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Showing Results 177 - 184 of 1591

Raymond T. Boyle
Army Air Corps
Raymond
T.
Boyle
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
8th Air Force
Sep 6, 2023 - Feb 1, 1958
BIRTHPLACE: Oakland, CA
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Mar 9, 1943 -
0
Oct 26, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Family and Friends

BIOGRAPHY

Sargent Raymond Theron Boyle served in the 'Mighty' 8th Air Force. As a trained electrician and munitions worker he participated in over seven air campaigns, including the D-Day invasion of Europe. His primary duties included repairing guns, and loading bombs, ammunitions and film for on-board cameras. While he served in relative safety behind the front lines, he was not removed from the realities of war. Family members indicated the war and his participation in it had greatly affected him. As a member of the ground crews, he was aware of planes that did not return from their mission. Aircraft that did returned required his services. This meant working in fuselages which contained the physical evidence of injuries and deaths sustain by the crew. Undoubtedly, he had some form of personal contact with the men that flew these missions. It is inconceivable that he was not affected by such loss.

In a May 27, 1945 letter home to his parents and younger brother Harry, our Uncle Ray wrote '... just finishing our V-Day celebrations.... Talking about coming home lately its just rumors here and there, but as I finally read in our Army paper, that some of the Eight Air Force (thats me) have already landed in the states. Surely good news.... I'm pulling night C.Q. (command of quarters) tonight. Have only the aircraft to keep me company.... We were suppose to have a parade and personal inspection by the General today but its been raining for a week now and it hasn't stop raining yet, not even for a general. Our work has been flying food to Holland and bringing back allies who were prisoners over there. It seems our job isn't done yet.... Going to close, want to light a fire before its gets dark. Lots of love - Your son Ray'

For service to his country, Sargent Raymond Theron Boyle was awarded the Marksman Medal (Pistol), Air Crew Wings, AirCore Technician Badge (R.C. Turret Mechanic), Good Conduct Medal, American Defense Service medal, European Campaign medal (with two bronze and one silver device) and the WWII Victory medal.

Gerald L. Boyles
Navy
Gerald
L.
Boyles
DIVISION: Navy
Jul 26, 1922 -
BIRTHPLACE: Formoso, KS
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Oct 31, 1942 -
0
Jan 24, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Family of Gerald Boyles

BIOGRAPHY

Gerald L. Boyles grew up as a farm boy in Republic and Jewell Counties, in Kansas. He enlisted in the Navy on October 31, 1942, during WWII, and became a Navy Corpsman serving at the New York Naval Yard, Brooklyn. In 1944, he volunteered for Marine duty and became a pharmacist's mate. They were loaded onto ships and sent to Hawaii to take more training and to await orders. Gerald trained with the 25th Marines, Fourth Division. He shares 'We were loaded on ships and for well over 90 days we Practiced landing and running off the landing crafts, getting ready for battle. Then the practice was put to use when Gerald and others found out they were being sent to a little island called Iwo Jima. Gerald remembers the battle ships shelling the island for several days and nights. He wondered if there was going to be anything left of the island. Then he tells of being loaded from the large ship into a landing craft. Bullets were heard all around him. Some men fell in the water as the craft had not gotten close enough to the land. Along the black beaches there were fence, posts, and large holes, made by the shelling. Bodies of the fallen soldiers were everywhere. Gerald reports that the 3rd, 4th, and 5th Marine Divisions landed in 500 landing crafts in 10 waves onto various beaches that were named after colors. 'The Japanese commander knew a landing of American troops were coming and had hidden 800 cannons in caves and blockhouses. The Marines were met with heavy fire. 'We medics were supposed to work as a team but there were so many wounded lying everywhere that everyone split up and worked as fast as we could.' Gerald was armed with a M1 rifle and a medical bag, but he stated that there were so many wounded, that needed help, the supplies quickly ran out, so they had to use whatever was available to treat the soldiers. 'We patched them up as best we could and then carried them out for further help'. All the time he and the other medics worked under heavy fire. 'You couldn't see where you were going. At first you'd try to duck, but after a while you'd just go on as usual running to where you were needed'. Some soldiers knew they were dying. Gerald remembers one such soldier that he stopped to help saying, 'go ahead and help someone else, the life in me has just about ran out'. 'We tried to carry the wounded out and radio for help but sometimes we just couldn't get any help. It was terrible the soldiers were so brave'. He returned to farm in his home town, married Jacqueline Heskett and had 3 daughters. 'I don't know why or how I survived while I was on Iwo Jima, but I know I'm not a hero, those brave men that gave their lives are the real heroes,' Gerald states.

