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Showing Results 1001 - 1008 of 1416

Henry R. Pottberg
Army
Henry
R.
Pottberg
DIVISION: Army,
25th Infantry Regiment 25th Army Division
Nov 24, 1920 - Feb 2, 2013
BIRTHPLACE: Tipton, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: PFC
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Jul 30, 1944 -
0
Dec 1, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Wife Eloise Pottberg and Sons Calvin & Craig

BIOGRAPHY

He was inducted approximately 7/30/1944. He went to the Philippines for the Liberation of Luzon. He was severely wounded in April of 1945. Henry was in recovery at several hospitals and was discharged in December of 1945. Medals awarded: Expert Rifleman Badge, Combat Infantry Badge, 3 Bronze Stars and a Purple Heart.

Marvin E. Potts
Army
Marvin
E.
Potts
DIVISION: Army,
7th Division 32nd Infantry
Jan 17, 1922 -
BIRTHPLACE: Randolph, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Oct 18, 1944 -
0
Nov 3, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Wife Dorothy L. Potts Children John & Cyndi Potts, Cynthia Desroschers

BIOGRAPHY

I had Occupation duty in Okinawa. I was the first troop to step onto Okinawa. We walked right into the Japanese not knowing if they would fire on us or not. They had signed a peace treaty and were OK. It was our job to be on guard duty while getting them back to Japan via ships.

Alan Potts
Other
Alan
Potts
DIVISION: Other,
COSSAC, SHAEF
Jun 22, 1925 - Dec 11, 2005
BIRTHPLACE: Wallasey, United Kingdom
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Jun 1, 1943 -
0
Aug 2, 1947
0
HONORED BY: Widow, Dorothy Potts and Children; Colin, Janet

BIOGRAPHY

Alan was born in Wallasey and brought up in Knotty Ash, Liverpool, where his dad, Jack Potts, was a butcher. His love of music and humour started at an early age. He was at school with Ken Dodd and his mum, Ethel, mixed in theatrical circles and was a champion of the young Frankie Vaughan. Alan fell in love with jazz and big band music as a young man in the 1930's and soon acquired a collection of 78 rpm records. He became well known for carrying them around wherever he went! His favorites were the American big bands, the pop music of their day; Artie Shaw, Gene Krupa, Glen Miller, etc. This love stayed with him throughout his life. Little did he know, in his early teens that circumstances would present him with the opportunity to listen to them, live, much sooner than expected. When war was declared in 1939, Alan enlisted in the army and, because of his schooling as a draughtsman, after basic training was (at aged 18), he was posted for staff duties in London. He often talked about having a 'good war!' Strange but true. Based in the Union Jack Club! A civilian billet! His senior commanding officer was Colonel Fleetwood Hesketh of Southport fame. After security vetting (by no other than Anthony Blunt), Alan was assigned to Chief of Staff - Supreme Allied Command (COSSAC), later to become Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Forces (SHAEF) and set to work as a draughtsman preparing battle maps for the Normandy landings and European invasion. He was also BIGOTTED (no not intolerant!). This was 'need to know' clearance to work on the deception plans to disguise the true invasion sites. Under General Eisenhower's command, SHAEF moved to Versailles and Alan followed there in 1944, prior to which he had been able to spend his free time in London listening to his favorite U.S. bands over here to entertain the troops. He was present at the Signing of the Surrender Document in 1945. He was then transferred to Dusseldorf and stayed in the army as Sergeant in charge of the German military government Intelligence Division Drawing Office until 1947. Alan met his wife, Dorothy, when she was working for the U.S. Army Air Force in Bushey Park. They were married in 1956 and have two children, Colin and Janet. Alan trained as an architect, working for local authorities, a job which brought him to Southport and the family home in Walmer Road. He was a magistrate there for 17 years. He became a Captain in The Territorial Army and was awarded the Territorial Decoration. He raised thousands of pounds for the Army Benevolent Fund through promotion of over 40 military band concerts in Southport. Alan was a founding member of what is now Southport Melodic Jazz Club. Initially he was Treasurer and later a Director of the club. When his health started to decline, he was appointed Honorary Lifetime President in April 2004. Branch of Service details: Royal Army.

