Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Today’s Troops Follow in Footsteps of Earlier Generations of Heroes
American Forces Press Service ^ | Tech. Sgt. Kevin Wallace, USAF

Posted on 07/06/2007 5:44:01 PM PDT by SandRat

DOVER AIR FORCE BASE, Del., July 6, 2007 – America’s security has always rested on the backs of men and women willing to sacrifice whatever necessary to defend it.

An old Japanese quote states, “A samurai should always be prepared for death – whether his own or someone else’s.”

Like the samurai, U.S. servicemembers freely give their lives, faithfully serving as America’s avenger, wielding her mighty sword, in conflicts of the past and present.

In every battle the nation has seen, heroes have shone as a beacon for others to follow.

Below are the stories of four American heroes. Air Force Chief Master Sgt. Duane Hackney, Marine Lt. Gen. Lewis “Chesty” Puller, Navy Petty Officer 1st Class James E. Williams and Army Maj. Audie Murphy are beacons of leadership for their fellow servicemembers to follow.

Each man is the most combat-decorated member of his service. All are heroes, America’s version of the samurai, faithful to their country regardless of the cost.

Air Force Chief Master Sgt. Duane Hackney

While at basic training at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, during the Vietnam era, Chief Master Sgt. Duane Hackney chose to pursue a career in pararescue, a choice that continually put him in harm’s way and earned him more than 70 individual awards, including the Air Force Cross.

Hackney graduated from pararescue training as an honor graduate in every phase of the course. For this, he earned the right to pick his first assignment. Instead of choosing a lush assignment stateside or in Europe, far away from the sweltering jungle, he volunteered for Detachment 7, 38th Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Squadron, in Da Nang, Vietnam.

Three days after reporting for duty, he flew on his first combat mission. During the mission, he was struck in the leg by a .30-caliber slug. To avoid being grounded, he had a fellow pararescueman remove the bullet on the spot. This selfless act set the tone for his career, and he participated in more than 200 combat missions in three and a half years of Vietnam duty.

On his 10th mission, while pulling a wounded Marine pilot aboard his HH-3E “Jolly Green Giant” helicopter, Hackney was hit by enemy fire.

His helicopter was shot down five times over the following months, during which he earned four Distinguished Flying Crosses and 18 Air Medals for single acts of heroism.

He received his Air Force Cross while on a mission Feb. 6, 1967. He was the first living enlisted airman to receive the second-highest award for heroism given by the U.S. Air Force.

The dawn of the Feb. 6 mission started like any other. Hackney descended from his Jolly Green Giant to look for a downed pilot near Mu Gia pass, in North Vietnam. He searched for two hours, but inclement weather set in, and he was forced to return to base.

A few hours later, radio contact with the pilot was re-established and the chief went out again to attempt another rescue. This time, he found the severely wounded pilot. Hackney safely carried the pilot back to the helicopter to egress the jungle. However, before they could clear enemy air space, the chopper was struck by anti-aircraft artillery, and the compartment filled with smoke and fire. The chief strapped his parachute on the pilot’s back and shuffled the pilot out the door.

He then searched the craft for a spare parachute, finding one just before a second anti-aircraft shell ripped into the helicopter. Before he could finish buckling the chute, the Jolly Green Giant’s fuel line exploded, blasting him out the door without the chute on his back. With the parachute clenched in his arms, he managed to pull the cord before plummeting into the jungle 250 feet below. Though the chute slowed his fall, he still plunged more than 80 feet onto a rocky ledge below.

Despite being severely burned and wounded by shrapnel, Hackney managed to evade the enemy and thwart capture. The heroic rescuer was rescued by a fellow pararescueman and was returned to Da Nang Air Base. When he got back, he learned that he was the only survivor from the mission. There had been four other crewmembers with the pilot he rescued.

For giving up his parachute and risking his own life, he received the Air Force Cross. He was the youngest airman and the second enlisted member to receive the medal. The first was Airman 1st Class William Pitzenbarger, also a pararescueman, who received the award posthumously.

After Vietnam, the chief continued his distinguished Air Force career and retired in 1991. Two years later he died of a heart attack in his Pennsylvania home. He was 46 years old.

Marine Lt. Gen. Lewis “Chesty” Puller

Lt. Gen. Lewis “Chesty” Puller, the most decorated Marine in U.S. history, is one of only two people to receive a Navy Cross, the Navy’s second-highest decoration, five times.

