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Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Dr. John David Ulferts
22 episodes
2 weeks ago
World War II was a pivotal moment in world history, when not only the survival of the United States was at stake, but of democracy throughout the world. Had the Allies lost WW II, fascism would have engulfed the world even as genocide would have robbed humanity of its diversity. WW II veterans live again through these short podcasts, which like the accompanying book of the same name, tell their incredible stories of valor and sacrifice. Each riveting podcast tells the story of WW II through the eyes of those who fought it. They were called the greatest generation for a reason.
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All content for Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes is the property of Dr. John David Ulferts and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
World War II was a pivotal moment in world history, when not only the survival of the United States was at stake, but of democracy throughout the world. Had the Allies lost WW II, fascism would have engulfed the world even as genocide would have robbed humanity of its diversity. WW II veterans live again through these short podcasts, which like the accompanying book of the same name, tell their incredible stories of valor and sacrifice. Each riveting podcast tells the story of WW II through the eyes of those who fought it. They were called the greatest generation for a reason.
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History
Episodes (20/22)
Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep. 22 - Murray Shapiro - Serving Proudly even Behind Enemy Lines
As a Jewish American, Murray Shapiro couldn’t wait to volunteer in WW 2.  He was well aware of the Nuremberg Laws and the racist treatment Jewish people received in Germany.  He lost his spot in officer school though because he objected to the racist views his Major Carvell held towards black people.  During the Battle of the Bulge, Shapiro would receive the Bronze Star for his actions organizing a rear guard and defending it until his outfit was able to withdraw.  In doing so, Shapiro was left completely surrounded behind enemy lines and had to make a harrowing journey back to his platoon.  From the Battle of the Bulge to the Colmar Pocket to the crossing of the Ludendorff Bridge at Remagen, this episode focuses on Murray Shapiro’s harrowing WW 2 experiences.  Young Murray Shapiro Photo young Murray Shapiro sent home to family Murray Shapiro  Murray and his wife Shirley Shapiro Murray Shapiro - twilight years  
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2 weeks ago
53 minutes

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep. 21 Colonel Lloyd Huggins - Leading Easy Company Thru the Hurtgen Forest, the Battle of the Bulge, and Beyond
Colonel Lloyd G. Huggins landed on Omaha Beach three weeks after D-Day as the replacement officer for Easy Company’s Infantry Regiment.  They were in continuous combat for nearly one year fighting through France, the Siegfried Line, the Hurtgen Forest, the Battle of the Bulge, across the Remagen Bridge, until VE Day.  No one had more respect for his infantry men than Huggins did.  Through it all, he put his men first and foremost in his mind.  This is his story, as told in his letters to the podcast host and his unpublished 1988 autobiography that he sent to me.  Colonel Lloyd Huggins Newspaper article - Ft. Wolter Hurtgen Forest Hurtgen Forest Hurtgen Forest Battle of the Bulge Battle of the Bulge Battle of the Bulge Ludendorff Bridge at Remagen  
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4 weeks ago
42 minutes

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep. 20 - When Johnny Comes Marching Home: Transitions and Remembrance
Following the unconditional surrender of Germany on VE Day and the unconditional surrender of Japan three months later on VJ Day, spontaneous celebrations swept across the US with tinker tape parades, dancing and singing.  In Times Square, an estimated two million people gathered to celebrate.  But not every veteran participated or received the warm welcome they expected upon returning home.  By the time Henry Heller was finally sent home from Germany, there were no hugs or parades.  Suffering from a number of maladies, Heller struggled for years to get the help he needed from the VA.  Bud Olson and Tom Carr both found the transition to civilian life difficult.  The skills they had learned as fighting men in WW 2 didn’t open any doors in the domestic civilian job market.  Having lost so many of their buddies in the war, many veterans were in no mood to celebrate.  Arnold “Dutch Nagel, Richard Mandich, Lewis J. Gould, Michael Luciano, and Edward Heinle seemed haunted by the friends they left behind.  WW II forever changed veterans.  Some wore their scars on the outside and accepted them as challenges to overcome, such as Paul Leimkueler, who didn’t let losing a leg stop him from becoming a downhill US Ski Hall of Famer.  It was the scars on the inside, the post traumatic stress, that were harder to overcome.  Veterans like Robert Erhardt, Richard Morgan, Robert Bowen and Donald Chase dealt with the nightmares the rest of their lives.  