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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 897 - 904 of 1559

James J. McAdams
Other
James
J.
McAdams
DIVISION: Other,
National Guard -Artillery
Apr 1, 1913 - Aug 29, 1985
HIGHEST RANK: Seargent
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
HONORED BY: Thomas McAdams - son

BIOGRAPHY

James McAdams joined the Nations Guard in 1940 and was in combat all the way to the war's end. He was reaching the rank of sergeant in the Artillery branch. Dad fought in Patton's Army in France and Germany. His buddies told about James being trapped by German soldiers who were hunting him down but James made it successfully back to his unit. However, he had a bullet hole in his helmet. It was noted his "black hair" had turned "white". Another time while in France, James was starving and came across a lovely French lady by a cottage. She was holding in her apron many white eggs. In his best French/English voice he told her if she dropped the eggs, he'd blow her brains out. James commented that the Germans were a hell of a fighting force. James's mother gave him a religion medal in a card to keep him safe. James claimed it kept him safe as he carried the cared with him to Europe. March 18, 1942, Millie, his girl, flew to California where James was stationed at the time, and they were married. James then traveled to Pearl Harbor from California and witnessed the devastation .After the war James returned to the the Bronx and worked at NY Central Railroad. In 1955 the family moved to Buchcan, NY and in 1975 James and his wife retired to Baynton Beach, FL. James was a civilian soldier but always loved his country, served, but was not boastful. James didn't join the fraternal order but his wife fought to have the American flag cover his coffin and won. The religious card remained in James's personal effects and his son Thomas found it years later and on what would have been his 100th birthday, took the card along with flowers and performed a memorial in his honor at the Twin Towers which is across the bay from West Point.

Dan McBride
Army
Dan
McBride
DIVISION: Army,
101st Airborne
Apr 9, 1924 - Feb 16, 2022
BIRTHPLACE: Ohio
HIGHEST RANK: Sergant
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: 1944 -
1
Sep 22, 1945
0
BATTLE: D-Day - Normandy Holland Bastogne
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Dan had an adventurist spirit, hitchhiking from Ohio to Colorado and back at 15 years of age, funded by taking odd jobs along the way. The next couple of years he hunted game to help feed his family during the Depression. Dan became an expert marksman, which served him well as a sniper and machine gunner while being a paratrooper in the 101st Airborne during WWII.

He left England about 10 pm on June 5 and jumped about midnight. The planes carrying all the paratroopers were all in line- in formation. But when we flew over Normandy the German anti-aircraft fire began and Dan could hear bullets from machine guns and shrapnel from the 20 millimeter shells hitting our plane. See more of Dan McBride firsthand account of his 1944 - in attached documents.( Courtesy of Silver City Daily Press and Roger Lanse)

Other Service Documents

Russell F. McCallister
Army
Russell
F.
McCallister
DIVISION: Army,
Big Red One 1st Infantry Division
Mar 7, 1922 - Oct 25, 2005
BIRTHPLACE: Huntington, WV
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Aug 1, 1940 -
0
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Betty F. McCallister; children, Linda, Robert, and Patricia

BIOGRAPHY

Russell was married to Betty for 62 years. Their marriage was blessed with three children: Linda Marie McCallister, Robert Russell McCallister, and Patricia Kaye McCain.

George McCalpin
Army Air Corps
George
McCalpin
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
35th Engineer Combat Battalion
Dec 4, 1923 -
BIRTHPLACE: St Louis, MO
HIGHEST RANK: Sgt.
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
BATTLE: Battle of the Bulge
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

George was born December 4, 1923, in St. Louis, Missouri, to George A. McCalpin, Sr. and Marguerite Miles McCalpin. He had an older brother, Bill and a younger sister, Mary Margaret. George not only had a wicked sense of humor, but was also very intelligent. He often joked that even though he flunked blocks in kindergarten, he was then able to skip second and fourth grades. He graduated from St. Louis University High School at 16 and then went on to St. Louis University. In 1941, three days after his 18th birthday, the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. George registered for the draft and continued his schooling. As 1942 progressed, the war occupied everyone's thoughts. In January 1943, when all allowable absences for classes had been used up, George went to the Draft Board to ask when he would be called up. Not surprisingly, the draft notice came days later and in February 1943, George was inducted into the US Army at Jefferson Barracks. Based on George's AGCT and his school subjects, he was assigned to Ft. Leonard Wood, a new Army training camp in central Missouri, near Waynesville/St. Robert. When basic training was completed, George was assigned to the 35th Engineer Regiment. At first, George spent time in Canada working on the CANOL project, a project to build the road which would enable a pipeline to be laid from Norman Wells in the Northwest Territories to Whitehorse, Yukon, to supply fuel to airfields in Alaska and northwestern Canada in order to ferry lend-lease planes to Russia. After Canada, he was sent to Camp White in Oregon, where they went through Basic again because they had been out of the country. Then the 35th was split into two battalions: the 35th and the 145th. George remained with the 35th Engineer Combat Battalion, and on April 9th, 1943 the battalion was sent to Camp Shanks in New York to await deployment overseas. Fortunately for George, his time there was extended, so his Company didn't land on Omaha Beach until August 9th. By October 1944, George's company was sent to Luxembourg and billeted in Mersch, about thirty miles southeast of Bastogne. When the German Army began the Battle of the Bulge, all the engineer companies in the area were recalled to Bastogne to defend VIII Corps headquarters, as these engineers constituted most of the reserves of the Corps. George's company was moved to Marvie to be part of Bastogne's perimeter defense, about two miles east of Bastogne itself. George's company stayed in this position until relieved by Engineers of the 101st Airborne and then the company spent the night in Bastogne. The company moved out of Bastogne about six hours before the town was surrounded by German forces. In March 1945, George's unit ferried troops of the 87th Infantry across the Rhine River. Unfortunately, the nighttime crossing was discovered by lookouts on the other side of the river, and the heavy German machine gun fire resulted in some 34 engineers being killed, wounded or missing in action. George was made a squad sergeant as a result of these casualties. After the war ended in Europe in May 1945, George was relocated to Marseilles, where a fellow St. Louis native got him an assignment in a typing pool and later was given the job of approving 'Compassionate Leaves and Furloughs' for GIs eligible to return home but who had relatives in Europe. George returned to the US on his birthday, December 4th, 1945. After returning home, George resumed his life where he left off. He continued his education at St. Louis University in 1945 and graduated with a B.S. in Mathematics in 1947. He also continued dating his sweetheart Dorothy "Dot" Schulte. They married in April 1948 in St. Louis. Following the wedding, George and his bride moved to Texas to take a job as a petroleum geophysicist with Sun Oil Company. After a short stop in San Angelo, they ended up in Beaumont Tx and later moved to Richardson, TX. McCalpin passed in September of 2024. Courtesy of the dallasnews.com/obituaries.

