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Showing Results 825 - 832 of 1428

Daniel Margolis
Army
Daniel
Margolis
DIVISION: Army
Apr 5, 1922 - Sep 13, 1997
BIRTHPLACE: Kings County, New York
HIGHEST RANK: Pfc
THEATER OF OPERATION: Other
SERVED: Feb 4, 1942 -
0
Sep 6, 1945
0

BIOGRAPHY

Daniel Margolis listed in the Army on February 4, 1942 in New York City and was assigned serial number 125057604. He served in the warrant officer branch. He completed 2 years of high school prior to enlistment. He died on September 13, 1997 and is buried in Misson Hills, California. He was a beloved husband, father and grandfather.

Karl R. Marrs
Navy
Karl
R.
Marrs
DIVISION: Navy,
Fleet Air Wing-15, Fleet Air Wing-7
Nov 18, 1923 - May 27, 2013
BIRTHPLACE: Chilocco, OK
HIGHEST RANK: LTJG
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Oct 10, 1942 -
0
Dec 27, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Before WWII all Naval Air Cadets were required to have completed two years of college before being accepted for training as Naval Aviators. With that program in place the Navy had a limited number of combat pilots on December 7, 1941. A few days after the Japanese struck Hawaii, the Navy asked Rear Admiral Thomas Hamilton to develop an intensive program that would include physical, academic and spiritual training for high school graduates. That program would allow 18 year olds to enter Navy Pilot training program if they could pass the entrance exam and meet the physical requirements the Navy demanded. With that program in place, a local airport owner/pilot instructor started recruiting men just as Karl Marrs completed his solo flight check. By early September, 1942, he had a class of 17 ready to go to Kansas City. The five hour academic test went well for all 17 but the following day two were eliminated during the physical exam. At age 18, nine months after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Karl R. Marrs had joined the Navy V-5 Flight Program with 15 of his home town high school classmates. Nine months after they started at the University of Iowa, he was one of three from the original hometown group to graduate at the Pensacola Naval Air Station and wear the Wings of Gold of a Naval Aviator. He soloed a PBY-5B at age 19 and flew that seaplane for several months before making the transition to the PB4Y-1 as a Co-Pilot/Navigator at NAS Chincoteague VA. After completing that training his crew flew a new PB4Y-1 (B24-J) to North Africa, via the southern ATC route and joined VPB-112, a squadron in Fleet Air Wing-15. His crew flew several Anti-Sub and convoy cover missions in the Gibraltar Funnel area before being transferred to England in early January of 1945, where they joined Fleet Air Wing-7. After completing 27 combat missions, in that area, they returned to the States for reorganization for duty in Alaska with the new PB4Y-2. Before that training was completed the hostilities with Japan had ended and he was released from active duty after a short stint in the South Pacific. The flying career for Karl was put on hold for fifteen years. After fifty years of livestock and grain farming in southern Kansas, Karl wrote a book, 'I WAS THERE WHEN THE WORLD STOOD STILL'. It was about his 'War Years' and just for his family. He wanted them to know that he was not a hero and did nothing but serve his country just as thousands of other young men and women had done during that period of history. Fifty-five years after WWII ended and just before the book went to press the Navy decided to award each flight crew member of Fleet Air Wing-7 the Distinguished Flying Cross and Air Medals for every five missions they had completed. That put a shade of grey on his attempt to downplay the hero bit for his family.

Roland L. Marsicek
Army
Roland
L.
Marsicek
DIVISION: Army,
Signal Corps
Dec 8, 1921 - Sep 1, 2003
BIRTHPLACE: Narka, KS
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
SERVED: Aug 10, 1942 -
0
Feb 1, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Barbara Joyce Chaloupka Splichal

BIOGRAPHY

Roland Lloyd Marsicek was the only child of Adolph and Frances Marsicek of Narka, Kansas. He was born on December 8, 1921. He attended country schools through his elementary years and then attended and graduated from Narka High School. He enlisted in the service in August of 1942 and took his basic training at Camp Kolher, California. He was stationed through out the United States including Ft. Benning, Georgia and Pullman, Washington. His 'Theater of Operation' was Stateside Service; serving in the Army Signal Corps as a supply clerk. His medals earned included the Good Conduct and the Marksmanship medals. He was discharged from the Army in February of 1946. He was married to Helen Chaloupka in 1946 until her death in 1976. Then he remarried in 1981 to Delphine McKinley; who passed away in 1988. He lived on a farm near Narka and Cuba, Kansas. Farming until he passed away in September of 2003. His children were son, Roland James (RJ) and wife Kathleen Marsicek of Narka, Kansas, and daughter, Vicki Marsicek Dozier and husband Scott Dozier of Pratt, Kansas. He had four grandchildren, Krista and James Marsicek of Narka, Kansas, and Jacob and Rebecca Dozier of Pratt, Kansas. He belonged to William Fleming American Legion Post, Masons, and was a member of the Presbyterian Church of Cuba, Kansas.

