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In 1944 Battle of the Bulge, Albert Darago, then 19, took on a German tank by himself
washingtonpost.com ^
| December 15, 2014
| Michael E. Ruane
Posted on 12/16/2014 10:26:37 AM PST by Berlin_Freeper
Albert Darago had never fired a bazooka before. He was an ack-ack guy, a fuse-cutter on a 90mm antiaircraft gun. But on Dec. 19, 1944, the brass was looking for volunteers to go after some German tanks. And Darago said sure.
He was a 19-year-old, color-blind draftee, a native of Baltimores Little Italy and a musician who played piano and clarinet. He was no hero, he said.
But when Adolf Hitler launched the massive attack that began World War IIs bloody Battle of the Bulge, he had not reckoned on GIs like Darago.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
TOPICS: History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: albertdarago; baltimore; battleofthebulge; germany; littleitaly; maryland; worldwareleven; worldwartwo; wwii
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To: Berlin_Freeper
Starting on 16 December 1944, and for nearly six weeks, more than 600,000 American soldiers, fighting in freezing conditions and often hungry and dog-tired, took part in desperate efforts to contain, then throw back, a surprise German counteroffensive masterminded by Adolf Hitler himself.
The British prime minister, Winston Churchill, hailed the ultimate result as an ever-famous American victory. But it came at a high cost: 80,987 US casualties, including 10,276 dead, 47,493 wounded and 23,218 missing, according to the US armys official history.
To: Berlin_Freeper; All
nor did he (Hitler) reckon w/Texan Audie Murphy either.
3
posted on
12/16/2014 10:35:47 AM PST
by
skinkinthegrass
("Bathhouse" E'Bola/0'Boehmer/0'McConnell; all STINK and their best friends are flies. d8^)
To: skinkinthegrass
Nor did he count on my father, 1st Army Ranger R.G.Campbell, 2 purple hearts, bronze star.
To: cartoonistx
Bless 1st Army Ranger R.G.Campbell for his service and dedication to the principles of freedom.
5
posted on
12/16/2014 10:42:28 AM PST
by
teeman8r
(Armageddon won't be pretty, but it's not like it's the end of the world.)
To: Berlin_Freeper
Have been reading a WW2 history compiled from interviews with and local newspaper articles about veterans from a small southern Ohio county. Aside from the horrifying carnage of war, the suffering from the weather conditions these men endured during the winter of 44-45 in the Ardennes was unimaginable. My esteem of the town's people who served in that conflict has increased immeasurably. I am truly not worthy.
6
posted on
12/16/2014 10:46:56 AM PST
by
buckalfa
(Long time caller --- first time listener.)
To: cartoonistx
My uncle in the101st said they were the hole in the donut.
God bless your dad.
7
posted on
12/16/2014 10:48:01 AM PST
by
longfellow
(Bill Maher, the 21st hijacker.)
To: buckalfa
Memoirs of the operation described diarrhea-plagued GIs being rushed to the front on open trucks on Christmas Eve during one of the coldest winters ever experienced in Western Europe.
"The men in Belgium, I'm told, really suffered," Ogden said.
To: Berlin_Freeper
A man in my church was in 3rd Army during the Bulge. He was willing to talk about it too. Under Patton, he ‘felt safe’. That’s how he put it.
Patton kicked their butts, but most of them got it. Them that didn’t, they didn’t stay long.
He died about seven years ago. He was an accountant. Amazing how that works. You change history, literally, then you go home and keep books.
To: Berlin_Freeper
Meanwhile, today, 19 year olds fall apart because someone they dont know punched a cop and was shot dead for it.
10
posted on
12/16/2014 11:12:57 AM PST
by
Bogey78O
(We had a good run. Coulda been great still.)
To: cartoonistx; All
Nor did he count on my father, 1st Army Ranger
R.G.Campbell, 2 purple hearts, bronze star.
please, thank him (if possible) for his service to the country and Western Civilization.
11
posted on
12/16/2014 11:14:35 AM PST
by
skinkinthegrass
("Bathhouse" E'Bola/0'Boehmer/0'McConnell; all STINK and their best friends are flies. d8^)
To: Berlin_Freeper
To: cartoonistx
Nor the “Sharpshooters of Munshausen”.
13
posted on
12/16/2014 11:30:57 AM PST
by
wordsofearnest
(Proper aim of giving is to put the recipient in a state where he no longer needs it. C.S. Lewis)
To: Berlin_Freeper
Seventy years ago, Army Pfc. Bill Beckett needed help from above to survive a suicide mission in Bastogne, Belgium.
Beckett and another member of the 101st Airborne were handed a bazooka and five shells and ordered to stop seven advancing German Panzer tanks.
To: Berlin_Freeper
To: Berlin_Freeper
He called together the chaplains after five days of battle, telling them, Were not going to win this battle militarily. Weve got to pray.
They did, and after the early, terrible weather had limited U.S. aerial power, the skies began to clear, U.S. planes could start to target German positions, and the tide began to turn.
To: Berlin_Freeper
As the group of old friends was getting ready to leave, Lou Dworkin, 89, turned to Charles Woodman, 91.
"You remember the two guys who were killed in the foxhole?" Dworkin asked in a sandpaper voice.
"Yeah," Woodman said wearily. "It was a direct hit. Nothing left but smoking rags and shoes.
To: Berlin_Freeper
There are just a few years left to express our appreciation of these veterans in preserving our freedom. May God bless all of our troops, past and present.
To: Berlin_Freeper
"I think of all those young men that died alongside of me. It's hard. We were all only 18, 19 years old, the majority of us. If a guy was 25 he was called pops," said Foy.
To: Berlin_Freeper
A friends father survived a wound at the battle of the bulge because the bleeding froze. Tough S.O.B.s, those guys.
20
posted on
12/16/2014 12:32:27 PM PST
by
muir_redwoods
("He is a very shallow critic who cannot see an eternal rebel in the heart of a conservative." G.K .C)
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