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Showing Results 1369 - 1376 of 1558

Marvin M. Strunk
Army
Marvin
M.
Strunk
DIVISION: Army
Dec 31, 1921 - Apr 22, 1977
BIRTHPLACE: Abilene, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: 1st Lt.
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
SERVED: Aug 21, 1942 -
0
Mar 25, 1946
0
HONORED BY: daughters, Marla Jo, Marvel Jean and Mariln Jayne

BIOGRAPHY

Marvin M. Strunk enlisted at Ft. Riley, Kansas. Strunk was an Aviation Cadet with the 392 Observation Training Program. He trained at various Air Corps bases in Texas and Liberal, Kansas. This gave him the military occupation of pilot, very heavy bomber-B 24, B 29. Following honorable discharge February 7, 1944, from the Aviation Cadet, he was enlisted Februrary 8, 1944, as 1st Lt. Marvin M. Strunk stationed with the Air Corps 2517th AAF Base Unit Ellington Field Texas. The war ended and he returned to Dickinson County, Kansas, following an honorable discharge on March 25, 1946. He remained in the Air Corps Reserve for two years.

Melvin J. Strunk
Army Air Corps
Melvin
J.
Strunk
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
447th Bomb Group: Eighth Air Force
Oct 21, 1923 - Apr 13, 2013
BIRTHPLACE: Abilene, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Dec 11, 1942 -
0
Sep 12, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Marie Strunk

BIOGRAPHY

Melvin John Strunk enlisted in the Army Air Corps at Fort Riley, Kansas, December 11, 1942. Melvin was inducted at the Wyandotte County Courthouse February 25, 1943 at the age of 19. He traveled by train, his first train ride, from his home in Abilene to Kansas City. He was sent to Jefferson Barracks for basic training. They had coal-burning stoves; they were allotted one bucket of coal per day. He remembers the shoes he was issued did not fit. Wooden rifles were used for the 'manual of arms' training. He was sent to Michigan State University where the cadets attended classes from 7AM until 10PM, 7 days a week. Melvin received 19 hours of college credit and was paid $21 per month. He was there till July of 1943. At San Antonio Classification Center, Melvin was given a battery of tests for 7 days. He qualified for the three categories - pilot, navigator, and bombardier. Because there was such a backlog of cadets wanting pilot school, Melvin opted for navigator school. Melvin was sent to Ellington Field, Houston, Texas. His pay increased to $75 per month. He received his silver navigator wings and was commissioned a second Lieutenant in the Army Air Force on March 18, 1944. His pay increased to $220; plus a clothing allowance ($150 month pay; $75 flying pay; and $21 subsistence). He was transferred to Ardmore, OK for transitional training, combat and crew training before leaving for overseas duty. On May 29, 1944, Lt. Strunk was sent to Kearney Army Air Field in Kearney, Nebraska. A new B-17 had been flown from Seattle, Washington by two WASPS. On May 31, Melvin and crew flew to Bangor, Maine, Gander, Newfoundland and landed in Wales, United Kingdom, then by train to Rattlesden. On June 26, 1944, he was assigned to the 447th Bomb Group, 709th Squadron, 8th Air Force. Not enough planes were available, so he waited till July 12, 1944, to fly his first mission to Munich, Germany. Melvin flew 35 missions in 100 days, all before he was 21 years old. He flew 248 combat hours. He was awarded the Air Medal with four Oak Leaf Clusters, the Distinguished Flying Cross, three bronze stars for the European Theatre Ribbon, Presidential Citation, and the French Diplome for the liberation of Normandy. Melvin returned to the United States on the U.S.S. Westpoint, zigzagging all the way across the Atlantic, landing at Newport News, Virginia. He returned to Ft. Leavenworth on November 20, 1944 for reassignment. Strunk was sent to the AAAF Distribution Center, Santa Ana, California. On January 6, 1945, he was sent to Navigation Instructor's School at Ellington Field, Texas. On April 12, 1945, he was sent to Pilot's School at Chickasha, Oklahoma, then to Mission, Texas. By September 12, 1945, the war was over, and Melvin was discharged at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas, and he returned home to Abilene by train.