If they lived long enough, WW 2 veterans saw wars come again, though thankfully not on the scale of WW II.  Some reenlisted to serve, while others saw their children serve such as Duane Stevens.  Though proud of their service, many WW II veterans came out of WW 2 hating all war and regarded it as an abomination to be avoided whenever possible.  Dennis Olson, Lloyd Huggins, Arthur Jackson, David Saltman, Charles Wysocki and Donald Chase wanted to make sure no one glorified war and saw it for what it was:  HELL.  Those stories and more in Episode 20 When Johnny Came Marching Home:  Transitions and Remembrance. Henry Heller Bud Olson Tom Carr Arnold "Dutch" Nagel Lewis J. Gould Robert Erhardt Richard V. Morgan Robert Bowen Stan Davis Donald Chase Paul Leimkuehler Dennis Olson Lloyd Huggins Arthur Jackson David Saltman Charles Wysocki  
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1 month ago
38 minutes

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep 19 - Victory At Last Part 2 - VJ Day
When Germany unconditionally surrendered and Victory in Europe or VE Day was announced on May 8, 1945, American GIs were in a mood to celebrate.  For Russell Darks in France and Charlie Toole in London, it was an unforgettable night of celebrations.  But, in Germany, Murray Shapiro found that German civilians had nothing to celebrate, and all was quiet.  Tom Carr wanted to celebrate, but he was recovering from war injuries in a Czechoslovakian hospital.  Within days of VE-Day, Tom Morris had to establish a camp for German POWs and civilian refugees who now numbered in the thousands.  Lloyd Huggins was already questioning whether the Soviet soldiers, our so-called allies, were any better than the Germans we defeated when he was kept awake all night by the screams of German women being raped in the Soviet occupied quarter.  Harry Koty figured he was pretty lucky.  His 97th Infantry Division was one of the first to be sent home to the US.  Then, he learned they were sent home so quick so they could be redeployed in the Pacific.  But his luck continued.  En route, the Japanese surrendered and Koty had an enviable assignment once he arrived to occupied Japan – guarding a house full of Geisha girls and preventing GIs from visiting them. The invasion of mainland Japan was expected to be costly for both American and Japanese lives.  370,000 Purple Heart medals were ordered by the U.S. Army in preparation for the invasion.  They weren’t needed.  Instead, the US became the only country in history to drop the atomic bomb first in Hiroshima killing 80,000, then in Nagasaki, killing 70,000.  Almost all of the dead were civilians.  Fearful that more cities would soon be obliterated, Japan quickly surrendered.  While the US action remains controversial even today, most GIs supported the decision crediting the dropping of the bombs with saving their lives and that of their buddies.  But some GIs saw the dropping of the atomic bombs on innocent civilians as an immoral, dirty act, and would have preferred to have kept fighting.  In any case, all of the GIs fighting in the Pacific were glad the war was finally over when VJ-Day was announced.  These stories and more in Part 2 of our Victory at Last episode. Russell Darkes Murray Shapiro Charlie Toole Tom Carr Tom C. Morris Lloyd Huggins Harry Koty Robert B. Nett Joe Lawhn Ralph Keller Rex Whitehead James and Eva Mae Spaulding Raymond Komro Charles Wysocki
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1 month ago
38 minutes

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep 18 Victory at Last VE Day - Part 1
Having led his country through the most devastating and consequential war in world history, President Franklin D. Roosevelt died just as the war’s end seemed in sight.  For GIs like Roland Schump, Murray Shapiro, and Samuel Erlick, the loss of the only President they had ever really known, was as unsettling as it was shocking.  In the final weeks of the war, as Germany’s defeat seemed all but certain, GIs still didn’t know what to expect as they liberated city after city.  Many German soldiers couldn’t wait to surrender to the Americans who they preferred over the Russians, while other Germans fought on ferociously.   No GIs wanted to lose their lives, or see their buddies lose theirs, so close to the end.  Commander of A Company, Michael J. Daly felt so protective of his men in the final days of the war that he took out Four machine gun nests and fifteen Germans on  his own during fierce fighting at Nuremberg.  Most of the German soldiers Roland Schump now met didn’t seem to want to fight any more than he did.  In the confusion of the final days, Sherril Hayes nearly accidentally shot an elderly grandfather and his grandchild.  Hayes would never have forgiven himself.  In fierce fighting at Cheb in Czechoslovakia, Harry Koty’s outfit found themselves outnumbered and outgunned by ten German tanks.  Charles Savage exchanged fire with a deadly sniper in Pilzen, Czechoslovakia before he liberated a baby factory in Marienbad.  Arnold Dutch Nagel was nearly taken out by friendly fire in the final days of the war.  Earl Lovelace remembered a man from his company that was.  An excited Dallas Finch couldn’t wait to pen a letter home as he stood guard outside the War Room at the Supreme  Headquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Forces as the Allied commanding officers accepted the unconditional surrender of the German forces. These stories and more in this episode of Always Remember World War II Through Veterans Eyes.       Roland Schump with his wife Phyllis and their grandchild Murray Shapiro Samuel Erlick Harry Koty Michael J. Daly Arnold "Dutch" Natel Earl Lovelace Dallas Finch in the War Room Dallas Finch returned to the War Room in 1995
