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A Virtual World War II Honor Roll

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Showing Results 1225 - 1232 of 1559

Allen M. Schauffler
Army
Allen
M.
Schauffler
DIVISION: Army
BIRTHPLACE: Chicago Illinois
HIGHEST RANK: Lieutenant Colonel
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Apr 25, 1942 -
0
Oct 6, 1946
0
MILITARY HONORS: Bronze Star Army Commendation Ribbon Meritorious Service Unit Plaque

BIOGRAPHY

He served in North Africa and Sicily and with AMGOT in Italy as well as the Arno Campaign and the Po.

Jesse E. Scheib
Army
Jesse
E.
Scheib
DIVISION: Army
Nov 27, 1915 - Mar 15, 1974
BIRTHPLACE: Hudson, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
HONORED BY: Daughter Susan & James Wadlow

BIOGRAPHY

Jesse worked at a field hospital in rural England. He was in charge of supplies. He was flown over as he was needed quickly. He was friends with Joe Smeraldi from New York, New York who was an Italian American, who is also deceased. Jesse died of a massive heart attack on March 15, 1974. He was married to Josephine Deister Scheib (deceased). He was drafted in Dodge City, Kansas where he was employed as a bookkeeper-accountant, a field he went back to after the service.

David Scheinhartz
Army Air Corps
David
Scheinhartz
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
364th Fighter Group
Dec 1, 1924 - Aug 28, 2022
BIRTHPLACE: New York City, NY
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: 1942 -
1
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

David Scheinhartz was born in New York City in 1924. his family moved to the Bronx where he was raised and graduated from Morris High School. He remembers the great depression by standing in bread lines and dining by candle light in his home, because they could not afford electricity. After graduation, David enlisted December 1, 1942 in the Army Air Corp and ended up in Honington, England in February of 1944. His emcampent got bombed the night of his arrival but the Germans missed the target. London, not far away, was not so lucky. It substained a lot of devastation, being lite up (at night). David commented that on June 6, 1944, "The sky over England was unreal, thousands of bombers. You looked up and you couldn't see anything ese. They were going over to support the landing on Normandy." David served with the 364th Fighter group as a telephone lineman and radio mechanic. He recalls when the Germans surrender on May 8th 1945, it set off instant celebrations. Guys were drinking and hugging each other but it didn't last. Soon his group was sent to Frankfort Germany. While there he asked many if they were Nazi's. All said "no" but they did not look you in the eye and often turned around and walked away with their head down, On August 1st the 364th got news it would leave for Japan. The military was telling them as they loaded into trucks that 250,000 to 500,000 of them would not make it out of the Japan conflict and over a million of Japanese would die. Two weeks later VE-J happened and the celebrations surpassed VE-Day. David said they all came home to a hero's welcome, even at a no-nonsense place like Fort Dix. "When I went in, 1942, at 5:30 in the morning the first sergeant would come screaming through the barracks, 'Get out of the sack and get out of here!' " he said. "When we came back three years later, the sergeant came through the barracks and said, 'Come on guys, time to get up. hat a difference, the respect they had." After the war, David worked for ITT and eventually Fort Monmouth C-COM for many years before retiring. He married Sybil in 1955 and started a family. He settled in Middletown. Courtesy app.com

Saul Schiff
Army
Saul
Schiff
DIVISION: Army,
Sound Ranging
Mar 25, 1923 - Jul 17, 2012
BIRTHPLACE: Bronx, NY
HIGHEST RANK: Corporal Technician
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
BATTLE: Battle of the Bulge
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Saul Schiff was born in the Bronx in 1923, the youngest of four boys and one girl. Three years later they moved to Morristown, New Jersey. His parents were European Jews, leaving families in Europe and coming to America. At age 20, Saul was drafted into the US Army and because he had gone to radio and television school, he was soon promoted to the rank of Corporal Technician and sent to Sound Ranging School. Sound ranging was a technique used in WW II to locate and plot the position of enemy guns which were firing on our troops and installations. His group moved through France, Luxembourg and Germany ending up fighting in the battle of the bulge. Saul's unit had many successful mission that took out the "Nancy Gun." This was a 280 mm railroad gun shelling out Headquarter in Nancy, France. At the wars end, his battalion drove by Dachau, seeing piles of bodies, not realizing until later what they had witnessed. Saul's two brothers also served and he was able to meet them while in Europe. Saul returned home, working as a Mechanical Engineer at the Rock Island Arsenal. He married a lady who was a surviving Polish Jew, once they both were back in the US. Courtesy of abookbyme.

