We All Have a Story To Tell

Book II

by


Formats

Hardcover
£22.99
£14.40
Softcover
£14.99
£9.30
Hardcover
£14.40

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 15/09/2006

Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 400
ISBN : 9781425935221
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 400
ISBN : 9781425935214

About the Book

38413

The shock of entry into World War II proved to be energizing to the nation and to us as a people.

            Rather than the grand actions that historians would have us believe is the story of war, these stories are human stories, stories of the men who put their life on the line out of a sense of duty, of responsibility, of patriotism, of loyalty to comrades. Mostly though, their choices came about because they were in situations that gave them the choice of doing what was needed, of dying, of redemption or for some battlefield situations, of escaping into insanity. Within the civilian population something can be seen of their effort and their sacrifice that produced the goods of war that made winning possible.

            Not thinking of themselves as heroic or unusual, their stories, for the most part, were unknown to the families of the individuals telling them.

            I have been fortunate that within family and friends I have uncovered the previously untold stories of civilian as well as soldiers that provide a broad picture of involvement in a spectrum of actions during that period of time identified as WW II. These stories range from the commonly accepted stories of battles and battlefield action to the story of a young woman living through the occupation of Holland and resulting starvation as well as that of her cousin who spent the war in Germany as a labor prisoner, where he endured with the German people the massive bombings that killed at least 12,000 people in the city of Frankfurt.

            Much of the military action described is of campaigns in the Pacific Theater where I spent 22 months in a non-combat role. Twin brothers were also there and engaged in six major campaigns beginning with Tarawa, Saipan, Guam, and Okinawa        to provide an unforgettable picture of ground war action. One friend was living in Honolulu during the attack on Pearl Harbor. Another friend was involved in the Normandy attack, a cousin was badly wounded in a B-17 attack on Germany and another friend was involved in the final drive on Germany.

On the civilian front we see female involvement in war production as well as the strain of caring for family under the burdens of wartime privation and lack of male support while often dealing with the threat of family loss.

To help celebrate the end of the war, two stories of time with the Japanese occupation forces are offered.  In our last story we share with one individual his efforts to bring help and comfort to the people of one nation as they recover from wartime occupation. 

           


About the Author

 About the Author

38215 & 38413

 

Born 10-10-1921 in Weiser, Idaho. Raised in the in the town of Union, Oregon located at the East end of the Grande Ronde Valley. On completion of highschool there found I had been successful enough in athletics to be invited to attend Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington. There work opportunities were available to pay for tuition, board, room and other incidentals. During the summer of 1941 completed the Civilian Pilot Training program while working full time in the Walla Walla cannery. Drafted in the spring of 1942 and trained as a Radio Mechanic for the Army Air force. Twenty-two months of a total of 32 months of that time were spent in the Pacific theater of war. On return to the States in the spring of 1945 married MaryBelle Preston, the girl I had first dated in the winter of 1940. On March 14, 2006 we celebrated our 61st wedding anniversary. On discharge from the service entered the University of Washington and using the G.I. Bill graduated in the spring of 1947. Spent the following two years in the Graduate School of Social Work, then in the fall of 1949 joined the Los Angeles County Probation Department as a Deputy Probation Officer Trainee. A thirty plus year career was spent in various elements of the Juvenile Justice system, including my last position as Superintendent of a 400 bed Juvenile Hall.

            Retirement years have included cabinet making, travel mostly with trailer, genealogical research and memoir writing. With a lifetime interest in people and the stories they could tell, and when doing genealogical research, discovering I really knew nothing of the lives of my parents, began taping the memories of family members to help me know my own parents. This broadened into taping of the early years of family and friends and then to taping memories of the war years.