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Stories from the Greatest Generation

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A Virtual World War II Honor Roll

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Showing Results 1545 - 1552 of 1559

Paul Ybarra
Army
Paul
Ybarra
DIVISION: Army,
Company G, 8th Infantry Regimen
Jun 25, 1925 -
BIRTHPLACE: Wellington, KS
HIGHEST RANK: PFC
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Sep 22, 1943 -
0
Nov 4, 1945
0
BATTLE: Normandy, N France, Rhineland, Battle of the Bulge
MILITARY HONORS: Purple Heart with Oak clusters, EAME ribbon with 3 Bronze stars
HONORED BY: The Ybarra Family

BIOGRAPHY

Paul Ybarra was born in Wellington, KS June 25, 1925, one of twelve children. He attended school until 7th grade and was drafted at age 18. Basic training was in Tyler, TX until deployment to Europe. Ybarra arrived in England sometime in May 1944, and began preparing for combat but he was not told of the big operation planned for June 6. Ybarra recalls being awaken early on June 6 and loaded into a boat to cross the English channel. He is unsure of the beach he landed on but his unit received little if any resistance. They patrolled the beach until ordered to push through the line and continue on into France. In his video Ybarra talks about the accidental bombing from American pilots due to the smoke laid as targets, being blown by the wind. Part of his unit was taken out with these bombs. Ybarra and his unit marched through France, to Paris. Ybarra engaged in the Battle of the Bulge that winter and continued fighting until the end of the war. Ybarra was wounded twice but returned to battle each time. After the war Ybarra returned to Wellington and worked for the Railroad. He earned his GED, married and had four children

Other Service Documents

VIDEOS

Gustave F. Yeager
Army
Gustave
F.
Yeager
DIVISION: Army
Aug 19, 1921 - Sep 18, 1944
BIRTHPLACE: Pittsburgh, PA
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Nov 29, 1942 -
0
0
HONORED BY: Parents, Gustave & Mathilda Yeager, Siblings, Elizabeth, Charlotte, Ruth, Edward, Shirlley, Norma

BIOGRAPHY

My brother Gustave Frank Yeager enjoyed going over the state line into West Virginia to attend dances with his friends. He was a red haired gentleman who cared very much for family and carried a clipping of his baby sister's hair with him at all times. He served 22 months for his country, 18 of them overseas. He served in England, Africa, Sicily, France, Belgium and Germany. He died at Strassburg, Germany, September 18, 1944. Upon his death he was buried in Flose, Belgium until he returned home on April 10, 1949.

KILLED IN ACTION
Chuck E. Yeager
Army Air Corps
Chuck
E.
Yeager
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
357th Fighter Wing
Feb 13, 1923 - Dec 7, 2020
BIRTHPLACE: Myra, WV
HIGHEST RANK: Captain
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: 1941 -
1
1945
1
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Charles "Chuck" E Yeager was born on February 13, 1923 in Myra, West Virginia. The family moved to Hamlin, WV when Chuck was five. He always had an fascination with generators, pumps and machinery used by his father's natural gas drilling business. Three months after graduating High School, Yeager enlisted in the US Army Air Forces where he trained as an aircraft mechanic. In July 1942, he signed up for a program that trained enlisted personnel as pilots. In the end he was the only one of his class to train as a fighter pilot. In March of 1943 Yeager was posted in four bases and in eight months completed his training. In November of 1943 he was assigned to an airbase in Britain called RAF Leiston. On his seventh mission he got his first kill by shooting down a Messerschmidt Bf 109 fighter. On his eighth mission, March 5, 1944, his squadron was ambushed. Being in the rear position Yeager was in a  vulnerable position and was shot down. Yeager bailed out and was able to hide from the enemy and after nearly three weeks united with American Airman. On another flight, Yeager and Lt. Omar Patterson Jr. encountered a German patrol and were fired upon. They escaped but Patterson was struck by a bullet nearly severing his leg below the knee. Yeager amputated the leg, applied a tourniquet and carried his comrade to safely in Spain. Yeager remained in Spain for some time. After this mission, Yeager was to be stationed back in the US fearing he could be a target to divulge information about the France resistance. He appealed the orders and was given audience with General Dwight D Eisenhower. Yeager's argument was simple, he felt he could still help the war efforts and whatever information he may have was of little use since the D-Day invasion as the French resistance was openly known. General Eisenhower agreed and Yeager returned to action and earned a reputation as an elite fighter Pilot. He flew sixty one combat missions. Yeager had many interesting stories from his military service, including testing the X-1 rocket plane. Later Yeager achieved breaking the sound barrier, became a  test pilot, and later trained military pilots to be astronauts. In the early years, Yeager's' planes were often named Glamours Glenn for his future wife Glennis. Yeager and Glennis married after the war. More about Chuck Yeager's story can be found in the attached documents; an article from The Elks Magazine.

Other Service Documents

Jerry Yellin
Army Air Corps
Jerry
Yellin
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
78th Fighter Squardron
Feb 15, 1924 -
BIRTHPLACE: New Jersey
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
0
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Jerry Yellin remembers the depression and how hard it was to make a living. His family moved every October 1st because you were allowed 3 months free rent each year moving at this time of the year. Yellin was working at a Steel Mill, saving money to attend college when the attack on Pearl Harbor happened. That action caused him to enlist, he wanted to become a fighter pilot. Not having attended college he had to pass an academic test and a physical test. He passed the academic test but failed the physical. One eye was 20/30. Jerry memorized the eye chart and went back and this time passed. After all this training, a few days before graduation, he again was having an eye exam. They eye chart was changed and he failed. By going to see the Corporal, he was granted permission to graduate and become a fighter pilot. His station in Hawaii, saw him being selected as one of 5 out of 40 graduates to continue with the fighter pilot training. Jerry was stationed in the South Pacific with the 78th Fighter Squadron. Courtesy of the American Veteran Center.

