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436th FA Battalion

Discussion in 'Honor, Service and Valor' started by Slipdigit, Jun 19, 2008.

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  1. Billyjim

    Billyjim WWII Veteran

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    SLIPDIGIT:

    Will try to upload a foto (of me in Basic at Ft. Sill, OK, July '44)
    [​IMG]

    Did it work? (Can't visualize it in Preview.) If it works have 3 more pics.

    And yes, got my MD degree in '55, practiced family medicine for 30 years, then got mad and quit (That's a story in itself, not germane to WW2 but certainly is to the mess the American Healthcare System is in :(.)

    Bill
     

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  2. Billyjim

    Billyjim WWII Veteran

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    Here's another pic:
    [​IMG]

    In fatigues at Ft. Sill Basic

    Bill
     

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  3. Billyjim

    Billyjim WWII Veteran

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    Here's one of my wife Jean & me, down in sunny, warm sweet home Alabama during Easter.

    [​IMG]
     

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  4. Billyjim

    Billyjim WWII Veteran

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    [​IMG]
    Back to Summer 1944: here's one of Mom & me, when she came down to Lawton, OK, to make sure I was OK ('cause I wasn't writing home :eek:.)

    Bill
     

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  5. Slipdigit

    Slipdigit Good Ol' Boy Staff Member WW2|ORG Editor

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    I can't but Otto, the Administrator/Owner, can. I'll follow up on it

    I adjusted your pics so that they will be easier to see.
     
  6. Slipdigit

    Slipdigit Good Ol' Boy Staff Member WW2|ORG Editor

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    DRG-based payment schedules?

    You have a lovely wife, she must be very proud of you.

    I looked up the 436th FA Battalion. 8" howitzers, towed by tractors. You were at Camp Gruber, OK when Japan surrendered.

    When did you go overseas?
     
  7. Billyjim

    Billyjim WWII Veteran

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    SLIP:

    No I quit before DRG scheds came in. I'll have to work up the answers to why I quit -- I think I enumerated 4 or 5 big ones. Will make a post out of it -- If I don't then remind me.

    The 436 started out with 105mm, then we went to 155mm, and finally 8" -- all at Gruber. But we weren't at Gruber when VJ-Day happened -- that's a story in itself. Will try to tell that one in chronological sequence with the other stories. (Makes for better story-telling :).)

    Hey, how did you look up that info on the 436? Gotta do that, so I can check on some of the guys in the outfit.

    G'nite -- will write more this weekend.

    Bill
     
  8. Skipper

    Skipper Kommodore

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    Slip if we can't change the title, there is something we can do: Open a new thread with the correc title, move all the postings from this tread to the new one, then delete what's left of the first one.
    As a result you should get a proper title with the good postings attached to it.
     
  9. Za Rodinu

    Za Rodinu Aquila non capit muscas

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    Why spoil a good thread? This one is perfect! Bill, I find your posts extremely humourous and entertaining, do keep at it :)
     
  10. Skipper

    Skipper Kommodore

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    Spoil? Not. Za, read Bill's initial and urgent request to change the title. It is mispelled and could lead to confusion and wrong information. It should be 436. So Bill is looking for info about the 436th FA Battalion
     
  11. Slipdigit

    Slipdigit Good Ol' Boy Staff Member WW2|ORG Editor

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    It is in a book, Order of Battle US Army World War II, by Shelby Stanton. It has the information I typed above, plus formation dates and locals and nothing more. I doubt it would be of help for you searching for buddies.

    Skipper,that is a good idea. I have already PMed Otto, let's give him another day or so. I also asked him to change Mr. Bill's title section to reflect his veteran of the war status.
     
  12. Skipper

    Skipper Kommodore

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    Good work Jeff, Let's give Otto the time to change the title or one of us can use my idea.
    In the mean time if some of the rogues read this thread they know the right figure is 536.
    let's hope people interested in this Battalion google with the correct words and this and get this thread with their search engine.
     
