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Showing Results 1481 - 1488 of 1488

Louis Zamperini
Army Air Corps
Louis
Zamperini
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
372nd Bomb Squadron
Jan 26, 1917 - Jul 2, 2014
BIRTHPLACE: Olean, NY
HIGHEST RANK: Captain
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: 1941 -
1
Sep 21, 2022
0
MILITARY HONORS: Distinguished Flying Cross
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Louis Zamperini, was the son of first generation Italian immigrants born on January 26, 1917 in Olean New York. When Louis was a toddler the Zamperini family relocated to Torrance, California. Growing up in Torrance, Louis was noted for a lot of things and running was one of them. Zamperini became known as the "Torrance Tornado" - taking after his older brother Pete who was already a track star Louis began to break records for long distance running. His talent awarded him a scholarship to the University of Southern California. At the age of 19 years old he qualified for the 1936 Olympics held in Berlin Germany. He would compete in the 5000 meter race and place 8th overall but his impressive finish garnished the attention of many spectators.

After the Olympics, Zamperini returned to USC where in 1938, he set a national collegiate mile record that stood for 15 years .In September of 1941, Louis Zamperini enlisted in the United States Army Air Forces serving as a bombardier on the B-24 Liberator "Super Man" with the 372nd Bomb Squadron. After flying several missions, on May 27, 1943 his aircraft went down due to mechanical failure. Stranded for 47 days in the Pacific Ocean, Zamperini and the only other surviving crew member ,Pilot Russ Philips, were captured by the Japanese Navy after their raft reached the Marshall Islands.

"For forty-seven days Louis Zamperini drifted idly in the Pacific Ocean. Armed with a few small tins of drinking water, a flare gun, some fishing line, and a couple of Hershey D-Ration candy bars, Zamperini and two other soldiers struggled to stay alive. Their struggle was exacerbated by vicious sharks, blistering heat, treacherous swells, and Japanese fighter pilots. For most people, this experience would undoubtedly be the most challenging of their lives. For Zamperini, it was not even the most difficult of the war." - US National Archives December 24, 2014

The then-75 pounds Zamperini was held for six weeks on Kwajalein Atoll and transferred to multiple interrogation centers and Prisoner of War camps. For two long years he suffered psychological and physical abuse at the hands of cruel prison guards and the sadistic Sgt. Mutsuhiro “The Bird” Watanabe. He was declared dead to his parents in a June 1943 telegram. Meanwhile, the former track star, Watanabe’s “number one prisoner,” was spared from execution but served as a propaganda tool. When he refused to comply after being forced to make radio broadcasts at the Ofuna interrogation center, he was immediately sent back to Watanabe on the mainland and subjected to more abuse." Liberation finally took place in September 1945. After years of malnourishment and torture, Zamperini could not be a runner anymore. After finding solace in Christianity at a Billy Graham sermon, however, he returned to Japan as a missionary in 1950 and forgave his former captors imprisoned at Sugamo. Watanabe, one of the top 40 war criminals in Japan sought by America, refused to meet him. Zamperini later travelled across the US as an inspirational speaker and established the Victory Boys Camp, a wilderness camp for troubled youths. Fifty years after breaking the National High School mile record, Zamperini made a triumphant return to the Los Angeles Coliseum to carry the Olympic torch in 1984. In 1988, he ran a leg of the Olympic torch relay at the Nagano winter games." Zamperini recounts his story in two autobiographies, both titled Devil at My Heels, published in 1956 and 2003. His story was also documented in Laura Hillenbrand’s biography Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption and the 2014 film Unbroken directed by Angelina Jolie. The University of Southern California dedicated the Louis Zamperini Plaza in honor of the “Torrance Tornado. Courtesy of Vantage Point, Veteran's Administration & WW II Uncovered

