Thursday, September 30, 2010

RIP Tony Curtis

Long before Tony Curtis became a gay icon known for his cross-dressing onscreen with Marilyn Monroe and of course, "Spartacus," (and also for being the father of Jamie Lee Curtis), he was Bernard Schwartz, a Jewish kid from New York City. At 17 he joined the Navy, and he wanted to be a submariner.


Bernard Schwartz, 1943.

He was assigned to be a tender to submarines on Guam, where he would scrape off the barnacles and clean the sub up when it came back from war patrol. Dirty work for sure, but Curtis never qualified for permanent duty aboard a sub. He was however onboard the USS Proteus when she steamed for the Japanese submarine base at Yokosuka where he witnessed the historic signing of the famous Document of Surrender aboard the USS Missouri.



He was standing on the signal bridge and actually got to witness the formal surrender of the Japanese, thus closing WWII into history.

He died in his home in Las Vegas Sept. 29, 2010.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Monday, September 6, 2010

Dirty Jobs

For most of us, the glory of the WWII front line soldier attacking his way through the impossible German lines is what we associate with heroics. A lot of people don't understand that for every combat soldier, there were 1.7 (or 2, why not?) people who served in non-combat roles to back that soldier up. These included non-combatants, engineers, medics, CP staff, quartermasters, maintenance, drivers, etc. They are the unsung soldiers of WWII that may not have gotten the "glory" that the combat soldier did, but played just as much of an important part to win the war.


Corporal Max Shepherd, Jeep driver for an officer named "Barney." His speedometer was 24,591 miles when he turned it in at the end of the war.


Graves Registration team. They identified the bodies on the battlefield.


Sgt. Vern Kurtanbauch, from Brandt, S. Dakota, the S-1 clerk for the Service Co., 355th Inf., 89th Inf. Div, sets up shop as the Red and Blue Armies maneuver at Camp Carson, Co.


Jim Baskerville of the 191st Signal Repair Co. They repaired radios, phones, and other Signal Corps equipment in the CBI theater.


103rd Engineer Combat Battalion, 28th Infantry Division in Europe during WWII.


USAAF ground crew loading an extra gas tank on a P-51D for the 332nd Fighter Group in Italy.