Puller earned 52 separate, subsequent and foreign awards in his 37-year career with the Marine Corps.

With five Navy Crosses and a Distinguished Service Cross, the Army’s second highest decoration, Puller received the nation’s second highest military decoration six times.

Prior to his involvement in World War I, Puller, then an Army sergeant, was accepted into the Virginia Military Institute, in Lexington, Va., to pursue a commissioned career in the Army.

As America’s involvement in World War I intensified, the sergeant, who was nicknamed “Chesty” for his barrel chest, resigned from the college and enlisted as a private in the Marine Corps. His reasons were summed up in his quote, “I want to go where the guns are.”

After his 1919 re-enlistment, he saw action in Haiti. There, he participated in more than 40 combat engagements during the course of five years.

In 1924, he returned stateside and was commissioned as a second lieutenant. He spent four years at various stateside assignments before returning overseas in 1928, where he earned his first Navy Cross in Nicaragua. He spent a second tour in Nicaragua in 1933, when he earned a second Navy Cross for leading five successive actions against superior numbers of outlaw forces.

Puller earned three Navy Crosses in World War II: in Guam, Guadalcanal, and finally in Japan.

On Guadalcanal, for action that is now known as the Battle for Henderson Field, Puller’s battalion was the only American unit defending an airfield against a regiment-strength Japanese force. In a three-hour firefight, his unit suffered 70 casualties while the Japanese lost more than 1,400 troops, and the American’s held the airfield.

Puller was quoted as saying, “All right, they’re on our left, they’re on our right, they’re in front of us, they’re behind us. … They can’t get away this time,” about the battle.

He earned his fifth Navy Cross in November 1950 during the intense Battle of Chosin Reservoir. During the firefight, then-Col. Puller was quoted as saying, “We’ve been looking for the enemy for some time now. We’ve finally found him. We’re surrounded. That simplifies things.”

In 1966, he asked to be reinstated in the Corps in order to see action in the Vietnam War, but the request was denied on the basis of his age.

Navy Petty Officer 1st Class James E. Williams

Born and raised in South Carolina, Petty Officer 1st Class James E. Williams was the most-decorated enlisted man in Navy history. He received a Medal of Honor, Navy Cross, Silver Star, Navy and Marine Corps Medal, Bronze Star, Purple Heart and a Navy Commendation Medal with combat distinguishing device.

The petty officer received the Medal of Honor for his service on the Mekong River in Vietnam on Oct. 31, 1966, while serving as a boat captain and patrol officer. His vessel and another river-patrol boat were searching for contraband when crewmembers spotted two speedboats. Williams pursued and sunk one of the boats, then turned and went after the second, which was hiding in an 8-foot-wide canal in front of a rice paddy.

He knew his boat wouldn’t fit in the canal, but after checking a map realized he could pass through a wider canal and intercept the enemy’s vessel.

He proceeded with his plan. However, after exiting the canal, he found himself and his crew in a hostile staging area where they came under heavy fire from more enemy boats and North Vietnamese troops on the shore.

U.S. helicopter support eventually arrived, so Williams moved his vessel to another enemy boat staging area down river, where yet another fierce battle was under way.

After more than three hours of fighting, his patrol had accounted for the destruction or loss of 65 enemy boats and more than 1,000 enemy troops.

“You gotta stop and think about your shipmates,” he said during a 1998 interview with the Navy’s All Hands Magazine. “That’s what makes you a great person and a great leader -- taking care of each other.”

Williams passed away in 1999.

Maj. Audie Murphy

Immediately following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on Dec. 7, 1941, Audie Murphy, a 17-year-old son of poor, rural sharecroppers, tried to enlist in the military, but the services rejected him because he was not yet 18.

Shortly after his 18th birthday, Murphy tried to enlist in the Marine Corps but was turned down for being too short. Finally, the 5-foot-5-inch man was accepted into the Army and sent to Camp Wolters, Texas, for basic training.

During a close-order-drill session, he passed out. Fearing his apparent weaknesses, his company commander tried to have him transferred to a cook and bakers school, but the private insisted on becoming a combat soldier.

His thirst for combat was finally quenched when he was ordered to help liberate Sicily on July 10, 1943. Shortly after arriving, he experienced his first combat encounter and defeated two enemy officers. For this action, his captain promoted him to corporal.

Murphy distinguished himself in combat on many occasions while in Italy earning several promotions and decorations.

