Image
WWII,DDE
Image
Ike Logo
Image
DDAY
Image
Ike Logo

Stories from the Greatest Generation

Image
D Day
Image
Ike Logo

A Virtual World War II Honor Roll

Search

Filter Your Results

empty

empty e. empty empty

empty

EMPTY
E.
EMPTY
EMPTY

Jan 1, 2000 - Jan 1, 2000
BIRTHPLACE: empty

SOLDIER DETAILS

HIGHEST RANK: empty
DIVISION: empty,
empty
THEATER OF OPERATION: empty
SERVED: Jan 1, 2000 -
DISCHARGED: Jan 1, 2000
BATTLE: empty
MILITARY HONORS: empty
HONORED BY: empty

VIDEOS

empty

BIOGRAPHY

empty
empty

Search Results

Showing Results 649 - 656 of 1475

Ralph E. Hossfeld
Army
Ralph
E.
Hossfeld
DIVISION: Army
SERVED: Mar 23, 1943 -
0
0
HONORED BY: Eisenhower Foundation
Marion J. Hottman
Army
Marion
J.
Hottman
DIVISION: Army,
16th Infantry
BIRTHPLACE: Detroit, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Aug 4, 1942 -
0
Feb 2, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Hottman Family

BIOGRAPHY

Marion J. Hottman entered WW II in 1942 from Detroit, KS, Dickinson County, reporting to Fort Leavenworth, KS. He served as a rifleman of an infantry squad in combat in the Philippine Islands and Japan.

During his tour, in addition to his combat as a rifleman, he also performed duties as a lineman on communications poles. He also served as a Military Policeman.

Awards included: American Service Medal, Asiatic Pacific Service Medal, Philippine Liberation Ribbon, World War II Victory Medal and Good Conduct Medal.

He was discharged on 2 Feb. 1946.

Dana E. Hough Jr.
Navy
Dana
E.
Hough
Jr.
DIVISION: Navy
Aug 30, 1927 - Mar 1, 2005
BIRTHPLACE: Ottawa, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Jul 7, 1945 -
0
Aug 2, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Wife Norma Hough
David L. Houlton
Navy
David
L.
Houlton
DIVISION: Navy,
Company 787
Jan 12, 1926 -
BIRTHPLACE: Abilene, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: Seaman First Class
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
SERVED: Jul 12, 1944 -
0
Apr 20, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Catherine Houlton

BIOGRAPHY

I was sworn into the Navy in Kansas City on July 12, 1944. Then I was sent to Farrigut, Idaho for 13 weeks of basic training. We fought 13 forest fires in Idaho and Washington.

Then I was sent to Hawthorne, Nevada with 124 other general duty men. They put us to work making ballistic rockets for the Navy and I was frozen to that base for the duration.

After my discharge as a Seaman First Class, I worked in various grocery stores until I bought my own in 1961 in Abilene. I sold that in 1975 and worked at various jobs until my retirement.

I was married to Catherine Sanders on June 9, 1946 after my discharge from the Navy. We have two sons: Steve and Mike

Robert D. Houlton
Navy
Robert
D.
Houlton
DIVISION: Navy
Oct 13, 1926 -
BIRTHPLACE: Abilene, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
SERVED: Mar 5, 1945 -
0
Aug 22, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

I was discharged in August 1946, awarded an American Theater Medal, and worked in Abilene, Kansas for some time on the farm. Moved self and family to California in 1959. Spent most of my working life in the insurance business. I retired in California.

Clara Houtz Lawson
Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service (WAVES) Navy
Clara
Houtz Lawson
DIVISION: Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service (WAVES) Navy,
Wave Quarter D and I in Washington DC
BIRTHPLACE: Abilene, KS
HIGHEST RANK: Seaman 2nd Class
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
SERVED: Jan 1, 1943 -
0
Nov 19, 1945
0
HONORED BY: American Legion Post #180 of Hebron, NE

BIOGRAPHY

Clara Houtz was born in Abilene, KS in 1913. She attended Talmage schools through High School. In 1933 she joined Job-Seekers and went to Denver to work for a Jewish Family for $5.00 a week plus room and board. Bettering herself she eventually worked as a maid, in invalid care, a family bakery, a commercial bakery and the Denver munitions plant. Clara joined the U.S. Navy Waves in 1943. After boot camp in Hunters College she was stationed at Wave Quarters D and I in Washington D. C. where she made pastries for the Pentagon.  She was discharged as a Baker Second Class. Clara went back to Colorado and received a Bachelor of Arts Degree in 1950. She served for the Nebraska Cooperative Extension Service for 28 years. She married Clarence Lawson in 1969 and had tree step sons and one step daughter. Clara departed this life in June 2013 at age 99.

