My Cooter's History Blog has become about 80% World War II anyway, so I figured to start a blog specific to it, especially since we're commemorating its 70th anniversary and we are quickly losing this "Greatest Generation." The quote is taken from Pearl Harbor survivor Frank Curre, who was on the USS Tennessee that day. He died Dec. 7, 2011, seventy years to the day. His photo is below at right.
Saturday, March 30, 2024
USS California Unknown David Walker Has Been Identified
Thursday, March 28, 2024
Pearl Harbor Survivor Richard Higgins Dies at 102-- Part 2: There Are Now 22 (PHSA) Survivors of Pearl Harbor
Richard Higgins died March 21, 2024.
He was born on a farm near Magnum, Oklahoma, on July 24, 1921 and joined the Navy in 1939, retiring 20 years later. He then became an aeronautics engineer for Northrup Grumman, and other defense contractors.
He worked on the B-2 Stealth Bomber.
His wife, Winnie Ruth, died in 2004 after 60 years of marriage. Shortly after checking into hospice care Thursday, he told his granddaughter, "I'm ready to go see Winnie Ruth."
There are now just 22 survivors of the Pearl Harbor attack according to Kathleen Farley, the California state chair of the Sons and Daughters of Pearl Harbor Survivors. She said that other survivors may still be alive because not all joined the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association (PHSA) when it was formed in 1958.
About 87,000 military personnel were on Oahu on December 7.
--GreGen
Tuesday, March 26, 2024
100-Year-Old D-Day Veteran Getting Married Near Beaches of D-Day-- Part 3
Harold Terens later got dysentery which almost killed him. He later had another close call when a British barkeeper refused to serve him past closing time despite his pleadings for just one more drink. Moments after he was kicked out, a German rocket destroyed the pub.
Following the German surrender, Terens again helped transfer freed Allied prisoners back to England before he shipped back to the U.S. a month later.
He married his wife Thelma in 1948. She died in 2018 after 70 years of marriage. His bride-to-be, Jeanne Swerlin married at 21 and then had a second husband who died after 18 years and a long term boyfriend who died in 2019.
The couple and their families will travel to Paris in late May where Terens and a handful of Americans will be honored. It will be his 4th D-Day commemoration.
So Happy for Them. --GreGen
Monday, March 25, 2024
100-Year-Old D-Day Vet Getting Married-- Part 2: D-Day and a Secret Mission
It is so nice writing about this instead of the sad deaths of our Greatest Generation.
On D-Day, Harold Terens helped repair planes returning from France so they could rejoin the battle. He said half his company's pilots died that day. He went to France twelve days later and helped transfer captured Germans and newly released Allied POWs back to England.
To him, the Germans seemed happy that their war was over and they might survive it, but he was angered at how badly the Allied prisoners had been treated by the Germans.
Later he went on a secret mission. His planes hopscotched North Africa and eventually ended up in Tehran where he survived a robbery which left him naked in the desert until he was found by an American military police patrol.
He later learned the reason for the secret mission and that was that American bombers would fly from Britain to attack Axis targets in Eastern Europe. They wouldn't have enough fuel to return, but instead would fly to the Soviet Union. Terens job in the USSR was to feed the crews of those planes and get them ready to fly back to Britain.
--GreGen
Friday, March 22, 2024
One of the Last Pearl Harbor Survivors, Richard Higgins Dies at 102-- Part 1
From March 21, 2024, CBS News.
Richard C. "Dick" Higgins, 102, died in Bend, Oregon, on Tuesday, March 19, of natural causes.
He was a radioman assigned to a patrol squadron of seaplanes based in Hawaii when the attack came. Higgins recounted that day in an oral history taken in 2008. He had been in his bunk in the screened in lanai on the third floor of his barracks when the bombing began.
I jumped out of my bunk and I ran over to the edge of the lanai and just as I got there, a plane went right over the barracks. He figured the plane was about 50 feet over and 100 feet above his barracks. He then described "the big red meatballs" on the plane (which were the Japanese symbol).
"So, there was no doubt what was happening in my mind, because of the things that had been going on."
--GreGen
Monday, March 18, 2024
Sure Going to Miss That 'World War II' Magazine
I was really saddened this past week to find out several of my favorite magazines are no longer going to be published. And one of the best of the lot was the "World War II" magazine. I was even considering taking out a subscription to it. Kind of glad I didn't now.
I got quite a bit of material for this blog from it.
Right now I am going through the April 2022 issue which has these articles:
* Mel Brooks Goes to War.
* A U.S. Sub Commander's Ultimate Sacrifice.
* How a British Intelligence Blunder Killed Dozens of Allied Agents in Holland.
Always interesting articles and little-known facts about the war.
Hope It Comes Back. --GreGen
Thursday, March 14, 2024
100-Year-Old D-Day Vet Getting Married Near the Beaches of D-Day-- Part 1
Tuesday, March 12, 2024
USS Oklahoma Unknown from Alabama Identified
From March 11, 2024, WAFF 48 (Alabama) "Remains of WW II veteran from Rogersville identified."
Navy Seaman 2nd Class Cecil Thornton was accounted for in April 2019 but his family only received the news. He was aboard the USS Oklahoma on the day of the attack which left 429 crewmen dead. He was one of them.
He was from Rogersville, Alabama, and that is where he will be buried.
--GreGen
Friday, March 8, 2024
And Another USS Oklahoma Sailor to be Buried: Raymond Boynton
Wednesday, March 6, 2024
Another Identified USS Oklahoma Sailor to Be Buried: Charles E. Hudson
One of the more recent unidentified USS Oklahoma dead has been identified. He is U.S. Navy Water Bidding 1st Class Charles E,. Hudson who was 39 when he died.
He was originally from Stockton, California.
He will be buried at the National Memorial of the Pacific on Oahu, Hawaii, on September 10, 2021.
--GreGen
Monday, March 4, 2024
Wreckage of Marine Plane Found in South Pacific
From the March 2, 2024, New York Post "Wreckage of WW II plane that vanished in South Pacific found after 80 years" by Angela Barbuti.
The wreckage of a Marine Douglas SBD Dauntless was found by Papua New Guinea locals in a jungle last month. It went down January14, 1944, with pilot Lt. Billy Ray Ramsey and gunner Sgt. Charlie J. Sciara aboard.
The plane crashed into three pieces after having left Munda Airfield in New Georgia in the Solomon Islands to target Japanese shipping in the Rabaul Harbor as a part of a large number of planes. The tail was shot off.
The bodies were not found and both were declared dead and MIA a year later. Their remains have still not been found. It is believed that Sciara survived the crash but died later in a Japanese prison camp.
--GreGen
Friday, March 1, 2024
Iowan to Receive Congressional Gold Medal Posthumously for Service in the 'Ghost Army'
From the February 28, 2024, Des Moines (Iowa) Register "This Iowan served in World War II's Ghost Army. Years later, his service is being recognized" by Kyle Werner.
The sons of John T. Cantrell, of Des Moines, will receive a Gold Medal for him at a special service in Washington, D.C., at the Capitol on March 21.
Today, only seven members of he "Ghost Army" are still alive and all of them 100 years or older.
Information on this top secret group was classified for more that fifty years before finally being released1996. Its 1,100 members will be receiving a Congressional Gold Medal, the nation's highest non-military medal.
This is coming about because of a lot of work by groups who thought they should receive the honor.
--GreGen