Posted on 12/21/2013 8:17:55 PM PST by EveningStar
John S.D. Eisenhower, the son of a five-star general turned president who forged his own career in the U.S. Army and then chronicled the history of the American military in numerous books, died Saturday. He was 91.
(Excerpt) Read more at abcnews.go.com ...
His family went to Denison TX and failed in a business, if I recall correctly, and he was born at this time. The family went back to Abilene, Kansas shortly thereafter. I’ve toured the home there in Abilene. He and his wife Mamie are buried on the grounds there.
My mother's uncle, as a boy, climbed a telegraph pole to watch Lincoln's funeral procession pass buy in Upstate NY.
Yes, great book (see my post #19). I'll have to check it for a mention of Lieutenant Lyle "Failboy" Bouck, who believed for a significant portion of his life that his command of his I&R infantry platoon was a failure, because his 18 men were only able to hold off and delay an entire German Panzer Army for a day.
Battle of Lanzerath Ridge
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Lanzerath_Ridge
Lyle Bouck
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyle_Bouck
Lyle "Unbelievable Bad-ass" Bouck just turned 90.
That’s just what I mean. American history spans just over the living memory of two or three lifetimes. It is just the twinkling of an eye compared to the totality of human existence. Maybe an anomaly. Great story. I love those kind of things. I read Bill James. He wrote in the nineties that there might still be people alive that saw Cap Anson play.
It contained all of Ike's papers.
I was not a history buff at the time, but NOW I'd like to have a look at them.
Back then the papers were under lock and key.
I remember the door leading to the goods.
Wish I was more "curious".
I'll never get so close again.
Seems like EVERY election cycle we're treated to what ever Eisenhower grandchild "thinks" about the republican party.
And it's ALWAYS how "awful" the modern day republicans are.
True enough, one would suppose. What doesn't get much talk now is that on this date in 1944, the 28th Division, PA national guard, had already been pretty much destroyed in action while delaying the Nazi advance east of Bastogne.
If it hadn't been for the sacrifice made by the 28th and few other divisions against an entire German army corps, there wouldn't have been a Bastogne for the 101st to defend.
And even funnier, despite having just won the biggest war in recorded history, Ike didn't have a birth certificate until it was an October surprise (Wednesday, October 1, 1952).
http://www.sonorannews.com/archives/2010/100922/frontpage_Ike.html
"To Save Bastogne", Robert Phillips:
http://www.amazon.com/Save-Bastogne-Robert-F-Phillips/dp/0812829077/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1387698685&sr=1-1&keywords=to+save+bastogne
"Alamo in the Ardennes: The Untold Story of the American Soldiers Who Made the Defense of Bastogne Possible ", John C. McManus:
http://www.amazon.com/Alamo-Ardennes-American-Soldiers-Bastogne/dp/0471739057/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1387698783&sr=1-1&keywords=alamo+in+the+ardennes
Along those same lines, the last known "Civil War" widow died in 2008. source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maudie_Hopkins
That’s the kind of obvious crap that Leftist history types stick in Wikipedia. Think about how much goes unnoticed.
Ignore my previous, I was thinking Ike, not son of Ike. This is why I try not to post before coffee.
Ike was born in Dennison, Texas, not Kansas although his library is in Kansas.
Ike was born in Denison, Texas but Abilene Kansas was his boyhood home until he went to West Point. He considered himself a Kansan.
In Abilene: Eisenhower Museum, Eisenhower Library, Boyhood home, Final resting place of Ike, Mamie, and an infant child. All in one location. Then over at the Abilene cemetery are the graves of his parents.
Nothing to do with it. Early in the war, he was charged with organizing and training the US Army's first tank brigade which was located at Camp Colt, located on the Gettysburg battlefield. Ike was later given orders to go to France but the Armistice was signed before he got there.
Not true. Ike's ancestors lived in Pennsylvania since the mid 1700's. Ike's father moved from Pennsylvania to Kansas in 1880. He was a college educated engineer and owned a General Store in Kansas, which went bankrupt. He moved to Texas in 1889 where Ike was born in 1890. The family returned to Kansas in 1892 when Ike was still a toddler.
As a kid in 1960, I attended the Boy Scout Jamboree in Colorado Springs, and still remember Ike’s drive-thru for all the lads. He was sitting atop the back seat of an open convertible like you might see in one of today’s parades down Main Street.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.