Following the Italian campaign, Murphy’s unit was ordered to invade southern France. Shortly thereafter, Murphy’s best friend was killed while approaching a German soldier feigning surrender. His friend’s death sent him into a rage, and he single-handedly wiped out the German machine gun crew responsible. He then used the German machine gun and grenades to destroy several nearby enemy positions. For this act, he received a Distinguished Service Cross.

He was awarded a battlefield commission and given a platoon. Twelve days after the promotion, he was shot by a sniper and spent 10 weeks recuperating.

When he returned to his unit, Murphy became the company commander and was wounded by mortar rounds that killed two soldiers near him.

The next day, despite the bitter-cold temperature and more than 24 inches of snow on the ground, his unit entered the battle at Holtzwihr, France. With only 19 of his 128 soldiers engaged, his men seemed doomed. Subsequently, he sent all of his men to the rear while he continued to engage the Germans until he ran out of ammunition.

Without the means to return fire, Murphy looked to an abandoned, burning tank nearby. He secured its .50-caliber machine gun and used it to saw down German infantry at a distance. During the engagement, he destroyed a full squad of German infantry that had crawled in a ditch to within 100 feet of his position. Murphy suffered several leg wounds, yet released his fury on the enemy for almost an hour.

Eventually, his telephone line to the artillery fire-direction center was cut by enemy fire. Without the ability to call on artillery, he summoned his remaining men and organized them to conduct a counter attack, which ultimately drove the enemy away from Holtzwihr. These actions earned Murphy the Medal of Honor.

During World War II, Murphy was credited with destroying six tanks, killing more than 240 German soldiers, and wounding and capturing many others. By the end of World War II, he was a legend within 3rd Infantry Division as a result of his heroism and battlefield leadership.

During his career, Murphy received 33 U.S. medals, five French medals and one from Belgium.

Despite suffering from insomnia, bouts of depression and nightmares as a result of post-traumatic stress disorder, he raised his hand and volunteered for duty when the Korean conflict broke out in 1950. However, he was never called up for combat duty. By the time he retired in 1966, he had attained the rank of major.

(Air Force Tech. Sgt. Kevin Wallace is assigned to the 436th Airlift Wing.)

Biographies:
Chief Master Sgt. Duane Hackney, USAF
Lt. Gen. Lewis “Chesty” Puller, USMC
Petty Officer 1st Class James E. Williams, USN
Maj. Audie Murphy, USA
Click photo for screen-resolution image Airman 1st Class Duane Hackney, the most decoratd airman in Air Force history, receives Air Force Cross. Air Force photo  
Download screen-resolution   
Download high-resolution
Click photo for screen-resolution image Lt. Gen. Lewis “Chesty” Puller is accounted as the most decorated Marine in history. Marine Corps photo  
Download screen-resolution   
Download high-resolution
Click photo for screen-resolution image Petty Officer 1st Class James E. Williams, the most-decorated enlisted man in Navy history, stands ready aboard River Patrol Boat 105 in Vietnam. Navy photo  
Download screen-resolution   
Download high-resolution
Click photo for screen-resolution image Retired Maj. Gen. John “Iron-Mike” O'Daniel presents 1st Lt. Audie Murphy with the Distinguished Service Cross and Silver Star. Murphy is the most decorated soldier in history. Army photo  
Download screen-resolution   
Download high-resolution


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: Delaware
KEYWORDS: footsteps; generations; heroes; troops

1 posted on 07/06/2007 5:44:04 PM PDT by SandRat
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: StarCMC; Bethbg79; EsmeraldaA; MoJo2001; Kathy in Alaska; Brad's Gramma; laurenmarlowe; ...

HEROES Past and Present PING


2 posted on 07/06/2007 5:44:45 PM PDT by SandRat (Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SandRat

God bless our troops!! True heroes there!


3 posted on 07/06/2007 5:48:48 PM PDT by swatbuznik
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: SandRat

Great war tales.


4 posted on 07/06/2007 5:52:03 PM PDT by tlj18 (A mediocre Soldier with integrity is better than a great Soldier with none - my firm view)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SandRat
Thanks for the post. Great stories. Sometimes I fear that someday these heroes will realize that the majority of Americans either hate them or don't even care about them and just decide it's not worth it.

Thing is, they know it and do what they are called to do anyway.

