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  New book on engineers
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 04-27-2005, 07:34 PM - Forum: WWII ENGINEERS - No Replies


I just won the bid on an engineer book yesterday. Yippee! Another one to add to the co-lec-shee-un! B)

WE CLEAR THE WAY - Army Engineers WWII 94th Infantry

 

We Clear The Way : A Tribute To My Uncle, Staff Sergeant John L. Schreier and the 319th Engineer Combat Battalion, 94th Infantry Division, United States Army.

 

General Dwight D. Eisenhower called World War II an “Engineer’s War,†using transportation infrastructure to field a highly mechanized, mobile fighting force. The Combat Engineers made that mobility possible, building bridges, clearing mine fields, providing support infrastructure and opening roads. Everything was done on the double, while under constant bombardment from enemy forces. These were ordinary men, extraordinary soldiers, American heroes.

 

Following its stateside training at Camps Phillips and McCain, the 319th Engineer Combat Battalion headed off to the European Theater aboard the RMS Queen Elizabeth. Through the Brittany Region of France and into the Saar-Moselle Triangle of Germany, they “cleared the way†to support the 94th Infantry Division.

 

Through the writings of two American soldiers, one, a wartime journal and the other, a memoir written 55 years after the war ended, the reader shares in the “dogfaces†day-to-day activities, camaraderie and the horrors of fighting in Nazi-occupied Germany.

 

In this tribute to her Staff Sergeant uncle who was killed in Germany in 1945, Rose Welton embarked on an investigation of her uncle’s life, through interviews and correspondence with the men he served with in the 319th Engineers. She offers this poignant compilation of memories, photographs, and documents in a tribute to her uncle and those who fought alongside him in the 319th Engineers and helped “clear the way.â€

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  On this date...
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 04-27-2005, 04:57 PM - Forum: ANYTHING WWII - Replies (1)

On this date...

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  Hilter's Last Days
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 04-27-2005, 04:55 PM - Forum: ANYTHING WWII - Replies (1)


Eyewitness: Hitler's last days

By Rob Broomby

BBC News

 

 

Bernd Freytag von Loringhoven, 91, is one of the last living eyewitnesses to Hitler's final days.

He escaped Hitler's bunker just 24 hours before the dictator shot himself.

 

As an aide to army chiefs he had had daily contact with Hitler.

 

He describes the order to join his boss Gen Krebs in Hitler's bunker, just over a week before the dictator's suicide, as a death sentence.

 

He had already survived the fighting on the Russian front and was one of a few to escape from Stalingrad.

 

He met Hitler for the first time in July 1944. His predecessor had been executed for his part in the bomb plot against Hitler.

 

The young Maj Freytag von Loringhoven, who was not a Nazi party supporter, says he was "completely flabbergasted" when he saw Hitler just days after the blast.

 

"I had the image of a very strong, vital person with charisma, but what I saw was a sick old man. His right arm was injured by the attempt and his figure had changed, his head was sunk into his shoulders.

 

"His left hand was very weak and his left foot dragged behind him."

 

As for reports that Hitler had had a charismatic spell, he says: "I felt nothing, the eyes were pale and without any expression anymore."

 

He said he was surprised that Germany was in the hands of such a "sick prematurely old man".

 

Dying days

 

Inside the bunker he describes wild mood swings. There would be a temporary explosion of hope and then confidence would collapse again. The main topic of conversation was suicide - whether they should take cyanide pills or shoot themselves in the head when the Russians arrived.

 

He also recalls the drunkenness in the bunker, but not the orgies that some accounts speak of. He says he was too busy preparing for situation conferences.

 

When he met Hitler's mistress Eva Braun - soon to be the Fuhrer's wife - he had no idea who she was. The Nazi elite had been very discreet.

 

 

When I saw these poor children it pressed my heart

Maj Freytag von Loringhoven

 

Just days before the end, Magda Goebbels, the wife of Hitler's Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels, arrived with her six children.

They would later be poisoned by their parents in the bunker with the help of an SS doctor.

 

He recalls their pale faces peering out in fear from inside their dark coats.

 

"When I saw these poor children it pressed my heart," he says.

 

But he there was no chance to get out.

 

News that his trusted SS Chief Heinrich Himmler had made peace feelers to the Allies had a devastating affect on Hitler in the final days.

 

"This was like a bomb. Hitler called it treason," the former major says.

 

'Ice cold'

 

But with his work done, just 24 hours before Hitler's suicide, Maj Freytag von Loringhoven was given permission to break out.

 

He said he had no wish to die "like a rat in the bunker". He took his leave from Hitler with one last meeting which lasted around 20 minutes.

 

"I personally got the impression that he was a bit envious," he says. "We were 29 or 30 years old and we had a chance to get out because we were sound and young and he had no chance because he was a wreck."

 

He disputes portrayals of Hitler as raving and foaming at the mouth in the final days.

 

"I was present at these rages but they were not so excessive," he says.

 

He never saw him screaming with anger but says he could be "ice cold in his expressions and very aggressive, especially towards the generals".

 

Hitler was by the end resigned to his fate. His Reich, which was to have lasted 1,000 years, was in ruins.

 

But looking back, one thing still puzzles him. Hitler, he says, "was still so quiet and realistic just 24 hours before he shot himself".

 

The young officer escaped, was captured by the western Allies and held as a prisoner of war. He re-joined the army in 1956 and later served Germany in Nato.

 

He maintains that the divide between the army and the Nazi elite was very real and that although there were rumours, no-one discussed the fate of the Jews in top military circles. It was "taboo" he says.

 

Asked for his abiding memory of Hitler 60 years on? He pauses at first, then says simply: "He was a terrible creation. Yes, a being, but a being full of evil and cruelty... he was a monster."

 

Story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/euro...ope/4486379.stm

 

Published: 2005/04/26 16:05:42 GMT

 

© BBC MMV

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  WW2 OLDEST VETERAN
Posted by: Cadetat6 - 04-27-2005, 12:16 PM - Forum: The Papa Art Section! - No Replies


Here is a challenge

 

From: Teresa Carter teresa@hot.rr.com

 

 

My dad was drafted at age 27, he is now 90 and is a 10th Mountain Division Veteran. His 4 brothers and himself were all overseas at the same time, miraculously they all made it home safely. He can still tell the great stories as if it was yesterday. I would like to know how old is the oldest World War II living veteran. Thank you!

 

cadetat6 Art

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  RED SKELTON
Posted by: Cadetat6 - 04-27-2005, 11:44 AM - Forum: The Papa Art Section! - No Replies


Red Skelton

 

http://www.poofcat.com/july.html

 

Art

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