Other Service Documents

Richard Schifter
Army
Richard
Schifter
DIVISION: Army,
ASP (Army Specialized Program), Ritchie Boy
BIRTHPLACE: Vienna, Austria
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Richard Schifter was born in 1923 in Austria. On March 11, 1938 he remembers hearing a radio broadcast from the Chancellor of Austria. The Chancellor spoke of being notified by the Germans to surrender or they would be at war. Richard's father knew what this meant for them, Jewish people. Richard was able to get a passport and passage to the United States but his parents were from Poland and could not get papers to leave. They ultimately were taken to a concentration camp and died there. On December 15, 1938, Richard arrived in the United States and lived with a great uncle. He attended college until he was drafted. He was placed in ASP "Army Specialized Program" which was for college students or graduates. But when he was training, because of his background, they switched him and he was sent to Camp Ritchie. He became a Ritchie Boy. The Ritchie Boys consisted of approximately 20,000 servicemen, and 200 Women's Army Corps members, who were trained for U.S. Army Intelligence during WWII at the secret Camp Ritchie training facility. Most of the men sent to Camp Ritchie for training were assigned there because of fluency in German, French, Italian, Polish, or other languages needed by the US Army during WWII. They had been drafted into or volunteered to join the United States Army and when their ability to speak the language of an enemy was discovered were sent to Camp Ritchie on secret orders. They were trained at the Military Intelligence Training Center at Camp Ritchie in Maryland, later officially known as Fort Ritchie. During war time interrogations, he often used the threat of sending the German prisoner to Russia if they would not talk. It always worked! After the war, Richard returned home and went to Law School and later worked for the United Nations. He also founded and was Director of the American Jewish International Relations Institute (AJIRI) Richard passed in 2020. Courtesy of American Veterans Center and Wikipedia.com.

VIDEOS

Edgar Schimming
Army
Edgar
Schimming
DIVISION: Army
Jun 14, 1920 -
BIRTHPLACE: Hope, KS
HIGHEST RANK: Staff Sergeant
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
SERVED: Sep 10, 1942 -
0
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Edgar Schimming was born in Hope, KS and attended school their until 4th grade. His family moved to Herington where he completed his schooling and graduated High School in 1938. He enlisted in the Army on 9/10/1942 and made corporal on November 1, 1942, Sergeant on February 1, 1943 and Staff Sergeant on July 15, 1943. He was stationed in Tucson, AZ. Courtesty of Dickinson Co. Heritage Center.

Henry F. Schirmer
Army
Henry
F.
Schirmer
DIVISION: Army,
93rd Signal Battalion
Mar 15, 1918 - Jan 19, 2009
HIGHEST RANK: Staff Sgt
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Mar 25, 1942 -
0
Oct 8, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Daughters, Relda M. and Tracey Galli

BIOGRAPHY

Henry was inducted into the United States Army on February 28, 1942. He completed his basic training camp at Camp Crowder, Missouri. He served 19 months oversears in France, Belgium, Luxenbourg and Germany with the 93rd Signal Battalion, which was attached to the 12th Corps of General George Patton's Third Army. Henry served in communications as a Field Lineman. As a Field Lineman, he supervised a wire laying crew in maintaining and taking up the wire and cable of a telephone or telegraph system. He was awarded a Bronze Star for gallantry in action and received several Commendations for good conduct.
Because Henry could speak fluent German, he served an additional six months after the end of World War II for the U.S. Military Forces as a German Language Interpreter and Translator.
Henry served his country a total of 45 months. He was Honorably Discharged as a Staff Sergeant from the United States Army at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas, on November 8, 1945, and returned to the family farm. Henry and Deloris Neitzel were married June 3, 1962. They had one child.
When talking about World War II, Henry often commented, 'I didn't start the war, but I had to help finish it.' He often wondered how Adolph Hitler was allowed to become so out of control. The war was a difficult time for Henry's parents as they had immigrated from Germany to the United States in 1914, and their only son had to go fight a war in their homeland.

Gilbert C. Schlappy
Army
Gilbert
C.
Schlappy
DIVISION: Army,
109th Medical Battalion 34th Division
Aug 1, 1919 - Dec 13, 2006
BIRTHPLACE: Chapman, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: Technical Sergeant
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Apr 28, 1941 -
0
Jul 21, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Wanda Schlappy, wife, and children

BIOGRAPHY

Gilbert Schlappy served from 1941 thru 1945. He was in the following battles and/or campaigns: CO 33 WD 45 Tunisia Po Valley - Naples Foggia, Rome Arno - North Apennines. His rank was TSgt. He earned the Good Conduct Medal and the American Defense Service Ribbon.

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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