Posted on 09/22/2015 3:21:45 PM PDT by LibWhacker
Yep, sorry about that. As soon as I posted it, I knew I had screwed up.
I think I heard that on the PBS documentary series on the CW
Guess that’s why the saying goes “TWO IN THE CHEST and one in the head is how you make sure they really are dead”.
I still don't like it. The whole time growing up as a kid, I don't know how many innumerable times I heard the phrase, so-and-so "won the Medal of Honor." IMO, people who say it ought to be taken out behind the woodshed and be given a lesson in military grammar. But, nevertheless, the phrase is stuck in my brain and many other veterans' brains, apparently never to be erased. :-(
Due to the location of the bullet, they never removed it. One side effect was that if he leaned over for more than a few seconds, he would get a nose bleed.
Great guy, he was the eternal optimist. You could give him a crap sandwich and he would use it to fetilize his garden.
Those guys in the picture (50 years after the war) were at least in their late 60s or 70s. Notice that not one of the old guys is fat.
Yup, that was long before processed food and countless hours in front of the TV.
I think one of the villains in Smith’s “Wild Wild West” was based on this guy’s wound.
While I am a second generation American, I reflect on the men in the plaques that I read about, that stood the line here and charged there as though they really are my ancestors, though they are’t, they are, by adoption. I pray for them amd thank them the same. It’s funny though, when a fellow onlooker recounts his family member, and I remember mine....is his! Both those on God’s side.
It’s good. I’ve heard the same being in and around the military.
Still.
Thanks for posting
I’m not sure this is the same Jacob Miller who won the MOH. There was a Jacob C. Miller who won the MOH for actions in a charge at Vicksburg, but he was with the 113th Illinois.
This guy deserved a medal, but I’m not sure he received the MOH.
My Great Grandfather was with the Michigan Brigade with Custer during the civil war and after the war deserted when they wouldn’t let him go home after the war was over. He was ordered after the souths surrender to western frontier’s district of the plains to the indian wars .......He was from Bath County Kentucky.
Said F’em an went back home to farming in Sharpsburg Kentucky was my grandfathers version of the story.....he said great grandfather was at Gettysburg as well as other battles that I can’t recall..... Beverly Gransville Perry was my Great Grandfathers name ......
Well, the man in the photo with the hole in his forehead is wearing the MOH. I think it is probably him.
That’s pretty great.
Good thing he broke away from Custer when he did.
Got to be a rough ride for the Seventh Cav.
Sounds like not sticking with Custer was a wise decision.
My GGrandpa lived in Florida but only a few hundred yards from the Alabama line. He and his Brothers enlisted at Elba, Alabama. His name was Martin Abel McDuffie. Some more of Mother’s family served with Laird’s Rangers but I know nothing of them.
My paternal ancestors enlisted in the First and Sixth Florida. They were organized in Pensacola and trained at Chattahoochee which is now the site of the state mental hospital.
Agree..... history is my favorite past time. All my uncle’s, me, my brother served in the service as well as an aunt who delivered fighters during WWII ......
But this mans story is amazing ..... his drive to survive , just amazing
Awesome historical and amazing all in one....... Bless em all for what they endured.
Stay Safe !!
We should all be so proud!
Leni
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