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  Gene's comments about engineers
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 09-14-2006, 09:26 AM - Forum: WWII ENGINEERS - No Replies


Gene sent me the following letter recently. Mr Fidcuia was with the 631st. You can read more about him here:

 

http://www.6thcorpscombatengineers.com/GeneFiducia.htm

 

You are an excellent writer. Just read your article in the WW2 Magazine.  Was the article edited in any way by the magazine?

 

The History channel had a very nice segment on the contributions by the engineers to the war effort in history of the armed forces showing their invaluable role in getting supplies and men to the front in all wars.  And of course their fighting as well.

 

Without the engineers even POW camps, supply dumps, docks, pipelines, roads and bridges would not have been constructed and the armies could not move.

 

Other branches of the service were rotated and pulled from the fightine but we engineers were in the war for the duration. Some units such as ours were shipped to other theatres of operations after the war ended in Europe because the engineers were needed.

 

Gene Fiducia.

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  603rd QM Graves Registration Co
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 09-14-2006, 09:20 AM - Forum: OTHER WWII UNIT STORIES AND INFO - No Replies


An interesting read. Thanks Papa Art! :wub:

 

This narrative relates some of my personal experiences as a sergeant squad leader in the 603rd Quartermaster Graves Registration Company in the first days of the Allied invasion at Normandy, France, in June 1944. As a squad leader in the 4th Platoon, I decided it would be a good idea to have someone accompany the glider elements of the 82d Airborne Division on D-Day. My name was submitted as the "volunteer" to make the first U.S. Army Quartermaster graves registration combat airborne landing.

 

This narrative also details how a cemetery was established near a village called Blosville about three miles south of Ste. Mere Eglise, an area with crashed gliders strewn everywhere and hundreds of parachutes hanging from hedges, trees and houses. The Blosville Cemetery was one of six American cemeteries established in a radius of about 20 miles. This was due in part to the overall lack of ground communication between the attacking elements. Graves registration services were plentiful. At the outset, the Blosville Cemetery was intended to be temporary and primarily serve the 82nd Airborne Division. By the time the St. Lo breakout took place and Allied forces moved east into central France, this cemetery contained over 6,000 Allied graves.

 

To read more click below...

 

http://www.qmfound.com/crosses.htm

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  After 6 Decades...
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 09-14-2006, 08:07 AM - Forum: OTHER WWII UNIT STORIES AND INFO - No Replies


The following article will draw the interest of historian, forensic anthropologist and WWII buffs. What is also of interest is how this story ties back into the important business at hand within the ground robotics world. Scan the article, but don't miss the closing paragraph.

 

 

New York Times August 25, 2006

After 6 Decades, 3 Who Died In French Fields Are Home By Michael Wilson

 

The original crew nicknamed her Chow-hound, painting the name on the big, cold nose above a cartoon dog lazing atop a cartoon bomb. It was the only thing cheery about the machine of destruction, and the bombs inside were real.

 

Chow-hound was a B-17G Flying Fortress that flew many bombing missions in World War II, and the crew changed over the years.

 

"She had a lot of sorties," said Gwendolyn Haugen, a forensic anthropologist for the military who has recently become familiar with the bomber and its crew: The remains of three crew members, one of them a technical sergeant from Queens, were recently unearthed in France and returned for burial in Arlington National Cemetery.

 

Chow-hound's last flight was on Aug. 8, 1944, in the skies over occupied France, carrying a crew of nine. The big bomber was just 10 minutes from its target and was over Caen in Normandy when it was hit by antiaircraft flak. Later, witnesses described the bomber breaking apart in the sky. The tail fell away, and the fuselage dropped, spinning, to earth.

 

French villagers quickly buried four of the dead men. The bodies of two others were recovered by advancing American ground troops the following week, and the bodies of the four who were buried were exhumed and returned to the United States.

 

The last three men were the one from Queens, Tech. Sgt. Henry F. Kortebein, of Maspeth; and Second Lt. David J. Nelson, of Chicago; and Tech. Sgt. Blake A. Treece Jr., of Marshall, Ark. They were buried yesterday, 62 years and 17 days after Chow-hound fell.

 

"All that time, not knowing what had happened to him," said a nephew, Henry Kortebein, 44, of Jacksonville, Fla., who was named for his uncle. His mother attended the funeral.

 

"She was real glad to be able to get closure for the family," he said in a telephone interview.

 

On the day of the crash, wreckage rained down over farmland, according to a report by the Joint P.O.W./M.I.A. Accounting Command, which searches for the 88,000 military personnel who remain unaccounted for. Most of the missing died in World War II, and most of them are believed to be lost at sea.

