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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 937 - 944 of 1422

Don C. Newey
Army Air Corps
Don
C.
Newey
DIVISION: Army Air Corps,
5th Recon.
May 31, 1922 - Dec 27, 2007
BIRTHPLACE: Ogden, Utah
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Oct 17, 1942 -
0
Nov 16, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Wife Geraldine Newey and Six Children

BIOGRAPHY

In 1939 Don graduated from High School, and joined the Navy. He left the Navy before WWII started, and afterwards he joined the Army Air Corps and served with the 5th Recon Unit in Saipan and Guam as a photograph developer. Leaving the service of his country on 1945, he then spent the rest of his life as a finish carpenter until his retirement 1980.

Paul Newman
Navy
Paul
Newman
DIVISION: Navy
Jan 26, 1925 - Sep 26, 2008
BIRTHPLACE: Cleveland, OH
HIGHEST RANK: Radioman 3rd Class
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: 1943 -
1
0006
1
MILITARY HONORS: American Area Campaign medal Good Conduct Medal World War II Victory medal.
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Paul Newman was born in a suburb of Cleveland in 1925. His family owned and operated a small, lucrative sporting goods store that provided a comfortable lifestyle. After Newman graduated from Shaker Heights High School in 1943, he joined the Navy's V-12 program at Yale University in the hopes of becoming a pilot. His hopes were dashed, however, when it was discovered that he was color blind. Instead of completing the program, Newman was shipped to basic training where he qualified to be a rear-seat radioman and gunner for torpedo bombers. In 1944, Newman was sent to Barber's Point where he operated in torpedo bomber squadron designed to train replacement pilots. He was later stationed on an aircraft carrier as a turret gunner for an Avenger aircraft.

 As a radioman-gunner, his unit was assigned to the aircraft carrier Bunker Hill along with other replacements shortly before the Battle of Okinawa in the spring of 1945. The pilot of his aircraft had an earache and was grounded as was his crew, including Newman. The rest of their squadron flew to the Bunker Hill. Days later, a kamikaze attack on the Bunker Hill killed several hundred crewmen and airmen, including other members of his unit.  Courtesy of Military.com

Leroy A. Newton
Army
Leroy
A.
Newton
DIVISION: Army,
Company 'C', 503rd M.P. Bn
Aug 26, 1924 - Apr 29, 2014
BIRTHPLACE: Three Sands, OK
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: May 19, 1943 -
0
Dec 12, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Eve Newton

BIOGRAPHY

Leroy was sent to England on 30 Jan 1944. He then found himself in Normandy in June 1944 with the D-Day invasion forces. He later spent time in northern France, the Ardennes, Rhineland and central Europe. Roy met Eve when he was stationed in Germany following WWII. They moved to Abilene, Kansas, where they raised their family while operating a Montgomery Ward franchise store. (Eve and Roy died just one day apart, April 28 and 29, 2014.)

Nez
Chester Nez
Marine Corps
Chester
Nez
DIVISION: Marine Corps,
382nd Platoon
Jan 23, 1921 - Jun 4, 2014
BIRTHPLACE: Galllup, NM
HIGHEST RANK: Corporal
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: 1942 -
1
0
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

One of nine children, Chester Nez was born at Cousin Brothers Trading Post on the Navajo Nation, about 15 miles southwest of Gallup, NM. His family isn't certain of his birth date, but government officials have set it at Jan. 23, 1921. Nez grew up at Chichiltah - which translates to "among the oaks" - on the Navajo reservation where he tended the family's sheep herd and lived a traditional Navajo boy's life until, at age 9, he was sent to Tohatchi Boarding School. By the time he was 18, Nez had attended boarding schools in Fort Defiance, Ariz., Gallup and Tuba City, interspersed with "vacations" back home on the reservation. He was in the 10th grade at Tuba City Boarding School when the (Marine Corps) recruiters came to the school. They were specifically looking for Navajos. The students didn't know they would be Code Talkers when they were recruited. In 1942, Philip Johnston, a World War I veteran and non-Native American who grew up on the Navajo reservation and spoke fluent Navajo, proposed that the military base a secret code on the complex language. After demonstrating to the military that Navajos could quickly encode, transmit and decode an otherwise undecipherable three-line message in 20 seconds, the Marine Corps brass authorized the recruitment of Navajos to create and implement the code as soon as possible. Nez and other new recruits were bused to Fort Defiance and sworn into the Corps in May 1942. From there they went to Camp Pendleton in California for basic training, and then 29 of them were selected and assigned to the 382nd Platoon. After boot camp training was over they sent us to Camp Elliott, and that's where they started doing the code. Form there the  Marines headed for the Pacific theater. The Code Talkers worked in teams of two, one sending coded messages by radio while the other cranked the radio's internal generator and watched for the enemy or returned fire. After a few hours, they would switch.  Nez left active duty in 1945 and went into the Marine Reserves until he was reactivated for the Korean conflict in 1951. He left the military in 1952 with the rank of corporal and soon enrolled at Haskell Institute in Lawrence, KS., now known as Haskell Indian Nations University, where he earned his GED and met his future wife, Ethel. The couple married in 1953 in St. Michaels, Ariz., and raised three sons and a daughter. They eventually divorced, and Ethel died of a heart attack in the early 1990s. Nez retired in 1974 after a 25-year career as a painter at the Veterans Affairs Hospital in Albuquerque, NM. Courtesy of WW II uncovered and frenchfuneral.com.

