Remember Bill Mauldin?

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I came across some cartoons today penned by Bill Mauldin, whose "Willie and Joe" characters were enshrined in the WWII publication Yank. Bill, for those of you too young to know about him, was a proponent of the quintessential enlisted "dogface soldiers," the guys on the front line doing the fighting.

He often took the opportunity to poke fun at the brass, which enraged Gen. George Patton, who told him in no uncertain terms to knock that off. Word reached Patton's superior, Gen. Eisenhower, of that order, and Ike told Patton that Mauldin could pen anything he wanted! His cartoons were immensely popular during the war.

Mauldin lived until 2003, sadly dying suffering from Alzheimer's disease. A steady stream of letters came to him then, and a long line of visitors was at his hospital bedside before he died, most of them veterans who loved his work. He was buried in Arlington Cemetery.

Here's a wartime photo of Bill:

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And here's some of his work. I'll lead with my personal favorite:

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Now this one's a little esoteric, but funny nonetheless:

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Bill, God rest your soul. You were one of a kind.

John

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My Dad had a paper back book of his cartoons when I was a kid. It disappeared over the years.

Fellow forumite Davwingman sent me a hard cover book by Mauldin a couple of years ago. It is one of my favorite things and sits next to the S&W Bible on the shelf next to my safe.
 
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I'd always been a fan of Mauldin's cartoonist work...and was shocked, when after watching the "Red Badge of Courage" for about the tenth time last week, to realize that Bill Mauldin actually appeared in the movie with Audie Murphy! It never dawned on me that it was the same guy!

Remarkable guy, a soldier's soldier.

Len
 
The YODEL one is over my head, or am I missing the obvious? :confused:
 
Yes, I believe it is obvious

The YODEL one is over my head, or am I missing the obvious? :confused:

I don't they he really wanted her to teach him to yodel.


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The war was over 10 years before I was born but you could appreciate 'Willie and Joe' without being a soldier, though they would, I'm sure, appreciate them the most. Besides the great humor and irony was the sheer situation these guys were in, making the best out of something they'd rather not have been involved with. One of Eisenhower's great military decisions was not to let Patton censor Bill Mauldin.

------------------

From a mud hole with artillery shells falling all around yelling into the walkie-talkie. "We've got to have air support!!!".... "What's that?"...... "The password is 'fragrant flower!"
:D:D:D
 
My dad admired Bill Mauldin during (and after) WWII and had a hardback copy of Up Front. It was either the first or second book on that war I read as a boy, and it was truly educational.

Years later in a used book store I bought a copy of Mauldin's less successful book Back Home, also featuring Willie and Joe.
 
I had copies of Up Front and Back Home, but they seem to have been lost, probably in a divorce. Now copies cost the proverbial arm and leg, but I do have a copy of Bill Mauldin's War, a collection of cartoons dating from before he went overseas, some of them showing GI's wearing the old WWI-style helmets and carrying Springfields.

He became an extremely successful and popular syndicated editorial cartoonist later in his career.

One of my all-time favorites was one that shows Willie and Joe huddled under an improvised pup tent shelter in pouring rain and sloppy mud. Standing outside the entrance is a little skinny, ribby, shivering dog with his tail drooping. And Willie says, "Let him in, Joe, I want to see something I can feel sorry for."

He pulled no punches and took no manure, and was totally loved by the grunts. It was only the stuffier officers and ego cases like Patton who disliked him.
 
My Grandfather was a veteran of the 26th Infantry Division and appreciated the Willie and Joe cartoons. I appreciate them too.

To put things in perspective, the 90 year old WWII vets who are still around were once just as young as the "kids" who are coming home from Afghanistan.
 
When I was a kid in the 1950's my grandparents had a copy of Up Front and I used to lay on their living room floor and look at the cartoons on Sunday afternoons. Good memories.
 
I had a copy of Up Front and saw some of his postwar newspaper cartoons.

My favorite photo of him shows him wearing his .45 pistol.

Note he seems to be wearing bloused paratrooper boots in the photo. Was that authorized?
 
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Wasn't Bill credited with giving... "Killroy was here"... and the picture of Killroy peeking over what ever his picture was on???

Or am I thinking of someone else?


WuzzFuzz
 
John, thank you again for such a great story. I'm pretty sure your favorite cartoon influenced a scene in an episode of M.A.S.H. I can't remember exactly what it was but something happened to Colonel Potter's jeep. Colonel Potter, being an old WW I cavalry man, took out his .45, walked over to the jeep and shot it.

CW
 
He also did a book called "a sort of a saga" about his childhood in the southwest during the depression. Funny as all getout but really gives an idea about how tough times were.
 
Another classic is the artilleryman who has decorated a field piece with his helmet and raincoat explaining in the downpour that he won't have to wipe himself down with an oily rag after the rain.
 
Somewhere down in the bookcases I have a two book set of all his cartoons. I got it from my sister for my 50th birthday. His work is timeless. R.I.P. Bill.
 

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