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2 months ago
32 minutes 49 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep 17 Liberators of the Holocaust Part 3 - Ohrdruf and the Forgotten Concentration Camps
Adolph Hitler’s “Final Solution” was carried out in an estimated 44,000 concentration camps, ghettos, and forced labor camps spread out throughout Europe.  An estimated 15 to 20 million people were murdered in these camps including six million Jews. For the young American GIs who liberated them, the horrors of the Nazi concentration camps far outweighed anything they had experienced in war.  Alex Bourdas liberated an auxiliary camp that had housed 20,000 POWs.  Their bodies were now stacked on carts and covered with lime to cut down the odor.  Tom Carr entered a small camp, the name of which he could not remember.  But he could never forget the emaciated prisoners still housed in the cells or the bodies stacked in piles outside.  General Patton himself sent down orders for his personnel to see what they were fighting for and against by visiting a small concentration camp near  Erfurt, Germany.  Mark Wilson recalled the few survivors they found there walked around in a daze, looking more like living skeletons.  In 1997, more than 50 years after the war had ended, Charles Savage returned to Marienbad, Czechoslovakia.  Accompanied by a local historian, Savage searched for the remains of Flashenhutten, the small camp that Savage had helped liberate and the mass burial site that had shocked him.  These stories and more in this 17th episode of Always Remember World War II Through Veterans Eyes.  General Dwight D. Eisenhower himself visited the first concentration camp liberated by GIs - Ohrdruf General Eisenhower cabled General Marshall requesting that a Congressional delegation and reporters be sent to the camp so that the atrocities committed there would not be forgotten. Fewer than 75 prisoners were found alive at Ohrdruf Alex Bourdas liberated an auxiliary camp near Ranshofen, Austria Tom Carr may not have recalled the name of the camp he liberated, but could never forget the horrors he witnessed there Charles Savage liberated a small concentration camp near Pilsen, Czech Republic.  The camp was largely forgotten until he returned to the Czech Republic and, along with a local historian, found its remains.  Savage donated all of his photographs of the camp to the local museum.   
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2 months ago
33 minutes 6 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep 16 Liberators of the Holocaust Part 2 - Dachau Concentration Camp
Adolph Hitler’s “Final Solution” was carried out in 42,400 concentration camps, ghettos, and forced labor camps spread out throughout Europe.  An estimated 15 to 20 million people were murdered in these camps including six million Jews. For the young American GIs who liberated them, the horrors of the Nazi concentration camps far outweighed anything they had experienced in war.  When Barney Zylka broke into Dachau, its crematoriums were still burning with hands and feet sticking out of them.  Zylka wished he could see a Nazi so he could empty his rifle into the Nazi’s belly.  Karl Mann recalled how American GIs. Angered by the pathetic condition of Dachau’s prisoners, and the bodies stacked around the camp like firewood, recalled his fellow GIs, lined up dozens of concentration camp guards against a wall and, for a few seconds, mowed them down with a machine gun until the battalion commander stopped them.  Standing guard at Dachau, the liberated inmates seemed more like skeletons than men to Jim Dorris.  The horrors he saw at Dachau made Dorris think he must be in hell.  Dorris prayed, and a concentration camp prisoner soon answered his prayer making Dorris realized that goodness could still be found even at Dachau.  Just outside Dachau, Dee Eberhart passed the death train filled with some 4,480 prisoners from Buchenwald, packed 80 men to a car.  All but one of the death train’s occupants had perished from exposure, disease, starvation and SS bullets.  Local townspeople claimed total ignorance of the camp, but GIs like David Israel didn’t believe them for a minute, as during the day many of Dachau’s prisoners were marched around town and forced to work in local industries while Dachau’s cruel prison guards boasted about their work at night in local bars.  In the first few weeks following the camp’s liberation, Edward S. Weiss recalled how deaths at the rate of 20-30 men per day still occurred, the prisoners so weakened by disease and malnutrition.  These stories and more in this 16th episode of Always Remember World War II Through Veterans Eyes.  