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A Virtual World War II Honor Roll

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Showing Results 873 - 880 of 1594

Norman R. Lucas
Army
Norman
R.
Lucas
DIVISION: Army,
B Co.291st Inf. Bn. 75th Division
Dec 13, 1910 - Jun 23, 1967
BIRTHPLACE: Branchland, WV
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Mar 24, 1944 -
0
Nov 11, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Wife Dorothy; Sons Melvin Ray, Oscar Jay, Wallace Gay, Arthur Eugene, Jackie Glenn and Jeremy Wayne

BIOGRAPHY

His training took place at Camp Walters in Texas and at Camp Breckinridge in Kentucky in April 1944. He moved to Camp Shanks, New York and departed by transport ship the Edmund B. Alexander. He arrived in Swansea, Wales in November 1944. They established headquarters in Lamphey, Wales in December 1944. After many long convoy rides and much walking day and night in extreme cold weather, they fought their way through France, Holland and into Germany and Belgium. It was extremely hard fighting the enemy due to the fierce weather conditions, shortages of sleep, shelter, food and clothing. Frost bite and flu took a toll on many of the soldiers during the long marches in waist deep snow without proper clothing and equipment. Many good men died to protect the freedom of America. Medals: Combat Infantry Badge, European/African Middle East Theater Medal with 3 stars, WWII Victory Medal, American Theater Medal, Arms of the City of Colmar and the Good Conduct Medal.

George S. Lucas
Army
George
S.
Lucas
DIVISION: Army,
816 Engineer Aviation Battalion
Feb 26, 1916 - May 13, 1989
BIRTHPLACE: Cleveland, Ohio
HIGHEST RANK: Spec 5
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: 1942 -
1
1946
1
BATTLE: Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, Central Europe
HONORED BY: George S Lucas Jr & Family, Carol Happ & Family
Henry L. Lueck
Army
Henry
L.
Lueck
DIVISION: Army,
Co. B, 103rd Inf., 43rd Division
Jan 18, 1913 - Aug 13, 1976
BIRTHPLACE: Holton, KS
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Dec 26, 1941 -
0
Sep 30, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Alice Lueck

BIOGRAPHY

Henry Longley Lueck was born in Holton, Kansas, on January 18,1913. He graduated from Netawaka High School in 1930 and attended the University of Kansas for 2 years. At 19, he became a grain dealer in Netawaka and worked there until 1941. On December 26,1941, he enlisted in the United States Army at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas and became a member of the Infantry. He served at Camp Roberts, California as a Technical Sergeant until he was moved to the South Pacific, where he joined the 43rd Division, 103rd Infantry, Company B. He fought there until the end of World War II. He was twice wounded and received the Purple Heart. One bullet remained in his left hung until his death. He was honorably discharged from the Army on September 30, 1945. Henry returned to Netawaka and resumed management of his grain business; managing this business until he retired in September of 1974. He served as president of the Kansas Grain and Feed Dealers and on the Board of Directors of the National Grain Association. Henry was active in the Kansas Democratic Party and in 1975 he was elected State Chairman of the Kansas Democratic Party; a position he held until he died of lung cancer on August 13, 1976. He was buried at Netawaka, Kansas. Survivors include his wife, Alice, of Abilene, Kansas and a sister, Pauline Snodgrass, of Clay Center, Kansas.

Errett L. Lujan
Army
Errett
L.
Lujan
DIVISION: Army
May 4, 1922 - Nov 19, 1992
BIRTHPLACE: Mexhoma, Cimmaron County, OK
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Mar 28, 1940 -
0
May 25, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Daughter, Judy Reed

