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Not All Were Heroes: A Private in the Corps of Engineers in the Pacific During World War II

Current price: $17.20
Not All Were Heroes: A Private in the Corps of Engineers in the Pacific During World War II
Not All Were Heroes: A Private in the Corps of Engineers in the Pacific During World War II

Barnes and Noble

Not All Were Heroes: A Private in the Corps of Engineers in the Pacific During World War II

Current price: $17.20
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Merriam Press Military Monograph 74. Fourth Edition (March 2012). The adventures chronicled in this work are those experienced by the man on the bottom. The memoirs of the captains and the generals, whose names were on every tongue, whose deeds were grandiose, whose commands and decisions impacted world history have long since been rushed to print. Now perhaps the voice of the private soldier, the anonymous GI may be heard. Not as a capstone to history, but as a supplement to the documentation of everyday moments lived by hundreds of thousands of unknown Americans. It is because relatively few close-ups have as yet appeared, particularly in the nature of daily diaries, that this account is offered. What light is shed on history is very limited. The happenstances for the most part are devoid of color and excitement, but honestly present the monotony and dullness that made up so many days of the ordinary private and especially the ordinary private of the service troops. Moments there were when the dramatic occurred to spark interest in the great military venture taking place in the Pacific War. But by and large the true picture of what was happening was almost invisible. The rear echelon private in the Corps of Engineers, even 20 miles from the front, was not as well informed as the civilian back home who had daily access to the newspapers. The vast majority of the millions in the services were supporting the relatively few under the guns of the enemy. We cannot all be heroes. But essential work was accomplished. The war was fought and won by combined efforts. Martin attempted to collect and forge into a simple chronology the major portions of his daily writings editing out only the banal and highly personal. The author was a member of the 529th Engineer Light Ponton Co. and the 866th Engineer Aviation Battalion. All of the drawings reproduced in this book are from the collection of the author, who sketched and colored them on the scene during the war. The author had no formal art training and the drawings have a splendidly amateurish quality about them. Contents: * Basic Training * Unit Training * ASTP (Army Special Training Program) * "Repple-Depples" * Voyage to New Guinea * New Guinea * A Visit to Leyte * Mindoro * Luzon * Voyage to Nippon * Yokohama, Japan * Going Home * 1 B&W photo * 69 drawings * 3 documents.

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