Weekly Review for Veterans and Oral History for Monday, May 11, 2015

weekly review for U.S. Veterans Monday, May 11, 2015

weekly review for U.S. Veterans Monday, May 11, 2015Here are some recent articles of interest that I found this week for U.S. Veterans. Enjoy!

Veterans Support: VA to study benefits of service dogs, emotional support dogs for Veterans
Joel Nicholson started his military career with the U.S. Marine Corps in 1993. He later joined the National Guard in 2006 and was activated in 2008 with the 56th Stryker Brigade to deploy to Iraq. He spent much of his deployment patrolling route Michigan in between Fallujah and Baghdad.
After leaving the service in 2009, Joel noticed he was depressed, had severe memory loss and was relying too much on alcohol to self-medicate. That’s when he checked in to a PTSD Residential Rehabilitation Program in West Virginia where a VA doctor recommended he get a service dog.

Read more here

Florida Legal News: Florida Veteran Invokes Stand Your Ground Law in Killing of Neighbors
William Woodward says he and his family thought their lives were threatened by their nasty neighbors.
Read more here

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for U.S. Veterans.

Weekly Review for Veterans and Oral History for Friday, April 10, 2015

Weekly Review for Veterans and Oral History for Friday, April 10, 2015

Weekly Review for Veterans and Oral History for Friday, April 10, 2015Here are some recent articles of interest that I found this week for U.S. Veterans. Enjoy!

Save 96 Year Old War Hero From An Eviction
As a young prisoner of war, he survived the brutality of the Nazi ‘death march’ across Europe. Now 96-year-old Robert Clark is engaged in a different sort of battle after a council refused to increase funding he needs for a live-in carer. It means the Second World War veteran could be forced out of his home of nearly 50 years and into a care home – a move his son describes as ‘like going back into a prisoner of war camp’.

Read more here

VA Announces New Grants to Help End Veteran Homelessness
VA Secretary Bob McDonald today announced the award of nearly $93 million in Supportive Services for Veteran Families (SSVF) 3-year grants that will help approximately 45,000 homeless and at-risk Veterans and their families. The grants will be distributed to 24 non-profit agencies in 15 communities, with $30 million in awards being distributed to the Los Angeles area.

Read more here

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for U.S. Veterans.

Weekly Review for Veterans and Oral History for Monday, April 6, 2015

Weekly Review for Veterans and Oral History for Monday, April 6, 2015

Weekly Review for Veterans and Oral History for Monday, April 6, 2015Here are some recent articles of interest that I found this week for U.S. Veterans. Enjoy!

Helping Veterans: Veterans with PTSD reclaiming their lives
Major Joshua Brandon has been an Infantry Officer with the U.S. Army since 2002 and he has PTSD. Difficult memories were triggered when he was driving to the grocery store in Tennessee and he would smell the smoke from backyard fires.

“I started looking for threats in all directions. My adrenaline would spike. I had to pull over and talk myself out of it.”

Major Brandon has the courage to talk about his experience and how VA has helped him with his PTSD on the website AboutFace. Learn about posttraumatic stress disorder from Veterans who have experienced it. Hear their stories. Find out how treatment turned their lives around.

Read more here

Help a Veteran: Supportive service partnerships key to ending Veteran homelessness
As VA works to end homelessness among Veterans by the end of 2015, partnerships of all types – including with federal, state, local and private entities – are essential in providing employment opportunities and safe and affordable housing to support homeless Veterans’ needs. These partnerships can increase the range of service offerings and thus provide better outcomes for Veterans and their families. The work of Yvette DeJesus exemplifies why partnerships play a critical role in helping to end Veteran homelessness.

Read more here

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for U.S. Veterans.

Weekly Review for Veterans and Oral History for Monday, February 23, 2015

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maxresdefaultHere are some recent articles of interest that I found this week for U.S. Veterans. Enjoy!

Living History: Meeting your childhood heroes
Seventy years after the end of WWII’s Battle of the Bulge, the VA sits down with Veterans who were there to listen to their stories. Living History is documentary-style web series where Veterans of different wars and generations discuss their experiences before, during and after war with each other. VA employee and Army Veteran Martin Taylor ran camera for the interview and shares his thoughts on meeting our Battle of the Bulge Veterans.