Dachau Concentration Camp     Medical experiments were conducted on prisoners                               Prisoners were brutalized by SS guards and starved                As GIs approached Dachau, they passed the Death Train from Buchenwald Bodies were stacked like cordwood throughout Dachau The ovens in the crematorium were still burning Angered by the brutality of the SS, American GIs lined them up along the fence and began mowing them down with a machine gun before a ranking officer stopped them   Like at Buchenwald, German civilians were brought to the camp so they could bare witness to the cruelty  Bernard "Barney" Zylka was wishing he could see a Nazi guard so he could empty his rifle into their belly. Barney and his wife Josie are pictured with the podcast host, John Ulferts, and his young family    Karl O. Mann recalled a tremendous roar from the prisoners as they were liberated       The terrible odor of burned bodies given off by the crematorium made Jim Dorris feel like he couldn't get his breath.  He is pictured with his wife Charlotte. Dachau taught Dee Eberhart that we must always be on guard against the hatred and vilification of others Richard J. Tisch recalled the 32,000 prisoners liberated at Dachau were suffering so much from disease and malnutrition that another 4,000 died in the weeks following the camp's liberation.  Richard is pictured with his wife Roseanne. David Israel was assigned to a five man intelligence team whose mission was to interrogate the 15,000 SS officers who were imprisoned at Dachau after the war ended.  He admitted to having "harbored brutal thoughts" to them knowing that they had tortured and killed so many innocent civilians in the very same camp where the SS were now imprisoned. Edward S. Weiss stayed on at the camp in the weeks following its liberation.  He had the grim job of bringing bodies to the crematorium.  He
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3 months ago
46 minutes 5 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep 15 Liberators of the Holocaust Part 1 - Buchenwald Concentration Camp
Adolph Hitler’s “Final Solution” was carried out in 42,400 concentration camps, ghettos, and forced labor camps spread out throughout Europe.  An estimated 15 to 20 million people were murdered in these camps including six million Jews. For the young American GIs who liberated them, the horrors of the Nazi concentration camps far outweighed anything they had experienced in war.  Tasked with the welfare, James S. Moncrief was one of the first GIs to arrive at Buchenwald.  He quickly reported back to Major General Robert W. Grow, that the horrors he saw at Buchenwald were worse than anything he could have imagined.   Robert Muhler stayed at Buchenwald about one week, restoring order and standing guard.  He found himself drawn to the skeleton men walking around, and yet repelled.  He had never seen such emaciated people.  John M. Williams was given a ghastly tour of  Buchenwald by one of the inmates, Mr. Bernstein, who showed Williams the various methods the Nazis used to murder Buchenwald’s inmates including inoculating them with disease, crushing their skulls, the gassing method, shooting, and the nail method.  Seeing a dead soldier didn’t bother Williams, but the walking dead at Buchenwald were ghastly.  After the B-24 bomber he navigated was shot down over France, Art Zander spent seven weeks in hiding, until he was double-crossed by a Frenchman and turned over to the Gestapo.  Zander was horrified to learn that instead of being sent to a prisoner of war camp, he was one of an unlucky 870 American soldiers deemed terror fliers by Hitler himself and ordered to concentration camps.  At Buchenwald, Zander and his fellow GIs avoided the wife of the camp’s commandant.  Nicknamed the Bitch of Buchenwald, she walked around the camp admiring the men’s tattoos.  If she saw one she liked, she had them murdered and skinned.  Those stories and more in Part 1 of a 3 part episode on Liberators of the Holocaust, the most important podcasts yet in the Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans' Eyes series. Liberation of Buchenwald         Buchenwald Barracks - Elie Wiesel, Nobel laureate and author of NIGHT is highlighted.   The Nazis experimented on prisoners inoculating them with toxins and disease germs to provide serums for German soldiers   Wooden shoot where prisoners had their heads crushed and their bodies flung down to the basement.  Notice the meat hooks where bodies were hung until they stiffened. Nail Method - Prisoners were lined up next to the wall as an executioner pushed a lever shooting a nail like object out of the wall into the prisoners head killing them Crematorium - 10 ovens were installed at Buchenwald.  The same type were later installed at Auschwitz-Birkenau. The ashes of the dead were spread in the surrounding area like garbage.       Prisoners were often forced to watch executions Ilse Koch, the Buchenwald commandant's wife, was a sadist who would wander through the camp searching for prisoners with interesting tattoos.  If she saw one she liked, she had the bearer shot and skinned.  She made book covers, lampshades, pocketbooks, and bags from the human tattooed skin.  After the camp's liberation, her macabre collection was put on display by the GIs so that local residents could see the depths of her depravity.   Ilse Koch, the BITCH of Buchenwald, on trial for war crimes   James S. Moncrief and his wife Jerry.  Moncrief arrived at Buchenwald just hours after Captain Keffer found the camp to assess what was needed to care for the liberated prisoners. Robert Muhler spent a week at Buchenwald caring for the prisoners.  He found himself "...drawn to those skeleton men walking around, and yet repelled."  He considered what happened at Buchenwald to be a "demonic evil."  After the war Muhler became a pacifist and a Presbyterian minister. In 1946, just one year after he helped liberate Buchenwald, John M. Williams wrote a brilliant, unpublished essay  called "Concentration Camp Chaos" for a clas