Omar Bradley
Omar N. Bradley
Navy
Omar
N.
Bradley
DIVISION: Navy
BIRTHPLACE: Clark, MO
HIGHEST RANK: Admiral
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
BATTLE: Operation Torch, Dunkirk, Normandy -D-Day,
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Omar Nelson Bradley was born near Clark, Missouri, on February 12, 1893. His father was a schoolteacher who died of pneumonia when Bradley was 14; his mother worked as a seamstress and took in boarders to support herself and her son. After graduating from high school, Bradley was working for the Wabash Railroad to earn money to attend college. Though he planned to attend the University of Missouri, his Sunday school teacher urged him to apply to the United States Military Academy at West Point. A talented athlete, Bradley played football and basketball at West Point. He graduated 44th out of a class of 164, which included Dwight D. Eisenhower and many other future generals. Bradley was commissioned as a second lieutenant and posted to the 14th Infantry on the Mexican border, where he supported the U.S. expedition commanded by General John J. Pershing into Mexico in pursuit of Pancho Villa. In 1916, he was promoted to first lieutenant and married his high school sweetheart, Mary Elizabeth Quayle; they would later have a daughter, Elizabeth.

After WW I ended, Bradlwy spent four yeard teaching math at West Point, Elevated to the rank of Major, he was sent for advaced training at Fort Benning, where he intensified his study of miliraty history and tactics. He served a brief tour in Hawaii before he was selceted for mor advanced training at Fort Leavenworkth in 1928. Assigned to the infantry as an instructor Bradley worked with future General George Marsall.

Bradley was in Washington working in the War Department by early 1941, when Marshall sent him back to Fort Benning to assume command of the Infantry School and convert it into a larger-scale, more efficient operation that could train hundreds of officers. After the U.S. entered World War II in December 1941, Bradley—by now a brigadier general—was given the task of training the 82nd and 28th Divisions for combat. At the request of Eisenhower, now supreme commander of U.S. troops, Bradley headed to North Africa in early 1943 to take stock of the then-struggling Allied campaign there and make improvements. Thanks to Bradley’s recommendation, General George S. Patton was given command of the U.S. II corps; as his deputy commander, Bradley helped restore discipline and improve the soldiers’ training. After Patton left for another assignment, he took charge of the corps himself and led it ably for the rest of the North Africa campaign.

Promoted to lieutenant general, Bradley again joined Patton in Sicily, serving as a corps commander in Patton’s Seventh Army. Military journalist Ernie Pyle, who met Bradley in Sicily and became a good friend, memorably dubbed him “the soldier’s general”—later more commonly written as “the G.I.’s general—for his modest style and the care he took for his troops .Eisenhower had chosen Bradley as field commander for American forces during Operation Overlord, the planned Allied invasion of Normandy across the English Channel. Bradley headed to England to train his troops, and on June 6, 1944 (D-Day), he oversaw the first American landings on Normandy’s beaches. He then commanded the First Army and (later) the 12th Army Group during the subsequent fighting against German troops in France, including a pivotal role in the Allied victory in the Battle of the Bulge. By the time the war ended in May 1945, Bradley was a full general in command of 43 divisions and 1.3 million men, the largest group of any American troops to serve under a single field commander. In August 1945, President Harry S. Truman asked Bradley to lead the Veterans Administration (VA), which was organized to provide aid to returning soldiers. In 1948, he returned to the Army as chief of staff, replacing Eisenhower. He would remain in the post only 18 months before he was chosen as the nation’s first-ever chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in August 1949. Elevated to become a five-star general the following year, he served two terms as chairman, overseeing U.S. operations during the Korean War. Courtesy of history.com and mationalww2musuem.com.

