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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 729 - 736 of 1475

Robert Kenney
Army
Robert
Kenney
DIVISION: Army,
116th Infantry
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
BATTLE: D-Day

BIOGRAPHY

116th Infantry on D- Day

Edward C. Kenney
Army
Edward
C.
Kenney
DIVISION: Army,
337th
Aug 3, 1914 - Jul 26, 2012
BIRTHPLACE: Pittsburg, Pennsylvania
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: May 8, 1941 -
0
Jan 5, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Joan Kenney; Children: Kate, Ned, Mary, Bob, and Pat; Grandchildren

BIOGRAPHY

Dad didn't talk much about the war, but he felt strongly enough about the need to defend his country that he joined the US Army Reserves even after the horrors of combat. He retired at the rank of Lt. Col. in 1974. While he was most proud of his CIB and claimed that his Bronze Star was a mistake, his Bronze Star commendation from Col. Oliver Hughes, September 22, 1944, reads differently.

Roy H. Kephart
Army Air Corps
Roy
H.
Kephart
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
381st Bomb Group
Jan 11, 1924 - Jun 1, 2006
BIRTHPLACE: Parsons, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
HONORED BY: Sons: CW-4 Marchus, CW-2 Sam, and Brian Kephart

BIOGRAPHY

B-17 pilot. He and his brother left the farm to go serve their country.

Leo Kepka
Leo J. Kepka
Navy
Leo
J.
Kepka
DIVISION: Navy,
Amphibious division of the 5th - Marine Corps
Mar 4, 1926 - May 26, 1986
BIRTHPLACE: Wilson, KS
HIGHEST RANK: Second Class Petty Officer
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Sep 3, 1943 -
0
Apr 26, 1946
0
BATTLE: Iwo Jima
HONORED BY: His children: Terry Kepka, Doug Kepka, Linda Kohls & Cindy Jackson

BIOGRAPHY

Leo Kepka was a radioman for the US Navy in the Pacific theater. He was part of the 5th Division aboard the USS Hansford, Leo's job was to set up communications and to radio out to the line of departure as to how things were going, On Imo Jima, Kepka and his group went ashore on CATS that were like small tanks, they were treaded and would go from the water up unto the shore. His group was to land on Beach Red against heavy shelling. His tank was hit and went down however, Kepka made it to beach and reunited with part of his group.

Leo and two other communication men were in a shell hole with sand bags around the top, working to get a message out, that the Lieutenant in charge had been killed and to send in a new person to command. A mortar exploded on or near the foxhole killing Kepka's two partners and severely wounding him. Dr. Richard Haw the medic that tended to Kepka describes what he found. "Kepka told me to tend to the others first. They looked bad and I would hate to have to describe them to either of their families. Leo had part of his helmet blown away. The shell fragments had gone through and he was bleeding profusely. I put pressure on what I presumed was his carotid artery from the area of the wound. Part of his ear was gone but I couldn't control the bleeding so I took a clamp and put on the carotid artery. That slowed things down." Leo was taken back to the ship. The medic presumed he did not make it but Leo did live and returned home, married and had a family.

See more of Leo Kepka story in attached documents.

Other Service Documents

Paul J. Kerbs
Army
Paul
J.
Kerbs
DIVISION: Army,
94th Signal Battalion
Jun 7, 1923 - Mar 9, 1999
BIRTHPLACE: Lost Springs, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Feb 9, 1943 -
0
Jan 16, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Son, (Dennis Kerbs family)

BIOGRAPHY

My Father was at Omaha Beach on 7 December, 1943. He was at the Battle of the Bulge. He was chosen by General Dwight Eisenhower to be his messenger out of the Bulge. He was in the Signal Corps and was a lineman for telephone and telegraph lines. He constructed those lines for forward divisions and corps, consisting of a number of divisions.

Once he saved his men by getting them to cover and he single handedly shot a German plane down with his M-1 Rifle. He rarely talked about his wartime years but we did hear stories about his feet being extremely cold in the War and for the rest of his life.
After an honorable discharge, he came home and drove a semi truck for a year then began working at the Hope, Kansas, Meat Locker Plant. He managed it for 40 years. He married Betty A. Noland in 1949 and they had three children; Dennis, Nancy and Mike. He lived his life in Hope, Kansas, and was a member of the Hope City Council, Hope City Fire Department as a volunteer, the Abilene Elks Lodge and the St. Phillips Catholic Church for many years.

Melvin L. Kesler
Navy
Melvin
L.
Kesler
DIVISION: Navy,
USS Hunter and USS Meyers
Nov 9, 1925 -
BIRTHPLACE: McPherson, Kansas
SERVED: Aug 26, 1944 -
0
Jun 18, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Eisenhower Foundation
Melvin L. Kesler
Navy
Melvin
L.
Kesler
DIVISION: Navy,
USS Hunter & USS Meyers
Nov 9, 1925 -
BIRTHPLACE: McPherson, Kansas
SERVED: Aug 26, 1944 -
0
Jun 18, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Eisenhower Foundation
Wayne O. Kester
Army
Wayne
O.
Kester
DIVISION: Army,
Army Veterinary Corps, Army Medical Field Service under the First Cavalry Division
Aug 27, 1906 - Jan 3, 1999
BIRTHPLACE: Cambridge, NE
HIGHEST RANK: Brig. General
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
SERVED: 1933 -
1
1949
1
MILITARY HONORS: Legion an Army Commendation Medal American Defense Medal Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal Victory Medal
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Wayne O. Kester was born in Cambridge, NE. He graduated High School from Cambridge High in 1925 and went on to attend the Nebraska State Teachers College at Chadron NE. His pre-veterinary work and degree of doctor of Veterinary Medicine was with Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS. After two years of general practice in Kansas and Ohio, Kester was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Regular Army Veterinary Corps in July 1933.

Kester's Army career included Army Medical Field Service School, and serving with the First Cavalry Division. In June of 1937 he was reassigned to Walter Reed General Hospital graduating from Army Veterinary School and reported to Seattle WA to serve as port and deport veterinarian until 1939. Kester was reassigned to the Hawaiian Island where he served as port and deport veterinarian until war was declared Dec 7, 1941.He was at Pearl Harbor during the Japanese attack. While stationed at Pearl Harbor, Kester was working on good ways to get fresh food to the troops overseas. During his time there he developed the process for making powdered mild and the process for canning chicken and meat. At the end of the war he was ordered to Washington DC for duty in the Office of the Surgeon General, as chief of the Meat and Dairy Hygiene Branch directing the worldwide Army veterinary food inspection service. See documents for more information about Wayne Kester. Kester is buried at Fort Logan National Cemetery Denver, Co.

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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