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3 months ago
38 minutes 45 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep. 14 - Shattering the Siegfried Line
The Siegfried Line which spread from the Netherlands to Switzerland was Nazi Germany’s 400 mile westernwall, a heavily fortified defensive line that took the Allies six months to pierce.  David Saltman remembered the Siegfried Line as a formidable opponent in itself.  Robert Maxwell  regained consciousness after throwing himself on a grenade to save his buddies only to find himself alone in an abandoned house.  Maxwell found a lieutenant who helped him walk to a medic station.  Along the way, his heal was blown off by another grenade.  After having been pulled off the front line and sent back to the regimental headquarters, Edward Rychnovsky regularly checked the piles of corpses brought in on trucks for men from his company.  When Nicholas Oresko’s platoon was ordered to make a third assault on a German position near the Siegfried Line, Oresko gave the order to attack, but no one in his platoon moved.  Oresko decided to go by himself, and took out two machine gun emplacements that were pinning his men down.  Stan Davis’s armored division took Trier, which had previously been thought impregnable.  A seemingly peaceful apple orchard near the Sieg River proved deadly for Ralph Keller’s company, which took devastating losses. Byron Whitmarsh’s squad was engaged in a fierce firefight in and around a German cathedral.   Furious that the Allies could use the Ludendorff Bridge at Remagen as a bridgehead across the Rhine River, The German forces waged an intense ten day battle to destroy the bridage with everything they had.  Lloyd Huggins, Rex Whitehead, Byron Whitmarsh, Clarence Taylor, and Barney Zylka rememembered the fighting at Remagen as some of the fiercest of the war.  Those stories in more in this the 14th episode of Always Remember – World War II Through Veterans Eyes.   David Saltman Robert D. Maxwell, Medal of Honor Recipient Henry Heller Nicholas Oresko, Medal of Honor Recipient Stan Davis Ralph Keller Byron Whitmarsh Lloyd Huggins Rex Whitehead Clarence Taylor Barney Zylka    
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4 months ago
39 minutes 57 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Episode 13 - Typhoon of Steel: The Battle of Okinawa
The final battle before the anticipated invasion of mainland Japan, Okinawa became the deadliest battle for US forces in the Pacific with savage fighting on land, air, and especially sea.  Nicknamed the Typhoon of Steel because of its intense artillery fire and bombardments on land, air and sea, the battle for Okinawa cost 49,000 US casualties including more than 12,000 deaths.  For the Japanese soldiers, the battle for Okinawa was far worse with 90,000 deaths.  As always, civilians suffered the most with an estimated 150,000 dead.  William Agen recalled the terror of kamikaze attacks that occurred three or four times during the day and even more often at night.  Raymond Goron and Phil Klenman both lost their best friends in kamikaze attacks.  23 servicemen received the Medal of Honor for their heroism at Okinawa.  This podcast features the stories of six Medal of Honor recipients.  Kamikazes set the LCS that Richard M. McCool commanded ablaze and resulted in 50% casualties amongst his crew, yet McCool still managed to rescue some 98 men from a sinking destroyer.  Richard E. Bush threw himself on a grenade to save the wounded men in his squad.  Elsewhere, a wounded Robert E. Bush gave his lieutenant a life saving transfusion of plasma with his one hand, while he used his other to fire his pistol at the advancing Japanese who were less than 30 feet away.  Angry that the Japanese had his riflemen pinned down for too long on Hen Hill, Clarence Craft led a heroic attack against the Japanese defensive line killing an estimated 25 Japanese soldiers.  Atop the 400 foot Maeda Escarpment, conscientious objector Desmond T. Doss rescued an estimated 75 soldiers lowering them 35 feet below the escarpment in a rope supported litter tied to a tree stump, all the while under enemy fire as he did so.  While the bloody battle for Okinawa raged on, Staff Sergeant Henry E. "Red" Erwin was flying bombing runs over the Japanese mainland.  On a mission to bomb a chemical plant near Koriyama, Japan, the phosphoresce smoke bomb Erwin was supposed to drop to signal to B-29s that they had reached their target exploded prematurely in the launching chute, shooting its 1300 degree Fahrenheit flames into the aircraft and, more precisely, into Erwin's face blinding him and destroying his nose.  "Open the window!  Open the window!," Erwin yelled as he attempted to throw the burning bomb out the window to save his aircraft.  Those stories and more in this 13th episode of Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans' Eyes.   William Agen Raymond Goron Richard M. McCool Richard E. Bush Robert E. Bush Clarence Craft Desmond Doss Henry "Red" Erwin Henry "Red" Erwin receiving the Medal of Honor      