VIDEOS

Melvin E. Yorgensen
Marine Corps
Melvin
E.
Yorgensen
DIVISION: Marine Corps
Aug 19, 1929 - May 24, 2020
BIRTHPLACE: Bennington, KS
HIGHEST RANK: PFC
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
0
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Melvin E. Yorgensen was born in Bennington, KS on August 19, 1929. As a kid he reported he had delivered the newspaper to the Eisenhower's house in Abilene. Yorgensen served in World War II in the Marines in the United States where he worked on airplanes.

Frank M. York
Army
Frank
M.
York
DIVISION: Army,
112th Regimental combat Team
HIGHEST RANK: Sgt.
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Mar 24, 2022 -
0
Mar 24, 2022
0
HONORED BY: Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Frank was an eyewitness to the surrendering of Japan on the Missouri.

VIDEOS

Leland A. York
Navy
Leland
A.
York
DIVISION: Navy,
CVB 41
Aug 26, 1926 -
BIRTHPLACE: Harrison County, MO
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
SERVED: Jul 1, 1944 -
0
Apr 1, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Eisenhower Foundation
Louis Zamperini
Army Air Corps
Louis
Zamperini
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
372nd Bomb Squadron
Jan 26, 1917 - Jul 2, 2014
BIRTHPLACE: Olean, NY
HIGHEST RANK: Captain
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: 1941 -
1
Sep 21, 2022
0
MILITARY HONORS: Distinguished Flying Cross
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Louis Zamperini, was the son of first generation Italian immigrants born on January 26, 1917 in Olean New York. When Louis was a toddler the Zamperini family relocated to Torrance, California. Growing up in Torrance, Louis was noted for a lot of things and running was one of them. Zamperini became known as the "Torrance Tornado" - taking after his older brother Pete who was already a track star Louis began to break records for long distance running. His talent awarded him a scholarship to the University of Southern California. At the age of 19 years old he qualified for the 1936 Olympics held in Berlin Germany. He would compete in the 5000 meter race and place 8th overall but his impressive finish garnished the attention of many spectators.

After the Olympics, Zamperini returned to USC where in 1938, he set a national collegiate mile record that stood for 15 years .In September of 1941, Louis Zamperini enlisted in the United States Army Air Forces serving as a bombardier on the B-24 Liberator "Super Man" with the 372nd Bomb Squadron. After flying several missions, on May 27, 1943 his aircraft went down due to mechanical failure. Stranded for 47 days in the Pacific Ocean, Zamperini and the only other surviving crew member ,Pilot Russ Philips, were captured by the Japanese Navy after their raft reached the Marshall Islands.

"For forty-seven days Louis Zamperini drifted idly in the Pacific Ocean. Armed with a few small tins of drinking water, a flare gun, some fishing line, and a couple of Hershey D-Ration candy bars, Zamperini and two other soldiers struggled to stay alive. Their struggle was exacerbated by vicious sharks, blistering heat, treacherous swells, and Japanese fighter pilots. For most people, this experience would undoubtedly be the most challenging of their lives. For Zamperini, it was not even the most difficult of the war." - US National Archives December 24, 2014

The then-75 pounds Zamperini was held for six weeks on Kwajalein Atoll and transferred to multiple interrogation centers and Prisoner of War camps. For two long years he suffered psychological and physical abuse at the hands of cruel prison guards and the sadistic Sgt. Mutsuhiro “The Bird” Watanabe. He was declared dead to his parents in a June 1943 telegram. Meanwhile, the former track star, Watanabe’s “number one prisoner,” was spared from execution but served as a propaganda tool. When he refused to comply after being forced to make radio broadcasts at the Ofuna interrogation center, he was immediately sent back to Watanabe on the mainland and subjected to more abuse." Liberation finally took place in September 1945. After years of malnourishment and torture, Zamperini could not be a runner anymore. After finding solace in Christianity at a Billy Graham sermon, however, he returned to Japan as a missionary in 1950 and forgave his former captors imprisoned at Sugamo. Watanabe, one of the top 40 war criminals in Japan sought by America, refused to meet him. Zamperini later travelled across the US as an inspirational speaker and established the Victory Boys Camp, a wilderness camp for troubled youths. Fifty years after breaking the National High School mile record, Zamperini made a triumphant return to the Los Angeles Coliseum to carry the Olympic torch in 1984. In 1988, he ran a leg of the Olympic torch relay at the Nagano winter games." Zamperini recounts his story in two autobiographies, both titled Devil at My Heels, published in 1956 and 2003. His story was also documented in Laura Hillenbrand’s biography Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption and the 2014 film Unbroken directed by Angelina Jolie. The University of Southern California dedicated the Louis Zamperini Plaza in honor of the “Torrance Tornado. Courtesy of Vantage Point, Veteran's Administration & WW II Uncovered

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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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Eisenhower Signature

Guildhall Address, London, June 12, 1945