Lloyd W. Zenor
Army
Lloyd
W.
Zenor
DIVISION: Army,
112th Cavalry RCT
Jan 2, 1926 -
BIRTHPLACE: Boone County, IA
HIGHEST RANK: Staff Sergeant
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Sep 1, 1944 -
0
Oct 1, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Children of SSgt Zenor
Paul E. Zernickow
Army
Paul
E.
Zernickow
DIVISION: Army,
Battery B, 335th Artillery, 87th Division (Golden Acorn)
May 2, 1923 - Aug 24, 1994
BIRTHPLACE: Chapman, KS
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Feb 9, 1943 -
0
Feb 2, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Wife Harriet Scott Zernickow

BIOGRAPHY

Paul was inducted on February 9, 1943 at Fort Leavenworth Kansas. He was sent to Camp McCain, Mississippi and became a member of Battery B-335th Field Artillery Battalion of the 87th Infantry Division, (The Golden Acorn Division). Since he had been a truck driver he was assigned to be a tractor driver that pulled a 155 howitzer. Following completion of basic training at Camp McCain they were sent to Tennessee for maneuvers. In January 1944, after the completion of the maneuvers, the division went to Fort Jackson, South Carolina for further training. In October 1944, the division shipped out and arrived in Camp Kilmer, New Jersey on October 12 to prepare for shipment to Europe. They arrived in Liverpool, England and then went by L.S.D. to France. They arrived at Metz, France on December 6, 1944. They went into battle in the final days of the Battle of the Bulge and continued to push the Germans back. They moved into Belgium the 29th of December 1945. The Germans were withdrawing and the division advanced to Luxemburg. The division entered Germany in March having crossed the Rhine River. When V.E. day was declared the division was sent back to the states for a 30 day furlough, arriving in New York on July 17, 1945. They were then to take 6 weeks training at Fort Benning, Georgia and then be sent to the Pacific. V.J. day came while they were on furlough. Paul reported to Fort Benning, the division was deactivated and Paul was sent to Fort Dix, New Jersey until he had enough points for discharge. He was discharged February 2, 1946 and returned to Abilene. He went to work for Robson oil station at 1st and Cedar. In 1953, Robson bought a gasoline transport. Since Paul had driven transport for Clyde Haynes before he went to the service, he quit the station. He drove gas transport for Robson for nearly 40 years. He and Harriet were Star Mail Route contractors for 25 years. Paul married Harriet Ellen Stott in August 1944. They had 2 sons, 6 grandsons and 5 great-grandchildren.

Onofrio Zicari
Army
Onofrio
Zicari
DIVISION: Army,
5th Amphibious Brigade
BIRTHPLACE: Geneva, NY
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
BATTLE: D-Day, Battle of the Bulge
MILITARY HONORS: Purple Heart
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Onofrio "NoNo" Zicari was born in 1923 in Geneva, NY. He enlisted in 1942 and his training for the service was in California. Zicari was stationed in Scotland then Wales, later seeing fighting in France, Belgium, and Luxembourg but one battle had a big impact on him, D-Day at Omaha Beach. He was in the 5th wave to go onshore. It was brutal and where he saw his first dead soldier. Zicari was in charge of bringing supplies to shore and setting up a supple line. Back in the states, Zicari lived in Los Angeles and was a deliveryman during the 1992 Rodney King riots. He was given a patch or armband to wear and had no troubles from the rioters. Courtesy of reviewjournal.com and Memoirs of WW II.

VIDEOS

Leo V. Ziegler
Navy
Leo
V.
Ziegler
DIVISION: Navy
Feb 11, 1924 -
BIRTHPLACE: Hays, KS
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Aug 11, 1944 -
0
Jun 26, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Rubina (Braun) Ziegler; Children: 1 son, 1 daughter, and 3 stepsons

BIOGRAPHY

I served on the USS Mellena. It was an attack cargo ship. We were in the Hawaiian Islands, Philippine Islands, and we crossed the Equator. We were also in China, Japan, and many more.