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4 months ago
41 minutes 21 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep. 12 - Prisoners of War
Millions of Allied and Axis soldiers became POWs in WW II.  His weight down to 90 pounds, sick with malaria, Edgar Kuhlow overheard two German guards talking about his condition – “He is going to stay laying here in Germany.”  Forced to work in railyards 2 – 3 times a week in Munich, William Ledeker knew he was better off than the concentration camp prisoners he would occasionally see from nearby Dachau.  Recovering from being shot in the back and the shoulder, Jim Lingg was still loaded onto boxcars along with other POWs by the SS. While trying to liberate the Belgium town of Viller-La-Bonne-Eau, Michael Cannella and six others were separated from their company.  Badly outnumbered with an intense fire fight taking place outside, Cannella’s makeshift squad took refuge in a cellar.  Unbeknownst to them, it was already occupied by nearly a dozen German soldiers.  Together they all made a pact, they would lay down their guns and surrender to whoever took over the town. When the Russian forces liberated his camp, Paul MacElwee found he went from being imprisoned by the Germans to now being imprisoned by the Russians.  Seldom reported in the official records of the war, opposing forces in WW 2 sometimes did not abide by the Geneva Accords and took no prisoners.  American GIs like James Spaulding couldn’t forget the senseless killing of soldiers who should have been taken prisoners of war.  Edgar Kuhlow and John Ulferts William Ledeker James Lingg (standing far right) Michael Cannella Paul MacElwee Murray Shapiro Robert Erhardt James and Eva Mae Spaulding
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5 months ago
40 minutes 55 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep. 11 - The Battle of the Bulge
With the Germans seemingly on the run everywhere in Europe, the Allies had hoped WW 2 would be done by year’s end 1944.  Those hopes were shattered when the Germans launched their largest counter offensive on the western front, the Battle of the Bulge.  A frustrated Tom Carr, who served as a scout, had warned his officers for weeks that the ermans appeared to be preparing a sneak attack, only to be ignored.  The Germans weren’t the only enemy American GIs faced.  Samuel Erlick recalled it was all he could do just to stay warm and avoid frozen feet.  Still, David Kitchen was grateful for the bitter cold that kept the war dead that littered the Ardennes Forest refrigerated avoiding the stink and maggots that would have been present otherwise.  German soldiers dressed as American GIs tricked David Kitchen’s squad into giving them their rifles.  Frank Caruk recalled that when German soldiers dressed as American GIs were caught they were summarily executed.  Mevlin Biddle took out three German snipers and three machine gun nests single handedly his actions earned him a Medal of Honor, though Biddle did not want to celebrate the killing he had done.  The Bulge desensitized a young Ross Rasmussen who afterwards was ashamed of his callousness recalling eating his lunch on the frozen corpse of a German soldier.  Separated from his unit, Murray Shapiro escaped German capture thanks to an old German woman.  Stan Davis spent 30 nights in his tank protecting Bastogne.  Their stories in more in this 11th podcast of Always Remember – World War II Through Veterans Eyes. Tom Carr Samuel Erlick Frank Caruk Melvin Biddle Murray Shapiro Stan Davis  
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5 months ago
43 minutes 13 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep.9 - Sand in Our Shoes: Island Hopping in the Pacific Theater
As the Allies embarked on their island hopping campaign growing ever closer to the Japanese mainland, they soon discovered that their enemy in the Pacific was adept at presenting new challenges on every island.  Tarawa, Saipan, Tinian, Peleliu, Leyte would all forever be ingrained in WW 2 veterans memories - and in their nightmares.  Richard V. Morgan remembers Lieutenant Alexander Bonnyman,, who stood atop a heavily garrisoned Japanese bunker directing demolition charges despite his being mortally wounded.  Bonnyman would receive the Medal of Honor posthumously.  For Dennis Olson, his poems helped him cope with the horrible losses he endured at Tarawa.  Later, at Peleliu, 19 year old Arthur Jackson volunteered to secure a position in the shallow enemy trench system wiping out 12 pillboxes and killing 50 Japanese soldiers.  He would receive the Medal of Honor for his actions from President Truman himself one year later.  In the Philippines, a young L.W. Clark and his buddies lose their appetite as 100 Filipino villagers stumble across the rice fields towards their dispensary seeking medical help after having been bombed by the 11th Airborne, who believed Japanese soldiers were still hiding in the village.  Amongst them, a soldier carried a still baby whose guts were hanging over the side of his body, his stomach ripped open by a mortar shell.  James Spaulding recalled Manilla was torn to pieces when they finally liberated it.  Leo "Red" Gavitt was instructed to pick up "Just the live ones boys" as he helped pluck 150 American sailors from the sea after the Battle of Leyte Gulf.  Roy Parks returned from the Pacific with a souvenir he never asked for - jungle rot - which left blisters all over his hands, and made his finger nails and toe nails fall off.   Richard V. Morgan Lieutenant Alexander Bonnyman, Jr. Dennis H. Olson Arthur J. Jackson L.W. Clark and his wife Ella James Spaulding and his wife Eva Mae Roy and Penny Parks  
