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Showing Results 537 - 544 of 1594

Vincent M. Gill
Navy
Vincent
M.
Gill
DIVISION: Navy
Jan 22, 1922 - Feb 3, 2015
BIRTHPLACE: Abilene, KS
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
HONORED BY: the Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Vincent Gil was born January 22, 1922 in Abilene, KS. He served as a gunners mate in the United States Navy and took part in D-Day. He also was a boxer while in the Navy. Gil was a lifelong member of the VFW. Courtesy of findagrave.com

Kenneth S. Giniger
Army
Kenneth
S.
Giniger
DIVISION: Army,
SHAEF
Feb 19, 1919 -
BIRTHPLACE: New York City, New York
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Jun 1, 1941 -
0
Feb 1, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Dr. Bernice E. Cullinan
Michael J. Giullian
Army
Michael
J.
Giullian
DIVISION: Army
Apr 27, 1912 - Feb 8, 1944
BIRTHPLACE: Mansfield Massachusetts
HIGHEST RANK: PFC
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Sep 10, 1944 -
0
0
BATTLE: ST LO

BIOGRAPHY

Was wounded at ST Lo on July 30, 1944

KILLED IN ACTION
John H. Glenn
Marine Corps
John
H.
Glenn
DIVISION: Marine Corps,
Marine Fighter Squadron
Jul 18, 1921 - Dec 8, 2016
BIRTHPLACE: Cambridge, OH
HIGHEST RANK: Second Lt.
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
0
0
MILITARY HONORS: 2 Distinguished Flying crossed and 10 Air medals
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

John Herschel Glenn Jr. was born on July 18, 1921, in Cambridge, Ohio, the son of John Herschel Glenn Sr. who worked for a plumbing firm, and Clara Teresa Glenn a teacher. His parents had married shortly before John Sr., a member of the American Expeditionary Force, left for the Western Front during World War I. The family moved to New Concord, Ohio, soon after his birth, and his father started his own business, the Glenn Plumbing Company. Glenn Jr. was only a toddler when he met Anna Margaret (Annie) Castor, whom he would later marry. The two would not be able to recall a time when they did not know each other. He first flew in an airplane with his father when he was eight years old. He became fascinated by flight and built model airplanes from balsa wood kits. Glenn attended New Concord Elementary School. He washed cars and sold rhubarb to earn money to buy a bicycle, after which he took a job delivering The Columbus Dispatch newspaper. He was a member of the Ohio Rangers, an organization similar to the Cub Scouts. Glenn attended New Concord High School, where he played on the varsity football team as a center and linebacker. He also made the varsity basketball and tennis teams and was involved with Hi-Y, a junior branch of the YMCA. After graduating in 1939, Glenn entered Muskingum College (now Muskingum University), where he studied chemistry, joined the Stag Club fraternity, and played on the football team. Annie majored in music with minors in secretarial studies and physical education and competed on the swimming and volleyball teams, graduating in 1942. Glenn earned a private pilot license and a physics course credit for free through the Civilian Pilot Training Program in 1941. He did not complete his senior year in residence or take a proficiency exam, both required by the school for its Bachelor of Science degree. Glenn joined the U.S. Naval Reserve in 1942. He then joined the U.S. Marine Corps in 1943 and flew 59 missions in the South Pacific during World War II. After advanced training at Camp Kearny, California, he was assigned to Marine Squadron VMJ-353, which flew R4D transport planes from there. The fighter squadron VMO-155 was also at Camp Kearny flying the Grumman F4F Wildcat. Glenn approached the squadron's commander, Major J. P. Haines, who suggested that he could put in for a transfer. This was approved, and Glenn was posted to VMO-155 on July 2, 1943, two days before the squadron moved to Marine Corps Air Station El Centro in California. He was promoted to first lieutenant in October 1943, and shipped out to Hawaii in January 1944. VMO-155 became part of the garrison on Midway Atoll on February 21, then moved to the Marshall Islands in June 1944 and flew 57 combat missions in the area. He received two Distinguished Flying Crosses and ten Air Medals. He graduated from the U.S. Naval Test Pilot School at Patuxent River, Maryland, in 1954 and flew on test projects involving the F-8 fighter. He made the first transcontinental flight with an average supersonic speed in 1957 when he flew from California to New York in 3 hours and 23 minutes. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel in 1959. Of the “Mercury Seven,” the U.S. military pilots selected in 1959 to be the first astronauts, Glenn was the oldest. Glenn was selected for the first orbital flight, Mercury-Atlas 6, and on February 20, 1962, his space capsule, Friendship 7, was launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida. Its orbit ranged from approximately 161 to 261 km (100 to 162 miles) in altitude. The flight went mostly according to plan, aside from a faulty thruster that forced Glenn to control Friendship 7 manually. A faulty switch onboard also relayed the inaccurate message to mission control that the heat shield had been released. He was told not to release the pack of retro-rockets on the rear of the spacecraft after they had fired. (Mission control hoped that if the heat shield had been released, the straps of the retrorocket pack would hold the shield long enough for Glenn to survive reentry.) Glenn made three orbits, landing nearly 5 hours after launch in the Atlantic Ocean near Grand Turk island in the Turks and Caicos Islands. He became a national hero. Glenn retired from the space program in 1964 to seek the Democratic nomination for a U.S. Senate seat in Ohio. However, he withdrew from the campaign to recover after an minor accident at home left him with inner ear problems. He left the Marine Corps and became the vice president for domestic corporate development of the soft drink maker Royal Crown Cola International Ltd. in 1965 and later became president of the company. In 1970 he ran for the Senate again but lost narrowly in the primary. He was elected U.S. senator from that state in 1974 and was reelected three times thereafter. Glenn was unsuccessful, however, in his bid to become the 1984 Democratic presidential candidate. Courtesy of britannica.com and wikipedia.com