 

Other Service Documents

Charles N. Howard Sr.
Army Air Corps
Charles
N.
Howard
Sr.
DIVISION: Army Air Corps
Jul 28, 1924 -
BIRTHPLACE: Fort Scott, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Feb 1, 1942 -
0
Oct 23, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Eisenhower Foundation
Roy E. Howell
Marine Corps
Roy
E.
Howell
DIVISION: Marine Corps,
Signal Battaliion VAC (Fifth Amphibious Corp)
Oct 16, 1925 -
BIRTHPLACE: Elkhart, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Jan 19, 1944 -
0
May 8, 1946
0
HONORED BY: The Howell Family

BIOGRAPHY

Roy Everett Howell was born in Elkart, KS, but grew up in the Felt, Oklahoma and went by his middle name, Everett. He graduated from Felt Oklahoma High School and was drafted when he turned 18. He decided he wanted to be in the Army, taking specialized tests for access to additional military benefits, however when he arrived at the draft office in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma he was put into the Marines. They listed him officially as drafted, discharged and then enlisted, all on the same day of January 19, 1944 so he would be enlisted, not drafted. He was sent to boot camp in San Diego for 6 weeks and then his unit was assigned to stay another month for mess duty. He then went to communication school, afterwards was send to Camp Pendleton for combat training and then got sent back to San Diego and was shipped out to Hawaii shortly after. While in boot camp, he qualified as a Marksman on the M1 rifle, which earned him $5 more per month in pay. After boot camp he was stationed at Camp Caitlin in Oahu, Hawaii in a temporary tent city between Honolulu and Pearl Harbor. On December 25th, 1944 he boarded a troopship and arrived on February 19th, 1945 to begin his first tour of duty and start the invasion of Iwo Jima, Volcano Islands. He was wounded in action on February 23rd, 1945 when a mortar shell landed 10 feet from the fox hole he was in and went underground and burned him in the face, right arm and hands. He was transported to the hospital and was told to stay inside for a week due to the visibility of his white bandages, which caused him to work on the field telephone switchboard and manned the ship to shore radio teletype. There were two American flags raised on Iwo Jima, and Everett helped the infantry man put the flag in his backpack who raised the first flag. He told Everett that he was going to put the flag on top of the hill (Mount Suribachi). After two to three weeks, he made it to the top, and tied the flag to the butt of his rifle and put the bayonet end in the sand, however, just as he did that a Japanese soldier crawled out of his cave with a hand grenade and that was the end of the infantry man and his flag. Later, Everett witnessed the second famous raising of the American flag on Mount Suribachi. He was about 200 yards down below it and he looked and said 'look there that d*** fool is putting up a flag.’ When he looked back he could see a little more clearly that there were five men instead of one. He later learned one of those five men was a Navajo when he met that Navajo’s grandson. On March 16, 1945 he left Iwo Jima and travelled by troopship back to Maui, Hawaii until after the atomic bombs were dropped on Japan and boarded troopships back to Japan. He went ashore Japan on September 22, 1945 and served again stringing telephone wire until January 4th, 1946. He then was sent to China from January 7th, 1946 until April 8th, 1946 to prepare it for occupation. He stayed in former Japanese barracks the six months he was in Japan and in China. His job was still to string telephone wire during both of these times on Japan and China. His battalion job’s was disarmament to get the Japanese out and prepare the islands for occupation by Army troops which would arrive later. On April 8th he boarded another troopship to bring him home. He was awarded the Purple Heart and was Honorably Discharged on May 8th, 1946. On the day he was discharged he was awarded his Corporal status. In the total of the 20 months he served, 6 months of it was spent on the troopships on the sea traveling. To this day he does not like the water.

He was married to Carol Jean Borden on May 18, 1950 two days after graduating from Panhandle State University. They had 4 children; Everly, Danny, Larry and Debbie. His brother T. J. (Thomas John) Howell served in the Army in the Korean War from 1952 ' 1953. Another brother, Cecil Howell served in the Army in WW II from 1943 ' 1945.

empty

empty e. empty empty

empty

EMPTY
E.
EMPTY
EMPTY

Jan 1, 2000 - Jan 1, 2000
BIRTHPLACE: empty

SOLDIER DETAILS

HIGHEST RANK: empty
DIVISION: empty,
empty
THEATER OF OPERATION: empty
SERVED: Jan 1, 2000 -
DISCHARGED: Jan 1, 2000
BATTLE: empty
MILITARY HONORS: empty
HONORED BY: empty

VIDEOS

empty

BIOGRAPHY

empty
empty

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.

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

Guildhall Address, London, June 12, 1945