Jack M. Powell
Army Air Corps
Jack
M.
Powell
DIVISION: Army Air Corps
Feb 19, 1919 - Jun 20, 2013
BIRTHPLACE: Ruby, Oklahoma
HIGHEST RANK: T SGT
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Jul 1, 1942 -
0
Dec 30, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Daughter, Liz Parker

BIOGRAPHY

Jack Powell was a great-great grandson of Charles Journeycake, Chief of Delaware Indians. His rough-and-tumble youth and young adulthood were filled with rodeos, and living fast and hard. He served his country in WWII from July, 1, 1942 to December 30, 1945, in Australia, New Guinea, the Philippines, and Korea as a Tech Sergeant in the 15th Army Air Corps. He loved Australia where he won the 1944 Championship bull riding event during the war. On February 22, 1947 he married the love of his life, Lula Rose (Posey) Frieden. Jack studied engineering at Oklahoma A&M in Stillwater and retired from Phillips Petroleum.

Robert C. Powell
Army
Robert
C.
Powell
DIVISION: Army,
Troop C 8th Engineer
Nov 28, 1913 - Aug 31, 1989
BIRTHPLACE: Halifax
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Jun 29, 1943 -
0
Oct 31, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Wilma Powell
Crosby W. Powell
Army
Crosby
W.
Powell
DIVISION: Army,
Red Bull:34th Infantry Division, 168th Infantry, Company L Regiment
Sep 21, 1923 - Feb 17, 2023
BIRTHPLACE: Topeka, Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: Pfc
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Mar 27, 1943 -
0
Nov 8, 1945
0
BATTLE: Battle of Monte Casino Battle at Anzio
MILITARY HONORS: Purple Heart Bronze Star Legion of Merit Presidential Unit Citation French Croix de Guerre Combat Infantry Badge ETO Ribbon with 4 Stars American Defense Ribbon, Victory Ribbon Good Conduct Medal
HONORED BY: His Daughter and On November 11, 2019, Powell was presented with a quilt from the Quilts of Valor Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

My dad was wounded by shrapnel to his knee, throat and back and suffered from severe trench feet during the 135 day Battle of Monte Casino. He was slung over the back of a donkey for a treacherous three hour ride down a narrow steep mountainous path. He was then sent to an evacuation hospital in North Africa for three months of treatment. He then had to relearn how to walk. He thought he would be sent back to the States but instead was sent back to battle, to the Anzio beachhead. He received his Purple Heart for dragging a wounded soldier he did not know back to safety at Monte Casino. He continues to suffer from his war injuries and from periodic nightmares. After WWII concluded, he joined the Kansas National Guard and retired as a Lieutenant Colonel. He was employed by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad for over 40 years.

VIDEOS

Darrell Powers
Army Air Corps
Darrell
Powers
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
E Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division
Mar 13, 1923 - Jun 17, 2009
BIRTHPLACE: Clinchco, VI
HIGHEST RANK: Staff Sergeant
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Aug 14, 1942 -
0
0
BATTLE: D-Day Garden Market Battle of the Bulge
MILITARY HONORS: Bronze Star with one oak leaf cluster, the Presidential Unit Citation with one oak leaf cluster, the Good Conduct Medal, the American Defense Service Medal, the American Campaign Medal, the European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal with three service stars and arrow device, the World War II Victory Medal, the Army of Occupation Medal, the French Croix de guerre with palm, the French Liberation Medal, the Belgian World War II Service Medal, the Combat Infantryman Badge, the Parachutist Badge with two combat jump stars
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Staff Sergeant Darrell “Shifty” Powers, of Clinchco, Virginia, enlisted with the US Army on August 14, 1942 in Richmond Virginia. Shifty was 19 years old. He enlisted with his friend Robert "Popeye" Wynn and both men were assigned to Easy Company at Camp Toccoa and received training under Captain Herbert Sobel. Shifty was with Easy Company from start to finish

. Missing his drop zone on D-Day, Powers joined up with Easy Company in time for the Battle of Carentan. As a veteran of Operation Market Garden and the Battle of the Bulge, Staff Sergeant Darrell Powers was one of the few men to remain uninjured during his service. During the Battle of the Bulge, Shifty's skill as an outdoorsman and marksman was remarkable. On January 13, 1945 when Easy Company was under attack in the city of Foy Power's marksmanship and quick thinking saved many of his brothers when he eliminated an enemy sniper. Always humble, Darrell made the near impossible shot with ease. At the Battle of the Bulge on December 29, 1944, when Easy company was staying the woods, Powers noticed a tree standing there that had not been there the day before and reported it to his First Sergeant Lipton. The "tree" was discovered to be a part of a camouflage  the Germans put up for there anti-aircraft battery. Lipton got permission to fire on the battery, despite low ammunitions. The area was evacuated within an hour. "Shifty " Powers noticing the tree and using his skills brought about the deployment of the German unit.

