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Stories from the Greatest Generation

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Showing Results 553 - 560 of 1475

Charles W. Hall
Army
Charles
W.
Hall
DIVISION: Army
Jan 1, 1927 -
BIRTHPLACE: Barton County, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: Other
SERVED: Dec 5, 1945 -
0
0

BIOGRAPHY

Charles W Hall was assigned Army serial number 17177387. He enlisted on December 5, 1945 in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. He was assigned to the Panamal Canal Department. His occupation was listed as tinsmiths, coppersmiths, and sheet metal workers.

Jack Hamlin
Coast Guard
Jack
Hamlin
DIVISION: Coast Guard,
Coast Guard
BIRTHPLACE: Springfield MO
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Feb 4, 1942 -
0
0
BATTLE: D-Day
MILITARY HONORS: French Legion of Honor
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundaition

BIOGRAPHY

Jack Hamlin was born in Springfield Mo in 1921. He graduated from Central High School and enrolled in Drury University in Springfield, in 1939. Hamlin was able to play in the minor leagues for the New York Yankees farm club in Joplin MO. Then the war started and Hamlin like most men enlisted in the service. He did not qualify to serve because of a childhood sickness so he joined the Coast Guard, thinking he'd stay in the US to defend our home land. This was not true and Hamlin soon found himself crossing the English Channel on June 6, 1944 - D-Day. A personal recollection of his service is in attached documents. Courtesy of ozarksalive.com

Other Service Documents

Charles V. Hamm
Army
Charles
V.
Hamm
DIVISION: Army,
502nd Parachute
Jul 15, 1923 -
BIRTHPLACE: Phoenix, Arizona
SERVED: Oct 5, 1943 -
0
Apr 23, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Barbara Hamm

BIOGRAPHY

I was born in Phoenix, Arizona, in 1924. In February, 1943, I received my draft notice. At the time, I was working after school and weekends in a small factory which had converted from making civilian goods to war essential products. I was asked to take a six-month deferment while I trained a woman to do my job. When I finally was inducted in October 1943, I was assigned to the Army Specialized Training Program, which meant that I would take basic Infantry training and then be assigned to Cornell University to continue engineering school to become an Army Engineer. The ATSP program for engineering students was discontinued and since I had infantry training completed, I was assigned to the 343 Inf. Reg, 86th 'Blackhawk' division at Camp Livingston, Louisiana. Here I was acting squad leader and shot expert with the 60 mm Mortar. I volunteered to become a paratrooper and graduated from Jump School at Ft. Bennin, Georgia. After another 5-week course in Parachute Maintenance, I was sent to France, where I was issued an M-1 Rifle, a steel helmet, a 60 mm Mortar, hand grenades, and ammunition that started my combat experience. A highlight of my time served was when we were told to prepare ourselves for a 'spit and polish' review by the Top Brass. On March 15, 1945, we awaited the arrival of Ike and his party. With Eisenhower in the first Jeep was our beloved General Maxwell Taylor. Then came Lt. Gen. Beretan, CG of the First Allied Airborne Army, Major General Ridgeway and Stephan Early, President Roosevelt's Secretary. After reviewing the troops, Ike addressed us. Ike told us that we, the Screaming Eagles of the 101st Airborne had become a fitting symbol on which the United Nations, all the citizens of the United Nations, can say to their soldiers today, 'we are proud of you' as it is my great privilege to say to you man to man to the 101st Division with all its attached units, I am awfully proud of you. To me, a boy soldier, this was a turning point in my becoming a 'man in a soldier's uniform.'

Fanny Hand
Women's Army Corps (WAC)
Fanny
Hand
DIVISION: Women's Army Corps (WAC)
BIRTHPLACE: Wilson, Pennsylvania
HIGHEST RANK: E-5 Sgt.
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
0
0
MILITARY HONORS: Good Conduct Medal
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Fanny was born in Wilson, Pennsylvania, the third child of George and Karin (Von Hadeln) Stürup. They were Danish and from the Copenhagen, Denmark nobility. They had 4 children, Inger, Jens, Fanny, and Nina Stürup. When Fanny was still a little baby, they moved to Ashtabula, Ohio, where her mother became an opera singer. Her father saw the Depression coming so he bought a farm in New York State (3 miles from Bemus Point, NY, extreme western New York). She loved living on the farm, and especially loved her horses. In 1944, she joined the Army (as a WAC). She worked in the Parachute School in Fort Benning, Georgia. Later, she was transferred to the Pentagon in Washington D.C. where she worked in the secretary pool. Her highest rank was E-5/SGT. Her enlistment was up in November 1946 and she was awarded the Good Conduct Medal. During her time in the service, she met her future husband, Lorand B. Hand at Fort Benning, Georgia. Four years later they were married in Hays, Kansas on March 11, 1950. She attended the Fort Hays State College (on her G.I. Bill). The family moved to Topeka, Kansas where she would later graduate from Washburn University. Franny was married to Lorand for 55 years until his passing in September of 2004. Courtesy of dovetopeka.com

