You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front
Lost and found: World War II memory
2004-01-27
I love these stories
When 79-year-old Hank Arend, a decorated veteran, tossed aside his heavy mess kit during one of the deadliest battles in World War II, he thought little of it. But 60 years later, as Arend’s grandson surfed a computer Web site, he stumbled across a posting by a collector with a photograph of the modest aluminum pot. Arend contacted the Belgian collector, who agreed to send the pot - replete with Arend’s name and serial number, 36738409, scratched into the bottom. Somewhat unexpectedly, the pot’s arrival last week in the mail has unleashed a host of memories for the Novato resident. "I thought, ’Just get rid of it. It’s too much to haul around,’" Arend said. "The fighting was so intense that we very rarely got a warm meal, so what was the use of that mess kit? We ate rations instead."

Arend is one of seven people in the F Company 291st, 75th Infantry, who survived the Battle of the Bulge from 1944 through 1945 in the Ardennes Forest on the border between Germany and Belgium. Posted on the front line, Arend, then 18, had little time to stop and eat and, hence, little need for a cooking pot. "You are laying on the ground as much as you are standing up, so you don’t want to be dragging all this stuff behind you," he continued. "Every movement we made, we would lose most of the men."

The mess kit consists of an oval-shaped aluminum pot with a lid that is roughly 7 inches tall and 8 inches long. On the bottom, Arend’s name and serial number are distinct. "I recognize my own writing. I had scratched it in," Arend said. The pot’s odyssey came to an end in December, when Jesse Babbitz, 33, of Los Altos, said he was looking for his grandfather’s e-mail address on a computer and discovered Arend’s mess kit instead. "It accentuates how powerful the Internet has become for connecting people through space and time throughout the world," Babbitz said. "The fact that this mess kit that he left 60 years ago could be identified is awe-inspiring."

Arend contacted Pierre Godeau, the collector who lives in Belgium. Godeau said he got the mess kit from a collector but that he then lost the collector’s information, Arend said. But Godeau agreed to send the package to Arend as a Christmas present. "I told him I threw it away 60 years ago. Now what would I want with it now?" Arend joked.

The mess kit discovery has allowed Arend and his grandson an opportunity to connect, Babbitz said. "I think it has opened up a chance for him to reflect on his life," Babbitz said. "It has allowed me to connect with him and his past - it has prompted more dialogue about his past and my past."
Posted by:tipper

#3  Those aren't very good odds. You would have expected more to survive due to non-mortal but disabling wounds (blindness, lost a leg ect.)
Posted by: Super Hose   2004-1-27 11:36:02 AM  

#2  I read it as seven people in F Company who survived the Bulge.
Posted by: Steve   2004-1-27 11:12:28 AM  

#1  Arend is one of seven people in the F Company 291st, 75th Infantry, who survived the Battle of the Bulge from 1944 through 1945 in the Ardennes Forest on the border between Germany and Belgium. Does this statement mean only seven men remain alive today or only seven survived the Battle of the Bulge?
Posted by: Super Hose   2004-1-27 10:54:21 AM  

00:00