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To: mass55th

Same with mine as to the 1973 fire but they sent what they could..my father’s info: Sgt., Airplane Mechanic 747, 10/16/42 - 12/17/45 10th AF, 311thFG, 528th FS China-Burma-India, Asiatic-Pacific Service Medal, Good Conduct Medal and WWII Victory Medal.

Someone on a 10th Air Force forum site a few years back told me my father was pictured in a book, Days of Ching Pao..I bought 4 copies of it for my siblings and myself..

Not sure if link will work, pictures of my father in WWII

https://www.facebook.com/christine.starick/media_set?set=a.1243507261619.35576.1647485333&type=3


2,704 posted on 01/30/2018 9:58:31 PM PST by tina07 (In loving memory of my father,WWII Vet. CBI 10/16/42-12/17/45, d. 11/1/85)
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To: tina07
Thanks for the link. I don't belong to Facebook, so they won't let me see them. I've got a picture of my Uncle Jack in uniform. He was my mother's brother. He's the one who served in CBI. I've also got a photo of my Uncle Adrian in uniform (Army). He was my father's youngest brother. They had come to the U.S. in 1912 with their parents from Holland.

My Uncle Jack and my mother had come to the U.S. as youngsters with my Grandmother. Because the date of their entry into the U.S. had never been officially documented, when he went to enlist, the Army took my Uncle to Niagara Falls, had him cross into Canada, then walk back over the bridge into the U.S. Don't know if it's true, but that's the story we were told as kids. Jack served from 9/22/42 to 6/25/45.

My great-uncle John Holmes, who was from Canada was killed in France in WWI, in September 1918...just before the Armistace. He's buried there. He was with the Canadian Expeditionary Forces. I've got a picture of him in uniform on horseback, and a photo of his grave in the British Military Cemetery in France.

My brother was in the Army and served in Vietnam '66-67 with the 25th Infantry Division...Cu Chi. My Dad was born in 1904, too young for WWI, and although he was 37 when we entered WWII, he wasn't medically eligible as he suffered from Chronic Osteomyelitis (infection of the bone). One leg was shorter than the other, and he always had an open wound that drained. Had it from the time he was a kid, but never missed a day of work on the railroad.

2,724 posted on 01/30/2018 10:27:09 PM PST by mass55th (Courage is being scared to death - but saddling up anyway...John Wayne)
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