Virgil Marsteller
Virgil Marsteller
Army
Virgil
Marsteller
DIVISION: Army,
1395th Engineers Construction Battalion
Sep 14, 1921 -
BIRTHPLACE: Abilene, KS
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Aug 18, 1942 -
0
Jan 3, 1946
0
BATTLE: Ryukyus
MILITARY HONORS: WW II Victory Medal Asiatic Pacific Medal American Service Medal Good Conduct Medal
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Marsteller was a Construction Machine Operator in the South Pacific Theater. He helped build roads and airfields. Courtesy of the Talmage Historic Society and Museum

Other Service Documents

Paul J. Martin
Navy
Paul
J.
Martin
DIVISION: Navy,
Navy Medical Amphibious Corps
Jun 30, 1925 -
BIRTHPLACE: Galena, KS
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Sep 11, 1943 -
0
Mar 30, 1946
0
HONORED BY: The Paul Martin Family

BIOGRAPHY

Paul Martin graduated from Galena High School, Kansas in May 1943. He joined the Navy on September 11th of that same year and was sent to 'Boot Camp' in Farragut, Idaho. Following that orientation and training, he was sent to the Hospital Corpsman School in San Diego, CA. After medical training, he was assigned to the U.S. Naval Hospital as a corpsman. On March 24, 1944 he was shipped to Pear Harbor's AIEA Receiving Barracks. On May 8th 1944, Paul was assigned to the ship USS Livingston AKA 163 and then participated in a task force for the invasion of Saipan, Mariana Islands. On June 11th, they landed troops in Saipan and for four days were under constant attack from Japanese planes and shore batteries. That was Paul's first combat experience. Following the Saipan operation, the USS Livingston went to Apamama in the Gilbert Islands, picked up the 7th AAF and took them to Saipan. After they unloaded the troops, the ship moved over to Tinian Island, picked up Japanese prisoners, then picked up additional prisoners at Saipan and moved them all back to Pearl Harbor for confinement. The prisoners numbered 250 and 76 of them were wounded. Six of the prisoners died enroute and were buried at sea. On the return to Pearl Harbor he was reassigned to a new ship, the USS Caviler APA 37. On that ship, he participated in the invasions of Leyte, Lingayen Gulf, Luzon and Zambales Beach, Luzon. While on that ship, the task force was attacked by Japanese suicide planes. A ship just off the port bow of Paul's ship was hit broadside and exploded. They met no enemy fire at Zambales Beach, Luzon. However after they left the area as the last ship on the column on January 30, 1945, they were hit by a torpedo at 1:30 in the morning in #5 hole. One torpedo went behind the ship and the second one hit them. They were able to stay afloat but had to be pulled back by tugs from the fleet to Leyte. Paul was returned to Pearl Harbor where he was assigned to another ship, the USS Barnwell APA 132. On August 15, 1945, the Japanese surrendered, while the Barnwell was docked at Manus in the Admiralty Islands. The ship had a wonderful celebration - the men shot flares and guns into the sky. The war over; a feeling of relief was evident. After the Japanese surrendered, the ship was used to transport troops to Japan for occupational duties. They also made trips to Kure and Sasebo. Paul was assigned to three different ships as he did not belong to any ship's crew. He was attached to the ships as part of the Medical Amphibious Corps that was attached to each ship. Each ship had three doctors and eight corpsmen. Paul was discharged from the Navy on March 30, 1946. After discharge, Paul earned his degree at the University of Mortuary Science in Kansas City. He then moved to Abilene, KS, where he owned the Martin Funeral Home for over 30 years. Paul is married to the former Lil Armstrong.

Jim Martin
Army Air Corps
Jim
Martin
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
101 st Airborne, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment
Apr 29, 1921 - Jun 7, 2022
BIRTHPLACE: Indiana
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Jun 25, 1942 -
0
0
BATTLE: D-Day, Battle of the Bugle
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Martin joined the U.S. Army in 1942. The United States had already entered World War II. He was sent to Camp Toccoa, Georgia, to join the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, where he trained for months to become a new kind of soldier: a paratrooper. His next assignment was England, where he and the 101st were preparing for Operation Overlord.

In the early morning hours of D-Day, "Pee Wee" -- nicknamed for his smaller stature -- dropped into France and helped secure two bridges, a move that cut off the Germans' ability to move reinforcements to the Normandy beachheads. June 5, his unit had departed for battle and parachuted down behind enemy lines in France. “We jumped into Normandy before all the beach forces came in,” Martin said. “Our mission was to knock out all utilities and to kill any enemy we found, which we did.” Martin was just 19 years old, a teenager, jumping into World War II. From there, he jumped into occupied Holland during Operation Market Garden, where paratroopers attempted to cut off the Netherlands from German forces by securing every bridge into the country as the rest of the Allies moved in from the south. Market Garden did not go as planned, but Martin survived and was with the 506th in Belgium during the last major German offensive of World War II, the Battle of the Bulge. Like the rest of the 101st, he found himself surrounded, cut off and under siege at Bastogne. As a "Toccoa Original" and one of the "Battered Bastards of Bastogne". He recently worked with songwriter Karen Waldrup to create the song "Normandy.." "Courtesy of military.com- A Military History"

Marvin Martin
Army Air Corps
Marvin
Martin
DIVISION: Army Air Corps
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: 1943 -
1
1946
1
BATTLE: Raid on Japan
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Marvin Martin enlisted in the Air Force in 1943 and served as a bombardier/navigator for the 20th Air Force. He was part of the "Last Mission" of World War II. A book and movie was made of this mission. Marvin claims the service taught him "who he was."

VIDEOS

Howard W. Mason
Army
Howard
W.
Mason
DIVISION: Army
Jul 22, 1914 - Sep 26, 1981
BIRTHPLACE: Ohio
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Jul 19, 1941 -
0
Aug 8, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Katie McDonald
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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