Hey all,
In honor of the 70th anniversary of D-day, I put up this thread for us to share stories of family members, or other people we have known who fought or otherwise served in World War II. I will share two.
1. Gerald Heany: This was a judge my mother served as a secretary for in the early to mid '80s.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_Heaney. He served at the Normandy beach landings, as an army ranger. He was fired upon as he stormed the beach, but he and his unit managed to take control of a nearby cliff and secure it for the other soldiers. Once the war ended, he was asked a superior officer if he could go home. The officer told him he couldn't, his tour of duty was not yet over. Suddenly Patton walks into the room and overhears the conversation. He goes up to the judge ( still only abour 23 or 24 or so). And he asked him if he was at D-day? he says yes. He asks him several other questions about battles he was at. Judge Heaney confirms he was at all of them. Patton turns to the officer and tells him "Give this man anything he wants." He got to go home
!
My grandfather actually wasn't at Okinawa, though he served on this ship http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Intrepid_(CV-11) and was on duty when a Kamikaze crashed into it!
Any stories guys?
In honor of the 70th anniversary of D-day, I put up this thread for us to share stories of family members, or other people we have known who fought or otherwise served in World War II. I will share two.
1. Gerald Heany: This was a judge my mother served as a secretary for in the early to mid '80s.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_Heaney. He served at the Normandy beach landings, as an army ranger. He was fired upon as he stormed the beach, but he and his unit managed to take control of a nearby cliff and secure it for the other soldiers. Once the war ended, he was asked a superior officer if he could go home. The officer told him he couldn't, his tour of duty was not yet over. Suddenly Patton walks into the room and overhears the conversation. He goes up to the judge ( still only abour 23 or 24 or so). And he asked him if he was at D-day? he says yes. He asks him several other questions about battles he was at. Judge Heaney confirms he was at all of them. Patton turns to the officer and tells him "Give this man anything he wants." He got to go home
My grandfather actually wasn't at Okinawa, though he served on this ship http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Intrepid_(CV-11) and was on duty when a Kamikaze crashed into it!
Any stories guys?