 when he left the Navy. In Germany towards the end I've read that they were throwing young children and the oldest of old men and women into uniform as they ran out of recruits of the standard ages.
All of the video lessons are being moved here:http://markweinguitarlessons.com/
Check out my blog LoveHateGuitar.com and my page: http://markwein.com/
Buy Foundations for Guitar on Amazon.com
None of my family has ever served in combat to my knowledge. I feel both fortunate and left out in a strange way.
My paternal grandpa served in the air force as a radar operator. But he spent all of his career in the states.
EDIT: I lied, i have an uncle who served in Afghanistan. He was a Pave Low...something. Got a medal for a rescue operation. I think it's the Distinguished Flying Cross? Not genetically related but still family.
Last edited by Kelly; 05-25-2012 at 04:22 PM.
My mother was drafted. She couldn't have been older than 16 at the time. When she reported to the recruiting office she found that it had been blown up. So she went home to the German countryside and waited out the war with her family. I'm proud to say that my mother was a draft dodger.
My parents rarely spoke of their experiences during the war. It's too painful for them to recount. About a month before he died, my father told the story of how he was captured in France. He was the only one from his high school graduating class that came home alive. I lost 2 uncles in the war. And several members of my extended family were killed.
Last edited by PunkKitty; 05-25-2012 at 09:09 PM.
Originally Posted by Chet Atkins
/l、Let go or be dragged.
゙(゚、 。 7
l、゙ ~ヽ
じしf_, )ノ
Cool stuff. Both my grandfathers were in WWII. I believe one in Europe and the other one signed up to be in artillery...and they made him a cook.![]()
Most folks who were "in" the war for real that I've met generally don't like to discuss it. Like I mentioned above my father rarely spoke of it until towards the end of his life. It was a matter of pride but not something to be discussed lightly even with his non-combat experience.
All of the video lessons are being moved here:http://markweinguitarlessons.com/
Check out my blog LoveHateGuitar.com and my page: http://markwein.com/
Buy Foundations for Guitar on Amazon.com
Wow, that's really haunting. Growing up in the US, we see only one side of the story. We only lost people who were sent to over to war, not the relatives that were simply living and working every day. The soldiers and civilians lost by Germany and Russia were astronomical.
My grandfather and my uncle served in that war. My grandparents had a Gazetteer of WWII at their house. Whatever that was. It was, more or less, like a Time-Life Books pictorial account, with photos and maps and accounts, from the battlefields, both Europe and the Pacific. Pretty horrifying, with dead soldier filled trenches, aerial shots of hundreds of bombs dropping, tanks rolling, Howitzers firing, flamethrowers in action, bombed out cities, prisoners, deathcamps and at the end were the color photos. I spent hours looking at it, many many times as a boy. They neither objected nor encouraged me. No comment, basically. Spoke for itself.
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Friend of Jack
Nephew of Uncle Jack
I've posted here about my great uncle, Oscar, who flew his 25 B17 missions, then re-upped for more. He even landed one in the English channel after sustaining severe battle damage. Oscar survived the war, and I remember him from when I was a young kid. My grandfather (Oscar's older brother) was declared 'unfit' for service due to his strong German accent and being a naturalized citizen. You hear a lot about the horrors of Japanese interment camps, but you rarely hear about the discrimination against German Americans during the war. I guess it has a lot to do with race and all that, but my grandfather was Frisian, not German, but his country of origin was Germany on his documents, and his accent would be called German by most, so he couldn't volunteer for service. His brother, Oscar, with the same immigration docs, but no accent served his adopted country.
Oscar served in the 303rd bomb group, 360th bomber squadron. He flew 16 missions as a pilot, and 25 as a co-pilot. He was promoted to pilot after the pilot of his plane was KIA. He had 7 co-pilots and 8 bombadiers during his 16 mission, all casualties. He was a 'fill in' pilot, and flew most of his missions in B17's named "Mary Cary" and "Miss Liberty".
Wife's grandfather was a marine in the pacific. He still has a pathological fear/hatred of asian people from his time in the war. Maybe racist, but more likely deep war wounds, or more likely, a bit of both. He rarely talks about the war, just dismissing it saying that 'it was so long ago', but every once and a while he will go on about the details, and I get a glimpse of why he holds on to all that anger.
Here is a pic of Oscar from way back.
