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Showing Results 401 - 408 of 1458

Elmer A. Ettridge
Army
Elmer
A.
Ettridge
DIVISION: Army,
161st Field Artillery Regiment, 35th Division
Oct 10, 1920 - Jul 2, 2002
BIRTHPLACE: Hope, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: SSGT
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Sep 2, 1942 -
0
Nov 5, 1945
0
BATTLE: Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, Ardennes-Alsace, and Central Europe.
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Elmer Ettridge was born to Anson and Marie Altman Ettridge in Hope, Kansas on October 10, 1920. He attended Hope schools and graduated in 1937. He attended Wichita Business College. He entered service in the Army in September of 1942. He was in the 161st Field Artillery Regiment, 35th Division. His highest rank was staff sergeant. The 35th Division began training in April 1943 at Fort Rucker, Alabama. The division arrived in England in May 1944, and returned to the United States in November 1945. The 35th Infantry Division and the 161st Field Artillery fought in five campaigns—Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, Ardennes-Alsace, and Central Europe. In November of 1947 he married Iva Obermeyer in Herrington, Kansas. They spent their lives operating a farm. They had at least two daughters, two grandsons, and a great-grandson. Ettridge attended Hope United Methodist Church, was a member of the American Legion, former director of the Co-op Board, and served as sexton for the Pilgrim Hope Cemetery. Courtesy fold3.com, newspapers.com, findagrave.com, en.wikipedia.org

Russell G. Evans
Army Air Corps
Russell
G.
Evans
DIVISION: Army Air Corps
Aug 25, 1904 - Jun 9, 1973
BIRTHPLACE: White City, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: Sargent
THEATER OF OPERATION: Other
SERVED: May 6, 1942 -
0
Jun 9, 1943
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Son of Nellie Kerns and George Evans, Russell Evans was born in 1904 in White City, Kansas. In 1918, the family moved to Solomon from New Cambria, where his father operated a grocery store. He worked for the Bucher Sand Co. at Solomon and Harper, until he was called to serve in the U.S. Army Air Force from May 6, 1942 to June 9, 1943, as a cook, having attained the rank of Sergeant. Know to everyone as BUSS, he was a kind and friendly person and always had a joke to share with many friends. He was the Owner-Operator of Sand Truck for 22 years. He was married to Henrietta Catherine “Kate” Wolfe Evans. Courtesy findagrave.com, fold3.com

Lawrence L. Everley
Navy
Lawrence
L.
Everley
DIVISION: Navy
Dec 29, 1915 - Sep 26, 1995
HIGHEST RANK: LTJG
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Oct 10, 1939 -
0
0
BATTLE: Philippines Netherlands East Indies
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Lawrence Lee Everley was born in 1915 to Hazel Steele and Loyal Leslie Everley. He had two brothers. He joined the Navy in October of 1939 and was assigned serial number 3421465. At the start of the war, he was assigned to the USS Whippoorwill, which was a minesweeper. At the time of the attack at Pearl Harbor, USS Whippoorwill was in Manila Bay in the Philippines. On December 10 Japanese bombers flew overhead and USS Whippoorwill claimed assists in splashing two bombers and sending another one crashing on shore nearby. A Japanese bomb struck USS Peary and the wharf. Under extremely hazardous conditions, the USS Whippoorwill towed the ship out of further danger. On the last day of February in 1942, the USS Whippoorwill assisted the British merchant ship SS City of Manchester, which had been attacked by a Japanese submarine. From mid-May to late August the USS Whippoorwill conducted local patrols and guardship operations in the shipping channels and harbors off the coast of Freemantle, Australia. By November 1942. Everley joined the USS Gold Star, which served as a coastal cargo carrier, steaming between such Australian ports as Brisbane, Sydney, and Fremantle. She thus contributed importantly to strengthening Australia and to checking the Japanese advance in New Guinea. After August 1943, the ship continued her coastal operations in Australia, but also began a series of cargo voyages to New Guinea and the Admiralty Islands. USS Gold Star brought many loads of vital supplies to Milne Bay as the Allies began the push toward the Philippines. By April of 1944, Everley was assigned to USS YMS-481. In a Navy interview conducted in 1945, Everley described the actions of the minesweeper, on which he served as Executive Officer, Ensign D-V(G). They spent three months conducting minesweeping operations near San Francisco and after that they proceeded to the Pacific Theater. Their first action was the attack of Mindoro, Philippines, on December 15, 1944, during which they were attacked several times by enemy aircraft but sustained no significant damage. USS YMS-481 returned to Leyte and prepared for the invasion of Lingayen, where they conducted minesweeping operations three days before the invasion. Everley recounts that they were often under attack, although most of the kamikazes targeted larger ships. He also describes how the shore bombardment made the crew nervous. The interviewer asked if they were attacked by suicide boats. Everley replied, “We, ourselves, didn’t but there was a destroyer that was brought under attack by suicide boats. I think that is the first time that they had found the suicide boat and it was more or less a novelty then. They caught everyone by surprise.” Next came the invasion of Palawan, then back to Mindoro, then invasions of Cebu City and Behel, all in the Philippines. The minesweeper then moved to the invasion of Tarakan, Borneo, in the Netherlands East Indies. Tarakan was a smaller island and as such the invasion force was moderately small. As in previous invasions, YMS-481 arrived prior to the battle to sweep for mines. On D-day there was very little opposition. On D-Day plus one, Everley describes the minesweeping operations: “There were to be two different groups of minesweepers, one group sweeping magnetic and the other group sweeping the Oropesa type. The Oropesa minesweepers were in front and they swept up the channel, swept clear up to this point where we later met our Waterloo. They swept within two hundred yards of the beach there. The Japanese let them go right ahead and make their sweep and we came in behind them with our magnetic gear out. There was five ships in a column, we were the third ship. The first two ships passed the point and we had got just abeam or a little aft abeam of the point when the Japanese opened fire with shore batteries. They evidently had us spotted in because only one shot missed, which was the first one, and it was very close, and after that it was just one shot right after the other. In about two or three minutes time the ship was completely out of control and burning, the engine room had a couple hits, the generator room had one hit knocking out all the power which made it impossible to fight the fires.” He later continues, “The Australian Air Force arrived in American planes and made several strafing runs on the beach, but it took, well, altogether I think about a half hour before the batteries were silenced or they quit firing, anyway. In the meantime, we were all in the water. We had abandoned ship. They had a hit on our fantail and our depth charges blew up, blew the whole fantail off the ship. We continued floating, burning, drifting away from the point all the time. About fifteen minutes later the main magazine went up. It blew the superstructure, practically gutted the ship but it still floated. We continued burning about a half hour or so after that, and I guess a fuel tank went up just at sundown and the ship sank then.” Everley describes how most everyone was off the ship except for the captain and a few others. The force of the explosion blew them off the ship, but “didn’t injure any body any more than they were already.” He recounts that Japanese soldiers fired at survivors close to the beach, but no one was hit. In the attack, one crew member was killed, five were missing, and eight wounded. Two landing craft from the USS Cofer came and picked up the crew, some not until the next day, and one man, Albert Otto from Texas, who made it to the thick jungle shore, was picked up three days later. After the war, Everley was married by 1946. He and his wife had a son and daughter. Courtesy fold3.com, findagrave.com, newspapers.com