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5 months ago
44 minutes 2 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep. 10 - Minorities in World War II
The African Americans who served on the USS Mason destroyer had already endured 90 mph winds and 60 foot waves that split the Mason's deck as they shepherded convoys to safety in the Atlantic when their beloved Captain Blackford was replaced with a racist captain who claimed the African Americans sailors he led smelled, couldn’t swim, and were hard to educate .  1st Lieutenant Vernon Baker, also an African American, destroyed six machine gun nests, two observer posts and four dugouts at Castle Aghinolfi in Italy only to see Captain Runyon, his white commanding officer who abandoned the firefight, receive the Silver Star.  An illegal immigrant to the US, Jose Lopez, a Mexican American, saved his company at the Battle of the Bulge by single handedly taking out over 100 German soldiers with his machine gun fire.  Iva Ikuko Toguri, a Japanese-American who had the misfortunate of being in Japan when the war broke out, found herself nicknamed Tokyo Rose and accused of being a traitor even as she tried her best to help the American POWs and fighting force anyway she could behind enemy lines.  Ira Hayes, a Native American, raised the American flag at Iwo Jima, but afterwards could not dispel the terrible combat memories that haunted him when he got home.  Hattie Brantley joined the Army Nurse Corps to see the world, but was instead imprisoned under the harshest conditions in a Japanese prisoner of war camp in the Philippines for almost the duration of the war.  Their stories and more in this 10th podcast of Always Remember – WW 2 Through Veterans Eyes. James Graham Lorenzo Dufau (left) and James Graham (right) Medal of Honor recipient Vernon Baker Vernon Baker later years Medal of Honor recipient Jose M. Lopez Iva Ikuko Toguri Ira Hayes Hattie Brantley in the Philippines Hattie Brantley's tombstone 
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6 months ago
47 minutes 28 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep. 8 - Bloody Red - Blood-soaked Omaha Beach Remembered
Bloody Omaha Beach bore the brunt of D-Day’s savage fighting with more casualties than all of the other D-Day beaches combined.  Aware that the men he led in one of the first waves to land on Bloody Omaha Beach had no prior combat experience, Staff Sergeant Walter Ehlers single handedly took out several German machine gun nests even while he was in their crossfire.  Ehlers was at first elated when he was told he would be receiving the Medal of Honor for his actions, but he was soon brought to his knees upon learning the terrible loss he suffered on Omaha beach. Trying to sleep after having witnessed so much death and suffering on Omaha beach, Charles Toole’s buddy told him that 24 hours from now there’d be a lot more dead in their own company.  Toole’s buddy’s words proved eerily prophetic.  Thanks to two Texas Rangers, there were far less dead on Omaha beach than there would have been otherwise.  Leonard Lomell and his buddy Jack Kuhn climbed the 100 foot cliffs of Pointe du Hoc even as Nazi soldiers fired down upon them, threw grenades, and cut their ropes.  Lomell and Kuhn knew the lives of countless Americans depended on them finding the huge 155 mm coastal howitzers the Nazis had hidden above, capable of firing five miles or more out to sea, far enough to hit the troop ships landing for the invasion.  Nothing in their 18 years of life could have prepared Frank Caruk and Mark Wilson for all the suffering they witnessed landing in the initial waves at Omaha beach. Walter Ehlers Walter and Roland Ehlers Charles Toole and the podcast host John Ulferts Frank Caruk and his wife Janet Leonard Lomell  
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7 months ago
41 minutes 43 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Ep7 Robert Bowen D-Day to Operation Market-Garden to Battle of the Bulge
From landing on Utah beach amidst floating bodies in life preservers to a combat glider landing aboard one of the "flying coffins" at Operation Market Garden. Robert Bowen saw a lot of action in World War II before he was badly injured and taken prisoner of war at the Battle of the Bulge.  As a POW a badly injured Bowen was nearly strangled by an enraged German doctor as Bowen lay on his operating table.  Back home, Bowen's young wife Christine never gave up hope that her husband was still alive, despite being told that he had been killed in action. Robert and Christine Bowen Robert Bowen in WW 2 Robert Bowen's painting of a Great Blue Heron   Bowen's painting of Nags Head, North Carolina