Lawrence McCauley
Army
Lawrence
McCauley
DIVISION: Army,
65th Armored Field Artillery Battalion
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
BATTLE: D-Day, Hurtgen Forest, Battle of the Bulge
MILITARY HONORS: French Legion of Honor
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

McCauley tried to join the Marines in Jan. 1942 but his eyeglasses prevented his enrollment. Months later the Army drafter him. He was trained to drive trucks armed with .50-caliber machine guns halftracks and landing craft - just in case. He prepared for D-Day in England and became fast friend with Otto Lutz- a tall Chicagoan. On D-Day McCauley recalled, he and Otto were standing together on a landing craft as it approached Omaha Beach. The door dropped open and a bullet hit Otto in the forehead. McCulley remembers looking back and seeing his friend's face sink beneath the water. But there was no stopping, orders were: Don't stop, because, you're better off as a moving target.

McCauley's unit, the 65th, fought their way off the beach that day and climbed the bluffs. McCauley remembers the feeling as he reached the top: "Best grass I've ever seen." McCauley was involved in the fighting through France and Belgium, including the Battle of Hurtgen Forest and the Battle of the Bulge.

On April 11, 1945, McCauley was among the first to reach Buchenwald, a Nazi concentration camp located atop Ettersberg hill about five miles northwest of Weimar in east-central Germany. They liberated 21,000 emaciated inmates. “They were packed in like sardines,” McCauley said. Later, McCauley’s unit stopped a train, opened it up and found young Jewish girls inside. They directed them to safety behind American lines. In 2019, McCauley attend the 75th anniversary of D-Day at the World War II Museum in New Orleans. He met a holocaust survivor who said she remembers being freed from a train by American troops. McCauley and the survivor - held hands for over an hour. "Courtesy of The Columbus Dispatch."

Tolbert McClain
Army Air Corps
Tolbert
McClain
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
Troop C 17th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron
Nov 29, 1918 - Nov 3, 2001
BIRTHPLACE: Svannah, TN
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Jan 9, 1942 -
0
0
BATTLE: Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, Central Europe
MILITARY HONORS: European African Middle Eastern Theater Ribbon with 4 bronze stars, Good conduct medal, WW II Victory medal
HONORED BY: His daughter Shirley McClain Wege

BIOGRAPHY

Tolbert McClain was born on November 29, 198 in Savannah, NT. He lived in Savannah doing general farm hand work before entering the U.S. Army on January 8, 1942. McClain entered the Army at Fort Oglethrope, GA and was transferred to Fort Riley, Ks for boot camp training. He became a soldier of Troop C 17th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron. As a youth he became an avid marksman while hunting the rural areas of Tennessee, subsequently, in basic training he received a military qualification as a 1st Class Gunner 37 MM. On March 1, 1944, McClain departed for the European African Campaign arriving in the United Kingdom on March 8, 1944. His battles and campaigns included, Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, and Central Europe (Belgium, Holland and Berlin Germany at the end of WW II).

Other Service Documents

Henry C. McClellan
Army
Henry
C.
McClellan
DIVISION: Army
THEATER OF OPERATION: American, Pacific
0
0
HONORED BY: Nephew, Renie Bressinck

BIOGRAPHY

Henry McClellan served in the Aleutian Island Campaign, part of both the American and the Pacific Theaters in World War II.

Cecil E. McClung
Army
Cecil
E.
McClung
DIVISION: Army,
Company A 202nd Engineers
Jan 16, 1921 - Apr 7, 1986
BIRTHPLACE: Whitesville, WV
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Mar 1, 1943 -
0
Dec 4, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Roselyn McClung

BIOGRAPHY

Cecil McClung fought in battles and campaigns in Normandy, Northern France, Ardennes, Rhineland and throughout Central Europe. Little is known about his European experiences except at the Ardennes. When the Germans split the Allied lines, he was separated from his company while carrying a combat message to another unit. It was a month before he was able to make his way back to his own company. Cecil was awarded the Good Conduct Medal, WWII Victory Ribbon and the European Service Ribbon. After the war, Cecil returned to South Charleston, West Virginia, and resumed his place in the family's department store, where he was the Manager of the Men's Clothing Department. Cecil was well known in the community and active in city affairs for many years.

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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