Read more here

Lessons of History: 70th Anniversary of Iwo Jima webinars for Students and Adults
February and March mark the 70th anniversary of one of bloodiest battles in Marine Corps History: Iwo Jima. Iwo Jima was of strategic importance in the Pacific campaign, as a potential base for bombers under duress in the long journey to or from raids on the Japanese home islands. The cost to take the 2 mile wide by 4 mile long island was high: over 24,000 American casualties. In fact, Iwo Jima was the only battle in the Pacific war where American casualties outnumbered Japanese. Through the sacrifices of our troops on the island and at sea surrounding the rock, the hard fought and eventual victory saved the lives of 24,000 US Airmen during emergency landings. During the next two months, the Museum will host a student webinar and an adult webinar series to commemorate the battle and those who fought tirelessly to take the “sulphur island.”

Read more here

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for U.S. Veterans.

Weekly Review for Veterans and Oral History for Friday, February 13, 2015

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Mig3Here are some recent articles of interest that I found this week for U.S. Veterans. Enjoy!

History Makers: “Was it like the old war movies?” Veterans share their stories of WWII
It was the middle of the workday last fall when a colleague brought a gentleman to my office and introduced him to me as the past president of the Veterans of the Battle of the Bulge. Retired U.S. Army Colonel Douglas Dillard sat down across from me and we spent some time chatting.

Read more here

Machines of History: Mig-3 raised from the bottom of a lake, restored & flies again!
The Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-3 was a Soviet fighter aircraft used during World War II. It was a development of the MiG-1 by the OKO of Zavod (Factory) No. 1 to remedy problems that had been found during the MiG-1’s development and operations. It replaced the MiG-1 on the production line at Factory No. 1 on 20 December 1940 and was built in large numbers during 1941 before Factory No. 1 was converted to build the Ilyushin Il-2.

Read more here

History Maker: THE REAL BURGER KING- 53 years after the war, WWII veteran receives an unexpected call
After having served in the 667th FAB-Headquarters during the Battle of the Bulge and Rheinland campaign, Corporal E. Frank Sisson from Oklahoma City was promoted as a Line Sergeant and transferred to Berlin where he began working as an investigator for the Military Police.

Christmas day, 1945, would become one of the most memorable days of Frank’s life. Read the rest here

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for U.S. Veterans.

Weekly Review for U.S. Veterans for Monday, January 19, 2015

weekly review for U.S. Veterans

weekly review for U.S. VeteransHere are some recent articles of interest that I found this week for U.S. Veterans. Enjoy!

Help a Veteran: Operation Stand Your Back

Retired Disabled Vietnam vet and National Guard retiree’s house goes into foreclosure 1-15-15.

After 3 surgeries in 2014 alone, following several others over the years, Mid Missouri resident, Bob and Sandy Sneller’s home is schedules for foreclosure by mid month. Mr. Sneller’s wife, Sandy, has had two bouts of cancer, numerous other medical problems.

Read more here

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for U.S. Veterans.

Weekly Review for U.S. Veterans for Monday, January 5, 2015

weekly review for U.S. Veterans

weekly review for U.S. VeteransHere are some recent articles of interest that I found this week for U.S. Veterans. Enjoy!

Oral History Legal Guide: New Edition of “Oral History and the Law”
A GUIDE TO ORAL HISTORY AND THE LAW is the definitive resource for all oral history practitioners. In clear, accessible language it thoroughly explains all of the major legal issues including legal release agreements, the protection of restricted interviews, the privacy torts (including defamation), copyright, the impact of the Internet, and the role of Institutional Review Boards (IRBs). The author accomplishes this by examining the most relevant court cases and citing examples of policies and procedures that oral history programs have used to avoid legal difficulties.

Read more here… 

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for U.S. Veterans.

Weekly Review for U.S. Veterans for Friday, December 26, 2014

weekly review for U.S. Veterans

weekly review for U.S. VeteransHere are some recent articles of interest that I found this week for U.S. Veterans. Enjoy!

Heroes of History: Ready to cry? He saved 669 children during the holocaust…he doesn’t know they’re sitting next to him
Sir Nicholas Winton is a humanitarian who organized a rescue operation that saved the lives of 669 Jewish Czechoslovakia children from Nazi death camps, and brought them to the safety of Great Britain between the years 1938-1939.

Read more here

Machines of History: 10 bizarre war machines from World War Two
Project Habakkuk was a British plan by Geoffrey Pyke to build aircraft carriers out of pykrete, a mixture of wood pulp and ice. The carriers, nicknamed “bergships” were to operate as landing platforms for aircraft in the war against the German U-boats in the mid-Atlantic.

Read more here

Little Known History: ‘Avengers’ a Jewish group of assassins that targeted Nazi war criminals
For many Jews, the end of World War II meant freedom, but some felt a need to seek revenge against Nazis. Some soldiers of the second brigade of the Jewish Brigade established the “Executioners Unit”. They traveled wearing stolen British army uniforms and apprehended many Nazis and secretly tried them in summary field trials. They called themselves “The Avengers”.

