Preserving The Oral HistorIES of Combat Veterans
COMBAT STORIES
WORLD WAR II
KOREA
VIETNAM
IRAQ
AFGHANISTAN
OTHER WAR STORIES
AFFINITY GROUPS
PHOTOS & MEMOIRS
ABOUT WTW
OVERVIEW
OUR TEAM
ADVISORY BOARD
PARTNERS
MEDIA INQUIRIES
SHARE YOUR STORY
SUPPORT OUR CAUSE
FOR EDUCATORS
[ NAVBAR ]
HOME
-- WORLD WAR II
-- KOREA
-- VIETNAM
-- IRAQ
-- AFGHANISTAN
-- OTHER
-- AFFINITY GROUPS
PHOTOS & MEMOIRS
-- OVERVIEW
-- OUR TEAM
-- ADVISORY BOARD
SHARE YOUR STORY
SUPPORT OUR CAUSE
FOR EDUCATORS
SEARCH RESULTS
Copy link
my selections
10,571
Videos
49
Photos
148
Docs
Search Again
Videos ( 10,571 )
Photos ( 49 )
Docs ( 148 )
In-Process (2,192)
advanced search
‹ First
<
114
115
116
117
118
>
Last ›
|
Showing
10
20
30
40
per page |
1,160/10,571
Bill Tyre
WWII
| 158th Combat Engineer Battalion
Bill Tyre tells his story of landing at Normandy 16 days after D-Day and heading towards Bastogne for the Battle of the Bulge. Provided by Sal Strom. This interview is audio only. (5:02)
Bill Vaughan
WWII
| 43rd Infantry Division
He wanted the Navy but there were a couple of tough looking MP's there so he accepted it when they told him he was in the Army. Before long, Bill Vaughan was going ashore at Luzon as a machine gunner. He was only in the battle a few days when he was hit and had to be evacuated. (This interview made possible with the support of MARILYN M. WOODHOUSE.) (5:01)
The Banzai charges would come at night. Machine gunner Bill Vaughan was in his foxhole and had the advantage, but he was always glad to see daylight come. The living conditions on Luzon were not good, basically a hole with water in it and swarms of malaria causing mosquitoes. (This interview made possible with the support of MARILYN M. WOODHOUSE.) (2:49)
The Japanese were trying to regroup, but Bill Vaughan's unit had the high ground and took care of them in short order. They had fortified Luzon very well, hiding artillery pieces in caves high in the mountains and rolling them out at night to blast Allied ships. (This interview made possible with the support of MARILYN M. WOODHOUSE.) (4:07)
When Bill Vaughan's unit started out to secure Ipo Dam in the Philippines, they had 180 men. At the end, there were 34 left. Soon he was serving occupation duty in Japan, courtesy of President Truman's fateful decision to use the atomic bomb. (This interview made possible with the support of MARILYN M. WOODHOUSE.) (3:04)
While serving occupation duty in Japan, Bill Vaughan was shuffled through multiple units until he finally had enough points to return home. The banner that greeted him was very complimentary, but it made him think of those who didn't make it back. He headed for Georgia, where his high school sweetheart had waited for him. (This interview made possible with the support of MARILYN M. WOODHOUSE.) (3:23)
Bill Watkinson
WWII
| U.S. Navy, Fighter Pilot, VF-9, VF-88 Squadrons, USS Yorktown
Mr. Watkinson shares a funny incident between he and a fellow shipmate involving heavily armed explosives. (1:17)
Mr. Watkinson discusses taking damage while operating a Hellcat fighter plane and successfully landing it. (2:06)
Bill Watkinson discusses the loss of four fellow aviators during a dogfight over Japan after the Japanese surrender. (3:21)
Bill Watson
WWII
| 100th Infantry Division
Bill Watson recounts how he came to understand how battle can make a man feel good. (1:16)
‹ First
<
114
115
116
117
118
>
Last ›
|
Showing
10
20
30
40
per page |
1,160/10,571
Our Sponsors
Our Partners