  13. Billyjim

    Billyjim WWII Veteran

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    G'evening all:

    Haven't posted for a couple days 'cause I was digging thru 5 boxes of mementos of the past 80+ years. Came up with some material for future posts.

    Here's a mini story:

    Thru the late '30s I had become interested in ham radio. Met a few ham operators who lived in adjoining neighborhoods, Woodhaven and Glendale, Queens, LI, NYC. Both these neighborhoods were mainly Germans who had emigrated after WW1. These fellows were very helpful, taught me some Morse code, electronics, and wiring techniques. Then came Pearl Harbor -- and they all disappeared. Didn't find out what happened to them till svl years after the end of WW2.

    Turns out they were German spies who were using their ham equipment to send msgs to German subs operating off the East Coast. They got caught and I assumed were executed as spies.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Another:

    I took 3 years of German in high school, from 1939 to 1942. When I finished I still couldn't speak the language, but I got a good foundation in German grammer and sentence structure. Also developed an excellent accent. Why?

    Well, the class was taught by Mrs. Bryant, and a nice Irish name she had. However, that was her husband's name. She was German, altho she spoke English with no accent whatsoever.

    Now something interesting happened in her class during 1942. Occupying the entire front row of seats were all girls, who spoke perfect German. They came from those families in Woodhaven and Glendale, and were taking German in school because it was a "free ride" -- they didn't have to study anything -- just talked the language their folks used at home.

    Then one day they were passing this giant book of photographs from desk to desk, including passing it to Mrs. Bryant, and then back again among them. I finally snuck a look at the cover and then a few pics inside. The title was, "Polish Atrocities Committed Against the German People in the 1930's." It was one of Hitler's excuses to invade Poland September 1st, 1939, starting WW2.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Another:

    I remember when Hitler seceded the Saar Valley and the Rhineland in 1935 and 1936. Dad wrote to me from England, explaining the implication: that Hitler was planning to conquer Europe.

    In 1938 Dad finished his medical studies and came back from England. He continued teaching me about politics, and what it all meant.

    Then came September 1, 1939. Dad told me to sit down in front of the family radio and turned it on. What we heard was the news that Hitler had invaded Poland. It was the first time I saw a grown man cry, as I watched tears well up from my dad's eyes.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    The next story is not a mini-story ... it's a big one. Will talk about it in my next post.

    Bill
     
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  14. Slipdigit

    Slipdigit Good Ol' Boy Staff Member WW2|ORG Editor

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    Thanks Mr Bill.

    Do you remember the names of the Germans?
     
  15. Billyjim

    Billyjim WWII Veteran

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    We lived in Richmond Hill, Queens, LI -- not the helter-skelter of Manhattan .. so we rarely heard a newsboy hawking the latest headlines.

    But this Sunday was different. We heard this kid yelling out the news, "Read all about ... Japs attack Pearl Harbor!! ... War will be declared!!" It was December 1, 1941.

    The next day, a special assembly was called at 11AM in school and the principal came up to the microphone and explained to us that FDR had declared war on Japan. It was a pretty somber event .. even we teenagers knocked off our usual banter and listened in silence.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Of course everything in all our lives changed. Victory gardens. Rationing stamps for gasoline (Dad was the only one in our neighborhood to get a decent ration, because he was a doctor.) Sugar, meat, a whole bunch of stuff became hard to get. We kids collected lead foil and kitchen grease and turned it in to the depots to help the war effort (to make bullets and gunpowder). Every house in NYC had to install "blackout shades" -- black shades on all windows, so that German bombers wouldn't have easy targets (The East Coast was never bombed, but there were plenty of U-Boats plying the waters off the coast.) We all started saving to buy $25 War Bonds.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Now comes some interesting considerations. Before the "the day in infamy" that FDR described to us --- America and Americans were best described as thorough-going ISOLATIONISTS. "Leave Europe fight it's own Wars." "We are Fortress America -- we've got the Atlantic to protect us on the East and the Pacific to protect us on the West." "Rumors about Hitler rounding up all the Jews and exterminating them? Just rumors."

