WILMASBOYL78
06-04-2014, 03:46 PM
Thought I would begin this a little early since I'll be "in the woods" starting tomorrow. This Friday marks the 70th anniversary of the Allied Invasion of Normandy, June 6th, 1944. This was the greatest amphibious invasion in military history and was truly the beginning of the end for the Third Reich. Less than 11 months later Germany surrendered and the war in Europe was over.
Please take time to remember this Friday the incredible sacrifices that were made on that historic day so long ago...and also take a moment to remember all those who have served before and after. The price of the freedom we cherish so dearly was paid for by these heroes...in many cases with their lives. We need to always pay honor to their legacy.
Lest we forget...
Wilma <<GRAEMLIN_URL>>/flag.gif
http://www.worldwar2history.info/D-Day/
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-1121-12479-d_day.jpg
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-1121-12480-d_day_2.jpg
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-1121-12481-d_day_ike_photo.jpg
PeteLeathersac
06-04-2014, 04:01 PM
Thanks Wilma, I was going to start a similar thread today too!
And you're so right w/ your comment about what paid for the freedom we all have today!!!
The 100 year date since the beginning of WW1 is only weeks away too!
<<GRAEMLIN_URL>>/flag.gif
~ Pete
Andy4639
06-04-2014, 04:55 PM
<span style="font-weight: bold">Thanks to all our country men & women who have given there lives for our country and our freedom's. </span>
earntaz
06-04-2014, 05:32 PM
Awesome Wilma -- just read a story where this 93 year old paratrooper (101st AB) was going to jump again in the same place he did during D-Day ... OMG I sure hope I make it to 93 AND have the spunk to do something as wild as this ... The TAZ
PeteLeathersac
06-04-2014, 06:09 PM
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: earntaz</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Awesome Wilma -- just read a story where this 93 year old paratrooper (101st AB) was going to jump again in the same place he did during D-Day ... OMG I sure hope I make it to 93 AND have the spunk to do something as wild as this ... The TAZ </div></div>
Wow, too cool!
Salute!!!
<<GRAEMLIN_URL>>/flag.gif
~ Pete
http://news.yahoo.com/world-war-ii-vet--...-133638834.html (http://news.yahoo.com/world-war-ii-vet--93--plans-to-parachute-onto-beaches-of-normandy-133638834.html)
---------------------------
DAYTON, Ohio (Army News Service, June 2, 2014) -- Veteran paratrooper Jim "Pee Wee" Martin, who jumped into Normandy on D-Day, is returning to coastal France to mark the 70th anniversary of the invasion that changed the course of World War II.
Martin, who spoke in an interview ahead of the anniversary, remembers looking out in the night sky before making the historic jump.
"When we made our initial jump into France, there were a few cirrus clouds up above, just enough so you still saw shadows down below," he said recently at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force here.
"It was just unbelievable to see as many ships as there were down there," he said.
Martin said he hopes to leap from the skies again during the anniversary.
"I truly would want to do that one, because there's no other 93-year-old guy in the unit who can do it but me," he said. Martin was a private first class with the elite 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division.
Martin said he and his unit were known as the "Toccoa Men," because they attended basic training at Camp Toccoa, Ga. They were trained alongside Easy Company of the 506th, later depicted in the "Band of Brothers" series. Martin said he was aware then that they were part of something big.
"We knew that the success was going to hinge on us. We were absolutely certain of that. Eisenhower was too, that's why he made the decision to send us in, even though all the others didn't want to," Martin said.
Martin said he "never had a doubt about the success of the mission," but had concern about what the human cost would be.
"I knew it was going to be bad," he said.
He and his unit were among the first wave of paratroopers to jump into Normandy. They later jumped into Holland in "Operation Market Garden," were among the defenders of Bastogne, during the Battle of the Bulge, and captured Adolph Hitler's mountain retreat in Bavaria at the end of the war.
"Going into Normandy, it wasn't so much scary," he said. "Now going into Holland, we were different, we had already been there, and we showed more fear, but don't let anybody tell you that he wasn't scared going in to any combat, whether it was us or others."
Men died all around him; the unit endured a lot during the war, Martin said.
It was terrible when his unit landed in Normandy, he said, because German paratrooper and SS troops were right where they landed. "It was a slaughterhouse on that drop zone."
The plane ride over Normandy was typical, Martin recalled, but the pilots didn't slow down and make a slight left turn, to protect the Soldiers and the equipment.
"As a consequence, we lost most of our equipment," he said. Soldiers were also killed making the jump as well.
The unit's objective was one of the most important ones of the whole operation, Martin said, to capture a pedestrian bridge and a vehicle bridge, both of which were put in a few months prior to let reinforcements down to the beach when forces landed on shore.
"It was paramount we get the bridges, which we did," he said. But he said the unit lost all of its communication equipment in the jump.
"Division thought we had been wiped out, so they ordered the bridges bombed, and here we are right there at the bridges," he said.