At the closing of the ETO Shifty did not have enough points to return home. Even though he served his time; he was never injured in action thus coming up short for the requirement. Consequently he was chosen via lottery to receive an early furlough. On his way to the airport Staff Sergeant Powers was severely injured in an automobile accident. Spending many months convalescing, he returned to the United States well after many of the men in his Company. After the war Shifty returned to Virginia and married Dorothy Lenore Stamper. The couple were married for 60 years. After a brief career as a machinist in California the Powers returned to Virginia where Shifty worked as a machinist with Clinchfield Coal Corporation for more than twenty years. Darrell Shifty Powers was portrayed in the HBO miniseries Band of Brothers by Peter Youngblood Hills. Staff Sergeant Powers passed away on June 17, 2009 at the age of 86. He lies in rest at Temple Memorial Park in Castlewood Virginia. Courtesy of WW II uncovered

Ralph P
Ralph B. Praeger
Army
Ralph
B.
Praeger
DIVISION: Army,
Troop C, 26 Cavalry, Philippine Scouts
Apr 7, 1914 - Dec 31, 1944
BIRTHPLACE: Claflin, KS
HIGHEST RANK: Major
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: 1938 -
1
0
BATTLE: Defense of the Philippines
MILITARY HONORS: Distinguished Service Cross with one Oak Leaf Cluster Legion of Merit Bronze Star Purple Heart American Defense Service Medal with Foreign service clasp Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal with four Bronze Service Stars Wourld War II Victory Medal Combat Infantry Badge Distinguished Unit Emblem with one Bronze Service Star Philippine Liberation Ribbon with one Bronze Service Star Philippine Independence Ribbon Philippine Presidential Unit Citation POW Ribbon
HONORED BY: Ralph B. Praeger Jr.