Leland C. Ewalt
Army
Leland
C.
Ewalt
DIVISION: Army
Nov 2, 1923 - May 7, 2014
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Nov 19, 1943 -
0
Feb 8, 1946
0
MILITARY HONORS: Bronze Star, Bronze Arrowhead and a Purple Heart
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Leland Ewalt was born on November 2, 1923 on the family farm near Knox City, Missouri, the son of John Edward, Jr. and Vern Snell Ewalt. He attended rural school and graduated from the Knox City High School. He served his country during WWII in the United States Army, from November 1943 to February 1946. He was assigned serial number 37627454. He was a rifleman in the 167 Infantry Regiment in the battles of New Guinea and the Philippines. He received a Bronze Star, Bronze Arrowhead and a Purple Heart for wounds received on August 11, 1944 in the Asiatic Pacific Theater. Leland grew up on the family farm and continued to live there his entire life, he worked more than 60 years in the United Sates Post Office, as a Rural Carrier, out of Knox City, Missouri. He enjoyed the lifelong friends he made on his route and was a history buff, keeping clippings and pictures of the more memorable events. Leland was a member of the Knox City American Legion Post #358, Colony Masonic Lodge, receiving a 50-year pin and the Rural Postal Carriers Association.

William H. Ewert Mr
Army
William
H.
Ewert
Mr
DIVISION: Army,
Battery C, 82nd Field Artillery Battalion
Aug 12, 1926 - Jul 4, 2022
BIRTHPLACE: Vivian Township, Waseca County, MN
HIGHEST RANK: Technician 5th Class
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Dec 9, 1944 -
0
May 15, 1946
0
HONORED BY: All of his family

BIOGRAPHY

Bill served his country in the U.S. Army toward the end of WWII with Battery C, of the 82nd Field Artillery Battalion, from 9 December, 1944, to 15 May, 1946. He was a truck driver involved with the cleaning up prison camps in Japan and the Philippines and attained the rank of Technician 5th Class.

Earle D. Ewing
Navy
Earle
D.
Ewing
DIVISION: Navy
Aug 28, 1927 - Aug 5, 1982
BIRTHPLACE: Council Grove, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: S2c
THEATER OF OPERATION: Other
SERVED: Aug 14, 1945 -
0
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Earle Ewing was born in Council Grove, Kansas in 1927. He served in the Navy and was assigned number 343-94-37. He was reached the rank of seaman apprentice. He served aboard LSM-456, a medium landing ship. After his service he worked for the Southwestern Pacific Railroad. He married Elsie Hammers Ewing in 1972. He had two sons, two daughters, and two grandchildren. Courtesy newspapers.com, fold3.com, findagrave.com.

Earl A. Ewing
Navy
Earl
A.
Ewing
DIVISION: Navy
Mar 28, 1919 - Apr 23, 2001
BIRTHPLACE: Salina, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: M2
THEATER OF OPERATION: Other
SERVED: Feb 6, 1943 -
0
Nov 23, 1945
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Earl Ewing was born to Bobbie Starks and Earl Ewing in Salina, Kansas in 1919. He had an adopted sister Phyllis Ewing Webber. Ewing was a 2nd Class Petty Officer metalsmith in the U.S. Navy. He was married to Velma Koestel Hipp and they had one daughter, Marlys Ewing Atteberry. Courtesy fold3.com, findagrave.com, www.elliotmortuary.com.

Arthur L. Eye
Army
Arthur
L.
Eye
DIVISION: Army
Jan 8, 1916 - Jul 17, 1979
BIRTHPLACE: Clay, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: Other
SERVED: Oct 27, 1942 -
0
Nov 8, 1945
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Arthur Eye was born in Clay, Kansas. He served in the army from October 1942 until November 1945. He married Gladys and had a son, daughter, stepdaughter, and three grandchildren. He died in Fort Worth, Texas. Courtesy fold3.com, newspapers.com, findagrave.com

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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