Harry S. Stuart Jr
Army
Harry
S.
Stuart
Jr
DIVISION: Army
Sep 12, 1925 - May 14, 1978
BIRTHPLACE: Chapman, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: PFC
THEATER OF OPERATION: Other
SERVED: Jan 13, 1944 -
0
0
HONORED BY: Dickinson Historical Society and Heritage Museum and the Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

No actual service information is available for Harry S. Sampson, Jr. He registered October 20, 1943, in Abilene, Dickinson County, Kansas, and enlisted in the Army on Jan. 13, 1944, in Leavenworth, Kansas. His enlistment record states Harry S. Sampson's enlistment was the standard, "for the duration of the War or other emergency, plus six months, subject to the discretion of the President or otherwise according to law." Harry S. Sampson completed 3 years of high school before his enlistment date. The following was listed next to Occupation: "Semiskilled mechanics and repairmen, motor vehicles." Harry was a brother to Ike's Soldiers veteran Eber Price Sampson.

Other Service Documents

Gail E. Stubbs
Army
Gail
E.
Stubbs
DIVISION: Army,
32nd Bomber Squadron 301st Bomber Group
Jan 3, 1919 - Sep 10, 1944
BIRTHPLACE: Grainfield, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Jan 20, 1941 -
0
0
HONORED BY: Brother Houston & Newphews John & Keith Stubbs & Gail & Craig Parrish

BIOGRAPHY

First Lieutenant Gail E. Stubbs of Grainfield, Kansas, was killed in action on September 10, 1944, while flying Aircraft Commander of B-17 No. 44-6353. Stubbs served in the 32nd Bomber Squadron, 301st Bomber Group, Heavy of the 15th Air Force. The mission was against oil refineries and industrial targets in the area of Vienna, Austria. Stubbs was the first man from Gove County, Kansas to enter the armed service under the Selective Service Act of 1940; he was a volunteer. He was inducted into the U.S. Army at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas on January 20, 1941. Stubbs' service record includes: 1) January 29, 1941- Service Battery, 3rd Field Artillery Battalion, Fort Riley, Kansas. 2) October 1, 1941-Advanced to Corporal while on maneuvers-Greenwood, Louisiana. 3) March 19, 1942-Promoted to Sergeant. 4) September 1, 1942-Advanced to Staff Sergeant and transferred to the Armored Field Artillery. 5) November 14, 1942-Left Fort Riley for Army Air Force Classifications Center, Nashville, Tennessee. 6) January 31, 1943-Entered Pilot Pre-flight School, Aviation Cadet Class 43-1, Maxwell Field, Alabama. 7) April 3, 1943-Appointed Corporal, Army Air Forces (Pilot); transferred to Camden, South Carolina. 8) May 29, 1943-Completed primary flight training at Southern Aviation School, Camden South Carolina. 9) June 2, 1943-Basic Training at Shaw Field, Sumter, South Carolina. 10) August 1, 1943-Twin engine Advanced Training, Class 43-1, Turner Field, Albany, Georgia. 11) October 1, 1943-Received Silver Wings; commissioned Second Lieutenant of the Army Air Force. 12) October 13, 1943-Attended Officers B-17 Training at Hendricks Field, Sebring, Florida. 13) December 24, 1943-Transferred to the 18th Replacement Wing Army Air Base, Salt Lake City, Utah. 14) February 9, 1944-Transferred to Sioux City, Iowa Army Air Base as B-17 Pilot. 15) April 18, 1944-Last furlough home to Grainfield, Kansas. 16) April 28, 1944-Transferred to Kearney Air Base, Kearney, Nebraska. 17) May, 1944-Transferred to an air base (unknown) on the U.S. east coast and later sent oversea. 18) June 9, 1944-Last correspondence sent to family from unknown location near Oran, Africa. 19) June 12, 1944-Transferred to Lucera Airdrome, Italy. 20) September 10, 1944-On his 26th mission, Gail E. Stubbs was killed in action on a mission near Vienna, Austria. Prior to his death, he was promoted to First Lieutenant (date unknown). Following the war, his remains were returned to the U.S. Army Air Forces and buried in the Lorraine American Cemetery, St. Avold, France. A memorial marker in his name is located at the Grainfield Cemetery, Grainfield, Kansas. Awards: Distinguished Flying Cross with Bronze Oak Leaf; Air Medal with two Bronze Oak Leaves, Purple Heart with Bronze Oak Leaf; American Campaign Medal; European Campaign Medal with 3 Bronze Stars; Army Good Conduct Medal with a two knot bar; WWII Victory Medal.