BIOGRAPHY

Comments of Colonel Ralph B. Praeger, Jr. (USAF Ret.) At Memorial Day Ceremony Calflin, Kansas May 30, 2016 Today we gather with thousands of our fellow citizens across the country to recognize Memorial Day. A day set aside to honor those who answered the call to defend their country and paid the ultimate sacrifice in doing so. Memorial Day was created in 1868 just after the Civil War. On this day, all Americans are called upon to decorate the graves of their fallen countrymen and recall the sacrifice they made for the United States of America. Since 1775, between 1.2 and1.8 million of our fellow citizens have died in service to their country. Each of their stories is unique and inspiring. We honor them all -- particularly the 17 sons of Claflin whom we lost in WWII and Vietnam. However, today we will show our honor by focusing on just one of these fallen Americans. A man who grew up just a little over a mile from where we are now gathered. My father, Major Ralph B Praeger. As most of you know, Major Praeger grew up on a very successful Kansas farm. There he learned the importance of individual responsibility, the necessity of hard work, and developed a keen sense of duty. After graduating from Claflin High in 1932, he devoted his time to obtaining an appointment to West Point. He was motivated by a personal desire to try another kind of life other than farming. To increase his chances of obtaining an appointment, he attended college classes in Sterling. Finally, two years later, his dream was fulfilled. He received a letter from his Congressman informing him that he had secured his long sought appointment to West Point. He entered West Point in the summer of 1934. Despite all of the commentary concerning the difficulty of the training and academics at West Point, he found the intense schedule a significant relief from the dawn to dusk farm labor he did as a boy. I had the opportunity to meet a large number of his West Point class mates. All of them related to me how he repeatedly reminded them that the demands of the Point were much less than the demands placed on a farmer. He told them that he felt he was on an extended vacation. June week in 1938 at West Point was a very significant for my Father. He married my Mother in the Chapel at West Point, received his bachelor of science degree and was appointed a Second Lieutenant in the Army. He then pursued a new dream. He desperately wanted to be a pilot. Unfortunately, he was unable to fulfill this dream because of a depth perception problem. Fate then intervened. The Army then sent him to the Presidio in San Francisco. This was a holding position for his ultimate assignment to the 26th Cavalry, Philippine Scouts at Fort Stotsenburg , Philippine Islands. He arrived there in 1939. His first job was officer in charge of the motor pool. There he used his farm experience and for the first time was able to get all of the aging vehicles in operating condition. This entailed him to do most of the repair work personally because his Philippine Scouts had little knowledge of mechanics. He taught them as he worked. This illustrated one of his most noteworthy traits -- he considered no job beneath him. At this point, we are going to turn to my Dad's accomplishments in WWII. Before doing so, I need to make a side comment. He was fortunate to have serving as his deputy, Captain Thomas S. Jones. Tom Jones was critical to the success of the WWII operations as were three other Americans and the Filipinos who joined their operation. Tom was the sole American survivor. My Father would be embarrassed today if he knew that I had confined my remarks to only him and failed to recognize the significant contributions of his colleagues. As the war clouds gathered in 1940, then Captain Praeger was appointed the commander of Troop C, 26 Cavalry, Philippine Scouts, stationed at Fort Stotensburg north of Manila. Life was good. Mornings were consumed with military affairs and training. The afternoons were basically free but usually filled with sporting activities and the evenings were consumed with social activities -- a life style similar to that of a Colonial army unit. All of that changed abruptly on the morning of December 8, 1941. My Father received his orders to return to the United States early that morning, commenting to Tom that the orders were not worth the paper upon which they were written. A short time later, they learned that the Japanese had attack Pearl Harbor. Soon the bombs began falling around them at Clark Air Base and Ft. Stotsenburg. War had come and their lives were about to change drastically – challenging both to the absolute limits of human survival. They were just 27 years old. As the Army began preparing for the certain invasion of the Philippines by the Japanese, Troop C was dispatched to protect Baguio, the summer capital of the Philippines. Baguio is located high in the mountains about 90 miles north of Ft. Stotsenburg. On December 18, Troop C departed its home base by bus with a strength of about 100 men. For about two weeks, they prepared to defend Baguio. However, the Japanese Army decided to bypass Baguio staying in the lowlands between Manila and Baguio. Troop C and the other US forces in Baguio were now cut off from the rest of the US and Philippine forces. Disgusted with the leadership in Baguio – particularly a decision to destroy all of the available supplies instead of hiding them for potential future use – and anxious to carry out operations against the enemy – my Dad requested permission to strike out on his own. Keep in mind, by making this decision; he was going to be operating entirely upon his own without logistical support or potential for reinforcement. He would be solely dependent upon the equipment and food he and his men could carry or obtain from the land and its people. During the next two weeks, they walked over 115 miles north to the Cagayan Province where on January 12, 1942 they attack the Japanese Army Garrison near Tuguegarao. The attack was a success and inflicted heavy casualties upon the Japanese. Tom told me that he believed that the attack on Tuguegarao was the first offensive operation against the Japanese after Pearl Harbor. During the next few months, Tom and my Father organized their forces, set up headquarters high in the unmapped and rugged mountains near Kabugao, collaborated with the Provence governor, Mr. Adduru, and established contact by radio with Corregidor, Gen McArthur’s headquarters. Troop C then became known as the Cagayan/Apayao Force – CAF for short. Their primary mission was to collect intelligence. At the same time, they were working with Gov. Adduru to gain control of the northern part of Luzon. To accomplish this, they established a working government complete with a judicial system and a monetary system which operated until mid1943. In early May of 1942, Bataan fell and the US surrendered its forces in the Philippines. My Father and Tom chose not to surrender justifying their decision on a technicality -- the order they received was not specifically addressed to either of them. Now they were truly on their own. Hope was fleeting. Despair was always present. Good health was constantly difficult to maintain. The future was quite uncertain. But Ralph Praeger was not common -- certainly not by today’s standards. Duty, Honor, Country were part of his very