Archive for June, 2009
“The world depended on them.
They depended on each other.”
Band of Brothers “Shifty” Powers Passes

Band of Brothers: Darrell "Shifty" Powers

Tri-Cities News: rbrown@bristolnews.com

Powers, a Dickenson County native, died earlier this week (June 17) at age 86 following a battle with cancer.

Bravery – and dignity – was a constant, running thread in the life of “Shifty” Powers, both during and after his life as an Army sharpshooter in the actual “Band of Brothers.”

During the war, he fought brutal battles against the German army across France and Belgium.

After the war, Powers served as an eloquent representative for the men he fought with: At one point during the “Band of Brothers” mini-series, he appeared on camera to talk in moving, humane fashion about his grim but necessary task during the war – killing the enemy.

Flightline Fabrications offers our condolences to the Powers Family, a true hero and great Amercian has passed.

Living History Project Interview:<br>P-38 Pilot Robert Mitchell<br>PART THREE

Living History Interview: Col. Robert Mitchell

The Second World War, the famous 44th ‘Vampire” fight Squadron of the 13th Air Force, Far from home, One P-38 Pilot flying missions in the Solomons & Philippines during 1944-1945. Retired Col. Mitchell lived the adventure, the air combat, and the reality!

Col. Mitchell recently sat down with our Flightline Fabrications Living History Project to share his story of flying the P-38 Lightning , Phis comfirmed victory and 1 probable victory, and the stories that went along with WWII.

Strap on your parachute, complete your pre-flight checklist, and get ready to take off, because these P-38 Lightning Pilot stories are AWESOME!  Thank you Mr. Mitchell for taking the time to preserve your history!

If you missed PART ONE & PART TWO, You will not want to miss any more of Col. Mitchell’s interview!

Secondhand Lions movie download

PART THREE of Four: P-38 Pilot Col. Robert Mitchell Interview

Flightline Fabrications wishes to express its gratitude to the P-38 National Association for their partnership in making these interviews possible.

If you would like to leave comments,
please click the “Comments” link below.

Do you or someone you know have first hand memories of this or any other historic event, whether you served in the military or as a civilian, Flightline Fabrications Living History Project want to hear from you.  Please contact our Living History Project with your remembrances.  History should NEVER be forgotten.  Your memories are important and should be retained and shared. 

 Flightline Fabrications

Flightline Fabrications : Living History

Living History Project Interview:
P-38 Pilot Robert Mitchell
PART TWO

Living History Interview: Col. Robert Mitchell

Flightline Fabrications recently interviewed retired USAAF P-38 Lightning  Pilot Robert Mitchell. Bob was generous enough to sit down for our Living History Project™ and tell us about his life as a P-38 Lightning  Pilot during WWII with the famous 44th “Vampire” FS of the 13th Air Force.Flying in the Solomons & Philippines during 1944-1945 Col. Mitchell scored 1 victory and 1 probable victory.

Strap on your parachute, complete your pre-flight checklist, and get ready to take off, because these P-38 Lightning Pilot stories are AWESOME!  Thank you Mr. Mitchell for taking the time to preserve your history!

If you missed PART ONE , You will not want to miss any more of Col. Mitchell’s interview!

PART TWO of Four: P-38 Pilot Col. Robert Mitchell Interview

 

 Flightline Fabrications wishes to express its gratitude to the P-38 National Association for their partnership in making these interviews possible.

If you would like to leave comments,
please click the “Comments” link below.

Do you or someone you know have first hand memories of this or any other historic event, whether you served in the military or as a civilian, Flightline Fabrications Living History Project want to hear from you.  Please contact our Living History Project with your remembrances.  History should NEVER be forgotten.  Your memories are important and should be retained and shared. 

 Flightline Fabrications

Flightline Fabrications : Living History

Obama honors D-Day vets @ 65th Anniversary of Invasion

 D-Day 65 Years Later

OMAHA BEACH, France (AP) — Recalling the “unimaginable hell” of D-Day suffering, President Obama paid tribute Saturday to the against-all-odds Allied landings that broke Nazi Germany’s grip on France and turned the tide of history.

“The sheer improbability of this victory is part of what makes D-Day so memorable,” Obama said.

The president spoke under a sunny sky at the American Cemetery on cliffs overlooking Omaha Beach and other landings sites where American, British and Canadian soldiers established a beachhead 65 years ago under the withering fire of Nazi troops awaiting the Allies’ cross-channel gamble.

Normandy’s cliffs, still pocked with gun emplacements and other remnants of the war, including the white headstones of thousands of buried American troops, provided sure footing for a new U.S. commander in chief. Obama noted that the site has been visited by many U.S. presidents and predicted that “Long after our time on this Earth has passed, one word will still bring forth the pride and awe of men and women who will never meet the heroes who sit before us: D-Day.”