5 posted on 07/06/2007 6:14:35 PM PDT by Eagles6
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SandRat
Not all great heroes but names of many we never hear of having gone to do what needed to be done.

STARS IN KHAKI[/u] Copyright © 2000, H-Net, all rights reserved. This work may be copied for non-profit educational use if proper credit is given to the author and the list.

James E. Wise, Jr and Paul W. Wilderson III. Stars in Khaki: Movie Actors in the Army and Air Services. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press. 2000. xi + 244 pp. Bibliography, appendices, index. $24.95 (cloth), ISBN 1-55750-958-1.(Amazon.com -- $14.99 + $2.98 S&H)

Reviewed by Charles C. Kolb, National Endowment for the Humanities . Published by H-PCAACA (November, 2000)

Hollywood Stars and their Army Service from the Spanish American War to Vietnam

This splendid book is the third and final volume in historian-biographer Wise's trilogy and it makes a fitting companion to its two illustrious predecessors. In 1997 Wise and his co-author Ann Rehill wrote Stars in Blue: Movie Actors in America's Sea Services in which film actors who served in the U.S. Navy, Naval Reserve, Coast Guard, or Coast Guard Reserve from 1920 through the Korean War are profiled.

Wise and Rehill also authored Stars in the Corps: Movie Actors in the United States Marines, (1999) which covers the same period but emphasizes Marines in the Pacific Theater of Operations during World War II.

Your reviewer had the privilege of reviewing these two prior volumes, and is pleased to report that this third volume joins its antecedents by providing the reader with clear, concise, and informative profiles of celebrities who, in this volume, served in the U.S. Army and air services from as early as the Spanish-American War into the Vietnam era.

In Stars in Blue we learned about Wayne Morris, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Henry Fonda, Humphrey Bogart, Paul Newman, Aldo Ray, Ernest Borgnine, Robert Montgomery, Cesar Romero, and dozens of other film stars.

With the sequel, Stars in the Corps, we discovered the contributions made by more than 30 motion picture stars including Sterling Hayden, Tyrone Power, Steve McQueen, Lee Marvin, Gene Hackman, George C. Scott, Harvey Keitel, Brian Dennehy, Hugh O'Brien, Ed McMahon, and Dale Dye. As in these two volumes, the emphasis in Stars in Khaki is on World War II.

Many of the men who served in the U.S. Army and air services were already motion picture celebrities -- Jimmy Stewart, Clark Gable, Ronald Reagan, and Elvis Presley -- or were just beginning their careers -- Charlton Heston and Bert Parks -- or, as a result of their military service, would aspire to the acting profession and become stars in their own right -- Audie Murphy, Charles Durning, Jack Warden, and Clint Eastwood.

The senior author, James Wise, is a retired U.S. Navy captain who was a naval aviator and intelligence officer, and is the author of three other naval books in addition to the trilogy. His co-author, Paul Wilderson is executive editor of Naval Institute Press and holds a doctorate in American history from the University of New Hampshire. Their book contains a preface, acknowledgments, three parts comprising 25 biographies and 100 brief biographies, three appendices, and 78 black-and-white images. The Bibliography lists 99 books and periodicals, nine official records or archives, and nine other sources. A seven-page double column index includes almost exclusively proper nouns.

In "Part 1: Soldiers and Airmen in Combat," 14 stars are documented, 13 are from World War II, while director William "Wild Bill" Wellman served in the Great War. (World War I) Notable among the men profiled in this section are Charles Durning, Clark Gable, Audie Murphy, Sabu, and Jack Warden. With "Part 2: Staff Personnel, Instructors, and Entertainers," the authors focus on 11 men, profiling stars that include Gene Autry, Clint Eastwood, Glenn Miller, Elvis Presley, and Ronald Reagan.

The third section is an alphabetical tabulation of mini-biographies of 100 other film and television stars, beginning with Art Abbot and ending with Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.

An appendix is devoted to the actress and comedienne, Martha Raye (1916-1994) a member of the Bob Hope troupe who for more than 30 years entertained GIs in North Africa, Europe, Korea, and Vietnam.

Another appendix contains two dozen captioned images of actors and actresses "boosting GI morale."

A final appendix tabulates 38 prominent stars who were unable to qualify for military service during World War II (among them were Fred Astaire, Marlon Brando, Gary Cooper, Errol Flynn, Cary Grant, Bob Hope, Peter Lawford, Gregory Peck, George Raft, John Wayne, and Richard Widmark -- most of whom starred in films with military themes).

