Image
WWII,DDE
Image
Ike Logo
Image
DDAY
Image
Ike Logo

Stories from the Greatest Generation

Image
D Day
Image
Ike Logo

A Virtual World War II Honor Roll

Search

Filter Your Results

empty

empty e. empty empty

empty

EMPTY
E.
EMPTY
EMPTY

Jan 1, 2000 - Jan 1, 2000
BIRTHPLACE: empty

SOLDIER DETAILS

HIGHEST RANK: empty
DIVISION: empty,
empty
THEATER OF OPERATION: empty
SERVED: Jan 1, 2000 -
DISCHARGED: Jan 1, 2000
BATTLE: empty
MILITARY HONORS: empty
HONORED BY: empty

VIDEOS

empty

BIOGRAPHY

empty
empty

Search Results

Showing Results 953 - 960 of 1434

George Norton
George F. Norton
Navy
George
F.
Norton
DIVISION: Navy,
Naval Reserve Armed Guard
Jul 7, 1925 -
BIRTHPLACE: Smith Center, KS
HIGHEST RANK: Seaman 1st Class
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Feb 16, 1943 -
0
0
BATTLE: Okinawa
MILITARY HONORS: Purple Heart Medal, Achievement Medal Good Conduct Medal, World War II Victory Medal, American Campaign Medal Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal, with 1 bronze star, Navy Occupation Service Medal with Europe clasp, national Defense Service Medal with 1 bronze star,
HONORED BY: The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

George Norton grew up in Smith Center, KS. The end of the fall semester of his senior year in 1942, North left Smith Center for Kansas City to join the Navy at 17 years old. The Navy sent him back and called him up on Feb. 16, 1943. North went to boot camp in Farragut ID, then gunnery school in San Diego. After a 30 day leave, he transferred to Treasure island, CA. and assigned his first ship the SS Ben Holladay. On Dec. 1943 Norton transferred to the SS Joseph Snelling for the duration of World War II as Seaman 1st Class. Aboard the SS Joseph Snelling we were under constant attack by the Japanese suicide planes. We got credit for shooting down 3 1/2 Kamikazes before we were hit by a Kamikaze off the coast of Okinawa. The plan hit in the NO. 1 cargo hold. The plan had a 40 lb and 500lb aboard. About 10 seconds before the plan hit us, North was hit in the eye by a piece of Shrapnel. As the pointer on a 50 Cal. gun the gunnery office r was giving me treatment ( we had no corpsman doctor) when the Kamikaze hit the cargo boom on the starboard side of the ship and sent it into the cargo hold. The 40lb bomb exploded and fire went up mast high. when Norton had his first aid done, he was told to return to duty. The stevedores eventually had the fire put out and were down clearing out the cargo hold. What they did not know was a 500lb bomb buried in a load of timber, had not exploded. That morning, two other nearby ships in the anchorage had been hit by Kamikaze planes also.

VIDEOS

L V. Nowak
Navy
L
V.
Nowak
DIVISION: Navy,
USS Lenawee, APA 195
Aug 8, 1921 - Jun 24, 2010
BIRTHPLACE: Gorham, KS
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Oct 28, 1943 -
0
Apr 4, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Lillian; and children

BIOGRAPHY

Vernon took basic training at Farragut, Idaho; was assigned to the USS Lenawee, APA 195; amphibious training at Camp Pendleton; and Pearl Harbor. He participated in the battles of Iwo Jima and Okinawa; clean up in the Philippines; signing of the surrender at Tokyo Bay. Vernon was discharged at Norman, Oklahoma.