Paul V. Branam
Army
Paul
V.
Branam
DIVISION: Army,
1st Engineer Special Brigade, 531st Engineer Shore Regiment and 3051st Engineer Combat Battalion
Jul 25, 1909 - May 27, 2002
BIRTHPLACE: Atchison, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Apr 15, 1942 -
0
Jun 27, 1945
0
BATTLE: Operation Torch, Battle of Tunisia, Operation Husky, D-Day, Cobra, Battle of the Bulge.
MILITARY HONORS: Marksman Badge & Rifle Bar, Good Conduct Medal, European-African-Middle East Campaign Medal with Arrow Head, 3 bronze service stars and 1 silver service star, World War II Victory Medal and French War Cross (Croix de Guerre) with Palm.
HONORED BY: Mike and Jeanette Branam and Sarah Branam Schotte.

BIOGRAPHY

Paul was inducted into the Army on April 13, 1942, at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas. He was sent to Camp Edwards, Massachusetts for training with the 1st Engineer Special Brigade, 531st Engineer Shore Regiment. They sailed from New York Port of Embarkation for Glasgow, Scotland on August 5, 1942 to participate in Operation Sledgehammer, which was not conducted. The regiment departed Glasgow on October 22, 1942 for North Africa. On November 8, 1942 they assaulted Arzew, Algeria in North Africa then moved to Zeralda, Algeria in June 1943. After participating in the invasion of Gela, Sicily on July 10, 1943, they returned to Damesne, Algeria on August 26, 1943. On September 9, 1943 the regiment invaded Salerno, Italy. On November 18, 1943 the 531st traveled from Naples, Italy returning to England on December 12, 1943 in preparation of the Normandy invasion. They participated in the D-Day landings June 6, 1944 on Utah Beach and operated the Utah Beach Command until October 1944. The 531st Engineer Shore Regiment was disbanded August 2, 1944 and Paul was transferred to the 3051st Engineer Combat Battalion. The Battalion participated in the Rhineland campaign during the winter of 1944 and 1945. Paul Victor Branam married Margaret Stewart McDonald in Irvine, Scotland on February 27, 1945. Margaret traveled to the United States in the summer of 1946 on the Queen Mary. Paul was discharged June 27, 1945 at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas. He returned to Holton, Kansas where they resided until his death in 2002. Paul was awarded; Good Conduct Medal, European-African-Middle East Campaign Medal with Arrow Head, 3 bronze service stars and 1 silver service star, World War II Victory Medal and French War Cross (Croix de Guerre) with Palm.

Owen T. Brennan
Army Air Corps
Owen
T.
Brennan
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
467 Bomb Grp Heavy, 789 Bomb Sq, 8th AF
Nov 9, 1922 -
BIRTHPLACE: St. Louis, MO
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Dec 29, 1942 -
0
Oct 24, 1945
0
HONORED BY: George J. Green

