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All 11 Knodel brothers served their country (Vet saw more than his share of war)
The Free Lance-Star ^ | May 26, 3002 | CATHY DYSON

Posted on 05/26/2003 2:57:44 PM PDT by MudPuppy

Walter Knodel of Spotsylvania's Wilburn Gardens is one of 11 brothers who served as soldiers, sailors and airmen

All 11 Knodel brothers served their country

Walter Knodel never saw much point in talking about the wars he fought in or the ways he served his country.

Neither did any of his 10 brothers, who also did their duty as soldiers, sailors or airmen.

"We figured a lot of people already knew what it was like, so there weren't no sense talking about it," Knodel said.

"It weren't no vacation, I'll tell you that."

And that's about all the tight-lipped 82-year-old has to say.

There's a reason he's so reserved. The veteran, who pronounces his name Ka-know-del, grew up in South Dakota and is still a Midwesterner at heart, even though he hasn't been back there in almost 40 years.

He believes there's no need to state the obvious or to go on and on about a hardship.

"That's the way he is," said his friend Betty Lael, who lives in the Chancellor area of Spotsylvania County. "It's nothing to brag about, no big deal."

But anyone else who hears the story of his family would beg to differ, especially on Memorial Day.

Walter now resides at Wilburn Gardens, an assisted-living community off State Route 3 in Spotsylvania. Today, when he looks at the red-white-and-blue bunting on the building or the small flag in his room, he'll go back in time.

"I'll think about my brothers and wish I was home," he said.

Walter was the third child of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Knodel, who married in 1917 and lived in the small town of Isabel.

The couple had 16 children.

Three of them died young: in a house fire, from illness and in a work-related accident.

That left 11 boys and two girls, and every single Knodel male served his country in the armed forces between 1942 and 1967.

Ten of them went off to war at least once; Walter was the only one who fought in three wars. He rode through Europe with a tank battalion in World War II, discovered Korean winters weren't much colder than South Dakota ones, and rebuilt damaged ports in Vietnamese harbors.

He didn't get so much as a splinter, like the rest of his brothers.

"They never even got a scratch, as far as I know," Walter said.

Six Knodels went into the Army, four into the Air Force and one into the Navy.

All 11 of them were honored in 1967, on their parents' 50th anniversary. The U.S. Department of Defense and the U.S. House of Representatives presented the family a citation "with pride, admiration and grateful hearts," according to former South Dakota congressman E.Y. Berry.

At the time, Berry believed the Knodels were the only couple in America with more than 10 children in the armed services. His speech about the family was entered into the Congressional Record.

"This outstanding record of one family's unfailing service to their country is worthy of recognition and commendation by the nation which they have served honorably over a period of 25 years," Berry told his House colleagues.

Walter Knodel ended up spending 20 years in the Army. He met his wife, Connie, when he was stationed in Germany, and the two settled in the Chancellor area of Spotsylvania when Walter worked at Fort Belvoir.

After he retired from the Army as a sergeant, he worked almost two decades as a security officer with the Library of Congress.

He and Connie never made it back to South Dakota. Times were tough there when he was growing up, and he didn't see much of a future for himself.

"There was nothing out there," he said. "No decent jobs, unless you wanted to be a sheepherder, and I didn't want to be a sheepherder."

The Knodels became good friends with their neighbors, Betty and Sonny Lael. Connie taught Betty how to preserve vegetables and other homemaking skills, and the two had many chats over coffee.

"They were just good people," Betty Lael said. "We looked out for each other."

Connie died from emphysema a few years ago, and Betty, who's 20 years younger than the Knodels, started keeping an eye on Walter. He fell and broke his hip on the way to the mailbox one morning, and she helped him get settled in Wilburn Gardens.

The Knodels never had children, so Betty has Walter's power of attorney. She makes sure his refrigerator is stocked--that's one thing he insists on--and she talked him into sharing his story with a reporter.

He still didn't understand why anyone would be interested in what he had to say, Betty said. "He kept saying he didn't understand what the big deal was."

Date published: 5/26/2003


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: memorialday
God Bless America! Never forget our Veteran's and their families.
1 posted on 05/26/2003 2:57:44 PM PDT by MudPuppy
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To: SAMWolf
A great American story!!
2 posted on 05/26/2003 3:04:09 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: MudPuppy
Memorial Day Bump!

