A Most Important Day For Me

shouldazagged

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SEVENTY-THREE YEARS AGO TODAY my father was a nearsighted, 4-F (physically draft-exempt, for you younger folks) war correspondent. I have grandkids older than he was, but he was so "old" the young GI's called him "Pop".

He had crossed the North Atlantic in winter of 1943, the storm season, aboard a flat-bottomed LST, an ungainly ship that would roll on a damp dishcloth. He landed in England to prepare to cover the Normandy Invasion.

On this day, all those years ago, he went ashore on Omaha Beach, the most heavily contested and deadly of the invasion beaches. He landed with one of the first units in the first wave, an engineer outfit tasked with preparing the beach for the units to follow. On the way in he had an amphibious vehicle shot out from under him by a German artillery piece.

He was one of the thousands of men pinned down at the foot of a bluff and sea wall, every inch of which the Germans had sighted in with massed machine gun and artillery fire.

Like most men who were there, he would rarely say anything about it, and then very little. Mostly he would only admit that "It was pretty rough."

I was glad that when he died at ninety he had never seen the opening minutes of "Saving Private Ryan". He would have recognized that grisly as it was, it wasn't as bad as the real event; but it would surely have taken him back to the horror.

Dad went on to a distinguished career as a journalist, including major overseas assignments. Then he retired from that and entered the ministry, retiring three more times.

But at the end of his long life, if you asked him what his occupation had been, he would square his shoulders and proudly say, "War correspondent."

I hear people say, "They don't make them like those guys anymore." I beg to differ. I believe we do, and they would answer the call if we needed them on that scale. The kids who called my young father "Pop" were the same ones old timers had criticized for being soft, disrespectful and irresponsible. Older generations have always said such things about the young.

The "soft, disrespectful, irresponsible" boys my father watched dying in droves as they fought their bloody, costly way off the beach were the ones we call today "the Greatest Generation".

There is a lesson there for us old timers.
 
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Well happy birthday to ya! I'm 11 days behind ya for the 73 mark or as I like to call it the 34th anniversary of my 39th birth day. That don't sound quite so bad.

By the way, That was a good post and I agree with your comments. some great perspective there.

WALLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL HAPPY BIRTHDAY--and an EARLY one for Jack. Many many more please.
 
I watched Saving Private Ryan with my late father-in-law. He was in the 29th Inf that hit Omaha beach and was one of 3 from his landing craft that made it to the beach. He got really uncomfortable and said it was pretty realistic but much, much worse than the movie. He made it through the landing but was wounded twice during the next few months. He was a machine gunner so you can just imagine how much fire he took during that time.
 
Best opening post for a thread that I've seen on this forum in a long time.

Today is D-Day. Wherever you are, whatever you're doing, I hope all of you have taken a few minutes today just to stop and think about what happened on this day in 1944, and the eventual end result of the events of that day.
 
I hear people say, "They don't make them like those guys anymore." I beg to differ. I believe we do, and they would answer the call if we needed them on that scale. The kids who called my young father "Pop" were the same ones old timers had criticized for being soft, disrespectful and irresponsible. Older generations have always said such things about the young
There is a lesson there for us old timers.

Yes, they do make them. They have answered the call. And just like those who went before them, they come home, go to work, quietly raise families and become the fiber that holds us together and makes this nation great.
 
Yes, they do make them. They have answered the call. And just like those who went before them, they come home, go to work, quietly raise families and become the fiber that holds us together and makes this nation great.

Well said, sir.

An important word there is "quietly". Except among themselves, the ones who have really seen the elephant don't talk much about it.

"I just did my job" has been spoken by many an authentic hero.
 
My mom was born june 6 1923 and turned 21 on D-day. She was packing parachutes in Kansas at the time for the air base there. She said silk was scarce & they salvaged anything they could. Sometimes they would get parachutes from a crash that still had blood & flesh on them. Her brother, my uncle Ernie, was in the Battle of the Bulge & came home with what is now called PTSD but did recover. Almost everyone in that greatest generation did their part, even if they weren't on the front lines.
 
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