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  Los Negros Island
Posted by: Carolyn - 03-23-2006, 12:49 PM - Forum: OTHER WWII UNIT STORIES AND INFO - Replies (2)


In May 1944, on Los Negros Island in the Admiralties, just north of eastern New Guinea, the 40th Seabee Battalion was assigned to the 1st Calvary Division. Its objective was to put the unused and much bombed Japanese airstrip at Momote into operation. The Army captured the airfield, all right, but while the Seabees were at work on it, the Japanese counter-attacked in greater force than anyone suspected was present. Two seabee officers and 100 men took over a sector of the perimeter and occupied a trench that they dug with the battalion's ditch digger.

 

They armed themselves with automatic rifles and knives, and set up a truck mounted 20mm gun behind them. Meanwhile other Seabees landed and started to grade and clear the runways and taxiways in the midst of battle. Others drove bulldozers into the jungle to clear fire lanes for Army guns, using blades now to clear a lane and again raised as a shield behind which they fired at the enemy.

 

In the Japanese assault, the Seabees distinguished themselves by capturing two machine-gun positions and a Bofors-gun. They took 47 casualties, with nine Killed. General Macarthur awarded them the Army's Distinguished Unit Badge, and President Roosevelt gave them the Presidential Unit Citation.

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  SOS
Posted by: Cadetat6 - 03-22-2006, 10:46 AM - Forum: ANYTHING WWII - Replies (10)


SOS ( Mess Hall Delight )

 

 

 

Chipped beef on toast has a different name.

For those that know, you know it it isn't printable.

For those who don't, recall you asked for it

 

To my fellow Marines and friends.

 

Does this bring back memories?

Looks like a pretty good recipe if you're interested in trying SOS again...

I like it better with chipped beef vice hamburger...

 

This is the original messhall recipe that Marines have thrived on for 230

years (1775-2006).

For you non believers, try it once over biscuits, hash brown spuds or toast

and you think you

have died and gone to heaven. You Marines already know how great Marine

Corps SOS is,

so print out this email because it's a keeper. For you first timers, when

you get it ready to eat,

give me a call and I'll come over and help judge the quality of your SOS.

Good eating and Semper Fi.

Bill

 

SOS

 

1 & 1/2 LB. (24 OZS) of LEAN HAMBURGER

2 Tbsp. OLEO OR BUTTER

1 CUP CHOPPED ONION

3 Tbsp FLOUR

2 TBS. GRANULATED GARLIC

4 Tbsp SOY SAUCE

1 Tbsp. WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE

2 CUPS MILK

SALT & PEPPER TO TASTE

 

Brown meat, add oleo or butter and stir.

Add chopped onions and cook until they are translucent.

Add flour, stir and cook for two to three minutes.

Add garlic, soy sauce, Worcestershire Sauce and mix thoroughly.

Add milk and stir until it thickens.

 

Bon Appetite

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  George Koskimaki 101st Airborne
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 03-20-2006, 11:21 PM - Forum: ANYTHING WWII - Replies (5)


Trying out my new Epson Photo Scanner 3490 tonight and thought I'd test it out on my dear friend George. I still have to create a page for him when the new site is complete. :D

 

Here's George during the war.

post-11-1142907713_thumb.jpg



Attached Files
.jpg   George_K001.jpg (Size: 40.54 KB / Downloads: 0)
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  Remagen-Ludendorf Bridge March 17, 1945
Posted by: Jeff B. - 03-20-2006, 11:22 AM - Forum: WWII ENGINEERS - Replies (44)


I have always been a history buff and am especially interested in the Great Depression and WW 11. I knew my Uncle George was killed in the war and from what Mom said he was killed on some bridge in Germany. You see I now know that my Uncle was a proud member of the 341st. Engineers General Sv Regt. Company A and helped build the AlCan highway. Once that project was finished he got to come home on leave before undergoing more training and being sent on to England. He came ashore in France at Normandy a couple of weeks after D-Day and was traped in the Battle of the Bulge for a time. At the time of his death he was helping make repairs to the Ludendorf Bridge at Remagen on March 17, 1945 when the bridge fell into the Rhine. His full name is was George N. Chandler from Texas he was a Tec 5 and his service no. was 38079495. His body is burried in Holland.

 

Just before Christmas last year I made contact with Mr. and Mrs Oberbeck. Mr. Oberbeck was a Captain and my Uncle George's Company Commander from Alaska to Germany. All I can say is wow. Mr. Oberbeck is 90 years young and as sharp as a tack. He and his wife are just great people and I have enjoyed our converstations.

 

If anyone has any information or would just like to chat I would be happy to hear or to help in any way.

 

Thanks for your time,

 

Parker

 

 

 

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  The Military Aviator
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 03-20-2006, 01:22 AM - Forum: The Papa Art Section! - No Replies


Cadets may appreciate this poem.

 

THE MILITARY AVIATOR

 

I think I've known a million lads,

Who say they love the sky;

Who'd all be aviators,

And not afraid to fly!

 

For Duty, Honor, Country,

Their courage I admire!

But it takes more than courage, son,

To get to be a flyer.

 

When you are only twelve years old

Of course you want to fly!

and tho' you know not what is Death,

You're not afraid to die.

 

But of the million, more or less,

All must have perfect eyes;

So only half a million now,

Can dream of future skies.

 

Then comes high school, science, math;

Some choose the easy way:

Football, cars, and dating girls;

Teen pleasures hold their sway.

 

And of the quarter million left,

One half go on to schools;

The other half will dream and drift,

And never learn the rules.

 

Now comes the day of testing,

Eight hours of Stanine Hell,

On every subject known to man,

Four-fifths will not do well.

 

The one in five who pass this test

Apply for flying schools,

The Application Boards will now

Eliminate the fools.

 

Then comes two days of nakedness,

Flight Surgeons poke and prod;

To pass this Flying Physical

One needs to be a God!

 

And now, five hundred lucky souls

Will start their Pre-Flight days;

Endure demerits, hunger, cold,

As upperclassmen haze.

 

One-half survive this mental game,

And go to Primary schools,

But only half will hack the course,

Move on to Basic rules.

 

Two hundred fifty now will try

To pass those Basic tests;

Formation flight soon separates,

The "tiger" from the rest.

 

One hundred twenty-five will then

Pin on those pilot wings;

The best become 'Top Gun' jocks;

The rest fly other things.

 

Some will die while learning those

Essential combat skills;

Some will die in combat,

Some will score their "kills."

 

But they have learned a lesson,

Sometimes lost on you and me;

We must always fight for Freedom,

Because Freedom's never free!

 

He's a knight in shining armor,

That the cruel tyrants fear;

He's that deadly drop of venom

On the tip of Freedom's spear.

 

Engaging him in battle is a course

That only fools would choose;

He's the world's fiercest warrior,

For he has the most to lose.

 

So when you see that aviator,

Standing at the bar;

Taking out the garbage,

Or tuning up his car.

 

You'd best walk up and offer him

Your thanks, extend your hand;

He's that rare "one in a million"

Who Protects this sacred land.

(Author, Unknown)

 

Art

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