 

The three Chow-hound crewmen might as well have been. A French landowner, believing the search for the missing to be over, had long ago collected debris from his fields and laid it at the biggest crater left from the crash, then filled the hole and topped it with fresh soil. Cows tramped over the wreckage and the bodies for six decades.

 

A French group, the Association Normande du Souvenir Aérien 39/45, which still hunts for and inspects crash sites, contacted the accounting command in 2002 about the pasture, just south of the city of Lonlay-l'Abbey, according to the command report. A team, including Ms. Haugen, went to France and began work at the site on June 9, 2004.

 

"Lot of cows, lot of cheese," she said. "Quiet little quaint Normandy farming communities."

 

The search took a month, using backhoes, rakes and buckets. The team found parts of the airplane itself, including two engines, parts of the wings, and the hind legs of the dog painted on the nose, but for official purposes, Chow-hound itself was identified by the serial number recovered from a .50-caliber machine gun.

 

The team also found six intact bombs, each weighing 250 pounds. "It got dangerous for us to continue," Ms. Haugen said. An explosive ordnance professional worked carefully on the bombs and got them away safely.

 

Of Sergeant Kortebein of Queens, the little that was recovered was described as a "paucity of remains" in the command report. The group found parts of his right shoulder and right forearm.

 

That was enough for mitochondrial DNA testing, a technique often used in identifying such remains. The bones were sent to the command laboratory in Hawaii. As the identities of the missing crewmen were no secret, the command contacted Sergeant Kortebein's sister in Arizona for a blood sample, Mr. Kortebein said.

 

Satisfied with the match, the command turned the remains over to the family, Ms. Haugen said. Relatives of the three crewmen were allowed time with the caskets on Wednesday, according to The New York Sun, which reported the recovery of the remains yesterday. Mr. Kortebein said that besides his mother, six members of his uncle's family were there.

 

"She's got pictures of him when he was in the war, and the Purple Heart," he said.

 

The accounting command recovers about six bodies a month, or 75 a year. Many are still unidentified, little more than plastic bags of grit and bone fragments too small to extract DNA.

 

The successful recovery in France was followed by tragedy, Ms. Haugen said. The explosives expert who helped remove the six bombs was a marine, Staff Sgt. Kenneth Blake Pospisil, 35. He was killed in Iraq in December, outside Ramadi, as he approached a bomb he was going to defuse.

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  Tanks for the Memories
Posted by: 3_7_I_Recon - 09-13-2006, 10:26 PM - Forum: WWII Books & Magazines - Replies (4)


Hey folks, I got this book several months ago and loved it.

 

It's up for auction at 4.95!!

 

http://cgi.ebay.com/Tanks-for-the-Memories...8QQcmdZViewItem

 

 

http://cgi.ebay.com/Tanks-for-the-Memories...8QQcmdZViewItem

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  This Day in History - September 13, 1942
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 09-13-2006, 09:33 PM - Forum: ANYTHING WWII - Replies (1)


1940 : Italy invades Egypt

 

On this day in 1940, Mussolini's forces finally cross the Libyan border into Egypt, achieving what the Duce calls the "glory" Italy had sought for three centuries.

 

Italy had occupied Libya since 1912, a purely economic "expansion." In 1935, Mussolini began sending tens of thousands of Italians to Libya, mostly farmers and other rural workers, in part to relieve overpopulation concerns. So by the time of the outbreak of the Second World War, Italy had enjoyed a long-term presence in North Africa, and Mussolini began dreaming of expanding that presence-always with an eye toward the same territories the old "Roman Empire" had counted among its conquests. Chief among these was Egypt.

 

But sitting in Egypt were British troops, which, under a 1936 treaty, were garrisoned there to protect the Suez Canal and Royal Navy bases at Alexandria and Port Said. Hitler had offered to aid Mussolini in his invasion, to send German troops to help fend off a British counterattack. But Mussolini had been rebuffed when he had offered Italian assistance during the Battle of Britain, so he now insisted that as a matter of national pride, Italy would have to create a Mediterranean sphere of influence on its own-or risk becoming a "junior" partner of Germany's.

 

As the Blitz commenced, and the land invasion of Britain by Germany was "imminent" (or so the Duce thought), Mussolini believed the British troops in Egypt were particularly vulnerable, and so announced to his generals his plans to make his move into Egypt. Gen. Rodolfo Graziani, the brutal governor of Ethiopia, another Italian colony, disagreed, believing that Italy's Libya forces were not strong enough to wage an offensive across the desert. Graziani also reminded Mussolini that Italian claims of air superiority in the Mediterranean were nothing more than propaganda.

 

But Mussolini, a true dictator, ignored these protestations and ordered Graziani into Egypt-a decision that would disprove the adage that war is too important to leave to the generals.

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