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 785 - 792 of 1458

Joseph P. Lavin
Army
Joseph
P.
Lavin
DIVISION: Army,
42 Military Government Hq Co
Oct 5, 1925 -
BIRTHPLACE: Chicago, IL
HIGHEST RANK: Tech 5
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Feb 26, 1945 -
0
Apr 13, 1946
0
HONORED BY: George J. Green

BIOGRAPHY

Upon graduation from high school, Joe, as he was known to his friends, was drafted into the United States Army. He took his basic training at Fort Sheridan, Illinois, and was accepted for additional educational training at the Reconditioning School at the Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Virginia. While there the Japanese surrendered. In October 1945, he was sent to Korea with the 42 Military Governments as a Quartermaster Clerk and promoted to Tech 5 rank. Joe spent most of his time assisting in the control of military equipment for the organization of the US and Korean Military. On 4 April 1946, he returned to the United States and was sent to Camp McCoy, Wisconsin for discharge on 30 April, 1946. He received the Good Conduct, American Theater, Asiatic-Pacific Theater, the WWII Victory, and the Korean Occupation Medal.

Irving 'Larry' M. Lazerus
Army
Irving 'Larry'
M.
Lazerus
DIVISION: Army,
SHAEF
Aug 2, 1917 - Jan 8, 2006
BIRTHPLACE: Springfield, MA
HIGHEST RANK: Master Sergeant
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Jun 11, 1943 -
0
Dec 28, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Daughters, Susan Cohen and Judi Lazerus

BIOGRAPHY

Irving M. 'Larry' Lazerus proudly served his country during World War II as a Master Sergeant on General Eisenhower's staff at Supreme Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) Headquarters. He landed on Utah Beach and was stationed in England, France and Germany. He was Chief Clerk of civilians hired by Supreme Headquarters in France and England. In Germany, he was responsible for the hiring, screening, and paying of all German civilians. He was also responsible for obtaining jobs, under civil service, for American soldiers who elected to remain in Germany as civilians. He spent two years overseas in the European Theater of Operations (ETO) with Headquarters Company, Headquarters Command, Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Forces (SHAEF). He received the following decorations and citations: Good Conduct Medal, WWII Victory Medal, European African Middle-Eastern Theater Campaign Ribbon, and the Bronze Star Medal. The citation on his Bronze Star read: 'Master Sergeant Lazerus, through a high degree of initiative and utmost devotion to duty procured the necessary civilian personnel for Supreme Headquarters to perform the necessary labor, clerical and administrative details. Through initiation of new procedures devised through personal experience he carried out the administration of all civilian personnel of the headquarters in a manner which reflects great credit upon himself and the military service.' He was a member of the American Legion, the Louis Greene Post of the Jewish American War Veterans and a member of the SHAEF Alumni organization. Dad always promised our mother he would take her back and show her the places where he was stationed in Europe during the war. In 1992 he made good on that promise and they returned to England and France on a tour with the SHAEF Alumni organization. When we were children, he never talked about the war. But as he grew older and his short-term memory started failing, his long-term memory became stronger and he talked about the war. In his declining years, when he met someone new, we could always tell if he liked that person by the first thing he said to them . . . If he told them that he had served on General Eisenhower's staff, we knew he liked them.

Achill V. Le Sage
Army
Achill
V.
Le Sage
DIVISION: Army,
Co. I, 358 Reg., 90th Div.
Dec 27, 1923 - May 17, 2010
BIRTHPLACE: Rooks County, KS
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Oct 1, 1943 -
0
Nov 1, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Le Sage Family

BIOGRAPHY

I landed at Utah beach in Normandy on (D + 10) June 16, 1944 and carried a rifle (M1) across France up to Belgium in the 'Battle of the Bulge' and was wounded on January 27, 1945.

John LeBoutillier
Navy
John
LeBoutillier
DIVISION: Navy,
VF-1
Oct 8, 1920 - Jun 6, 1944
BIRTHPLACE: New York City
HIGHEST RANK: Lieutenant
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Apr 8, 1942 -
0
0
HONORED BY: Kris LeBoutillier

BIOGRAPHY

Graduated St. Paul's School, attended Yale. Awarded Air Medal with two Gold Stars, the Order of the Purple Heart, Asiatic-Pacific Area Campaign Medal with three Bronze Stars, and World War II Victory Medal. MIA over Rota Island, Marianas on June 6, 1944. Presumptive date of death February 4, 1946. Hellcat pilot who flew off the Yorktown.

KILLED IN ACTION
Harry R. Ledeker
Navy
Harry
R.
Ledeker
DIVISION: Navy,
Hospital Corp
May 14, 1925 -
BIRTHPLACE: Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: 1943 -
1
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

"Robben" was drafted May, 1943, days after he graduated High School. He served in the US Navy in the South Pacific in the Hospital Corp.