The danger was present every day as Soldiers were killed around him; he thought each day might be his last. Once you accept you might die, "you're better off," and can focus on the mission at hand, Martin said.
"You got to understand that you can't let the fear control you; you have to do your job regardless of the fear, and we all did it. That's what we had to do and we did," he said.
Martin would "absolutely" do it all over again.
He enlisted in 1942, at the age of 21. He knew the situation was deteriorating in Europe, and that France and Britain were no match for Germany. Besides, men were being drafted and had to leave their wives and children at home.
"Here I am a young person with no family to worry about and these guys are going away and leaving their families. That did change me," he said. "I went down, I had a deferment, I didn't have to go, but I went down and signed up for submarine service."
Not wanting to wait the months that it would be before the Navy finished the ship it was building that he would be on, he then signed up and shipped off with the Army.
When the Navy came knocking on his mother's door saying he was a deserter, she showed the men the letters he had written home from the Army, and they reportedly said "'Well, that's OK, he's in, he's in.'"
Times were certainly different then, he said.
Serving one's country, he said, is part of the duty of living in a free nation.
"I don't consider it a sacrifice. A lot of people said it was a sacrifice. It's not a sacrifice. It's a duty that you're obligated to do," he said. "If you live in a free country, whether you agree with what they do, if you're called, you should go and do your very best."
Martin is proud of the men and women who serve the nation today.
What advice does he have for the fighting generation: "Go in there and do the best you can. Be thankful that you have a country that will back you with materials."
earntaz
06-05-2014, 02:00 PM
That's the WARRIOR -- tough is the word and hats off to him!!!
69hurstSC
06-05-2014, 07:42 PM
Greatest Generation! <<GRAEMLIN_URL>>/flag.gif
PeteLeathersac
06-06-2014, 04:38 PM
Just had a fella in my office who's father was part of the D-Day landing 70 years ago today.
His dad's still with us @ 90 and although foggy w/ many things is still clear about his days in the war also was telling him this morning about his D-Day landing...he and his group of Canadians were launched into the water @ the beaches riding motorcycles coated in grease also intake snorkel tubes that went up over their shoulders!
He also mentioned his father's shared much of his war experiences over the years but doesn't like to talk about liberating one of the Jewish death camps also has had bad dreams about it his whole life.
I passed a heartfelt handshake and a sincere thank you on to him!
Where's that Canadian flag?
<<GRAEMLIN_URL>>/flag.gif
~ Pete
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-2506-12585-dday1944.jpg
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-2506-12586-d_daycanadians.jpg
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-2506-12587-d_dayjunocanadians.jpg
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-2506-12588-d_dayustroops.jpg
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-2506-12589-d_dayrevisit.jpg
enio45
06-06-2014, 04:49 PM
My dad was there and survived. he passed 5 yrs ago - we had a lot of discussion in his last 10 yrs alive about this - hard to believe anyone survived.
thanks for the thread Wilma!!
mockingbird812
06-06-2014, 06:42 PM
It was an honor to have met and broke bread with your Dad, Eddie. Eddie's Dad wreaked havoc on the Axis <span style="font-weight: bold"><span style="font-style: italic"><span style="text-decoration: underline">after</span></span></span> D-Day too!!! My Father-in-law was in the 1st wave at Juno beach with the Canadian Combat Engineers and was wounded but survived - he passed in '98.
jannes_z-28
06-07-2014, 09:06 AM
Here is a great story about an 91 year old hero that ran away from his nursing home to go to Normandy for the ceremonies.
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2014/06/07/article-2650882-1E8A99E100000578-451_964x399.jpg
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-...ng-friends.html (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2650882/D-Day-veteran-89-reported-missing-care-home-staff-told-travel-France-Normandy-escaping-joining-friends.html)
Jan
parkbrau
06-08-2014, 11:12 AM
Here are some pics courtesy of Ramstein PA.
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-4359-12645-c47_flyover.jpg
C-47 Flyover
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-4359-12646-flyover.jpg
C-130 from the 37 AS Flyover
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-4359-12647-fly_over.jpg
Flyover
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-4359-12648-lined_up.jpg
Lined up at Cherbourg
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-4359-12649-one_last_ride.jpg
One last ride
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-4359-12651-pilot.jpg
One last time
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-4359-12652-story_telling.jpg
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-4359-12653-trooper.jpg
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-4359-12654-two_old_warriors.jpg
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-4359-12655-paratroopers.jpg
http://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/pics/usergals/2014/06/full-4359-12656-10376727_732002536843037_94575
earntaz
06-08-2014, 02:26 PM
The three fighters were F-15s ... all these pics are awesome -- thanks for sharing!! The TAZ
parkbrau
06-08-2014, 06:37 PM
Correct. I'm not sure if they were from the 48th FW at RAF Lakenheath. I assume they were.
napa68
06-08-2014, 11:43 PM
Certainly, the finest generation this country has produced <<GRAEMLIN_URL>>/flag.gif
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