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Stories from the Greatest Generation

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A Virtual World War II Honor Roll

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Showing Results 889 - 896 of 1594

Edward Makin
Army
Edward
Makin
DIVISION: Army,
24th ID Btry. C 520 FA. BN.
Mar 12, 1923 - Nov 11, 2000
BIRTHPLACE: New York, NY
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Apr 14, 1941 -
0
Jul 20, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Wife Colleen and Sons Edward H. and Kevin B.

BIOGRAPHY

He was stationed at Schofield Barracks, Hawaii December 7, 1941. Decorations: American Defense Service Medal with Bronze Star; Asiatic Pacific Service Medal; Good Conduct Medal; Philippines Liberation Ribbon with Bronze Star.

George B. Makin
Marine Corps
George
B.
Makin
DIVISION: Marine Corps,
1st Raider Battalion
Apr 5, 1919 - Jul 10, 1943
BIRTHPLACE: New York, NY
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Jan 15, 1942 -
0
0
HONORED BY: Parents Charles and Anna Makin

BIOGRAPHY

George was killed in action against an organized enemy on July 10, 1943. He was buried 200 yards east of bridge on Enogai Point, New Georgia, B.S.I. Grave #9.

KILLED IN ACTION
Dominic C. Mammola
Army
Dominic
C.
Mammola
DIVISION: Army,
67th General Hospital
Sep 7, 1922 -
BIRTHPLACE: Mammola, Reggio Calabria, Italy
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Jan 8, 1943 -
0
Dec 14, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Son, Dominic Mammola, Jr.

BIOGRAPHY

Dominic was very proud to have become an American citizen and to have served his adopted country during WWII in the ambulance service.

Ed Manly
Army
Ed
Manly
DIVISION: Army,
502nd Paratroopers
Nov 5, 1921 - Feb 27, 2022
BIRTHPLACE: New Jersey
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
BATTLE: D-Day, Battle of the Bulge - Bastogne, Garden Market
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Edward Rodney Manley was born on Nov. 5, 1921, in New Jersey. His life before the war was nearly as colorful as his service. “My dad died two months before I was born, and my mother was an orphan,” he once recalled. “She lived with showgirls and was the only one with a steady job. She got walk-ons on different Broadway shows and that would get her $5.” When Ed was 3, his mother sent him to live with a babysitter, and at 5 he was moved to the Gould Foundation group home in Harlem. “I had to learn to be streetwise when I was at the home in Harlem,” Manley said. “On Saturdays all the kids from the home had 15 cents for the movies. The street kids knew it. I wandered away from my group once and this 13-year-old boy cut me four or five times across the leg with a strap razor. I was carrying a broken Coke bottle and buried it in his solar plexus. “They took me home, cleaned me up, and I went to the movies. Ed trained at Fort Benning and joined the Paratroopers because he thought that would take him close to the front and closer to Hitler. He wanted to kill Hitler. When the U.S. Army’s 502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment dropped into Normandy on D-Day, June 6, 1944, Ed Manley’s job was to help blow up four Nazi cannons overlooking Omaha Beach. The group was dropped in the wrong place but he improvised. He was 22 and lived to tell about it. On Sept. 17, 1944, he jumped into Holland on a mission to seize roads and bridges in the key city of Eindhoven. Again he lived. On Dec. 17, 1944, Manley and the 502nd Regiment held positions in Bastogne, Belgium, during the Battle of the Bulge. Manley was wounded, but lived to be captured by the Nazis on Jan. 3, 1945. Imprisoned at Stalag 12A in Limburg, Germany, he lived to escape from the camp 4 1/2 months later. Now he was 23. Returning from the war, Manley passed the test to join the New York State Police. He supplemented his police salary as a flag man directing traffic and a runner for a concrete company dealing with their truckers. He also worked on a tanker on the Great Lakes, and as a lumber salesman and theater manager. In 1951, he married Dorothy Ann Brower. She died in 1983 after 32 years of marriage. The couple had two sons, Scott and James, who survive him, and a daughter, Kimberly. Courtesy of coastalstar.com and American Veterans Center.

PRISONER OF WAR

VIDEOS

Edward Maragliano
Army
Edward
Maragliano
DIVISION: Army,
530 Signal Battalion
Feb 10, 1912 - May 10, 2005
BIRTHPLACE: Tenafly, NJ
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Mar 2, 1942 -
0
Sep 14, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Mildred Maragliano; and daughter, Alice Louise

BIOGRAPHY

Edward L. Maragliano was one of four brothers who served in World War II. He served in campaigns in North Africa, Italy and France. While he was serving, he kept a diary. The following is an excerpt: 'I write this not to complain but to give you an idea of what some soldiers go through to make America safe and free for free loving people, and I hope and pray that this crusade will reach its goal, though some of us must die to obtain it.'