Dale Zingg
Army
Dale
Zingg
DIVISION: Army,
460th Engineer Depot Company
May 16, 1921 -
BIRTHPLACE: Leland, IA
HIGHEST RANK: Technician 5th Grade
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Jun 13, 1942 -
0
Dec 22, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Terry L. Sorenson

BIOGRAPHY

After this enlistment at Fort Des Moines, Tec 5 Zingg was transferred to Fort Sill, Oklahoma for Artillery Basic Training. After this training, he was transferred to Camp Carson, Colorado where the 460th Engineer Depot Company was formed and was training. Tec 5 Zingg was a driver of a 2 1/2 ton truck. His company landed at Oran, Algeria on March 21, 1943. They operated the Oran engineer depot until August 1944. Then his company was part of the invasion force of Southern France (Operation Dragoon), landing on August 25, 1944. The engineer depot opened force supply points for the Seventh U.S. Army during the push north through the Rhone Valley. Then the company established its base camp in the Browning Firearms Factory in Brussels, Belgium.

Tommy Zouzas
Tommy J. Zouzas
Army
Tommy
J.
Zouzas
DIVISION: Army,
82nd Airborne
Sep 19, 1920 - Mar 3, 2015
BIRTHPLACE: Atchison, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: Private but he was a sergeant but got busted back after several days of unauthorized leave
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: 1942 -
1
1945
1
BATTLE: Places he served: Casablanca, Morocco Constantine, Algeria Bizerte, Tunisia Naples, Italy Battles he was in: Cassino, Italy Beaches of Anzio Italy Grave, Belgium Battle of the Bulge in Belgium Cologne, Germany to the Elb river where they met the Russians Berlin as occupation troops until the end of the war.
MILITARY HONORS: Purple Ribbon and others. We don't know what the medals stand for.
HONORED BY: His children: Mark Zouzas, Morea Zouzas Charvat, Neal Zouzas, Diana Zouzas

BIOGRAPHY

The following two paragraphs are from Tommy Zouzas's memoirs in 'Tales from a Devil in Baggy Pants'.

"After my jump in Holland, I broke my lower leg. I was sent to England and was a casualty, lying on a stretcher, when a friend gave me two new 6 x 4 foot German flag with a large swastika in the center. As a doctor was looking me over, he saw the flags, and in an excited voice he said, "What would you take for one of those flags?" I instantly answered with "A bottle of Scotch!" Here we were, a hundred miles behind the lines and within a few minutes he retuned with the scotch!"

"One time in Germany, I had some prisoners to move to another location. It so happened that I marched them past a small town that most of them had lived in before. As we went by the town, word got out to their families and friends that we were coming. So the whole village surrounded us -- hugging, crying and making a hell of a scene. I didn't know what to do. My first thought was to start shooting into them or above to scare them off. I was confused so I did nothing which turned out to be the best solution. As far as I could determine after the melee was over I hadn't lost any prisoners that could have melted into the crowd."

"In all of us, there is some of us" 

(I woke up saying the above. I don't know why or how this occurred.)

Dad was in school at Kansas State University where he was on the football team when the war broke out. He quit school and joined the army. He liked adventure so he decided to become a paratrooper. He loved the choice he made and had lots of adventures! He was very lucky and able to come home at the end of the war. He went back to his Hometown of Ellsworth where he met Christine Foster. They were married in 1947 and were married for 66 years. They died within 7 weeks of each other. Dad worked in several businesses over the years in Ellsworth. Dad was always a great provider and a wonderful dad to his 4 children. We were lucky to have him as our dad! Our dad was always very proud of his service and the contribution that he and his fellow soldiers made for freedom! He was able to go to Normany, France for the 50th reunion of the invasion of Normandy where he jumped again! A few years ago a young paratrooper took our dad's ashes to Normandy and spread them on the beach!

Other Service Documents

Ernest Zust
Army
Ernest
Zust
DIVISION: Army
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
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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