BIOGRAPHY

Owen T. Brennan was born on 9 Nov 1922 in St. Louis, MO. He graduated from high school the summer of 1942 and apprenticed as a painter. On 29 Dec 1942 he was inducted in the Army at Jefferson Barracks, St. Louis, MO, was assigned to the Army Air Corps, and sent across the Mississippi River to Scott Army Air Base to attend Radio School. Upon completion, he attended Gunnery School in Harlingen, TX. By Nov 1943, he was a radio operator gunner on a B-24 Liberator in Casper, WY training for overseas combat. Within the month, they were informed they would be assigned to a new bomb group being formed, the 467th bomb group commanded by Col. Albert Showers with training at Wendover Army Air Base, UT. In Jan 1944, they were on the way to the European Theater. They picked up a new B-24 bomber in Topeka, KS and named it 'The Royal Flush.' Crossing the Atlantic from Trinidad, South America, to Dakar, Marrakech, Africa and on to Wales, England, they arrived on 9 Mar 1944. After landing in England, they had their B-24 taken from them and took the train to their home base at Rockheath, Norwich, East Anglia, England. Their crew was George Perry, Pilot; Vic Lentz, Co-pilot; Vern Bleck, Bombardier; Homer Dippold, Navigator; Gene Bateman, Engineer; Owen, Radio Operator; Alex Duncan and John Krajny, Waist Gunners; Tom LaGary, Tail Gunner; and Gerry Melton, Ball Turret Gunner. Their bomber, #373 'C' was named Monster. The nose art was a dragon with two machine guns sticking out of its nose. Their mission was 4 hours to and 4 hours back and they lost one bomber. The next mission was to Hamm, where Owen lost a good friend, George Carter from Chicago who was on another bomber. Owen completed 35 missions with each one of different exposures. He was concerned 'how would he react, would he do his job correctly, would he show fear.' Each mission was hours of boredom interrupted by moments of sheer terror! He does not remember what happened on some of his missions, but still remembers the one on the first part of May 1944. It was to the Herman Goering Steel Plant near Brunswick, Germany. Lots of fighters hit them and they lost 15 to 20 bombers that day. As the fighters started their run, he remembers the Pilot, Rod McKay, saying 'Boys, give your hearts to God because Hitler's got your a**.' He remembers one fighter starting his run at them and firing about 1000 yards away. His 20mm shells burst in the air before they reached them. He opened fire at him when he was about 500 yards away and as the distance closed, he thought he was going to ram them. At about 200 yards, he forgot about firing short bursts and fired point blank, holding the trigger down. He knew he hit him as the tracers were bouncing off the armor plate. His guns stopped firing and he passed about 30 feet over the top of the formation. All this time, Owen's knees were shaking. They lost one engine on the way back to base; they had been hit by three 20mm shells and had over 100 holes in their aircraft. They, along with three others could not keep up with the formation. They and one other plane made it back while another had gone down. After completion of his required missions, he was sent to France at the forward airfields as a ground radio operator. Owen returned to the USA on 2 Nov 1944. After 30 days leave, he reported to replacement pool for crewman for the B-29 Bomber at a West Coast Army Air Force Base. The Sergeant Major interviewing him for reassignment was impressed that in the nine months he had served in the European Theater of Operations, he had completed 35 combat missions and served on the ground in France. He said as far as he was concerned that Owen had already done his service in the war and no way was he going to assign him to a B-29 crew. He graciously sent him to a C-54 Logistic crew that was delivering materials to the Islands in the Asiatic Pacific Theater of Operations. He served there until his discharge on 24 Oct 1945 at Truax Fie

Margaret T. Bridgeford
Women's Army Corps (WAC)
Margaret
T.
Bridgeford
DIVISION: Women's Army Corps (WAC),
SHAEF
Mar 12, 1919 - Feb 26, 1997
BIRTHPLACE: Chestnut Hill, PA
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Jan 1, 1943 -
0
Jan 1, 1946
0
HONORED BY: The family of Margaret Bridgeford

BIOGRAPHY

Margaret was the secretary to the Adjutant General, General Lovett, on General Eisenhower's staff.

Melvin L. Brillhart
Army
Melvin
L.
Brillhart
DIVISION: Army
Jun 11, 1927 - Nov 9, 2019
BIRTHPLACE: Buckeye, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: Private First Class
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: 1945 -
1
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation & Talmage Historical Museum & Library

BIOGRAPHY

When Pearl Harbor was attached Melvin was 14 years old. He was drafted into the US Army, September 1945 at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas. He took transportation corps training in the states of Louisiana and Wyoming. Melvin was sent to Europe and was assigned to transportation units in France and Germany. He left the Army with the rank of Private First Class. Courtesy of the Talmage Kansas Historical Museum and Library.

Donald D. Brin
Army
Donald
D.
Brin
DIVISION: Army,
29th Inf. Div
Apr 4, 1920 -
BIRTHPLACE: Goodland, KS
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Dec 26, 1942 -
0
Sep 27, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Elaine; Children: Mac, Larry, Ron, Mark, Carol, Pat

BIOGRAPHY

Staff Sergeant Brin landed on the beaches of Normandy on D-Day. He was wounded twice; in Brest, France and St. Lo, France. Donald received a Purple Heart with oak leave cluster; Presidential Citation, Silver Star, and the Middle Eastern Service Medal. He is married to Elaine Brin and they have six children: Mac, Larry, Ron, Mark, Carol, and Pat.

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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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Guildhall Address, London, June 12, 1945