Daniel Margolis
Army
Daniel
Margolis
DIVISION: Army
Apr 5, 1922 - Sep 13, 1997
BIRTHPLACE: Kings County, New York
HIGHEST RANK: Pfc
THEATER OF OPERATION: Other
SERVED: Feb 4, 1942 -
0
Sep 6, 1945
0

BIOGRAPHY

Daniel Margolis listed in the Army on February 4, 1942 in New York City and was assigned serial number 125057604. He served in the warrant officer branch. He completed 2 years of high school prior to enlistment. He died on September 13, 1997 and is buried in Misson Hills, California. He was a beloved husband, father and grandfather.

Glenn Marks
Army
Glenn
Marks
DIVISION: Army,
Medical Unit
Jul 27, 1925 -
HIGHEST RANK: Sergeant
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Glenn Marks, born July 27th 1925. He enlisted into the Navy and took the Officers test. The instructor told him they could not pass him because of his height. Marks was then drafted and he served in the U.S. Army in the medical field from 1944-1946 in Europe during World War II. While in training at Camp Grant, Illinois, Glenn was sent to clerical school where he was trained to be a typist. However, due to demand, Glenn was assigned to be a field medic recovering fallen casualties. Glenn traveled across Europe following units that were expected to have high casualty counts. His group would take the wounded back to a field hospital. At the end of the war, he stayed in Germany caring for German casualties until he was sent home. Marks tells a story about going to pick up casualties during the Battle of the Bulge. The Army had a tough go in taking a dam. When his group arrived on a road leading up to the area of the front lines, the jeep driver would not continue as the road had not been swept for mines. Marks encouraged the group to go forward as they had a job to do but the others did not want to drive the road. Mark finally volunteered to walk in front of the jeep. Marks walked down the road and the others in the jeep followed. Marks leading them to the area to pick up the causalities. Courtesy of digitalcollections.library.gvsu.edu.

Karl R. Marrs
Navy
Karl
R.
Marrs
DIVISION: Navy,
Fleet Air Wing-15, Fleet Air Wing-7
Nov 18, 1923 - May 27, 2013
BIRTHPLACE: Chilocco, OK
HIGHEST RANK: LTJG
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Oct 10, 1942 -
0
Dec 27, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Before WWII all Naval Air Cadets were required to have completed two years of college before being accepted for training as Naval Aviators. With that program in place the Navy had a limited number of combat pilots on December 7, 1941. A few days after the Japanese struck Hawaii, the Navy asked Rear Admiral Thomas Hamilton to develop an intensive program that would include physical, academic and spiritual training for high school graduates. That program would allow 18 year olds to enter Navy Pilot training program if they could pass the entrance exam and meet the physical requirements the Navy demanded. With that program in place, a local airport owner/pilot instructor started recruiting men just as Karl Marrs completed his solo flight check. By early September, 1942, he had a class of 17 ready to go to Kansas City. The five hour academic test went well for all 17 but the following day two were eliminated during the physical exam. At age 18, nine months after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Karl R. Marrs had joined the Navy V-5 Flight Program with 15 of his home town high school classmates. Nine months after they started at the University of Iowa, he was one of three from the original hometown group to graduate at the Pensacola Naval Air Station and wear the Wings of Gold of a Naval Aviator. He soloed a PBY-5B at age 19 and flew that seaplane for several months before making the transition to the PB4Y-1 as a Co-Pilot/Navigator at NAS Chincoteague VA. After completing that training his crew flew a new PB4Y-1 (B24-J) to North Africa, via the southern ATC route and joined VPB-112, a squadron in Fleet Air Wing-15. His crew flew several Anti-Sub and convoy cover missions in the Gibraltar Funnel area before being transferred to England in early January of 1945, where they joined Fleet Air Wing-7. After completing 27 combat missions, in that area, they returned to the States for reorganization for duty in Alaska with the new PB4Y-2. Before that training was completed the hostilities with Japan had ended and he was released from active duty after a short stint in the South Pacific. The flying career for Karl was put on hold for fifteen years. After fifty years of livestock and grain farming in southern Kansas, Karl wrote a book, 'I WAS THERE WHEN THE WORLD STOOD STILL'. It was about his 'War Years' and just for his family. He wanted them to know that he was not a hero and did nothing but serve his country just as thousands of other young men and women had done during that period of history. Fifty-five years after WWII ended and just before the book went to press the Navy decided to award each flight crew member of Fleet Air Wing-7 the Distinguished Flying Cross and Air Medals for every five missions they had completed. That put a shade of grey on his attempt to downplay the hero bit for his family.

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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