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Showing Results 1073 - 1080 of 1591

Pearson
Richard W. Pearson
Marine Corps
Richard
W.
Pearson
DIVISION: Marine Corps,
28th Marines
Jan 10, 1927 - Mar 13, 1945
BIRTHPLACE: Concordia, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Feb 12, 1944 -
0
0
HONORED BY: Sister, Karen; Brother, Robert; Nephew, Jeffrey; Niece, Lisa

BIOGRAPHY

IN GRATEFUL MEMORY OF RICHARD WESLEY PEARSON, UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS, WHO DIED IN THE SERVICE OF HIS COUNTRY AT IWO JIMA, VOLCANO ISLANDS, 13 MARCH 1945. HE STANDS IN THE UNBROKEN LINE OF PATRIOTS WHO HAVE DARED TO DIE, THAT FREEDOM MIGHT LIVE, AND GROW, AND INCREASE ITS BLESSINGS. FREEDOM LIVES, AND THROUGH IT, HE LIVES --- IN A WAY THAT HUMBLES THE UNDERTAKINGS OF MOST MEN --- SIGNED FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.' Richard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Pearson, was born January 10, 1927 in Concordia, and attended elementary and high school here. He was employed at the Locke drug store during his junior and senior years. After enlisting for service with the Marines in February of his senior year in high school, he was granted his diploma after extra work to finish his course, and was called for training March 27, 1944. He trained at San Diego and Camp Pendleton, Oceanside, CA, and left the states September 18 for Hawaii. He had a happy, friendly smile and the other fellows kidded him sometimes because he was a little guy --- shorter than most. He didn't let it bother him though. Some time about the first of the year, he left Hawaii for action in the South Pacific area, and took part as a machine-gunner in the invasion of Iwo Jima with the 28th regiment, Fifth Marine Division. On March 1 the Blade-Empire published a picture of the Marines of Private Pearson's outfit raising the Stars and Stripes on Mt. Suribachi on February 23, 1945, after a bitter fight which left only 16 men alive out of the regiment. Richard was later killed in action on 13 March 1945 at Iwo Jima Volcano Islands. He was a nephew of Major Paul E. Pearson, who was taken prisoner in the fall of Bataan and Corrigedor. Richard was survived by his parents; one brother, Pvt. Robert E. Pearson; one sister, Karen; and his grandmother, Mrs. Lizzie Pearson, Concordia.

KILLED IN ACTION
Clarence R. Peck
Army
Clarence
R.
Peck
DIVISION: Army
BIRTHPLACE: Harold, South Dakota
HIGHEST RANK: Colonel
SERVED: Sep 30, 1912 -
0
Jul 31, 1953
0
HONORED BY: Grandson, Hank Royer

BIOGRAPHY

Clarence R. Peck was born in Harold, SD, son of George W. and Nona C. Gerelaman Peck. When he was eight, the family moved to the Seattle area. He attended the Des Moines grammar school, West Seattle High School, graduating with the class of 1912, and the University of Washington from 1912 to 1917, where his legal studies were interrupted by World War I. He joined the army and didn't leave until 38 years later, when he retired as a colonel. He served as the Executive Secretary of the United States Joint Chiefs of Staff during World War II. He was instrumental in organizing the major conferences of the war at Quebec, Malta, Yalta, London and Pottsdam. During his military service he served in World War I, World War II, and the Korean War, and was awarded over forty distinguished service medals, including the United States Legion of Merit, the Order of British Merit and the Chinese Order of Yun Hui. He retired from active duty while serving in Washington D.C. on July 31, 1953. Clarence married Edna (Bird) Mae Orme in Seattle, WA on Aug 23, 1917. They had three children: John C. Peck, Jill Royer, and Bobbe Faulders. He later married Eleanor Stahl Fitch on Aug 10, 1962. He was cremated, with memorial services at the Fort Myer Chapel, Arlington, VA and inurnment in Arlington National Cemetery. Colonel Peck is honored by his grandson Hank Royer.