Clayton C. Nichols
Army
Clayton
C.
Nichols
DIVISION: Army
Nov 1, 1924 -
BIRTHPLACE: Akron, Ohio
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Sep 28, 1943 -
0
Jan 25, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Royce Jean Linder Nichols; son, Gary L. Nichols ; daughter-in-law, Ellen M. Nichols

BIOGRAPHY

Decorations and Citations: American Theater Ribbon; Asian-Pacific Theater Ribbon with three Bronze Stars; Philippine Liberation Ribbon with two Bronze Stars; Good conduct ribbon; Victory Medal; Military Occupation Specialty and No. Fire Control Instrument Operator 645 and Cabin Sharpshooter. Battles and campaigns: Southern Phillippines, Bismark Archipelago; Luzon.

Augustine W. Nickerson
Army
Augustine
W.
Nickerson
DIVISION: Army,
3118 Signal Corp
Aug 20, 1923 -
BIRTHPLACE: Lawrence, MA
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Nov 1, 1942 -
0
Dec 7, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Widow, Leona Nickerson

BIOGRAPHY

Augustine was one of four cryptographers that sent the message of the German surrender to the world from Reims, France. The unit went to I.G. Farben building in Frankfurt, Germany to continue the code work. Augustine remained there until his discharge.

Homer G. Nix
Army
Homer
G.
Nix
DIVISION: Army,
123rd Infantry
Oct 16, 1914 - Feb 4, 1991
BIRTHPLACE: Stevens County Kansas
HIGHEST RANK: Private First Class
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Feb 22, 1942 -
0
Nov 19, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Rita Nix Burch

BIOGRAPHY

A Kansas farm boy who served in the Civilian Conservation Corps during the 1930's where he learned to be a Jeep mechanic. When drafted he trained in Tennessee, Ft. Lewis, Washington and in the Mojave Desert prior to being shipped out to the Hawaiian Islands and then on to Luzon, Philippines and New Guinea where he served as a combat infantryman and Jeep driver. He earned the following medals: American Service medal, Asiatic Pacific Service medal, Philippine Liberation medal with a Bronze Star, Good Conduct medal, and a World War II Victory medal.

Richard M. Nixon
Navy
Richard
M.
Nixon
DIVISION: Navy,
South Pacific Combat Air Transport Cmd (SCAT), Fleet Air Wing 8
Jan 9, 1913 - Apr 22, 1994
BIRTHPLACE: Yorba Linda, CA
HIGHEST RANK: LCDR
THEATER OF OPERATION: American, Pacific
SERVED: Aug 1, 1942 -
0
Dec 31, 1945
0
HONORED BY: Richard Nixon Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Richard accepted work with the Office of Price Administration (OPA) in Washington, D.C. and in Jan 1942, he and his wife Pat set up home in Alexandria, Virginia. He began working as an assistant attorney for the rationing coordination section, in particular, with rubber and tire rationing for the war effort.
Then, in Aug 1942, Richard was accepted to the Officer Training Program at the Naval Air Station, Quonset Point, Rhode Island. He was transferred to Ottumwa, Iowa in Oct 1942, where he served as Aide to the Executive Officer. Richard frequently requested a combat assignment and finally succeeded with an overseas post in May 1943. After a brief leave to Whittier, he reported to San Francisco and sailed to New Caledonia on May 31, 1943, where he worked as a staff officer, primarily in logistics, in the South Pacific Combat Air Transport Command (SCAT). Pat Nixon remained in San Francisco, working for the OPA while he was out at sea, as she reasoned that was where he would return. Richard was promoted to Lieutenant on October 1, 1943.
In January 1944, his unit was moved to the Solomon Islands, a frequent target of Japanese air raids, and in February, he supported the U.S. attack on Green Island in a logistics role. He received a Letter of Commendation for his 'meritorious and efficient performance' at both. During this time, he developed his interest for poker and in his memoirs he referred to a poker game in which he drew a royal flush. It is believed that his substantial winnings were used to help finance his first congressional campaign. Richard's combat tour ended in July 1944 and he and Pat returned to San Francisco where he was assigned to Fleet Air Wing 8, Alameda, working on transportation problems. Transferred to the East Coast in November 1944, the Navy made use of his legal training by assigning him the task of terminating defense contracts. Praised for his 'meritorious service, tireless effort, and devotion to duty' he was credited with saving the Navy millions of dollars.
In August 1945, President Nixon and First Lady Pat Nixon were in the famous Times Square crowd celebrating the Japanese surrender. President Nixon was released from active duty in September 1945, but agreed to stay until December 31, 1945, to clear up a few contract terminations. In October 1945, he was promoted to Lieutenant Commander.
He was awarded the American Campaign Medal, The Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal, and the World War II Victory Medal.
RIchard Nixon served as President Dwight E. Eisenhower's Vice President for eight years, 1953-1961. Nixon became the 37th President of the United States in 1969.

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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