BIOGRAPHY

Errett Lujan enlisted in the 111th regiment of Cavalry, New Mexico Army National Guard on March 28, 1940. At the time, he lived with his two sisters and parents in Santa Fe, New Mexico. At 17 years of age, he was a high school junior so his enlistment required his parents' written approval. He looked toward the National Guard as a means to earn a living. Errett's regiment, renamed the 200th Coastal Artillery (Antiaircraft), was activated and federalized into the U.S. Army on January 6, 1941. His assignment for the next year was to become a disciplined and proficient soldier. His regiment, however, was deployed to Fort Stotsenburg, Philippine Island, in September 1941. The 200th CA (AA) was the largest American military unit in the Philippines when the Japanese launched its air attack on Fort Stotsenburg and other locations in the Philippines about four hours after the Pearl Harbor attack. Errett did not have another peaceful day until he was liberated from a Japanese prisoner of war camp in September 1945. His first assignment was to make their way to Manila where a few antiaircraft guns were stored, still in their shipping crates. They hauled them back to Ft. Stotsenburg where they would set up to protect Clark Field. However, once uncrated, they found the guns slathered with thick coats of grease. They cleaned them up, assembled the guns, and were actively engaged in combat within a remarkably short period of time. With the men sick, nearly out of ammunition, cut off from resupply and subsisting on one-fifth rations, it was decided that the defenders of Bataan should surrender to the Japanese. Weapons and equipment were disabled and what little was left of the ammunition was blown up. The men were ordered to surrender on April 9, 1942. Errett walked the infamous Death March route for seven days. He was first held at Camp O'Donnell, PI, then Cabanatuan, PI, and then Bilibid Prison, PI, before being transported to Japan aboard the Nagato Maru, arriving at Tokyo Prison Camp #3, also known as Mitsushima. Errett toiled with others in constructing a hydroelectric dam. His specific job was to mix cement for the structure with his bare hands. After a year and a half at Mitsumisha, Errett was moved for the last time as a prisoner to Kanose near Niigata, Japan, where he and his fellow prisoners worked at the Showa Denko carbide plant. His joyful day of liberation was September 1, 1945. Errett was among the mere half of his 1,800+ regiment that returned from the war. Along the way, he witnessed many atrocities, inhumane treatment (some of which befell him), and pitifully few kindnesses. There was an old Japanese man and a boy, his grandson Errett thought, who lived near the Mitsushima camp that risked their lives to deliver a handful of live-saving provisions over the fence to his outstretched, grateful hands every now and then.

Frank E. Lujan
Army
Frank
E.
Lujan
DIVISION: Army,
101st Infantry Airborn Div.
Oct 10, 1921 - Jan 28, 2010
BIRTHPLACE: Ganago Park, CA
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Sep 14, 1942 -
0
Oct 18, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Caroline Lujan and children.

BIOGRAPHY

Frank Lujan received the Purple Heart as he jumped in Normandy and was a prisoner of war.

Harry R. Lukens
Army
Harry
R.
Lukens
DIVISION: Army,
201st M.P. Company
Jul 6, 1924 - Jun 4, 2011
BIRTHPLACE: Harrisburg, PA
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: May 1, 1943 -
0
Jan 1, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Daisy Lukens and Family

BIOGRAPHY

Harry's company was General Eisenhower's Headquarters Security.

Quentin R. Lundin
Navy
Quentin
R.
Lundin
DIVISION: Navy,
15th US Naval Constr. BN.68 Naval Construction Battalion
Jul 10, 1923 - Aug 3, 2002
BIRTHPLACE: Irving, TX
HIGHEST RANK: Carpenteners mate Third Class
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Oct 11, 1944 -
0
Mar 15, 1946
0
MILITARY HONORS: World War II Victory Medal Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Lundin was inducted into the US Navy on October 11, 1944 serving with the 68 Naval Construction Battalion. We was a Coxswain SV-6 in the Asiatic and Pacific Campaign.

Lundin lived in the Talmage, KS area.

Courtesy of the Talmage Historical Society and  Museum

Francis Lyne
Army
Francis
Lyne
DIVISION: Army,
104th Inf., COC Div., 414th Reg.
May 3, 1923 - Jun 28, 2017
BIRTHPLACE: Oak Hill, KS
THEATER OF OPERATION: European, Pacific
SERVED: Jun 1, 1944 -
0
Mar 1, 1969
0
HONORED BY: Lyne Family

BIOGRAPHY

Francis Lyne is one of those rare humans who have fought in three wars. He defended the United States in WW II, Korea and Vietnam. And,in doing so, was wounded 5 times and received 5 Purple Hearts. He was a “career NCO” who gave all he could for us. Francis volunteered for service in April 1944 and went to Ft. Leavenworth, KS for induction. He then went to Ft. Blanding, FL; was trained in communications; and then went to Ft. Meade, MD., and sent to Europe on the Queen Elizabeth (converted to troop ship with 21,000 troops). They suffered torpedo damage. They received 8 hours of sleep in tiered, fold-down cots. They went to Glasgow and into a tent city after which they were sent in “box cars” to Le Havre, France. Assigned to the “Timber Timberwolves,” they did most of their fighting at night. He encountered the Germans at Aachen, the last battle for the Roer River. That became the flank force for the Battle of the Bulge. In an attempt to take one hill, he was pinned down and he was lying back with a friend. An artillery shot hit a tree and exploded, injuring his friend. Francis was in many more battles in WWII and during those he received:4 Purple Hearts, Bronze Star, Presidential Unit Citation, European Theater Medal w/ 3 Clusters. He was then sent to Korea and later to Vietnam where he was wounded again by shrapnel in his foot from a rocket, making that the 5th Purple Heart.

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The mission of Ike's Soldiers is to honor Dwight D. Eisenhower's legacy through the personal accounts of the soldiers he led and share them with the world.

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"Humility must always be the portion of any man who receives acclaim earned in blood of his followers and sacrifices of his friends."
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Eisenhower Signature

Guildhall Address, London, June 12, 1945