Read more here

Crimes of History: 17 December 1944: Kampfgrüppe Peiper massacre US troops at Malmedy
The attack through the Ardennes was a desperate gamble for the Germans. They had stiffened their assault with some very experienced SS units, veterans of the Eastern Front, who could be trusted to fight ruthlessly. One of the these was SS Kampfgruppe Peiper, a 4,000 strong battle group led by 29 year old SS-Obersturmbannführer Joachim Peiper, that was expected to make a rapid thrust through US lines and seize key positions. 

Read more here

Honoring a History Maker: “Wild Bill Guarnere” collection found in S. Phila. Home
In a bedroom lay a white silk pillow – yellowed with age and emblazoned with the screaming eagle emblem of the Army’s 101st Airborne Division. On the walls were pictures and plaques telling the story of a World War II veteran; in another room was an adjustable hospital bed and, on a windowsill, a worn Bible. That October day, Jim Bennett was looking for an investment, a house to buy, rehab, then rent or resell, as he has done with about 500 others over more than 20 years.

Read more here

History Maker: Battle of the Bulge recollected in officer’s account
The Battle of the Bulge was a surprise German attack on Allied forces in Belgium’s Ardennes region and ended up being part of the German’s dissent to defeat.
Bob Rupp, now 96 years old and originally from Aurora, Nebraska, joined the US Army in 1941 and in 1944 was stationed near Luxembourg City as a supply officer with the Third Armored Field Artillery Battalion.

Read more here

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for U.S. Veterans.

Weekly Review for U.S. Veterans for Monday, December 8, 2014

weekly review for U.S. Veterans

weekly review for U.S. VeteransHere are some recent articles of interest that I found this week for U.S. Veterans. Enjoy!

Surprises from History: 17,000 evacuated after huge WWII bomb found in Germany
Around 17,000 people are being evacuated from a residential area of Dortmund, Germany today following the discovery of a massive unexploded bomb thought to have been dropped by a British bomber during World War II.

The unexploded ordnance was uncovered in the city’s Hörde district during building work at a pump manufacturer. Everyone within a radius of 1.5km began to be evacuated at noon local time so the bomb could be be safely defused. Local authorities believe the type of explosive in the bomb is several times more powerful than conventional explosives, according to the Kolnische Rundschau newspaper.

Between 10% and 20% of all bombs dropped on Germany during World War II are thought to have not exploded on impact, which means ordnance continues to be uncovered 70 years later.

Read more here

Helping Veterans: Gift from Katy Perry helps homeless Veterans secure housing
Thanks to the philanthropy of Katy Perry, 22 homeless veterans in Michigan and Texas will soon cross the threshold into permanent housing. Perry is a supporter of Veterans Matter, a growing national program that works with HUD and VA to house homeless veterans. As part of its fundraising efforts, Veterans Matter auctioned a Katy Perry Prizmatic Tour concert package with the winner, Scott Vaughn of Oakton, Virginia, getting to be the superstar’s VIP guest with concert tickets and to meet her backstage before her recent tour stop in Cleveland.

Read more here

Historical Sacrifices: Six Months – Three Canadian Brothers – all killed in WWII
The Second World War took the lives of many young men who served in the military. But for the Wagner family, the loss was simply colossal. Sitting in her home in the hamlet of Teeterville in south-western Ontario, Lenore (Wagner) Floyd wondered how her grandmother coped with the ordeal while describing how all three of her sons were dead within six months of joining World War Two battles. Lenore’s great-uncles Howard, Ivan and Harry were all killed while fighting in Europe in the Second World War.

Read more here

Veteran Advocacy: 11 tips for running a successful small business from one Veteran to another
Thomas Bernard is taking the skills that made him a successful soldier and applying them to his construction business — and wants to share what he’s doing with other veterans turned entrepreneurs. After serving two tours in Iraq, Bernard started ProCraft Interiors in 2010 with as he puts it, “$600 and a dream.”

Read more here

History Maker: Lawrence Benner, the tail gunner tells his tale
Lawrence Benner, a crew member of the Lancaster bomber aircraft reflects on his journey as a tail gunner during the Second World War. A Tail gunner is a crew member of a military air craft who attacks the enemy fighters sitting at the back or tail of the aircraft. Lawrence Benner with his profound interest of becoming a pilot and serving the nation during the Second World War joined the Royal Canadian Air Force in September 1943. Benner is from Calgary, Alberta, Canada. He was seventeen years old when he made this decision. However, now he say, “nobody likes war, it’s cost to many young lives.” “I wouldn’t want to go again, I sure as hell wouldn’t.”

