Author Topic: WWI Vets ?  (Read 823 times)

Offline -tronski-

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WWI Vets ?
« Reply #15 on: January 06, 2004, 04:37:37 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Animal
I tell chicks I'm a WWI vet to impress them.


Is that to explain the peformance later in bed, or the reason you need viagra?

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Offline Animal

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WWI Vets ?
« Reply #16 on: January 06, 2004, 04:51:39 AM »
More like why I like eating from the trench

Offline -tronski-

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WWI Vets ?
« Reply #17 on: January 06, 2004, 05:01:06 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Animal
More like why I like eating from the trench


lol

 Tronsky
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Offline cpxxx

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WWI Vets ?
« Reply #18 on: January 06, 2004, 07:13:56 PM »
I seem to remember from the recent Armistice day BBC TV programmes that there is at least one WW1 pilot still alive or was until recently.  Can anyone confirm that?

Both my Grandfathers served as part of the British army in the Great War, one was even wounded but I never met them and have no information on where or when. There are  no family tales or pictures of them in uniform as after independance here in Ireland there was a collective amnesia about the whole thing even though 50,000 or so Irishmen died. Shameful really.

I did meet one veteran. A Sergeant Major he served in both wars in the British army and even shot down a German plane. I'm not sure in which war. He taught me and my friend, his grandson how to carry out army drill movements. He died before I was old enough to appreciate his stories.

Soon it will be down to one or two and we'll lose the link with the past.

Offline Nashwan

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WWI Vets ?
« Reply #19 on: January 06, 2004, 07:56:13 PM »
Quote
I seem to remember from the recent Armistice day BBC TV programmes that there is at least one WW1 pilot still alive or was until recently. Can anyone confirm that?


I thought they featured a Royal Navy pilot, who had flown a recce mission during the battle of Jutland, but couldn't find any more about it.

Offline MC_Honky

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WWI Vets ?
« Reply #20 on: January 07, 2004, 07:13:06 AM »
This is really crazy but my Uncle- who is 80.- remembers as a boy, hanging out with Civil War vets (American).  Civil War !!!  I think the last one died in 1954.  He was a confed. -soldier so I guess the confeds won after all. :)

Offline LWACE

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« Reply #21 on: January 07, 2004, 09:37:02 AM »
wow when you think about it like that, civil war doesnt seem that long ago, in 1940s and 50s i bet there was quite afew civil war vets left.

Offline Mickey1992

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WWI Vets ?
« Reply #22 on: January 09, 2004, 01:30:50 PM »
One less WWI vet than earlier this week.  :(

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=514&e=7&u=/ap/20040109/ap_on_re_us/obit_world_war_i_vet

Last Wounded U.S. WWI Veteran Dies at 108

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - Alfred Pugh, the last known combat-wounded U.S. veteran of World War I, has died. He was 108, just 10 days short of his 109th birthday, when he died Wednesday.

Pugh, who often told visitors the key to a long life is "keep breathing," joined the Army in 1917 and fought in France during World War I with the 77th Infantry Division. In 1918, he was wounded during the Meusse-Argonne offensive, one of the war's bloodiest battles.

He died at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center at Bay Pines. VA officials said he was the oldest wounded combat veteran in the United States, and one of fewer than 1,000 remaining American World War I veterans.

Friends said he loved the attention that came with being known as the oldest wounded combat veteran in the United States. "It tickled him when the classes would come by the busload to see him," said Pugh's niece Carolyn Layton.

Born Jan. 17, 1895, in Everett, Mass., Pugh raised 16 foster children, played the organ into his 100s and was an avid football and baseball fan.

He is one of 10 veterans profiled in the book, "The Price of their Blood," published last month and co-authored by Jesse Brown, former U.S. secretary of Veterans Affairs.

He spoke French and was used overseas as an interpreter until the battle in the Argonne forest, when he inhaled mustard gas that left him unconscious and with chronic laryngitis.

"It was like a fog," Pugh said in an interview in 2002. "... We didn't get any gas masks until the day after it happened."

After the war he returned to Maine and worked as a railroad telegraph operator for 12 years before delivering mail for 26 years. He came to Florida in 1971.

In 1999, he was named chevalier of the National Order of the Legion of Honor, a prestigious medal bestowed by the French government.

Offline Eagler

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WWI Vets ?
« Reply #23 on: January 09, 2004, 02:26:40 PM »
was on the news this am, he has a bud in the same vet hospital which is 106. they mentioned there were less than 600 still alive today.
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Offline AdmRose

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WWI Vets ?
« Reply #24 on: January 11, 2004, 11:41:46 PM »
I read that of the 4.5 million Americans who served in WWI, only about 300 are still alive today.

Offline Chairboy

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WWI Vets ?
« Reply #25 on: January 11, 2004, 11:45:32 PM »
According to this recent article about the last wounded WWI vet dying, there are 1000 in the US.

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/special_packages/iraq/7672434.htm
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