Some 215,000 Allied soldiers, and roughly as many Germans, were killed or wounded during D-Day and the ensuing nearly three months it took to secure the Allied capture of Normandy, a battle that helped free France from Nazi control.

Obama said the lessons of that pivotal effort are eternal.

“Friends and veterans, what we cannot forget — what we must not forget — is that D-Day was a time and a place where the bravery and selflessness of a few was able to change the course of an entire century,” he said.

Joined by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Obama stopped first at the gray granite visitors center and then at an overlook where the leaders talked at length with two D-Day veterans waiting at the top of the once-bloody bluffs.

Obama visited an American battlefield museum with his wife, Michelle, laid a wreath in honor of the fallen, greeted U.S. military members and mingled with uniformed World War II veterans.

Speaking at a time when he is directing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan — both of which have lasted longer than the U.S. involvement in World War II — Obama described in stark terms the harsh conditions the Allied invaders faced at Normandy. He noted that in many ways the seaborne invasion plan went awry, leaving the assaulting forces vulnerable to Nazi guns in their path.

“When the ships landed here at Omaha, an unimaginable hell rained down on the men inside,” he said. “Many never made it out of the boats.”

But the Allies prevailed, gathering strength for a breakout from Normandy in July that opened a path toward Paris and eventually took the Allies all the way to Germany and victory over the Nazis. Obama paid tribute to the Allies — the British, the Canadian, the French as well as the Russians, “who sustained some of the war’s heaviest casualties on the Eastern front.”

“At an hour of maximum danger, amid the bleakest of circumstances, men who thought themselves ordinary found it within themselves to do the extraordinary,” Obama said. “They fought out of a simple sense of duty — a duty sustained by the same ideals for which their countrymen had fought and bled for over two centuries.”

Obama noted that his grandfather, Stanley Dunham, arrived at Normandy six weeks after D-Day and marched across France in Lt. Gen. George S. Patton’s army. Attending with Obama was his great uncle, Charles Payne, who was part of the first American division to reach and liberate a Nazi concentration camp that Obama and his great uncle visited in Germany on Friday.

This D-Day anniversary assumed special significance because veterans of the battle are reaching their 80s and 90s and their numbers are dwindling. One American veteran, Jim Norene, who fought with the 101st Airborne Division, came back for Saturday’s ceremony, but died in his sleep Friday night.

“Last night, after visiting this cemetery for one last time, he passed away in his sleep,” the president said. “Jim was gravely ill when he left his home, and he knew that he might not return. But just as he did 65 years ago, he came anyway. May he now rest in peace with the boys he once bled with, and may his family always find solace in the heroism he showed here.”

Obama spoke after a private meeting with Sarkozy in this Normandy city before the leaders commemorated the D-Day invasion that cemented the trans-Atlantic alliance.

“This day marks not only the triumph of freedom, but it also marks how the trans-Atlantic alliance has allowed for extraordinary prosperity and security on both sides of the Atlantic,” Obama said.

After the ceremony, Obama and his wife, Michelle, returned to Paris to reunite with their daughters, Sasha and Malia, for a family evening in the City of Light. They planned sightseeing on Sunday before Obama returns to Washington from his trip, which also took him to Saudi Arabia and Egypt. The first lady and the girls planned to remain in France until at least Monday.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. 
Actress Donna Reed saved hundreds of letters written by troops during WWII

 By Larry Rohter - The New York Times

“It has been a long time since any of us boys have seen a woman, so we are writing to you in hopes that you’ll help us out of our situation,” Cpl. Frank Gizych lamented in a letter posted from the fog-shrouded Aleutian Islands. “Since we know that it’s impossible to see a woman in the flesh, we would appreciate it very much if you could send us a photo of yourself.”

It was July 1944, and America was at war. From bases and battlefields in Europe and on Pacific islands, troops were sending streams of letters to their favorite actresses in Hollywood, asking for pinup photos and commenting on life on the front lines.

Almost all of that mail, which studios usually answered with a glossy shot showing the star in a saucy pose, has been lost. But the actress Donna Reed, later famous for her roles as Mary Bailey in “It’s a Wonderful Life” and the middle-class housewife Donna Stone on “The Donna Reed Show,” saved some of the correspondence she received. After nearly 65 years in a shoebox inside an old trunk long stored in the garage of her home in Beverly Hills, Calif., the letters have finally been read and made public by the actress’s children. Reed died in 1986 at age 64.   MORE…

Donna Reed Saves WWII Letters!

Letters and photos sent to actress Donna Reed from soldiers during World War II are displayed for a photograph in the home of Mary Owen, her daughter, in New York on May 1, 2009. Reed saved some of the correspondence she received. (Librado Romero/The New York Times)

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