TerryinMD
Veteran Member
My dad worked in the steel mills during the war which allowed him an exemption. I know that he took a lot of flack from my uncles. Was that a good or bad thing? Don't know, but he took his reasoning with him to his grave.
One of my uncles and a neighbor fought in the Battle of the Bulge and lived through that mess. The neighbors son went to Nam, had his buddy killed, escorted his buddy's body back to the states, went back to Nam and was killed a week later. My uncle and our neighbor cried their eyes out at the funeral.
About 5 years ago, my father-in-law (an airplane nut) found out that a friend of his was a tail-gunner on a B25 during WWII. They found out that the plane was still flying in the Confederate Air Force. So what a bunch of my father-in-laws friends did was to get the B25 to come to Somerset, PA for a 4th of July parade fly-over and to have this old airman fly on his plane some 50 years later. Can you image!!!! In was one of neatest things I have ever witnessed. There wasn't a dry eye around.....
One of my uncles and a neighbor fought in the Battle of the Bulge and lived through that mess. The neighbors son went to Nam, had his buddy killed, escorted his buddy's body back to the states, went back to Nam and was killed a week later. My uncle and our neighbor cried their eyes out at the funeral.
About 5 years ago, my father-in-law (an airplane nut) found out that a friend of his was a tail-gunner on a B25 during WWII. They found out that the plane was still flying in the Confederate Air Force. So what a bunch of my father-in-laws friends did was to get the B25 to come to Somerset, PA for a 4th of July parade fly-over and to have this old airman fly on his plane some 50 years later. Can you image!!!! In was one of neatest things I have ever witnessed. There wasn't a dry eye around.....