FIVE MARKS
by
Book Details
About the Book
FIVE
MARKS began, with urging from my beloved wife, shortly after I was honorably
discharged from the U.S. Army. Many tides and versions of the German’s barbaric
crusade followed through the years. So it is, my final work may add a few
revelations to that ghastly history not heretofore available.
Facts
can be soft as picked cotton or granite hard. Still, the truth is indivisible
or it is nothing.
Holocaust
is a word I associated with fire – ultimate, consummate destruction.
German
death camps, designed and constructed with precision by architects and
engineers – Treblinki, Dachau, Maidonek and many other death camps defiled and
poisoned the ground, the air, the dead and the living.
I
was a prisoner in one, Dachau, Munich, Germany and as an escaped prisoner of
war, absorbed the horror of Maidonek, Lublin, Poland.
An
impressive inventory of first person chronicles written more skillfully than my
work attested to the incredible conduct of the ‘Master Race’ and the fate of
enemies of Hider’s Aryan hordes; the final solution to the Jewish problem, how
and why it happened, those outside the wire, the Russian soldier and much more.
Perhaps
not until FIVE MARKS have so many near victims points of view been recorded
while the war was reaching the long awaited apogee.
The
behavior of the German soldier and civilian in the occupied countries
challenges reason, their cruel excesses belonging to some long removed age in
antiquity.
Above
and beyond the Nazi nightmare the human spirit was revealed in both grandeur
and horror.
I
lived intimately with survivors at a time when passions had not cooled, the
hell of genocide still in evidence, the conflict still raging. Count your
blessings and remember, though we won the war it was too close for the survivors
and too late for the victims.
About the Author
A summary of my World War II service is listed below
with mention of other related incidents.
My enlistment in the United States Army occurred on
9 May 1942 with an Honorable Discharge 30 March 1946.
In addition, I hold an Honorable Discharge from the
United States Navy and the Royal Canadian Air Force.
I served on active duty in Morocco. No. Africa,
Italy and China. Awards include:
Parachute Wings, Combat Infantryman’s Medal, European Campaign Medal with two
Battle Stars, Prisoner of War Medal, China-Burma Indian Campaign Medal with one
Battle Star, Soldier's Medal, Breast Order of Yun Hui, Presidential Citation,
purple Heart with cluster and a U.S. Army Intelligence College Certificate.
Became a German Prisoner of War, Anzio, Italy 29 February
1944, held in Cina Cita Rome/Latterina Florence/ Dachau, Municb/ Schubin,
Poland -Oflag 64. I escaped 21 January 1945, made my way across Poland,
Czechoslovakia, Hungary, rescued in Cluj Romania by General McNarney 12 March
1945.
Arrived Washington, D.C. 20 March 1945, interrogated
and de-briefed, had one on one meetings with General George C. Marshall, who
changed my M.O. to Military Intelligence, Secretary of War Stimson, Mrs. George
Patton and others. Chief of Intelligence requested I go to China-Burma-India
Theater.
Appointed member of an Intelligence Service located
in Hunan Province, China. Arrived Kunming 11 June 1945; performed several
missions including the parachute rescue of a critically wounded U.S. fighter
pilot. Other activity and final mission
was as member of a six-man team.
Parachuted into a cornfield opposite the entrance to a Japanese Prison
Camp. Affected the rescue of 1500 Allied men, women and children. Escorted
ex-prisoners by rail to Tsingtao and Army Transport to Shanghai. Returned to U.S. 19 November 1945.