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79 years ago

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  • 79 years ago

    S/Sgt Louie Miori, a 25 year old construction worker from Seattle arrived in France at 8:00. Utah beach. He died on August 1, 1944.
    “Come, come, my conservative friend, wipe the dew off your spectacles and see the world is moving" - Elizabeth Cady Stanton

  • #2
    Re: 79 years ago

    I was waiting for this. June 6, 1944. D-Day.

    That day, my Dad was an oiler on a sea-going tug in Halifax harbour, RCNVR. My Mum's brother was probably still in Italy, holding what they had taken. He eventually wound up in that part of the war, in time to meet a nice Dutch girl and bring her home to Canada. I am not sure what my paternal aunt's husband-to-be was doing, but he might have been in the wings, getting ready to head over and carry on. I am pretty sure, if he had been in the first wave, we would have heard about it. They all survived, obviously, but I didn't hear many war stories. Except from my Dad, who raved about staying on his tug on Friday and Saturday, and eating everyone's ice cream, because the rest of the crew were all out on the town.

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    • #3
      Re: 79 years ago

      My Dad dodged that particular bullet and spent the duration in the Sunny South Pacific. He wouldn't talk much about it.

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      • #4
        My grandfather was part of the Normandy invasion. Landed at Omaha beach. A private.
        He died of cancer 30 years ago.

        Kevin


        Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
        There are two kinds of boaters: those who have run aground, and those who lie about it.

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        • #5
          Re: 79 years ago

          ^ That generation mostly did not talk too much about it - My Dad was an MP on Omaha Beach , shortly after the landing, he was processing German POW's back off the beach - He only started to talk about it when he was 70+




          Rick
          Charter Member - - Professional Procrastinators Association of America - - putting things off since 1965 " I'll get around to it tomorrow, .... maybe "

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          • #6
            Re: 79 years ago

            My father was patrolling those beaches this day, flying two sorties that morning. His biggest concern were the wires from barrage balloons as the ceiling was low and many balloons were hidden by clouds. Ten days later his fighter wing was operating from B4 at Beny-sur-Mere and his participation in the Normandy campaign was well underway.

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            • #7
              Re: 79 years ago

              Dad had been in various locations of the franchised Adolf Holiday Camps for just over 3 years by then, with another year to go. Here's his diary from June 6, 1941

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              • #8
                Re: 79 years ago

                My dad, a SBA( medic) spent the war in the navy, sunk once and self rescued in a lifeboat. Closest he came to invasions was assisting in a dressing station on Guadalcanal.

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                • #9
                  Re: 79 years ago

                  My father's service after D Day
                  22.2.1944 to 1.10.1947 Corporal RAFUR E/Asst ground radio, France & Germany
                  Jack volunteered as soon as he turned 18. Initially posted to Blackpool for training. Jack was then to follow the advancing Allies through France into Germany in a radio wagon. Jack and his comrades were occasionally billeted in liberated chateau, or had to rough it, sleeping on stretchers between the radio equipment racks in the back of the radio wagon.
                  Jack was discharged from No 101 Dispersal Centre, RAF Kirkham in Lancashire.
                  From his R.A.F. Form 2520A
                  Airman
                  Royal Air Force
                  Service and Release Book
                  J E Miller R A F Service and Release Book
                  Key entries: Air Crew category/R.A.F Trade: ACH/GA 5. 5. 44. E/ASST 19. 12. 44.
                  Overseas Service: 3.02.45 - 19. 3. 46 W. Europe.
                  His papers discuss disability for which he was able to claim benefit until at least 1965.
                  It really is quite difficult to build an ugly wooden boat.

                  The power of the web: Anyone can post anything on the web
                  The weakness of the web: Anyone can post anything on the web.

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                  • #10
                    Re: 79 years ago

                    my maternal grandfather ottis rechard was a remarkably young lieutenant on eisenhower's staff, a mathematician employed in the meterological assessments planning, leading up to, and during the invasion. he went on to work at los alamos, then computer science professorship at washington state and uni of denver.

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                    • #11
                      Re: 79 years ago

                      I crewed for a man who was Vice Chairman of Singer Corp, and who climbed the cliffs at Normandy as a Ranger. He looked like a duffer, but wow when I learned about his Normandy experience.
                      Gerard>
                      Albuquerque, NM

                      Next election, vote against EVERY Republican, for EVERY office, at EVERY level. Be patriotic, save the country.

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                      • #12
                        Re: 79 years ago

                        Originally posted by hawkeye54
                        ^ That generation mostly did not talk too much about it - My Dad was an MP on Omaha Beach , shortly after the landing, he was processing German POW's back off the beach - He only started to talk about it when he was 70+




                        Rick
                        I'm thinking it was about self-preservation. The things they saw and had to do were so horrible that they were best left unsaid and buried.
                        They might have talked about these things to fellow vets, the only ones who could truly relate.
                        I was born on a wooden boat that I built myself.
                        Skiing is the next best thing to having wings.

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                        • #13
                          Re: 79 years ago

                          My father signed up in ‘39 off to defend the UK in ‘40 and by D day had been doing the Sicily/Italy slog for the best part of a year, he and the rest of his division were shipped to North West Europe in the winter of ‘45 for the balmy weather and the liberation of the Netherlands. The up side though was as as one of the first to go he was one of the first to come home, being demobbed in Canada in June ‘45.

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                          • #14
                            Re: 79 years ago

                            grandad married at 19, commissioned and shipping out in '43

                            19B9F3E9-D3AA-4804-B421-D17669B18B29.jpg

                            norma wore that wedding dress when we married in '95.

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                            • #15
                              Re: 79 years ago

                              My father dropped out of U of Texas and enlisted, ended up flying p-51s out of Luzon.
                              Died in 1973, of Huntington's Disease.

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