Among the stars who are documented were a number who became officers: General Jimmy Stewart; Majors Clark Gabel, Glenn Miller and Lewis Stone; Lt. Colonel Tim McCoy; Captains Alan Alda, Bert Parks, Ronald Reagan, and Eli Wallach; First Lieutenants Audie Murphy and Gene Raymond; and Second Lieutenant Van Heflin.

Some film stars were intelligence officers (Bruce Cabot and Robert Preston), and there were a number of drafted and enlisted men and NCOs, such as Sergeants Dan Blocker (a Korean War veteran), Neville Brand, Broderick Crawford, Melvin Douglas, Steve Forrest, Charlton Heston, and Joe Yule, Jr. (Mickey Rooney's true name), as well as drill instructors (Robert Mitchum and Gordon Scott).

In the Army Air Force (AAF) there were instructor pilots (Robert Cummings, George Gobel, and a civilian, Welshman Ray Milland); and pilots Gene Autry (C-47s), Jackie Coogan (gliders), Tim Holt (B-29s), Dan Rowan (P-40s), Jimmy Stewart (B-17s and B-24s, and later B-47s and B-52s), Jack Palance, and Jack Webb. Kris Kristofferson was a helicopter pilot in the Vietnam era.

AAF personnel also included bombardiers (such as Cameron Mitchell), navigators (Arthur Franz and Gordon MacRae), and aircrew (Peter Graves and Sabu).

Other motion picture stars included paratroopers (John Derek and Kris Kristofferson), military policemen (Chuck Norris and Rip Torn), radio operators (James Coburn, Steve Forrest, and Walter Matthau), medical corps personnel (Ossie Davis, Gene Wilder, and Eli Wallach), and a combat photographer named Van Heflin.

The wounded included: James Arness, Pat Brady, Charles Durning, James Garner, Audie Murphy, and Jack Palance.

World War I veterans who were also film stars included Walter Brennan, Robert Burton, Melvin Douglas, and director William Wellman who was in the Lafayette Flying Corps and was credited with three kills. Cowboy star Tim McCoy served in both World War I and II while Gene Raymond was in both World War II and Vietnam.

Lewis Stone has the distinction of serving as an Army officer in the Spanish-American War and World Wars I and II.

Two men served in both the U.S. Navy and Army during World War II -- James Daly and Jack Warden; while George Kennedy was in the army for 16 years before becoming a film star.

Several stories deserve mention. In 1942, seven months after losing his wife, Carole Lombard, in an tragic TWA DC-3 domestic airplane crash near Las Vegas, the film celebrity Clark Gable at the age of 41 (well past draft age) enlisted in the Army Air Corps. He attended Officers' Candidate School, and was assigned to the 351st Bomb Group in England to make films about aerial gunnery. However, Gable volunteered for combat duty and made five B-17 bombing missions over Germany earning the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal, as well as the notable honor of having the Nazi Air Minister, Hermann Goering, offer a reward for Gable's capture. Attaining the rank of major, Gable was discharged in June 1944. What caused Gable to enlist -- grief, a suicidal death wish, patriotism, or a combination of these? This remains a mystery.

The distinguished theater, film, and television actor Charles Durning participated in the D-Day invasion at Normandy, was wounded three times during the European campaign, and barely missed becoming a casualty at the infamous Malmedy Massacre.

Audie Murphy (1924-1971), America's most decorated soldier with more than two dozen U.S. medals and honors, was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. He served in six major campaigns: Sicily, Naples, Anzio-Rome, Rhone Valley, Rhineland, and Central Europe. Murphy's well-known story is profiled in the book and film To Hell and Back (in which he played himself), and he received a battlefield commission in addition to many foreign military honors from the Allies.

Indian born Sabu Dastagir (1924-1963) -- known professionally by his first name -- was already an established American film star by the late 1930s, became a United States citizen, enlisted in the Army Air Force, and served 40 missions as a ball turret gunner in B-24 Liberators in the Pacific Theater of Operations. He starred in Elephant Boy (1937), Drums (1938), and The Thief of Baghdad (1940) but his career flagged in the postwar era and beset by personal problem died at the age of 39 of a heart attack.

