Image
WWII,DDE
Image
Ike Logo
Image
DDAY
Image
Ike Logo

Stories from the Greatest Generation

Image
D Day
Image
Ike Logo

A Virtual World War II Honor Roll

Search

Filter Your Results

empty

empty e. empty empty

empty

EMPTY
E.
EMPTY
EMPTY

Jan 1, 2000 - Jan 1, 2000
BIRTHPLACE: empty

SOLDIER DETAILS

HIGHEST RANK: empty
DIVISION: empty,
empty
THEATER OF OPERATION: empty
SERVED: Jan 1, 2000 -
DISCHARGED: Jan 1, 2000
BATTLE: empty
MILITARY HONORS: empty
HONORED BY: empty

VIDEOS

empty

BIOGRAPHY

empty
empty

Search Results

Showing Results 1113 - 1120 of 1559

Vernon J. Quy
Army
Vernon
J.
Quy
DIVISION: Army
Jan 9, 1919 - Oct 8, 2014
BIRTHPLACE: Formoso, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: Sergeant E5
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
SERVED: 1941 -
1
1945
1
HONORED BY: Marcia M. Feighny, 2437 Village Lane, Salina, KS 67401

BIOGRAPHY

Vernon Quy was in the quartermaster corp at Fort Riley. In 1944 he was sent to Fort Meade, Maryland in preparation to go overseas. It was discovered that he suffered from hypertension so was sent to Camp Carson, CO. Despite being diagnosed with hypertension he lived to be 96.

John C. Raaen Jr.
Army
John
C.
Raaen
Jr.
DIVISION: Army,
5th Rangers
Apr 22, 1922 -
BIRTHPLACE: Ft. Benning, GA
HIGHEST RANK: Major Gen.
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
BATTLE: D-Day
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

John C. Raaen, Jr., was born into a military family. He went on to graduate from the United States Military Academy at Westpoint, in 1943. Commissioned as a 2nd. Lt. in the Corps of Engineers, he joined the newly activated 5th Ranger Battalion where he underwent extensive training in Florida, England, and finally Scotland in preparation for the invasion of occupied Europe. I was the Headquarters Commandant and Hq Company Commander of the 5th Ranger Infantry Battalion. I landed in the third wave of Ranger Force "C" on Omaha Dog Red at about 0750 on D-Day. The 5th Rangers landed INTACT as a battalion and thus became the dominant influence on Omaha Dog Beach. We fought our way into Vierville in the late afternoon, but were stopped from proceeding to Pointe Du Hoc by the 29th Division command group. Gen. Cota was probably right on that point, we were needed to secure a very fragile beachhead from expected German counter-attack, and since the German guns at PdHoc had not influenced the landings, protection of the beachhead was more important than relief of the 2nd Rangers at PdHoc. On D+1, I was with the relief force for PdHoc and ended up in command of that force the evening of D+1 as it dug in at St. Pierre du Mont for the night of D+1. The next morning, D+2, the rest of the 5th joined us with LTC Schneider in command, and we relieved the force at PdHoc. Courtesy of the American veterans center. More of his story available at  https://www.normandy1944.info/stories/john-c-raaen-jr

VIDEOS

Edward C. Raczkowski
Navy
Edward
C.
Raczkowski
DIVISION: Navy,
US Capercon
Oct 15, 1923 - Mar 6, 2020
BIRTHPLACE: Bronx, NY
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
0
0
HONORED BY: Thomas McAdams - Nephew

BIOGRAPHY

Edward Raczkowski joined the Navy shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor, to fight the Japanese. He was proud of his service. Edward was on a ship close to Japan when the atomic bomb was dropped. His crew was not told of the bomb dropping. Sailors were thrown all over some had broken eardrums but Edward was shocked but not harmed. He returned back to the Bronx becoming an electrician, a trade he learned in the service. Edward retiried in Baynton Beach, FL and was the community handyman..

