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  Army National Guard
Posted by: Mike - 01-21-2010, 04:11 PM - Forum: Announcements, Get Well Wishes & Farewells - No Replies


:happybirthday2: :happybirthday 107th:

 

Today the modern National Guard is 107 years old!!

 

Happy Birthday especially to those on Active Duty

 

Top :armata_PDT_37:

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  Halftracks and the 1303rd Engineers
Posted by: mick.wilson - 01-21-2010, 02:52 PM - Forum: WWII ENGINEERS - Replies (7)


Hi,

We run a UK based re-enactment group the 514th QM TC www.514th.co.uk

 

Apart from running our fleet of GMC CCKW trucks marked up as 514th, we also have a GMC compressor truck and two Halftracks that we would like to mark up as a US Engineer Unit of some sort, as our displays portray France late 1944 (The Red Ball Express). We would like to find an Engineering unit in France at this time and wearing the 3rd Army “A” patch (that the rest of us 514th wear), We are thinking of marking them up as 1303rd, what do you think?

Any photos or markings you could point us in would be very useful.

 

 

Mick Wilson

www.514th.co.uk

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  Al Crocker - 34th Inf Div - newspaper clipping
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 01-21-2010, 10:43 AM - Forum: VI CORPS AND 5TH & 7TH ARMIES - Replies (2)


...Lawrence Oelfke was a part of the 34th division, 135th regiment. This is an article my co-worker found and thought Rocky would be interested in it... Dan Donnelly

 

This is what the article says:

================

 

Al Corcker, St. Paul Pioneer Press War Correspondent writes a letter from an advanced post in Italy in which he has the following to say in regard to Cp Lawrence Oelfke a Bell Plain soldier who during the Tunisia campaign had been reported injured in action: "Corporal Lawrence Oelfke, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Oelfke of Belle Plain, like all of the other youngsters you meet, assured me that there was nothing unusual during his military experience during the past year of tough fighting. but his pals told me that he was wounded in the leg by a machine gun slug in Africa and spent three months in the hospital. And they later told me that near Ailano he was walking forward during the fighting armed with nthing but his walkie talkie radio. A Jerry appeared from nowhere and Oelfke pointed his stubby radio aerial at him charged forward and demanded surrender. Jerry threw up his hands, the corporal grabbed his rifle and pistol and sent him to the rear while he proceeded forward. The boys think he should have a Silver Star with his Purple Heart.

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  GOING,,, GOING,,,?
Posted by: onefastcat - 01-20-2010, 01:46 PM - Forum: Veterans Tributes - Replies (5)


He was getting old and paunchy

And his hair was falling fast,

And he sat around the Legion,

Telling stories of the past.

Of a war that he once fought in

And the deeds that he had done,

In his exploits with his buddies;

They were heroes, every one.

And 'tho sometimes to his neighbors

His tales became a joke,

All his buddies listened quietly

For they knew where of he spoke.

 

But we'll hear his tales no longer,

For ol' Bob has passed away,

And the world's a little poorer

For a Soldier died today.

He won't be mourned by many,

Just his children and his wife.

For he lived an ordinary,

Very quiet sort of life.

 

He held a job and raised a family,

Going quietly on his way;

And the world won't note his passing,

'Tho a Soldier died today.

When politicians leave this earth,

Their bodies lie in state,

While thousands note their passing,

And proclaim that they were great.

 

Papers tell of their life stories

From the time that they were young

But the passing of a Soldier

Goes unnoticed, and unsung.

Is the greatest contribution

To the welfare of our land,

Some jerk who breaks his promise

And cons his fellow man?

Or the ordinary fellow

Who in times of war and strife,

Goes off to serve his country

And offers up his life?

The politician's stipend

And the style in which he lives,

Are often disproportionate,

To the service that he gives.

While the ordinary Soldier,

Who offered up his all,

Is paid off with a medal

And perhaps a pension, small.

It's so easy to forget them,

For it is so many times

That our Bobs and Jims and Johnnys,

Went to battle, but we know,

It is not the politicians

With their compromise and ploys,

Who won for us the freedom

That our country now enjoys.

 

Should you find yourself in danger,

With your enemies at hand,

Would you really want some cop-out,

With his ever waffling stand?

Or would you want a Soldier--

His home, his country, his kin,

Just a common Soldier,

Who would fight until the end.

He was just a common Soldier,

And his ranks are growing thin,

But his presence should remind us

We may need his like again.

 

For when countries are in conflict,

We find the Soldier's part

Is to clean up all the troubles

That the politicians start.

If we cannot do him honor

While he's here to hear the praise,

Then at least let's give him homage

At the ending of his days.

Perhaps just a simple headline

In the paper that might say:

"OUR COUNTRY IS IN MOURNING,

A SOLDIER DIED TODAY."

 

 

Pass On The Patriotism!

YOU can make a difference

 

======================================================

 

I'm Honoring My three Brothers and Papa Art. three of them gone now!

At this rate I may be the last man standing.

 

Tell us who is on your Honor list.

 

chucktoo.

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  The 300th Combat Engineer Bn,
Posted by: sixgun - 01-19-2010, 09:59 AM - Forum: WWII ENGINEERS - Replies (3)


A Bailey bridge replacing a bridge destroyed on Taute connecting the current Giesmard streets and of the Bridge to Carentan. Bailey bridge built by the 300th Combat Engineer Bn,

 

http://www.300thcombatengineersinwwii.com/index.html

 

June 27, 1944, under fire from German artillery, Maj. John Tucker was killed and the bridge named "Tucker Bridge" in his honor.

See here:

 

http://www.300thcombatengineersinwwii.com/normandy.html

 

a street named after him in the town bordering on Saint-Hilaire-Petitville

St John Tucker, see here:

 

http://maps.google.fr/maps?f=q&hl=fr&a...013947&z=17

 

http://www.skylighters.org/memories/belmont6.html

 

 

 

the first picture

 

At right, a bulldozer, Caterpillar D-4 equipped with LeTourneau Model E4 Bulldozer kit. The bracket supporting the cable lift blade is no longer horizontal but this model is more an arcade but the reverse operation is equally simple: the lifting of the blade is no longer only with the cable-passing above the driver on a horizontal groove and a winding (or 2) drum (s) on the back but there with the inclination of the gantry pulled back to lift or forward to the lowering of the blade.

Behind the bulldozer a GMC 353 Leroi

Leaving a GMC Genie Bailey, the center of the bridge a Jeep and a right GMC LWB 353.

Many Engineers U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on both sides of the bridge on piers destroyed and two on the river on board an inflatable dinghy.

 

Vee

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