Norman F. Goeken
Army
Norman
F.
Goeken
DIVISION: Army,
Company F 3118 Signal Service, SHAEF
Aug 21, 1919 - Nov 7, 2014
BIRTHPLACE: Norton County, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: Tec 4
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Aug 20, 1942 -
0
Dec 25, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Daughter Col & Mrs. Neil Johnson

BIOGRAPHY

Norman 'Bud' Goeken enlisted in the U.S. Army on August 20, 1942 to go to Radio Mechanic Signal Corps School in Kansas City for nine months. On May 10, 1943 he was inducted into the Army at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas and sent to Camp Kohler north of Sacramento, California for basic training. After a month, he caught the measles and then had to start training all over again. After basic training, he went to Camp Davis California to Signal Corps School for 23 weeks. He took leave in December and returned home to Kansas for Christmas by train. In February of 1944, he left California on a troop train headed for the war in Europe. The train stopped in WaKeeney, Kansas where he sent a letter home. The troops left Brooklyn, New York February 11, 1944 on a refitted English Luxury Liner protected by a battleship convoy and headed for England arriving on February 23, 1944. He joined the 3118 Signal Service Group attached to General Eisenhower's Supreme Headquarters radio transmitters and receivers on a tennis court where they worked and lived. Buzz Bombs would go over so they dug fox holes. After D-Day, the U.S. Armed Forces moved into France. He left Dover, England on a pontoon boat with trucks and all the equipment with the English Army and WAC personnel and landed on Omaha Beach. From there they drove the trucks off the beach to Versailles, France to an old military camp. The transmitter sight was set up out in the country where they used radio telegraph to communicate with the various armies and back to the USA. He went to Reims, France and set up transmitters after the Battle of the Bulge. On May 7, 1945 German Army officers came into Reims and surrendered. The Signal Corp center was used for the first initial peace treaty between the Germans and the Allied Forces. Shortly after that, he flew to Frankfurt, Germany where he was assigned to the U.S. Occupational Force doing the same transmitter work. At one time he was assigned to set up communication facilities in Moscow but the Russians did not approve. On December 6, 1945, he departed Germany on the Rhine River through Antwerp, Belgium on a Liberty Boat the S/S Irvin MacDowell. On December 20, 1945 he arrived in Boston and was welcomed back home with a steak dinner and night in a hotel room. The next day he took a train to Dallas, Texas to the separation center at Camp Fannin, Texas. He was honorably discharged on Christmas Day, December 25, 1945 and caught a bus back to Norton County, Kansas. He received the EAME Campaign Medal with 3 Bronze Stars, the Good Conduct Medal and the World War II Victory Medal. He married Faye Best on August 17, 1947 in Lenora, Kansas and they moved to Colby, Kansas in November of 1948 where he worked for the Southwestern Bell Telephone Company for 33 years.