    Then there was the "America First Party," getting more popular all the time. Their platform? ... stay out of any war!. Matter of fact FDR's 3rd term election in 1940 was no where near the landslide he enjoyed in 1936 -- much negative public opinion regarding FDR's sending Lend-Lease military and materiel shipments to England and later to Russia.

    But the "sneak attack" news changed everything. It carried us through WW2, even though there were many bleak periods as bad news came in from the Southwest Asian compaigns, and the African campaigns. FDR was our hero before he passed in '44.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Then the other shoe dropped. Several years later the stink arose surrounding Kimmel and Short, who it was claimed became the goats for what FDR knew, and set up on purpose -- that he had sucked Japan into attacking Pearl so he'd have an excuse to bring us into the war. The rumblings were that our military had broken the Jap code, and knew they were steaming towards Pearl, ready to bomb it from the air and torpedo it from the sea.

    Americans have had differing opinions on that whole deal, over the years. What's my take on it, after all these years? ...... The following:

    FDR, knew full well that the truth would someday out. That he then would be castigated as a cynic playing murderous geo-politics with American lives. Yet FDR also knew, that Hitler, Hirohito, and Mussolini were well on their way to take over the world. Had Hitler not foolishly stopped short at Dunkirk, he could have swept across the Channel and gained England. And without England as a staging area, Eisenhower could never have set up the Normandy invasion. The result would have been y'all would have been speaking German, and I and my family would have been sent to extermination camps. That makes, in my eyes, FDR as the bravest statesman of the 20th Century.

    Now I know that this is strong opinion, and open to controversy. But I'll tell y'all, at age 82 I know longer am interested in arguing. Take it or leave it.

    Bill
     
  16. Billyjim

    Billyjim WWII Veteran

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    No, SLIP, can't remember any of their names. (Hey, some days I can't remember my own :D !
     
  17. Billyjim

    Billyjim WWII Veteran

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    Goin' beddy bye y'all ... got some more posts and pics, probably tomorrow.

    Bill
     
  18. Skipper

    Skipper Kommodore

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    Some more excellent stories. It seems like the Gemrans girls you went to school with were Bund supporters. That book you mentionned must be worth a fortune nowadays. I have one of these at Home it's volume 15 which deals about the 1935-1936 period . I wouldn't be surprised it was a book from the same collection. (A4 format , about 300 pages, written in Gothic and you could collect the illustrations and glue them inside to get a great picture book).
     
  19. Billyjim

    Billyjim WWII Veteran

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    In high school in the early '40s there were only 2 kids interested in (snow) skiing (there was no water skiing back then :p): I and George Wozacek. George was a Jewish refugee from Austria. His family was wealthy back there (owned paper making plants, etc.), so they used to take ski vacations in the Alps back then.

    Anyway, our big ambition was to volunteer for the 10th Mountain Division (ski troops) as soon as we reached out 18th birthday. Well, Geo was 6 mos older so he got in '43. I was so envious of him. By the time I was 18 they closed down volunteering for the 10th Mtn. Man was I disappointed.

    So Geo first went to Ft. Bragg, NC, where he got his Basic FA on 105mm howitzers. Then he went to Camp Carson and then Camp Hale, CO (Pike's Peak) for his mountain training.

    What a disappointment. He wrote back anguished letters describing how they never saw a pair of skis ... instead all he saw was the backside of army mules (while wiping up their doo-doo).

    Finally his outfit went overseas and of course they ended up in Italy in the mountains there. That's when it got real bad, 'cause the Yanks only had 75mm howitzers, whereas the Germans had their very effective 88mm's. So they always out-ranged the Yanks. Lots of casualties.

    Finally Geo took a MG bullet in his butt. Fortunately it went no further. So he was out of action, with a Purple Heart, but no lifelong disability.

    Man, my envy of him turned into giant relief.

    Ah, the Fickle Finger Of Fate.

    Bill
     
  20. Slipdigit

    Slipdigit Good Ol' Boy Staff Member WW2|ORG Editor

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    Have y'all remained friends through the years?

    Did you volunteer or were you drafted?
     

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