Vito Pedone
Army Air Corps
Vito
Pedone
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
9th Air Force Troop Carrier Command Pathfinder unit
HIGHEST RANK: Capt.
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
BATTLE: Normandy
HONORED BY: Steve Pedone and the Pedone Family

BIOGRAPHY

Vito Pedone was a first generation Italian-American, from Mount Vernon NY, his parents emigrated as teenager from Puglia, Italy. Vito's da Crop. Antonio Pedone, fought in WW I with the American Expeditionary Force 28th Infantry Division, in front-line combat in France. 23 years later, Vito, along with his brother and sister, the next generation, would answer the call to service in WW II as US Army Officers. Vito and his younger brother Stephen were studying Aeronautical Engineering AT NC State College, when the US entered the war. Both volunteered for US Army Aviation Cadet training to become pilots. Their younger sister Anne Pedon, graduated from nursing school and became 2nd Lt. as a US Army Nurse. Stephen was killed in September 1944 in a B-24 crash at age 22. Upon receiving his officer commission and pilot wings, Vito completed advanced flight training in the twin engine A-20 light bomber/ground attack aircraft. 1942 he was assigned to the 15th Bombardment Squadron 17th Bomb Group, 8th Air Force in England and would fly 25 A-20 combat missions across the English Channel into Nazi held Countries. Vito requested transfer to the newly formed 9th air Force Troop Carrier Command to fly c-47 Troop Carrier aircraft and prepared for D-Day. He became part of pathfinder C-47 Troop Carrier unit based in North Witham Air Field, Near Grantham, England. The military learned specially trained Pathfinder troop transport aircraft crews and paratroopers were essential to lead the way to finding and marking the correct drop zones to ensure successful deployment of all the paratroopers. Vito conducted the unit's Pathfinder School to train and prepare the C-47 crews for missions. Vito and Lt Col Joel Crouch were the pilots of the lead Pathfinder C-47 aircraft, Tail #293098, to take-off first and to lead the US Airborne Invasion Force into Normandy, called "Operation Neptune". The mission of the Pathfinder C-47 Pilots and aircrews was to fly the Pathfinder Paratroopers from England over the English Chanel to Normandy, and accurately drop them into several selected drop zones interior to the Normandy Invasion beaches. Vito's crew took-off from North Witham Air Field, England, very late in the evening on 5 June 1944. Onboard each of the (20) Pathfinder C-47 aircraft was a team of Paratroopers (Called the Stick) from the 101st or 82nd Airborne.  Vito's lead plane, Pathfinder Stick #1, Drop Zone A was led by Capt. Frank Lillyman, 101st Airborne Division 502nd parachute Infantry Regiment. Once on the ground, the paratroopers marked the (7) drop zones for the follow-on main body of paratroopers. Vito's C-47 would lead the tight formation of Pathfinder aircraft across the English Channel in total darkness, with only small Navigation lights on each plane to aid the pilot in keeping a tight formation. They flew 50 feet over the Channel to avoid German Radar. The unarmed C-47's had fighter cover protection. it was a clear moon-lit night crossing but as the they approached the Normandy coast over the Cotentin, Peninsula, a thick blank of cloud  obscured the sky and view of the ground, which made formation flying very dangerous. They proceeded inland hoping to see the ground and the drop zones. The Germans' hearing the sound of the C-47 engines began to fire. As Vito's aircraft approached the Drop Zone between Mere-Englise and Saint-Martin-de -Varreville, Vito saw a break in the clouds and they turned on the green light to signal to jump. It was 0015 hours, 6 June 1944. "Geronimo" was heard as the 101st "hit the silk". The first D-Day American forces were on the ground. Upon landing back in England, Crouch and Vito were ordered to personally report directly to General Eisenhower the details of the mission. Then they went back to their plane and got in line to transport more paratroopers to Normandy.

Vito met Geraldine "Jerry" Curtis, a flight nurse while in England. and they married in September 1943. She was a flight nurse, picking up wounded on D-Day. (see Geraldine Curtis Pedone for more information)

Vito continued on to have a 30 year military career and participated in many important moments in our nations' history, including the Pacific Atom Bomb Tests, establishment of NATO, the Cuba Missel Crisis airborne invasion, early 1960's Vietnam Conflict and the development of GPS.