Bertram H. Ramsay
Navy
Bertram
H.
Ramsay
DIVISION: Navy
BIRTHPLACE: Camp Court Palace, London, England
HIGHEST RANK: Admiral
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
BATTLE: Dunkirk, Normandy, Op;eratrion Torch, Operation Neptune
MILITARY HONORS: Naval Commander of SHAEF, Knighted
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Bertram Home Ramsay, (born January 20, 1883, Hampton Court Palace, London, England—died January 2, 1945, in flight near Toussus-le-Noble, France), British naval officer who, during World War II, oversaw the evacuation of British forces from Dunkirk in 1940 and then commanded the naval forces used in the Normandy Invasion (1944). Ramsay became a midshipman in the Royal Navy in 1899 and commanded a destroyer in World War I. During the interwar years he alternated periods of active duty with assignments on the staff of the Naval War College (1927–29) and the Imperial Defence College (1931–33). He became a rear admiral in 1935 and retired as a vice admiral in 1938. When World War II began, he was made flag officer at the Channel port of Dover. With the collapse of the Allied front in northern France in June 1940, Ramsay was put in charge of organizing the evacuation of the British Expeditionary Force from Dunkirk. Mobilizing every usable military and civilian craft he could find, he oversaw the evacuation of about 338,000 British and other Allied soldiers from Dunkirk and nearby beaches, bringing them to safety in England. He was knighted for this achievement. Ramsay commanded several major amphibious assault operations in the next two years. Working under Admiral Andrew Cunningham, Ramsay helped to oversee the fleet that covered the American landings in North Africa (Operation Torch; November 1942) and then commanded the British landing operations in the Allied amphibious assault on Sicily (July 1943). In 1943 Ramsay was appointed naval commander in chief for Operation Overlord, the projected Allied invasion of northern France. The ships under his command landed one million Allied troops in France in one month starting from D-Day (June 6, 1944). Courtesy Briticcana.com and nationalww2museum.com.

Other Service Documents

Leon M. Ramsey Jr.
Marine Corps
Leon
M.
Ramsey
Jr.
DIVISION: Marine Corps,
I Company, 3rd Battalion, 27th Regiment
May 9, 1924 - Jul 1, 2015
BIRTHPLACE: Abilene, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: May 1, 1943 -
0
Sep 1, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

I was inducted into the United States Marine Corps in May 1943 at Kansas City, KS and sent by train to San Diego, CA for basic training. After Boot Camp, I was selected for Parachute Training School, Camp Gillespie. After completing the training I received a Certificate of Proficiency for parachute packing, ground training, and jumping from a plane in flight. September 18, 1943 I was qualified as a Parachutist in the United States Marine Corps. Due to disbandment of the Marine Parachutes, we were sent to form the 5th Marine Division at Camp Pendleton, Oceanside, CA and trained there until June 1944. We were sent to Camp Tarawa on the big Island of Hawaii, training there until January 1945. We boarded transport ships for Iwo Jima, landing on Iwo February 19, 1945 in the third wave. While securing the island I was wounded March 22, 1945 and awarded the Purple Heart. I returned to Camp Tarawa with the Division and was selected for the Navy V-12 College Program and sent to Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. President Truman ordered the dropping of the Atomic Bomb and as the war ended I was given a choice to be discharged and did so in September 1945.

Harold L. Raney
Navy
Harold
L.
Raney
DIVISION: Navy,
USS Howorth
Jan 15, 1926 - Dec 25, 2015
BIRTHPLACE: Kansas City, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: Gunner's Mate (GM3)
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Nov 30, 1943 -
0
Apr 8, 1936
0
HONORED BY: Staff of the Kansas Veterans Home