Read more here

History Movies: Mel Gibson, Andrew Garfield Set to Work on Upcoming WWII Film
Oscar-winning director and actor Mel Gibson will reportedly work with The Amazing Spiderman actor Andrew Garfield on upcoming WWII film about war vet Desmond T. Doss, the first ever conscientious objector and one of the only three to win the Medal of Honor for his bravery during the Second World War.

Mel Gibson, whose most recent movie was The Expendables 3, is billed to direct the said war film while Andrew Garfield, who became recently popular due to his role as Spiderman, is said to portray Desmond Doss’ character in the movie. The project has the working title Hacksaw Ridge.

Read more here

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for U.S. Veterans.

Weekly Review for U.S. Veterans for Friday, November 14, 2014

weekly review for U.S. Veterans

weekly review for U.S. VeteransHere are some recent articles of interest that I found this week for U.S. Veterans. Enjoy!

Remembering History Makers: Internet Rallies For 107-Year-Old WWII Vet Who Worried No One Would Attend His Funeral
Before Roscoe Cassidy died last week, the WWII veteran was concerned no one would attend his funeral. He needn’t have worried.

Cassidy, who died last Tuesday at 107, told his family he’d outlived so many of his friends there’d be no one left to show up at his funeral, reports WAVE. Thanks to groups like the Patriot Guard and Reddit, dozens of well-wishers attended Cassidy’s service on Saturday, armed with American flags and salutes.

“It’s important for us to be at these funerals and to support these veterans and show them that somebody cares and show the community that they’ve got a lot of people behind them,” Patriot Guard State Captain Danny Valentine told WKYT, explaining his group’s mission. Roscoe’s son, Mike, told Lex18 his dad “loved his shot of moonshine every day and he said that was his secret to life.” As for the strangers who came to see him off, Mike says “I think it would bring tears to [Roscoe’s] eyes. He would just be so pleased.” Read more here

These Trees Do Talk: Tree Carvings Help Date World War II Site in Poland
Near the forest where trenches were discovered, are the remains bunkers built by the Germans shortly before World War II. The Międzyrzecz Fortification Region was a system of fortifications created by the Germans to defend the eastern borders of the Third Reich. It was built in the years 1934 – 1944. It did not play a large role during World War II, as the Nazis retreated earlier before the Soviet troops.

A few dozen carvings have been discovered on the beech trees. The researchers divided them into three groups. Those belonging to the first group were made even before the last world war. Dates that appear include “1915”, “1925”, “1930”, accompanied by initials, including one instance of initials with a heart surrounding them. The second group are the carvings associated with the period of World War II. The third group consists of carvings from the period after 1945. Among them is a Polish name and the date 1966/67. The most interesting were the inscriptions from the World War II period.  Read more here… 

Nisei Veterans: Fallen Japanese-American WWII are remembered
The Nisei Veterans Legacy Center has hosted an annual event honoring fallen WWII Japanese-American soldiers and their families since 2006. This year’s ceremony was held on the morning of September 28th, 2014 at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, otherwise know as Punchbowl Cemetery.

Those recognized included troops who died in the line of duty while serving in four segregated units including: the 100th Infantry Battalion, the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, the 1399 Engineer Construction Battalion and the Military Intelligence Service. After Japan attacked Pearl Harbour, there were over 20,000 Americans of Japanese Ancestry who served in these units, the Eye Witness News reports.  Read more here… 

History Maker: As rear gunner, Martin Charters flew 40 missions under heavy fire is finally honored
As a so-called ‘Tail-end Charlie’ – a rear gunner in a World War Two bomber plane – Martin Charters had the most dangerous job in the most dangerous part of the UK’s armed forces. Not only did he survive almost 40 raids in the flak-filled skies over heavily defended Nazi-occupied Europe, he has now reached the age of 93. Now his service has been recognised with a special ceremony to award him a Bomber Command clasp.

It took so long for the government to honour the actions of the wartime bomber air crews that many of the Killyleagh man’s comrades did not live long enough to get the special clasps which have only been issued over the past two years. Moral questions over the bombing of residential areas in German cities 70 years ago meant that in post-war Britain the work of Bomber Command was never officially recognised by the authorities until the Queen backed moves by Prime Minister David Cameron for the Bomber Command Clasp in 2012.  Read more here… 

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for U.S. Veterans.

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