Vito and Jerry operated two companies after their military service, in Alexandria, Virginia. Both are buried in Arlington National Cemetery.

 

Other Service Documents

Allen F. Peppe
Army Air Corps
Allen
F.
Peppe
DIVISION: Army Air Corps
Sep 22, 1926 - Jun 13, 2022
BIRTHPLACE: New York City
HIGHEST RANK: Sergeant
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Allen Frank Peppe was born in New York City to Frank and Alice Peppe. The family moved to Long Island and Allen spend the rest of his life enjoying the beaches. Allen enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1946 and was verbally recognized by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower as a young and capable Sergeant during World War II. Allen married Elizabeth Rougvie and dedicated his career to education. Courtesy of The Berkshire Eagle, Wantagh, NY.

Joseph A. Peterburs
Army Air Corps
Joseph
A.
Peterburs
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
20th Fighter Group 55th Fighter Squadron
Nov 25, 1924 -
BIRTHPLACE: St. Paul, Minnesota
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Nov 30, 1942 -
0
May 1, 1949
0
MILITARY HONORS: Three battle Stars, Distinguished Flying Cross, Purple Heart, Air Medal - 5 oak leaf clusters
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Joseph Peterburs was born in 1924, in St. Paul Minnesota. On the 7th of December 1941, Joe was attending the Salvatorian Seminary in St. Nazianz, Wisconsin. He heard the news coming out of the loudspeakers in the gym that morning, Peterburns knew he would be leaving the seminary and joining the Armed Forces of the United States. After the semester at St. Nazianz and at 17 years old he applied for pilot training in the Navy. They turned him down! Peterburs heard that the Army Air Corps was accepting applications for Aviation Cadet Training, however, you had to be 18 years old and take a competitive examination. On his 18th birthday on 25 November 1942 he took the test and passed the exam. He assumed the academic discipline acquired at the Seminary that enabled him to pass. He was sworn in by an Army Colonel friend of his  dad’s on the 30th of November1942 with his Dad there, looking as proud as he could be. After being sworn in, Peterburs was placed on deferred status until called up. On 23 January 1943 and Peterburs headed for Miami Beach, Florida for basic training. He also trained in Nashville and was sent to Scotland overseas November, 1944 flying a P-51. His first mission was December 22, 1944 and Peterburs went on to fly 49 missions. On one flight, Peterburs had a crash landing and was taken hostage, but escaped and fought until the end of the war.

PRISONER OF WAR
Clarence R. Peters
Army
Clarence
R.
Peters
DIVISION: Army,
1308th Engineering GS Regiment
Feb 27, 1922 - May 22, 1980
BIRTHPLACE: Dewey, Oklahoma
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Aug 2, 1943 -
0
Jan 5, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Daughter and Son-in-Low, Nancy and Chuck Smith

BIOGRAPHY

Peters served as a construction foreman at Camp Sutton, North Carolina for 10 months. He was deployed with the 1308th to N. France and spent 19 months serving in the Northern France, Ardennes and Rhineland Campaigns. His major duties consisted of construction and maintenance of bridges and other infrastructure supporting troop and material movement in the assigned areas.

John J. Peters
Army
John
J.
Peters
DIVISION: Army,
G-2 Division
Jun 21, 1925 -
BIRTHPLACE: Brooklyn, New York
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Oct 1, 1943 -
0
Sep 16, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Audrey M. Peters

BIOGRAPHY

John was assigned to General Eisenhower's Headquarters (SHAEF) in Bushy Park, England; Versailles, France and Frankfurt, Germany from June 6, 1944 until SHAEF's dissolution in 1945, then went to Berlin, Germany in our Army of Occupation until 1947.

Wendell Peterson
Army
Wendell
Peterson
DIVISION: Army
Feb 8, 1927 - Mar 15, 2006
BIRTHPLACE: Burdick, KS
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
SERVED: May 29, 1945 -
0
0
HONORED BY: His son Marvin Peterson

BIOGRAPHY

Wendell was drafted in February after his 18th birthday but was allowed to finish High School. He left for basic training right after graduation in May.

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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