KILLED IN ACTION
Houston G. Stubbs
Navy
Houston
G.
Stubbs
DIVISION: Navy
Jul 11, 1921 -
BIRTHPLACE: Grainfield, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
SERVED: Feb 4, 1943 -
0
Dec 10, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Sons John and Keith Stubbs

BIOGRAPHY

Airman Cadet/SP(A)3rd Class Houston (Hugh) G. Stubbs of Grainfield, Kansas, enlisted in the Navy on February 4, 1943. His only brother, Gail E. Stubbs, was in the Army Air Force at that time and stationed at Maxwell Field, Alabama. In September of 1944, while training to become a pilot for the Navy, Houston received the news that his brother, Gail, was killed in action while flying aircraft Commander of a B-17 on a mission against the oil refineries and industrial targets in the area of Vienna, Austria. Three weeks later, his father, John J. Stubbs, suffered a heart attack and died. Houston was the only surviving son, therefore his flight training ended and he was assigned to the US Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, Illinois. He completed his service as an instructor at the Naval Training Station, Newport, Rhode Island. On July 5, 1945, Houston married his sweetheart, Louise M. Hough, at Topeka, Kansas. After the war ended, Stubbs returned to the family farm where he farmed, owned and operated Stubbs' Radio and TV Service, and was an Electronics instructor at Northwest Kansas Area Technical School, Goodland, Kansas. Houston and Louise had two sons, John Stubbs and Keith Stubbs and a daughter, Sheryl (Stubbs) Colvin. Stubb's service record includes: 1) Flight Prep School, Liberty, Missouri 2) Washburn Training School, Topeka, Kansas 3) Flight Prep School, Del Monte, California 4) Naval Air Station, Hutchinson, Kansas 5) Naval Air Station, Ottumwa, Iowa 6) Naval Air Training Base, Corpus Christi, Texas 7) US Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, Illinois 8) Physical Instructor School, Great Lakes, Illinois 9) Naval Training Station, Newport, Rhode Island. Awards: American Campaign Medal; World War II Victory Medal

Robert S. Stubbs Sr.
Marine Corps
Robert
S.
Stubbs
Sr.
DIVISION: Marine Corps
0
0
HONORED BY: Brendan Stubbs (nephew)
Irvin Sullivan
Navy
Irvin
Sullivan
DIVISION: Navy
Mar 3, 1917 - Jun 20, 2020
BIRTHPLACE: Amarillo, TX
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Feb 21, 1941 -
0
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Irvin Sullivan was born in Amarillo, TX but was living in Wichita, KS at the time he was inducted into the Navy. Irvin entered the Navy in 1941 and served in WW II as a LT. Commander pilot/navigator in the South Pacific. His PGY squadron was the original VP 12 Black Cat Raiders. The group began flying at night to do more damage to the Japanese and is why they were known as the Black Cat Raiders. Courtesy of KSN news

VIDEOS

John F. Sullivan
Army
John
F.
Sullivan
DIVISION: Army,
50th signal Battalion
Jun 1, 1920 - Nov 7, 1986
BIRTHPLACE: Malden, Massachusetts
HIGHEST RANK: Staff Sergeant
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: 1942 -
1
1945
1
BATTLE: Normandy, Central Europe, Ardennes, Battle of the Bulge.
MILITARY HONORS: Honorable discharge.
HONORED BY: John D. Sullivan the son of John F. Sullivan
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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