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Belleau Wood

(@roque_riojas)
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I'm sorry Marion, I put to many Ws' It's---- www.nwwone.org. Rocky


Roque J.(Rocky) Riojas


   
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Walts Daughter
(@marionjchardgmail-com)
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Joined: 2 years ago
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Gratias darling! Am looking at it right now.

 

Here's a clickable link to make it super easy for all

 

The National World War One Museum


Marion J Chard
Proud Daughter of Walter 'Monday' Poniedzialek
540th Combat Engineer - H&S Company


   
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(@roque_riojas)
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I have a brick on the WALK OF HONOR. Reads

 

Roque Riojas WW11

Bronze Star--P/H

 

No Rocky!! :armata_PDT_01:


Roque J.(Rocky) Riojas


   
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(@capto)
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Joined: 18 years ago
Posts: 1540
 

Very neat place Rocky! I hope to get a chance to visit some day. (In my uniform I'm free!)

 

No Rocky!! :armata_PDT_01:

 

Good for you, no need to make your brick easy to pronounce for us gringos!


Maj Todd O. USMC, Retired
Grandson of LTC John O'Brien


   
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(@verow)
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Joined: 20 years ago
Posts: 1224
 

In Flanders Fields,

 

 

In Flanders fields the poppies blow

Between the crosses, row on row

That mark our place; and in the sky

The larks, still bravely singing, fly

Scarce heard amid the guns below.

 

We are the dead. Short days ago,

We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,

Loved and were loved and now we lie

In Flanders fields

 

Take up our quarrel with the foe:

To you, from failing hands, we throw

The torch; be yours to hold it high.

If ye break faith with us who die

We shall not sleep, though poppies grow

In Flanders fields

 

 

Vee

post-227-1211136778_thumb.jpg

-- attachment is not available --


Under every white cross of American Cemetery of Colleville (Normandy), sleeps a piece of Freedom


   
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(@colbill)
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Joined: 21 years ago
Posts: 61
 

Verow,

 

Thank you for the very beautiful and interesting pictures of the Belleau Wood Cemetery .It is good to know our fallen soldiers are in such a beautiful place .I look forward to seeing your photographs from your visit on 6 June.

 

ColBill



   
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(@verow)
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Joined: 20 years ago
Posts: 1224
 

Colbill,Thank you very much that you like the photos, when I'm visiting such places .

I love always to make lots photos to share them with you all .

 

Vee


Under every white cross of American Cemetery of Colleville (Normandy), sleeps a piece of Freedom


   
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(@sonofamp)
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Joined: 19 years ago
Posts: 540
 

During WWI, the Fifth and Sixth Marine Regiments were combined to form the 4th Marine Expeditionary Brigade. That brigade was in turn attached to the Army's Sencond Infantry Division.

 

info from:

ARMY LINEAGE SERIES

MANEUVER AND FIREPOWER

THE EVOLUTION OF DIVISIONS AND SEPARATE BRIGADES

by

John B. Wilson

 

http://www.history.army.mil/books/Lineage/M-F/index.htm

 

Chapter III: The Test -- World War I

 

One Regular Army infantry division, the 2d, was organized in France. When the first troops deployed, the U.S. Marine Corps wanted a share of the action, and Secretary Baker agreed that two Marine regiments should serve with the Army. The 5th Marines sailed with the 1st Expeditionary Division, and Pershing assigned them as security detachments and labor troops in France. Shortly thereafter he advised the War Department that the marines did not fit into his organizational plans and recommended that they be converted to Army troops. The marines, however, continued to press for a combat role. Eventually the Departments of War and the Navy agreed that two Regular Army infantry regiments, initially programmed as lines of communication troops, and the two Marine regiments (one serving in France and one from the United States) should form the core of the 2d Division. The adjutant general informed Pershing of the decision, and Brig. Gen. Charles A. Doyen, U.S. Marine Corps, organized the 2d Division on 26 October 1917 at Bourmont, Haute-Marne, France. The division eventually included the 3d Infantry Brigade (the 9th and 23d Infantry and the 3d Machine Gun Battalion), the 4th Marine Brigade (the 5th and 6th Marines and the 6th Machine Gun Battalion [Marines]), the 2d Field Artillery Brigade, and support units


Larry

"I'm proud to be an American, Where at least I know I'm free
And I won't forget the men who died, Who gave that right to me."
God bless the USA - Lee Greenwood


   
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(@verow)
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Here's a link ,I found on Weedon Osborne, the Medal of Honor .

 

One of my photos album.

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weedon_Osborne

 

 

VEE


Under every white cross of American Cemetery of Colleville (Normandy), sleeps a piece of Freedom


   
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(@twobisquit)
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Joined: 21 years ago
Posts: 222
 

I always thought of poppies when I read Flanders Field. Then I saw this picture of Flanders Field today and finally understood John McCrae's poem.

inflandersfields.jpg

 

It was raining too hard today to put out the flag. And I couldn't find any one selling poppies this year. Some of you might remember that I used to go to town with my Dad to sell Poppies for the American Legion. It was a tough one this year


Son of Francis "Combat" Stephens- Co. C 36th Combat Engineer Regiment


   
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(@verow)
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Posts: 1224
 

WWI - Chateau Thierry and the Aisne Marne Operation (1918)

Marines Headlines-Belleau wood

 

 

 

WWI - Chateau Thierry and the Aisne Marne Operation (1918)

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZofaGieWrW4...feature=related

 

 

vee


Under every white cross of American Cemetery of Colleville (Normandy), sleeps a piece of Freedom


   
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(@verow)
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Chateau-Thierry: The Battle for Belleau Wood

 

Explaining the Battle for Belleau Wood is a doubly difficult challenge. The three-week long action was simply a confused mess tactically. None of the participants ever quite knew where they, the front line or the enemy were inside that mile-square dark forest. ...

 

http://www.worldwar1.com/dbc/ct_bw.htm

 

Vee


Under every white cross of American Cemetery of Colleville (Normandy), sleeps a piece of Freedom


   
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Walts Daughter
(@marionjchardgmail-com)
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Merci. Thanks for continuing this very interesting post. I sometimes forget all the fantastic info which our site has to offer.


Marion J Chard
Proud Daughter of Walter 'Monday' Poniedzialek
540th Combat Engineer - H&S Company


   
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(@verow)
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A short video with historical footage of the bloody Marine Corps participation in World War I during the famed battle of Belleau Wood in June 1918, during which the Corps earned its nickname from the Germans, Teufel Hunden, or "Devil Dog".

 

In the face of massive casualties and five failed attempts to take the real estate, the tenacious Marines were finally successful on a sixth attempt. While the narrator leaves out not only the Devil Dog reference and fact that the French renamed the area the "Wood of the Marine Brigade" but General Pershing's legendary reference: "The deadliest weapon in the world is a Marine and his rifle!".

 

 

 

Vee


Under every white cross of American Cemetery of Colleville (Normandy), sleeps a piece of Freedom


   
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Walts Daughter
(@marionjchardgmail-com)
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It is so hard to fathom 10,000!!


Marion J Chard
Proud Daughter of Walter 'Monday' Poniedzialek
540th Combat Engineer - H&S Company


   
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