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2014-12-25 -Short Attention Span Theater-
Christmas 1944: The Battle of the Bulge
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Posted by Steve White 2014-12-25 00:00|| || Front Page|| [9 views ]  Top

#1 Thank you Dr. Steve. Dear God, they are nearly gone, those brave men. We shall not forget them, no, not ever. They were our fathers, our uncles, our aunts, our cousins. Thank you God for allowing us to walk among them. We must "earn
this."

Posted by Besoeker 2014-12-25 10:23||   2014-12-25 10:23|| Front Page Top

#2 My Uncle Bob was captured Christmas Day after fierce fighting and spent the rest of the war in a POW camp. Came out weighing less than 100 lbs and for the rest of his life never missed a full meal. Never spoke of it the rest of his life.
Posted by NoMoreBS 2014-12-25 12:22||   2014-12-25 12:22|| Front Page Top

#3 A retired cop who held the evening evenings at the steel mill (my first job) had been in the Bulge; a motorcycle courier who found himself dismounted and assigned to a rump company. He never said much about it, except to say it was "damn cold."
Posted by Pappy 2014-12-25 13:17||   2014-12-25 13:17|| Front Page Top

#4 Beso, NMBS, my dad and uncles didn't know squat about the Bulge; you want to talk sand and Palm Trees??

Like yours mine never talked about it, except once after our bowling league 30 years later.
Posted by AlanC 2014-12-25 17:04||   2014-12-25 17:04|| Front Page Top

#5 Roger AlanC. Please say a prayer for old Bill. Mid 90's, on his last combat patrol up in an extended care facility in Illinois. He's a former Marine featured in Jim Bradley's book as hiving killed a Jap while sitting in his fox hole at Iwo. Damn fine man. Damn fine American.
Posted by Besoeker 2014-12-25 17:23||   2014-12-25 17:23|| Front Page Top

#6 My godfather (my Dad's youngest brother) fought in the Battle of the Bulge at the age of 18. He died in 2001, and shortly before that was hallucinating and yelling in fear of the Germans.
Posted by Rambler in Virginia 2014-12-25 17:37||   2014-12-25 17:37|| Front Page Top

#7 Uncle went in 5 days after D-Day and there until the end. In the Battle of the Bulge he learned 3 things after having 3 half-tracks shot out under him.
1) Deep forests were good.
2) Avoid roads at all costs.
3) If you can't avoid the road stay at least 300 yards from it.
Posted by 3dc 2014-12-25 17:41||   2014-12-25 17:41|| Front Page Top

#8 A father of a cousin of mine, no direct relation to me, gave this account after he was captured during the Battle of the Bulge. He was a combat medic & continued to care for his wounded until the Germans barged in:
how he and his fellow prisoners quenched their thirst during a two-day boxcar ride between prison camps. When the guards gave them no water or food during the long journey, the prisoners improvised ingenious means to survive:
"Like most boxcars, this one had a small window on the right hand side of the car in the corner near the roofline. Our little window had bars over it but no glass. When the prison train stopped at stations along the way, we often heard children’s voices outside. Then, whoever was nearest the window would boost another man up so he could look out. The man at the window would make faces at the children, and they would respond with a volley of snowballs. Inevitably, some of the snowballs broke against the window bars and showered clods of ice into the boxcar. This is exactly what we wanted. We carried on with silly faces at the window the entire time those children were out there and the train was stopped. By the time the train rolled away from the towns, all of us had a bit of ice from a snowball to suck on."

"The seasoned British prisoners in the barracks had advised us not to answer the Germans' questions with any information beyond our name, rank, and serial number. Questions about jobs and occupations were particularly dangerous, the British prisoners warned. Based on what we might answer about former jobs, the Germans could assign us to specific work detail. Prisoners before us had been sent to salt mines, factories, and farms. Since I had worked alongside my father, a section foreman on the railroads, I dreaded the possibility that the officials would learn of my previous occupation. I could be sent to labor on the German railroads, favorite targets of the Allied bombers. 'We are all students,' we told the officials and refused to give any further information. The prison officer merely shook his head in resignation.
Posted by Anguper Hupomosing9418  2014-12-25 19:39||   2014-12-25 19:39|| Front Page Top

23:43 Procopius2k
23:20 SR-71
23:16 Pappy
23:09 Pappy
22:14 Rambler in Virginia
22:01 Beau
21:58 Silentbrick
21:29 trailing wife
21:25 trailing wife
21:01 Skidmark
20:58 Skidmark
20:55 tu3031
20:55 tu3031
20:06 Super Hose
20:04 Barbara
20:04 lord garth
20:03 g(r)omgoru
19:54 USN, Ret.
19:53 Super Hose
19:49 Anguper Hupomosing9418
19:39 Anguper Hupomosing9418
19:20 Besoeker
19:12 OldSpook
19:06 Alaska Paul









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