Wow, remember back in the day when people had 10 kids and no one critized them? God bless them!
3 posted on 05/26/2003 3:15:56 PM PDT by TheSpottedOwl (America...love it or leave it. Canada is due north-Mexico is directly south...start walking.)
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To: TheSpottedOwl
I'm the oldest of 5 and we're a service oriented family.

I spent 11 years in the Marines,
my sister and her husband are both going on 13+years active Air Force (he's in Krygystan right now),
my other sister is an office manger,
my only brother spent 3 years in the Air Force and
my "baby" sister is a cop in Delaware.

I recommend the military to my own kids and to other family members. Everyone should consider doing a tour - helps you grow up and definitely give you another perspective on life. You make friends that you'll have a lifetime.
4 posted on 05/26/2003 3:23:33 PM PDT by MudPuppy (Semper Fidelis!)
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To: MudPuppy
He still didn't understand why anyone would be interested in what he had to say, Betty said. "He kept saying he didn't understand what the big deal was."

That was the greatest generation. My mother-in-law was 21, with an 8 month-old baby boy, living at Hickum Field, Dec. 7, 1941. Her husband, my late father-in-law, was a corporal in the Army-Air Force and they lived in base housing, 5 blocks from the air field. They were awakened Dec. 7 by the bombing and shooting. He grabbed his pants and took off to join his outfit, she watched the baby. It was 3 days before she saw her husband again, and then she and other family were shipped back to the West coast. My father-in-law was sent to the Pacific and spent 3 years there, until he was sent home with a stomach disease (they had to remove most of his stomach).

I have tried to get my mother-in-law to tell of her experiences during those times, but she just keeps saying "I didn't do anything!"

But she was there, and from what she has told us, she hid her baby under the kitchen table. She saw an American sailor running down the street with a Japanese plane shooting at him from street light level. She has talked of that, but she feels unworthy, unworthy compared to the ones that died on that day. I guess the real ones always do feel that way. She's as brave as they come.

5 posted on 05/26/2003 3:30:24 PM PDT by xJones
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To: MudPuppy
bump
6 posted on 05/26/2003 3:33:48 PM PDT by VOA
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To: MudPuppy
She makes sure his refrigerator is stocked--that's one thing he insists on!

God bless America and God bless BEER - stock that fridge!

7 posted on 05/26/2003 3:40:46 PM PDT by balrog666 (When in doubt, tell the truth. - Mark Twain)
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To: xJones
...I didn't do anything,

He kept saying he didn't understand what the big deal was."

It seems, that's the way that whole generation was. No big deal.

My dad spent 18 months in Italy in WWII. Whenever I'd ask him about it, he'd tell me to talk to his older brother...His older brother spent more time in the Aluteians & the Phillipines, than my dad had in the service.

I'd ask my uncle about his service, and he would talk about the Phillipine orphans he helped.

These guys were builders and joiners and all around good guys. I miss them much.
8 posted on 05/26/2003 3:41:46 PM PDT by stylin19a (2 wrongs don't make a right.....but 3 rights make a left)
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To: MudPuppy
My Mother's brothers(my uncles)a all served in the Navy in WWII, my dad served in the Army.

Mind you, my daddy was 50 yrs old when I was born. He was the youngest child in the family. My grandma was 90 when I was born, and after all those children she gave birth to, I was her only grandchild.

Due to my Dad's age and bad feet, he got rejected by almost every recruiter for every branch of service; however a sympathetic Army recruiter enlisted my dad. My dad was in his thirties. He served in France with a communications unit. All he told me as a child was that the Vichy would cut the lines down every night; come daytime he and the rest of the crew would restring the lines every day.

My dad was first generation Irish American. His mother, my grandmother, came here on a steerage boat. She ended up working the mills in Massachusets, but she raised a good son and a proud American, nevermind the best daddy any kid could want:)

God Bless America!
9 posted on 05/26/2003 4:20:43 PM PDT by TheSpottedOwl (America...love it or leave it. Canada is due north-Mexico is directly south...start walking.)
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To: MudPuppy
"God Bless America! Never forget our Veteran's and their families."

...Could never have said it better! God Bless.

10 posted on 05/26/2003 6:00:21 PM PDT by never4get (A Conservative Surrounded by Liberals (help))
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To: snippy_about_it
Thanks Snippy.
11 posted on 05/26/2003 7:11:50 PM PDT by SAMWolf ("They are not dead who live in hearts they leave behind" - Hugh Robert Orr - They Softly Walk)
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