Here is his first B17, Miss Liberty...and a shot of it crashed in Allied France from battle damage. It was the planes 93rd mission. His second plane went into the English Channel from battle damage, and he was assigned to several different planes after that, mostly 'bad penny' and 'old bison'.
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Last edited by Tiltsta; 05-26-2012 at 11:50 PM.
My grandfather's brother was a member of the Dutch resistance...he took a huge risk one night by calling on his fiace at her home...the Germans found out somehow that he was there and raided the house...he managed to evade them and spent 2 long cold days hiding in a drainage ditch with his legs in ice cold water...he lost toes on one foot and more than that off the other...watching him walk LOOKED painful...he had to have wooden shoes made special and shipped here because they were the only thing he could stand up in...ballsy phucker was a dairy farmer for forty years here...
My Father flew 55 missions during WW2 as a tailgunner in a B24.
I'll try putting up his memoirs in a blog here sometime this weekend, if i can find them in the box i moved them in.
Proud member of the I ate a habenaro and lived fraternity
Friend of Jack
Son of Uncle Jack's Brother
Donner Party Catering Service
Originally posted by Help!I'maRock!: "so what if you're a cow? be the best damn cow you can be!"
"I'm the best musician in the country!" "Yeah, but how are ya in the city?"
- Moe and Larry (DANCING LADY, 1933)"Were them funny noises comin' outta you or the piano?"
- Joan Crawford to Larry (DANCING LADY, 1933)
"Why don't I come up and see ya sometime when you're in the nude... I mean mood."
- Shemp Howard (ART TROUBLE, 1934)
Son of Uncle Jack's Brother
Donner Party Catering Service
Originally posted by Help!I'maRock!: "so what if you're a cow? be the best damn cow you can be!"
"I'm the best musician in the country!" "Yeah, but how are ya in the city?"
- Moe and Larry (DANCING LADY, 1933)"Were them funny noises comin' outta you or the piano?"
- Joan Crawford to Larry (DANCING LADY, 1933)
"Why don't I come up and see ya sometime when you're in the nude... I mean mood."
- Shemp Howard (ART TROUBLE, 1934)
Son of Uncle Jack's Brother
Donner Party Catering Service
Originally posted by Help!I'maRock!: "so what if you're a cow? be the best damn cow you can be!"
"I'm the best musician in the country!" "Yeah, but how are ya in the city?"
- Moe and Larry (DANCING LADY, 1933)"Were them funny noises comin' outta you or the piano?"
- Joan Crawford to Larry (DANCING LADY, 1933)
"Why don't I come up and see ya sometime when you're in the nude... I mean mood."
- Shemp Howard (ART TROUBLE, 1934)
Son of Uncle Jack's Brother
Donner Party Catering Service
Originally posted by Help!I'maRock!: "so what if you're a cow? be the best damn cow you can be!"
"I'm the best musician in the country!" "Yeah, but how are ya in the city?"
- Moe and Larry (DANCING LADY, 1933)"Were them funny noises comin' outta you or the piano?"
- Joan Crawford to Larry (DANCING LADY, 1933)
"Why don't I come up and see ya sometime when you're in the nude... I mean mood."
- Shemp Howard (ART TROUBLE, 1934)
Son of Uncle Jack's Brother
Donner Party Catering Service
Originally posted by Help!I'maRock!: "so what if you're a cow? be the best damn cow you can be!"
"I'm the best musician in the country!" "Yeah, but how are ya in the city?"
- Moe and Larry (DANCING LADY, 1933)"Were them funny noises comin' outta you or the piano?"
- Joan Crawford to Larry (DANCING LADY, 1933)
"Why don't I come up and see ya sometime when you're in the nude... I mean mood."
- Shemp Howard (ART TROUBLE, 1934)
Son of Uncle Jack's Brother
Donner Party Catering Service
Originally posted by Help!I'maRock!: "so what if you're a cow? be the best damn cow you can be!"
"I'm the best musician in the country!" "Yeah, but how are ya in the city?"
- Moe and Larry (DANCING LADY, 1933)"Were them funny noises comin' outta you or the piano?"
- Joan Crawford to Larry (DANCING LADY, 1933)
"Why don't I come up and see ya sometime when you're in the nude... I mean mood."
- Shemp Howard (ART TROUBLE, 1934)
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