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7 months ago
46 minutes 4 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Episode 6 One Tough Gut: Monte Cassino, Anzio, Gunsmoke's James Arness, and a German Troop Train Escape
While Winston Churchill believed an Allied invasion of Italy would find it the soft underbelly of the Axis, most GIs agreed with General Mark Clark's description of it as "One Tough Gut" as they faced ferocious fighting at Salerno and along the Gustav Line at Mt. Sammucro, Monte Cassino and Anzio.  Episode 6 begins with Helen Callentine, a US Army Nurse whose hospital ship was bombed before she ever made it to Salerno; Russell Darkes who ordered his pinned down platoon at Mt. Sammucro to fix their bayonets before charging; Howard Fay who recalled the American dead that covered Monte Cassino's mountain slopes; Edgar Kuhlow and Leo Lawrence remembering the terror of Anzo Annie's 560 lb. shells that could fire for miles; Gunsmoke's James Arness, better known as Matt Dillon, who received a million dollar wound at Anzio days after the initial landing; B-25 pilot Jay DeBoer, show down over Italy, most of his crew executed by the SS, escaped capture by masquerading as an Italian soldier aboard a German troop train, and, finally, the liberation of Rome. Helen Callentine Russell Darkes Howard K. Fay Leo Lawrence James Arness Jay DeBoer        
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8 months ago
35 minutes 6 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Episode 5 - Combat Jumps of All American Panther Arnold "Dutch" Nagel
Arnold "Dutch" Nagel volunteered to be a paratrooper in WW 2 because of the extra $50 per month jump pay paratroopers received and the distinctive uniforms they wore.  By war's end, he had participated in 4 combat jumps - Sicily, Maiori, Italy, Operation Market Garden in Holland, and on D-Day at Sainte Mere Eglise, France - and had fought in the invasion of Sicily, the liberation of Naples, Italy, D-Day, and the Battle of the Bulge.  Nagel was one of only three men from Co. C, 1st Squad, 1st Platoon of the 505th 82nd Airborne Division to survive the war.  45 years later he became perhaps the war's last casualty when he made a commemorative jump to mark the opening of the Airborne and Special Operations Museum back where his service began at the home of the 82nd Airborne Division, Fort Bragg, North Carolina.  
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8 months ago
40 minutes 37 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Episode 4 - Aerial Dogfights and Headhunters - The Amazing Story of Jefferson DeBlanc and the Battle for the Solomon Islands
In August 1942 the US launched its first major amphibious landing of WW 2 in the Solomon Islands.  The battle became a bitter war of attrition as both sides fought feverishly for months on land, sea and air for the strategically important islands.  Jefferson DeBlanc became a fighter ace in just one day as he shot down six Japanese fighters before DeBlanc himself was shot down.  With his back, arms, and legs wounded from shrapnel, DeBlanc still managed to swim six hours before he came ashore at Kolombangara, only to be captured by a tribe of headhunters.  From his vantage point atop the control tower at Henderson Field on Guadalcanal, Carl "Bud" DeVere watched daily dogfights as Joe Foss and Foss's Flying Circus shot down 72 Japanese aircraft during three months of bloody combat. Jefferson DeBlanc Map of Jefferson DeBlanc's fateful dogfight with the Japanese Zeros Carl "Bud" DeVere
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8 months ago
23 minutes 1 second

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
Episode 3 We're In the Army Now - America Goes to War in WW 2
In the aftermath of the Japanese surprise attack at Pearl Harbor, and the declaration of war against Germany and Japan, millions of Americans didn't wait till their draft numbers were called upon.  They immediately enlisted, including nearly 200,000 underage Americans.  In the rigorous basic training that followed, young Americans learned that war was for keeps as they learned the fighting skills that would keep them alive in combat.  As Colonel Sin, Commander of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 101st Airborne Division, told his recruits, "Y'all ain't going over there to die for your country.  You're going over there to make that other son of a bitch die for his!" Photo below is of Milburn Henke, credited as the first US soldier to set foot on European soil in WW 2. Samuel Erlick with his medals
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9 months ago
24 minutes 14 seconds

Always Remember - World War II Through Veterans’ Eyes
World War II was a pivotal moment in world history, when not only the survival of the United States was at stake, but of democracy throughout the world. Had the Allies lost WW II, fascism would have engulfed the world even as genocide would have robbed humanity of its diversity. WW II veterans live again through these short podcasts, which like the accompanying book of the same name, tell their incredible stories of valor and sacrifice. Each riveting podcast tells the story of WW II through the eyes of those who fought it. They were called the greatest generation for a reason.