Thomas F. Hannan
Army
Thomas
F.
Hannan
DIVISION: Army,
Company K, 394th Infantry Regiment, 99th Infantry Division
Mar 6, 1920 - Jun 13, 2008
BIRTHPLACE: Brockton, MA
HIGHEST RANK: PFC
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Mar 8, 1944 -
0
Nov 29, 1945
0
HONORED BY: The children of PFC Hannan - Thomas, Patricia and Susan

BIOGRAPHY

While on patrol on December 18, 1944, PFC Thomas Hannan was captured by the Germans. The Germans took his unit of about 15 men and marched them to a prison camp (without their boots). They were loaded onto boxcars and taken to Stalag 13 in Hammelburg, Germany. Hannan was assigned to a 'work commando' and taken to the forest near Burgsinn where he and about 50 other soldiers cut down trees for the 'cause' under armed guard. They were housed in the unheated attic of a farmhouse and given only two meals a day (mostly root soup, bread and water). Each night the guards would take their boots and pants to keep them from escaping. Throughout their time at the work camp, the soldiers were becoming weaker and sicker. Tom's weight dropped from 165 lbs. to under 100 lbs. On April 1, 1945, the German soldiers ordered them on a forced march to get back to another prison camp. The German guards were ordered to get the GIs to a new prison camp and then return to the front since the Allied forces were advancing. To delay their reporting to the front, the guards zigzagged through towns instead of going directly. For 17 days they marched them. Tom became very ill and weak, and by April 14 he couldn't see. Other American prisoners carried him for three days. Finally on April 18th, American troops arrived in the town where they were sleeping and liberated them. Tom was rushed to a field hospital. Suffering from Diptheria, he had emergency surgery to remove the membrane covering his throat. The doctors said he would not have survived 12 more hours without treatment. He was evacuated to four more hospitals until he was returned to Cushing General Hospital in Framingham, Massachusetts. By the time he arrived, he was completely paralyzed. He remained there for seven and a half months recovering from diptheria and paralysis. He was honorably discharged at the hospital on November 19, 1945. Thomas Hannan passed away at the age of 88 in 2008, surrounded by his loving family. In the end, he stated to all of us, 'I've had a great life!'

PRISONER OF WAR
Cecil A. Hansen
Marine Corps
Cecil
A.
Hansen
DIVISION: Marine Corps
BIRTHPLACE: McLouth, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
0
0
HONORED BY: Daughter, Mary Smith and Ruth Wilcox

BIOGRAPHY

Cecil Hansen served 30 years in the marines. He was stationed in Hawaii on December 7, 1941. He served with the Marines in the South Pacific the rest of the war and retired in 1950. He moved his family to Enterprise, Kansas, in 1951 and is laid to rest with other family members in the Mount Hope Cemetery south of Enterprise.

Otis A. Hansohn
Army
Otis
A.
Hansohn
DIVISION: Army,
195th AAA AW Bn
May 3, 1912 - Jul 6, 1988
BIRTHPLACE: Sheboygan, Wisconsin
SERVED: Mar 20, 1942 -
0
Nov 8, 1945
0
HONORED BY: His daughter, Nancy Hansohn

BIOGRAPHY

With the Bronze Star he was awarded for service in the break-through at St. Lo, Lt. Otis Hansohn received the following citation: 'In providing anti-aircraft defense for the 78th Arm'd FA Bn, during the period between June 7 and July 31, 1944, Lt. Hansohn did perform meritorious and heroic service in combat by exemplary leadership. During engagements with enemy aircraft and actual contact with enemy infantry and tanks, Lt. Hansohn, without regard for his own personal safety, made continual checks of the guns of his platoon, giving the men confidence and assuring himself that all guns were being manned and directed against the enemy. That Lt. Hansohn's entire service during this period brought his platoon to a high state of training and his presence at the guns under enemy fire gave the men confidence and raised their morale which enabled them to man their guns in a most efficient manner. The heroic action by Lt. Hansohn contributed materially in repulsing the counter-attack and inflicting considerable damage on both enemy personnel and material.'

Andrew J. Harkness
Army
Andrew
J.
Harkness
DIVISION: Army,
970 ClCDetachment
Jan 3, 1920 - Apr 12, 2013
BIRTHPLACE: Caney, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Oct 19, 1945 -
0
Mar 12, 1947
0
HONORED BY: Staff of the Kansas Veterans' Home

BIOGRAPHY

I was in a Counter Intelligence Unit placed in Germany for the purpose of trying to find principles of the German Government who were still alive; whom we could detain and prosecute. There were still a lot of people, for instance, who belonged to the Gestapo who had either deserted or been released; still causing trouble and who were in reality still at war or trying to get out of Germany. I am unable to recall the names of any of the detainees. I experienced both dangerous and tragic events.

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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