LaVerne R. Nuss
Army
LaVerne
R.
Nuss
DIVISION: Army,
1st Infantry, 18th Regiment, K Company
Feb 10, 1923 - Apr 20, 2007
BIRTHPLACE: Rural Barton County, Kansas
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
0
0
HONORED BY: Son Marvin Nuss

BIOGRAPHY

LaVerne Nuss served in the Army's 1st Infantry, 18th Regiment, K Company. He was stationed for a time in Fort Lewis, Washington, and then Kansas City, Missouri. He was an MP in Kansas City assisting troop movement through Kansas City's Union Station. He was also stationed at a POW camp as a prisoner guard. He shipped to Europe in 1944 some time after D-Day. He fought in Germany and was part of the mortar squad. He was in Czechoslovakia when the war in Europe ended. He remained stationed in Germany for a year or so after the war. He returned to the USA in 1946 and was honorably discharged. Upon his return to Kansas, he started farming near where he grew up in southeast Russell County. He married Estella Crabtree in 1948 and raised four sons. He became a successful farmer/stockman. He grew wheat and milo and had a cow/calf operation. He was active in the Russell County Conservation Board, the Dorrance, Kansas Co-op, Dorrance school board, and the Dorrance Lutheran Church.

Delbert W. Obermeyer
Navy
Delbert
W.
Obermeyer
DIVISION: Navy
Aug 24, 1923 -
BIRTHPLACE: Woodbine, KS
HIGHEST RANK: AMM3c
THEATER OF OPERATION: American
SERVED: Jun 13, 1943 -
0
May 3, 1946
0
HONORED BY: Marilyn F. Obermeyer, wife

BIOGRAPHY

Delbert served at three bases within the United States during his service. His rank was Aviation Machinist Mate Third Class.

Eldon C. Oesterreich
Navy
Eldon
C.
Oesterreich
DIVISION: Navy,
Hospital Corpsman
Jun 12, 1925 -
BIRTHPLACE: Woodbine, KS
HIGHEST RANK: Ph M 3/C
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Sep 21, 1943 -
0
Mar 31, 1946
0
HONORED BY: wife, Charmaine and daughters, Martha and Mary

BIOGRAPHY

Eldon Oestereich's stations of duty included: USNTS, Farragut, Idaho; USNH, Seattle, Washington; and USNAS, Kaneohe Bay, TH. His rank was Ph M 3/C

Delbert M. Oesterreich
Army
Delbert
M.
Oesterreich
DIVISION: Army,
Co. C 313th Medical Battalion
Oct 26, 1922 - Jan 18, 2006
BIRTHPLACE: Woodbine, KS
HIGHEST RANK: SSGT
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Feb 27, 1945 -
0
Nov 21, 1946
0
HONORED BY: The children of Sgt. Oesterreich and his brother Eldon

BIOGRAPHY

Inducted at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. Discharged at Fort George Meade, Maryland. His rank was Staff Sgt. He received the World War II Medal.

Verle V. Ohm
Army
Verle
V.
Ohm
DIVISION: Army
Jan 18, 1918 - Jan 31, 1998
BIRTHPLACE: Hope, KS
HIGHEST RANK: PFC
THEATER OF OPERATION: European
SERVED: Oct 6, 1943 -
0
Apr 23, 1946
0
HONORED BY: The Dickinson County Heritage Center and The Eisenhower Foundation

BIOGRAPHY

Verle Ohm was born to Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ohm on January 18, 1918 near Hope, KS. His parents both died before Verle was 1 year old. Ohm's grandparents Mr. and Mrs. George Riffle took him on as their own and raised him. Verle attend the Michigan Grade School a mile south of Hope, KS and graduated from Hope High School in 1935. He worked at Badger Lumber Company in Hope until going to Wichita business school. Upon graduating, Verle worked for Santa Fe Trailways in Muskogee, OK as a ticket agent. On September 13, 1943 he was indicted into the service at Fort Leavenworth, KS. He was sent to Camp Roberts, CA for basic training in the infantry. On April, 6 1944, Verle was sent overseas to Great Britain. He wrote his folks to say it was a beautiful place and he felt right at home. No other information is know about his service. Verle married Anne Koepel of White City, KS in 1941 while living in Muskogee OK.