Dean L. Goll
Army Air Corps
Dean
L.
Goll
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
15th Air Force, 450th Bomb Group,740th Bombardment Squadron (H)
Aug 11, 1925 -
BIRTHPLACE: Garner Iowa
HIGHEST RANK: Staff Sergeant
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: 1943 -
1
1945
1
BATTLE: 35 air combat missions
MILITARY HONORS: American Campaign Medal, WWII Victory Medal, Air Medal with 3 oak leaf clusters, Good Conduct Medal, European/African/Middle Eastern Campaign Medal
HONORED BY: Goll Family & Steven Briola

BIOGRAPHY

Dean was born on a farm west of Garner Iowa where he grew up and is the oldest of three siblings. His father served during WWI with the Rainbow Division in France. Dean was always crazy about airplanes and just wanted to fly. He also felt the need to serve his country, so he enlisted in the Army Air Corps in pilot training in 1943. He attended basic training in Amarillo TX and passed all tests but was disqualified from pilot training due to missing a digit on one of his fingers. It was felt at the time he would not be able to flip the toggle switches. After being disqualified from pilot training he then went to Tech school at Lowry Airfield in CO. After Tech school he then went to gunnery school at Tyndall Airfield in FL. He then went to Springfield NH where his crew was put together and assigned to B-24 Liberators. He was assigned to the ball turret position. His crew was then sent to Chatham Airfield in GA for extensive crew training. After crew training his crew was sent to Langley Airfield in MA where they were assigned to a brand-new B-24 Liberator and flew overseas to Bari Italy where they were assigned to 15th Air Force, 450th Bomb Group, 740th Bombardment Squadron (H) where he completed his 35 combat missions. His missions were completed at a time when there was fighter escort, and he remembers the first 15 missions they had full canisters of ammunition but after that it was cut in half. On his first mission his first thought was what the heck did I get myself into! but he became a seasoned ball turret gunner. Upon completion of his 35 missions, he returned to the USA and was sent to a base in Santa Ana CA for reassignment and sent to Kerns field in UT and assigned to Administration where he completed his service and was honorably discharged in 1945. His service awards include American Campaign Medal, WWII Victory Medal, Air Medal with 3 oak leaf clusters, Good Conduct Medal and European/African/Middle Eastern Campaign Medal. Dean returned to Garner IA where he then attended college earning a Degree in Associates Science. In 1947 he purchased a trucking company which he ran for 14 years. In that same year he married Doris. Dean and Doris raised a family of 3 boys and 1 girl. In 1961 he purchased 188 acres of land to start farming. He purchased an additional 200 acres in 1964 becoming a full-time farmer until he retired in 1996. When asked what experiences he would like to share about his service time he produced four. (1) he felt every time he climbed down into the ball turret it would become his coffin. If the plane ever went down, he would not have been able to get out by himself and he could not wear a parachute in the turret as there was not enough room, (2) how COLD! it was up there, (3) the FLAK. The sky would be "just black with it, you could walk on it" and (4) he felt he had the best seat in the house on bombing missions. He could watch the bombs drop then disappear and see the explosions on the ground when the bombs hit their target. Dean still calls Iowa home today.

Other Service Documents

Dino Gonzalez
Army
Dino
Gonzalez
DIVISION: Army
Jun 18, 1924 -
BIRTHPLACE: Jackson, California
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Mar 3, 1943 -
0
Feb 9, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Daughters Mary, Margaret, Kathleen Sons Edwin and G. Dean
Goodnow
Edward B. Goodnow
Army
Edward
B.
Goodnow
DIVISION: Army,
393rd Infantry Regiment of the 99th Infantry Division
Nov 29, 1925 - Jan 28, 2023
HIGHEST RANK: PFC (Private First Class)
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Jan 10, 1944 -
0
Apr 30, 1946
0
BATTLE: Battle of the Bulge
MILITARY HONORS: European

BIOGRAPHY

Edward (Ned) Goodnow attended Hotchkiss School on a full scholarship. He graduated in three years, in June 1943. Goodnow entered Princeton a week later, completed his freshman year that December, and entered the United States Army the following month. After training as a rifleman, Goodnow shipped out to Europe with the 99th Infantry Division. They arrived in France on November 3, 1944 and were on the front lines in Belgium facing the German army within a week. Officially designated the "Checkerboard" division after the design of its shoulder patch, soon the inexperienced group quickly picked up the informal nickname of the "Battle Babies". The green 99th successfully held its position during the six-week battle. By the beginning of March, the 99th had crossed the Rhine into Germany. Goodnow was wounded February 11, 1945 and was awarded the purple heart.

After the war, Goodnow returned to Princeton and graduated in 1949. He joined the investment firm of Kidder, Peabody & Co., but was called back into service after the outbreak of the Korean War. He served as a First Lieutenant in the 42nd Field Artillery Battalion of the 4th Infantry Division as part of the formation of the NATO Forces in Europe. After deployment, Goodnow returned to Kidder where he remained until 1969 when he co-founded Goodnow Gray & Co., a financial firm in Darien Connecticut. Goodnow continues at the helm of its successor, Goodnow Investment Group, LLC. Courtesy of the Goodnow Investment Group and Darien Times

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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