core. He chose to continue the fight and to continue to serve his country. This was his duty. The Scouts of Troop C were not about to abandon it or the Filipino people. Writing in 1946, Tom Jones wrote the following profound words which, to me, sum the emotions they must have been having at the time: Quoting Tom. “Defeat is a terrible thing. Its full significance cannot be grasped merely through the material losses which are part of it. It brings down with it the whole structure about which a nation or an army has been built. It subjects men to the most severe of moral tests at a time when they are physically least able to meet them. Defeat brings to light weaknesses heretofore unsuspected or ignored so that everyone sees them. Respect is replaced by contempt. Loyalty disintegrates. On the battlefield fear is accepted as natural and passed over, but the failings in character which defeat exposes cannot be passed over.” Tom continues. “Leadership, in part, may properly be regarded as an acquired technique under normal circumstances, but it must be rooted in character if it is to survive a major disaster. For it is only the man of character who has the courage to stand fast when everything is crashing around him. He alone possesses the spirit of self sacrifice which is necessary to keep alive the loyalty of his men when disloyalty becomes an everyday occurrence. He alone has the impelling sense of devotion which causes him to discharge his duty as he understands when the chain of command has been destroyed, in a situation without precedents, or when others counsel him to the contrary of what he believes is right. Under normal circumstances, it is difficult to discern the true character of a man, but in the midst of defeat character cannot be concealed. ” "It was the good fortune of Troop C, that its commander was a man of character. He held his men together when he had nothing to offer them except privation and danger. He taught them by his own example the lesson of duty." Close quote. During the next 15 months my Dad maintained his operation. In September 1942 they were able to rebuild their radio and establish contact with Australia and the US. This was the only radio in the Philippines which was able to contact the outside world. They continued to maintain the government operations they had established with Gov Adduru, collected intelligence, and conducted minor operations against the enemy. In the meantime, guerrilla leaders throughout the Philippines were being captured. In May of 1943 Gov Adduru was caught. In July 1943, the following message was sent to Troop C. Quote: "To Praeger; From MacArthur" "From General MacArthur to the surviving members of C Troop,26th Cavalry: Soldiers of C Troop 26th cavalry." "I gratefully acknowledge and commend the invincible spirit that has held your little band together and permitted you as a unit to so long sustain military operations against the enemy in conquered territory. By so doing you have enshrined your Troop Guidon in glory and set a brilliant and inspiring example for soldiers everywhere to emulate. To the ill and depressed among you I trust a merciful providence will succor and protect you and instill in your hearts new courage and faith and hope in the firm knowledge that your struggle and sacrifice shall not have been in vain. I commend your surviving officers Praeger, Jones, Needham and Furagganan for high qualities of leadership, resourcefulness and unswerving devotion to duty." Close quote. The end of the operation was near -- lasting only until August 30th for my Dad and September 8th for Tom. When Captain Takahashi captured my Dad, the Japanese officer came to attention and remarked, "A very brave thing you have done for your country." With their capture, radio contact with the Philippines was lost for many months. Both men then endured the harsh treatment in various Japanese internment camps -- lasting for more than a year for my Dad and nearly two years for Tom. My Dad was executed by the Japanese for war crimes against the state of Japan in late 1944. He was just 30 years old. Some historians have called the CAF the most successful guerrilla operation in the Philippines. While it did not survive the occupation, it did provide the Filipino people in their area of operation with hope and a functioning government for the majority of the WWII. For his heroic acts, Gen. MacArthur awarded my Dad two Distinguished Service Crosses, the Nation's second highest award for valor. One to recognize his heroism, leadership, planning and execution of the raid on Japanese Army Garrison near Tuguegarao, and the second, awarded posthumously, to recognize his valor and accomplishments as a Guerrilla leader. In addition, he was awarded the Legion of Merit, at that time the nation's highest non combat medal, the Bronze Star, the Combat Infantryman's Badge and the Purple Heart. He was also honored by having the Army Reserve Center in Great Bend, an historic barracks building at Fort Riley, and VFW Post 8668 dedicated in his name. In December 1945, my grandfather received a letter from General of the Army, Douglas MacArthur. The bulk of the letter is probably the text of condolence letter sent to the families of many fallen soldiers. However, Gen MacArthur added a final sentence which many consider quite significant and separates it from a routine letter of condolence. Quote: "In your son's death I have lost a gallant comrade and mourn with you." Close quote. To the best of our knowledge, my Dad's remains were never identified. We believe he now rests in one of the graves marked as "Unknown" in the American Cemetery in Manila, the Philippines. Sherry and I visited the Cemetery in February. It is absolutely beautiful and a very fitting location for Dad's remains. After lamenting about the societal differences between the American Society of the 1940s and 1950s and the Society at the end of the 20th century , Bernard Norling relates the following in his closing paragraph of his book "The Intrepid Guerillas of North Luzon": Quote 'To such a society the brave men of Troop C, 26th Cavalry and the CAF constitute a hearting contrast. No matter how unsuccessful they might have been, in the short run, all of them risked their lives -- and most of them gave their lives -- to do their duty. Their deeds deserve to be recorded and their example displayed to a later age, many of whose members can scarcely imagine the meaning of the words valor and sacrifice. Societies and nations live on their memories quite as much as do individuals. Those who leave behind them examples of responsibilities accepted, performance of duty embraced and blood shed for worthy causes may live only brief lives, but they enrich the national legacy for generations to come." Close quote In closing, recall my father was but one of Claflin's sons who answered the Nation's call to duty and paid for this service with his life. All of them deserve our deepest gratitude and respect. The price of freedom is often overlooked as we live our daily lives. If you only take one thing away from this ceremony today, please remember that more than a million Americans have given their lives to ensure that we can live in freedom and peace and pursue the way of life we all now enjoy. Thank You

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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