Michas M. Ohnstad
Army
Michas
M.
Ohnstad
DIVISION: Army,
43rd Inf. Div.
Nov 14, 1926 -
BIRTHPLACE: Hinckley, MN
HIGHEST RANK: T/5
THEATER OF OPERATION: Pacific
SERVED: Jan 4, 1945 -
0
Jan 11, 1947
0
HONORED BY: Wife, Alma Ohnstad

BIOGRAPHY

Michas Ohnstad was the youngest of four siblings. He was born at Hinckley, MN on 14 August 1926. He graduated from Hinckley High School May 1944 and, upon receipt of the famous 'Greetings' letter from President Roosevelt, he was drafted and inducted into the Army at Ft. Snelling, MN and further processed at Jefferson Barracks, MO in Jan 1945 and sent for armored basic training at Ft. Knox, KY. Following a brief delay-en-route (not a furlough) after basic he went by troop train (the old coal fired steam type) to Fort Ord, CA replacement depot for processing for overseas duty. He departed by troop ship from California on 7 July 1945 for a destination unannounced until at sea and after zigzagging, for security reasons, across the Pacific with a stopover in Hawaii he landed at Manila in the Philippines and then transferred to Cabanatuan, Luzon for service with the 43rd Infantry Division - Field Artillery Battalion. On 6 and 9 August 1945 President Truman ordered the dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki (President Roosevelt had died on 12 April 1945) and on 14 August 1945 (his 19th birthday!) it was announced that Japan had surrendered. By troop ship he was sent to Yokohama, Japan for Army of Occupation duty with the 1st Cavalry Division. On Sep 30, 1945 he received Orders from General MacArthur that read in part and in typical military shorthand: 'Following named enlisted member, now on temporary duty Advance Echelon, GHQ AFPAC, APO 500, WP Hiroshima and Nagasaki and such other places adjacent thereto as may be necessary for carrying out instructions. Upon completion of this duty, member will return Advance Ech. GHQ AFPAC, APO 500. EM auth travel between Hiroshima and Nagasaki at such times as may be necessary in the accomplishment of their mission. Member will report to Col. A.W. Oughterson for duty. Travel by military aircraft is directed for accomplishment of an emergency war mission . . . .' This order was for service with the ATOMIC BOMB COMMISSION which was composed of several American medical doctors and two or three enlisted men and a contingent of Japanese doctors and nurses and two male Japanese cooks both of whom had been combat soldiers. One of the cooks lost his wife and one child as a result of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. The commission ate, slept and worked on site and the area was 'off limits' to area occupation troops because of radiation concerns. After the bombs were dropped early reports in the field in the Philippines indicated that 'vegetation would not grow for a hundred years' but that early report was far from reality. 'I was the only Minnesotan who served with the Atomic Bomb Commission and so at my demise that page of history will have been turned. Upon completion of the Atomic Bomb Commission assignment I served with the USA Typhus Commission in Tokyo. The task of the typhus commission was to spray Japanese civilians with DDT powder because at war's end lice were a health problem among the Japanese populace. The goal was to protect the Occupation troops from Typhus by spraying the civilian population. The Japanese welcomed the opportunity to be sprayed with the DDT powder and they lined up in long lines to await the spray treatment. Upon completion of USA Typhus Commission service my final service was in Tokyo at General MacArthur's headquarters in the Dai Ichi building. We would see General MacArthur every day. He was so disciplined that you could 'set your watch' by his departure time. The Japanese citizens had great respect for General MacArthur and in anticipation of his daily departure from the building they could be seen stopped on the sidewalk waiting for him to exit the building and to enter his chauffeured vehicle. I was returned stateside and received my Honorable Discharge after two years and eleven days with one year, four months, and two days foreign service. My rank at discharge was T/5 and I received the Asiatic Pacific Theatre Ribbon,'

empty

empty e. empty empty

empty

EMPTY
E.
EMPTY
EMPTY

Jan 1, 2000 - Jan 1, 2000
BIRTHPLACE: empty

SOLDIER DETAILS

HIGHEST RANK: empty
DIVISION: empty,
empty
THEATER OF OPERATION: empty
SERVED: Jan 1, 2000 -
DISCHARGED: Jan 1, 2000
BATTLE: empty
MILITARY HONORS: empty
HONORED BY: empty

VIDEOS

empty

BIOGRAPHY

empty
empty

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.

Image
Sunset
"Humility must always be the portion of any man who receives acclaim earned in blood of his followers and sacrifices of his friends."
Image
Eisenhower Signature

Guildhall Address, London, June 12, 1945