VIDEOS

Marvin L. Ledy
Army
Marvin
L.
Ledy
DIVISION: Army,
738th Tank Battalion
Jul 4, 1923 -
BIRTHPLACE: Upland, CA
HIGHEST RANK: T-5 Corporal
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Mar 4, 1943 -
0
Nov 5, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Wife Lois Ledy and Family

BIOGRAPHY

In December, 1941, Marvin Ledy was a high school student in Miltonvale, Kansas when Pearl Harbor was bombed. He was in the first group of nineteen-year-olds to be drafted from Dickinson County, Kansas. He served our country as a part of the 738th Tank Battalion, from February 1943 until November 1945. Before Marvin was sent for training in Fort Benning, Georgia, he went on a blind date with a beautiful young lady by the name of Lois Hahn (his future wife), to the Plaza Theater in Abilene. They were married in 1944, before Marvin shipped out to Europe. Marvin participated in the Battle of the Bulge, and during this time Lois did not hear from him for six weeks. Marvin was awarded 3 Bronze Stars for Rhineland, Ardennes, Central Europe Campaigns per WDGO 33 & 40, 1945, and the Good Conduct Medal. Marvin and Lois made their home in the Abilene, Kansas, community.

VIDEOS

Philip E. Lee
Army
Philip
E.
Lee
DIVISION: Army,
Company F, 275th Infantry Regiment
Jan 10, 1920 - Mar 4, 2015
BIRTHPLACE: Ashland, Nebraska
HIGHEST RANK: PFC
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: 1944 -
1
1946
1
BATTLE: Rhineland, Central Europe
MILITARY HONORS: Good Conduct Medal, Army of Occupation Medal - Germany, European African Middle Eastern Theater Medal
HONORED BY: Bethanie R. (Lee) HyattGalen W. LeeMelvin R. Lee

BIOGRAPHY

Philip was inducted into service on August 29, 1944 in Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas. His specialty occupation was Truck Driver Light 345. He later became a bodyguard to General Eisenhower.

Other Service Documents

Trafford Leigh-Mallory
Other
Trafford
Leigh-Mallory
DIVISION: Other,
Royal Air FOrce
Jul 11, 1892 - Nov 14, 1944
BIRTHPLACE: Mobberley, England
HIGHEST RANK: Air Command In Chief of SE Asia
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
BATTLE: Battle of Britain, Normandy
MILITARY HONORS: Distinguished Service Order Medal, Knight Commander of the Order of Bath
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Trafford Leigh-Mallory was born on July 11, 1892 in Mobberley, England. He studied law at Magdalene College (where he met Arthur Tedder, future commander of Operation Overlord) and wanted to become a lawyer when the First World War broke out in 1914.Leigh-Mallory was educated at the University of Cambridge, received a commission in the British Army in 1914, and fought in France during World War I. In 1916 he was transferred He joined the Liverpool regiment as an ordinary soldier before becoming an officer, which prevented him from going to the front with his unit. He married in 1915 with Doris Sawyer before going to war in the South Lancashire Regiment: wounded in the Second Battle of Ypres, he asked for his transfer in January 1916 in the Royal Flying Corps, the ancestor of the Royal Air Force (RAF). Six months later, Trafford Leigh-Mallory served at No. 7 Squadron with which he flew reconnaissance flights during the Battle of the Somme. In November 1917, while serving with No. 8 Squadron, he guided artillery and tank fire during the Battle of Cambrai, an action for which he was awarded the prestigious Distinguished Service Order Medal.In November 1938, Trafford Leigh-Mallory became the youngest officer in the Royal Air Force to become Air Vice-Marshal, only forty-six years old. In 1943, he was made Knight and in August of the same year, he was appointed head of the Allied Air Expeditionary Forces as part of the preparation for Operation Overlord. What interests General Eisenhower, commander-in-chief of Overlord and who has chosen him for this position, is Leigh-Mallory’s expertise in the field of joint operations: cooperation and coordination between ground troops and Air forces are one of the keys to success.Leigh-Mallory plans the aerial part of Operation Overlord despite regular intervention by Air Marshal Arthur Tedder, Eisenhower’s deputy. Its primary objective is to fix the German reinforcements before they reach the bridgehead that the Allies set up in Normandy. In order to carry out its mission, it wants to bomb the road knots, marshalling yards and railway lines, as well as many localities in France: Leigh-Mallory accepts the risk that many French civilians are killed under the bombs because it is according to him a sacrifice for the success of the allied armies. It is also responsible for fighting V-1 rocket launch sites as part of Operation Crossbow.In August 1944, the Battle of Normandy was already well engaged and largely under Allied rule, he was appointed head of the air force deployed in Southeast Asia. He then flew with his wife aboard an Avro York November 14, 1944 but following very bad weather the plane crashed in the French Alps. The couple was killed instantly along with ten other people on board. His rival of the Battle of Britain, the Air Marshal Keith Park, is named in his place. He is buried near the place of the accident, in the village of Le Rivier d’Allemont, in Isère (France). Courtesy of D-Day overload.com, Britannica.com and nationslww2museum.com.

PRISONER OF WAR
KILLED IN ACTION

Other Service Documents

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