BIOGRAPHY

Once while in the Philippines, we were in a convoy to make a landing at Mindoro, when we got to Mindoro we began bombarding the town. I looked out the door and saw three Japanese planes coming down over an island right behind us. I notified our gun Captain, who notified the bridge that there were some Japanese planes coming in around behind us. We notified all the other ships and eventually shot them down. However, before they were shot down two of the planes came right at us. One flew directly overhead. This plane had so many holes in the gas tank that gasoline was leaking on our deck. The pilot dove to hit us but he missed and the bomb he had on board exploded right beside our ship, causing water to wash the deck and all the gasoline was washed away. General McArthur was one ship ahead of us in this convoy. A suicide bomber did hit his cruiser and several who were in the chow line were killed. We were in a convoy going to the main harbor into Manila, when one of the cargo ships sailed by us with a Japanese plane, sticking out of the side of the ship, above the water line. The Japanese plane, flown by a suicide pilot, had hit the ship. Our Captain talked to them and reported the Japanese pilot was still alive sitting in the cockpit. The pilot committed suicide with his pistol, even though they tried to talk him out of committing suicide. At Okinawa we were coming in with our convoy and a Japanese plane flew in right over the top of the water. The bullets were flying, they were everywhere, and we were even hit by bullets from other American ships. When the bullets finally ceased I was foolish enough to pull one of the 20 millimeter bullets out of the refueling hose that was stacked on the deck. Fortunately nothing bad happened. While at Okinawa we were firing at the Japanese airplanes and during a lull, my Gunnery Sergeant, who was in the turret with me, said, 'Look outside and see how many planes are out there'. I looked outside and said five. Those planes were just waiting on us. We finally ran out of ammunition. All of the planes were on fire. One plane went in between our stacks and cut a cable but didn't hit us. Another plane left a green streak from the paint of his wing that dragged across the deck. Another plane fired bullets that hit the bridge and killed six people. They were pretty effective when they were suicidal.

Eli Rauzon
Navy
Eli
Rauzon
DIVISION: Navy
May 19, 1923 -
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
0
0
HONORED BY: Mark Rauzon

BIOGRAPHY

Eli Rauzon was born and grew up in Ohio. He attended a one room school house for a time and had a paper route as a kid. Eli chose the Navy, partially because the World War I veterans he had spoke with have some repercussions from muster gas and told him to go Navy. He also had a neighbor that had joined the Navy. Eli went into the service a year before the attack on Pearl Harbor. His assignment in the Navy was in electrical repair, which lead to working on submarines in Brisbane, Australia. Eli continues in the Navy through until after the signing of the peace treaties. Eli also ended up also serving in the Army and Army Air Force.

VIDEOS

Jabus 'Jay' W. Rawls Jr.
Army
Jabus 'Jay'
W.
Rawls
Jr.
DIVISION: Army,
Allied Forces HQ
Aug 23, 1914 - May 9, 2011
BIRTHPLACE: Columbia, Mississippi
HIGHEST RANK: Colonel
THEATER OF OPERATION: European, Other
SERVED: Jul 3, 1937 -
0
0
HONORED BY: Children

BIOGRAPHY

Colonel Rawls was an Antiaircraft Artillery officer during WWII. He served overseas at a variety of locations, beginning in July 1942 at the headquarters of II Corps in Salisbury, England, then later in London where he worked on the planning and execution of Operation TORCH, the British-American invasion of French North Africa. He landed in Oran, Algeria, on the morning of November 8, 1942, and remained in North Africa until moving on to Tunisia. He served under General George Patton and then was assigned to General Eisenhower's Allied Forces Headquarters in Algiers. He arrived at the AFHQ on April 17, 1943. Colonel Rawls' continued work with his British colleagues and was recognized by King George VI at the war's end by being named Honorary Officer in the Order of the British Empire (OBE), an order of chivalry founded by the British monarchy. Following the war Colonel Rawls continued his distinguished military career as an officer at the Pentagon. Discharge Date: 1954

empty

empty e. empty empty

empty

EMPTY
E.
EMPTY
EMPTY

Jan 1, 2000 - Jan 1, 2000
BIRTHPLACE: empty

SOLDIER DETAILS

HIGHEST RANK: empty
DIVISION: empty,
empty
THEATER OF OPERATION: empty
SERVED: Jan 1, 2000 -
DISCHARGED: Jan 1, 2000
BATTLE: empty
MILITARY HONORS: empty
HONORED BY: empty

VIDEOS

empty

BIOGRAPHY

empty
empty

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.

Image
Sunset
"Humility must always be the portion of any man who receives acclaim earned in blood of his followers and sacrifices of his friends."
Image
Eisenhower Signature

Guildhall Address, London, June 12, 1945