Jack Warden had served in the U.S. Navy from 1938-1941 then joined the Merchant Marine as water tender in the engine room but disliked convoy duty because of Axis aircraft attacks and his location 30 decks below the main deck -- this, as he says, ended his "romance with the life of a sailor." He left the Merchant Marine in 1942, joined the army and became a platoon sergeant and parachute jumpmaster in the 101st Airborne.

While hospitalized with a leg injury sustained in a jump, Warden read a play written by Clifford Odets and decided to be come an actor.

We also learn about the "Culver City Commandos" who made or starred in training films for the Army Air Force Special Services in California. Among these commandos were DeForest Kelley from "Star Trek," Arthur Kennedy, Clayton Moore (the "Lone Ranger", Craig Stevens ("Peter Gunn", and a fellow named Ronald Reagan -- a Reserve Army Officer 1937-1941, called to duty, who would later serve as president of the Screen Actors Guild (1947-1952 and 1959), Governor of California (1966-1974), and President of the United States (1981-1989).

In Part 2 the exploits of pilot Orvon Gene Autry (1907-1998) are recalled, including once flying the "Hump" in Burma. Gene Autry is the only person to be honored with five stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame -- one each for radio (his career began in 1928), recording (100 million records), film (dozens of motion pictures commencing in 1934), television (star of his own TV series and the producer of five others), and live performance (rodeo and theater). An astute businessman and legendary figure in American popular culture, Autry also held an interest in the California Angels baseball team.

Compelling stories are told about Sammy Davis, Jr. and his determined efforts against racial discrimination and bigotry during his 1942-1945 service in Wyoming. In the Korean War era Army PFC Clinton Eastwood's swimming enabled him to survive the crash of a Navy AD3E Skyraider crash off the California coast, and we learn why an Army man was aboard a naval aircraft. As the star of a television series (Rawhide) and film actor beginning with "spaghetti Westerns" and award-winning performances with now over 50 films to his credit, Eastwood also served as mayor of Carmel, California.

During World War II Sergeant Charlton Heston served in the Aleutians in the Army Air Force as a radio operator and gunner in a B-25. Known for his roles in epics such as The Ten Commandments (1956), Ben Hur (1960), and Khartoum (1966), Heston began his career on the stage and in television, and would become president of the Screen Actors Guild (1963-1975), a member of the National Council on the Arts (1966-1972), and president of the National Rifle Association (1998-date).

Originally William Beedle, Jr., Lieutenant William Holden (1918-1981), perhaps best known for his action roles in Stalag 17 (1953), The Bridges at Toko-Ri (1954), The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957), and The Wild Bunch (1969), was in the Army Air Force making training films from 1942-1945. The adjutant of his unit was Captain Ronald Reagan and a roommate was baseball great Hank Greenberg. Holden's brother Bob, a naval aviator, was killed in the Pacific on 1 January 1944.

New Yorker Bert Lancaster (1913-1994), an acrobat and actor recognized for his stellar film roles in Run Silent, Run Deep (1958), From Here to Eternity (1953), Elmer Gantry (1960), Birdman of Alcatraz (1962), and Seven Days in May (1964), as well as number of swashbucklers, was an Army athletics instructor stateside but he was also in a theater unit that entertained troops in Tunisia and Italy during World War II.

The triumphs and tragedies of gifted musicians Major Glenn Miller (1904-1944) and Elvis Presley (1935-1977) are also recounted along with their military service.

This final volume of the trilogy is a fascinating and valuable collection of profiles of motion picture stars and directors who served in the United States Army or associated air services. The stories are compelling and hold the reader's interest, often providing little-known facts and are accompanied by many images never before published. Observant readers may also note that the books' dust jackets and cloth bindings correlate with the service whose motion picture stars are being profiled: Navy blue, Marine Corps green, and Army khaki. Notes [1]. Charles C. Kolb, "Review of James E. Wise, Jr. and Anne Collier Rehill, ]Stars In the Blue: Movie Actors in America's Sea Services," H-PCAACA, H-Net Reviews, December 1997. URL: 12705884375164. -----

Here are just some that they missed above -- or were in different services, but probabaly appearing in the other volumes:

Edmund O'Brien. USAAF

Wallace berry, USCG

Robert Taylor, USN

Victor Mature, USN

James Arness -- Army -- landed in France on D-Day

Robert Stack -- Navy -- Gunnery Instructor

Lew Ayers -- Army Medic

6 posted on 07/06/2007 7:10:09 PM PDT by Turret Gunner A20
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson