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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 505 - 512 of 1559

Joseph E. Garten
Army
Joseph
E.
Garten
DIVISION: Army,
528 Field Artillery
Jun 19, 1920 - Oct 28, 1975
BIRTHPLACE: Abilene, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Mar 22, 1944 -
0
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Etta Mae Garten
Raymond H. Garten
Army
Raymond
H.
Garten
DIVISION: Army,
132nd Infantry
Mar 8, 1916 - Apr 7, 1990
BIRTHPLACE: Abilene, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
0
0
HONORED BY: Son, Ronald E. Garten

BIOGRAPHY

Raymond Garten was the recipient of the Asiatic Pacific Service Medal; the Philippine Liberation Ribbon with 1 Bronze Star; the WWII Victory Medal; and the Good Conduct Medal

Sylvan C. Garten
Army
Sylvan
C.
Garten
DIVISION: Army,
315th Engineer Combat Battalion
Feb 20, 1918 - Apr 8, 1956
BIRTHPLACE: Abilene, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Dec 27, 1942 -
0
Dec 22, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Nephew, Ronald E. Garten

BIOGRAPHY

Sylvan Garten was the recipient of the WWII Victory Ribbon; a Good Conduct Medal; American Theater Ribbon; EAME Theater Ribbon with 1 Silver Service Star and 1 Bronze Arrowhead

Layton O. Gary
Army
Layton
O.
Gary
DIVISION: Army,
1858th Medical Detachment
Aug 24, 1919 - Apr 5, 1985
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
0
0
HONORED BY: son, Frank R. Gary, Lieutenant Colonel, USAF (retired)

BIOGRAPHY

Layton worked in the dental portion of the 1858th Medical Detachment at Pine Bluff Arsenal, Arkansas. During the day, and drove an ambulance at night. With the large group of POW's near there he said he was always busy. The 1858th was part of the 8th Service Command, Headquartered at Dallas, Texas.

Charles D. Gary
Army
Charles
D.
Gary
DIVISION: Army,
Infantry
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
MILITARY HONORS: Purple Heart
HONORED BY: The Dickinson County Heritage Center and The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Charles Gary enlisted in the Army at Ft. Leavenworth, Ks in 1941. He served in the US Army in the signal corps first, in Germany, then was transferred to infantry. It was while in the infantry he was slightly wounded. He had brothers Prentis served in France and Wilbur served in the Navy in the South Pacific.

Nick Gavalas
Army Air Corps
Nick
Gavalas
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
449th Division
BIRTHPLACE: Birmingham, AL
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
HONORED BY: Krista Knowing

BIOGRAPHY

Gavalas graduated High School and went into the Service. He was a gunner on a B-24. His last mission was in Italy. The plane went down and he is MIA.

KILLED IN ACTION
Robert H. Geiger
Army Air Corps
Robert
H.
Geiger
DIVISION: Army Air Corps
Feb 22, 1926 -
BIRTHPLACE: Sabetha, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Jul 13, 1944 -
0
Aug 19, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Robert H. Geiger

BIOGRAPHY

After my 18th birthday in February 1944, I took the qualifying exams for admission to the Army Air Corp Aviation Cadet Program at Topeka, Kansas. I failed the vision test, so waited for my draft date, for after graduation from high school. At induction at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas I indicated a preference for Navy service and was assigned to the Army Air Corp. I took basic at Buckley Field, Colorado, followed by the 27 week radio mechanic training at Truax Field Wisconsin. I was transferred to advanced radio transmitter school at Shepard Air Force Base in Texas, and then routed to San Francisco to join an invasion unit headed to Japan. Fortunately for me, the bomb was dropped while we were staging in Utah. My part of our unit was transferred to Saipan for several weeks, then to Tinian Island. I was immediately assigned to 'acting' sergeant because that part of our unit had been reduced to skeleton size by rotation after the treaty. Two months later I was flown to a Repo Depot at Manila, Philippines, and assigned to a Distance Finding Station on Palawan Island, Philippines, where I was finally using the skills for which I was trained. Six weeks later I was re-assigned to Control Tower Operator 552 while the pursuit wing was being deactivated for the same reason that I was supply sergeant on Tinian. I received no rank for either of those positions, however, I was rated corporal before leaving Palawan. The political situation in the Philippines during my time on Palawan produced some interesting, but scary incidents, because the young men who made up the pro-independence group were armed and were hostile toward us most of the time. Problems developed for us with them at check points that they had set up on the main road that we had to travel from our station to headquarters and back for our meals and orders. We had to be very careful what we said and how we acted in their presence. Control from Manila was supposed to be through the political organization on Palawan, but it was actually by the local Philippine military commanding civilians. It appeared to me that they seemed to forget why we were there in the first place. After my separation, at the convenience of the government, thanks to the G.I. Bill, I graduated from the University of Kansas in 1952 with a B.S. in Education, married in 1957, moved to Chanute, Kansas, helped rear a son and a daughter, and retired from education in 1989. As is the case with many of us, I'm sure, I wouldn't take a million dollars for my military experience but I wouldn't give a dime to have it again.

Marvin P. Geist
Army
Marvin
P.
Geist
DIVISION: Army,
387 Bomb Group, 559th Squadron
Mar 10, 1923 - May 31, 2016
BIRTHPLACE: Chapman, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: Technical Sargeant
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Dec 4, 1942 -
0
Oct 30, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Mr & Mrs Marvin Geist

BIOGRAPHY

T/Sgt Marvin Geist was a POW for about 5 months at the end of WWII. Deciding to get on with life, he married, became an automobile mechanic, farmer and held other jobs that fit his personality. Born on a farm in the Upland area in NE Dickinson County, he graduated from Enterprise HS in 1942. Enlisting in the Army Air Corp after driving a cement truck during the construction of the Herington AB, he had basic training at St. Petersburg, FL, and was trained in radio communications. On 10 Sep 1944 he left a New Jersey port for Glasgow, Scotland, rode a train to Stone, England, and flew to Chateau Dun, France. Flying his first mission on a B-26 on Sep 27, Marvin, a radio operator, also manned waist guns when in enemy territory. On Dec 23, a cold cloudy morning during the Battle of the Bulge, his crew went airborne at 0900. 'We were flying about 18,000 feet on the lower left of the last echelon of the group when our lead pilot went left instead of right. When he realized, we were far from the rest of the group, couldn't catch up and fighters came in and shot us up. I was the only gun in operation and I found out later I had shot down a ME 109. Then, a shell came through the fuselage just to the left of my head. It exploded and I got shrapnel holes in my face. The shell hit our top turret gunner, an extra on his first mission. I didn't even know his name.' Given the order to bail, Marvin helped the unconscious gunner by snapping his chute and pushing him out. 'I bailed out and just as I did, the left wing exploded and fell off, burning me all over.' The injuries left him with no eyebrows or eyelashes. Landing on a roof, the jolt left him unconscious. 'When I came to, many guns and people were staring at me. They made me carry my parachute and walk to a medical station several miles away.' Walking was painful as his knee was hurt by the landing. They cleaned his burns and 21 shrapnel holes in his body, using plain crepe paper as bandages. Then he walked to a hospital at Limburg. The greeting POWs received was not friendly. 'Kids kicked and spit on me. The guard wouldn't let them kick my wounded leg, but they could my good one.' That night, the allies struck the hospital. Marvin had no doubt his survival took divine intervention. 'Turning left out of our room, there was nothing but rubble clear to the ground. I turned right, went down the stairs, and found an unexploded bomb had come in the 2nd floor window.' Dec 26, he, four other prisoners, and a German guard left by train. Whenever an air raid sounded, the train stopped and passengers went to a shelter. Once, divine intervention came through an unlikely source: the German guard. 'A Gestapo major wouldn't let the 5 of us in the shelter. After the all-clear, he lined us up to shoot us. I think he singled me out as I was Air Corps and he associated the bombers with me. Looking down the barrel of his Luger, I thought I was a goner. Our guard pulled his gun, and spoke to him. The major put his gun away and the guard said, 'Come!' I wished I had gotten to know him so I could have thanked him.' They were at Frankfort for five, scary days of solitary confinement and grueling interrogation; but he never broke. 'The last day, they told you all about yourself---when you joined the Air Corp, where and when you went to school, where you were stationed in the states, when you came overseas, where you were stationed in France, and a picture of our planes at the base. Had they known my plane's number, they could have pointed to it. It was disappointing as it showed there were spies in the US' records department.' The POWs headed to a transit camp in Wetzler, where he was one of the few not to get frostbite. There, he saw 2 of his crew. One had escaped, but was recaptured. The other had located the crashed plane, found the pilot decapitated, and a 20-millimeter hole through Marvin's chair and radio.

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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