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The Heroes I’m Remembering Today

Jimmy Stewart

 

by Robert Matzen

There is an affectionate term for the planes that helped win the fight against Hitler: warbirds. I saw all the warbirds of World War II in our recent visit to the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, where my new book, Mission: Jimmy Stewart and the Fight for Europe, was launched the evening of October 27.

This Veterans Day, it’s easy to think about the boys who stormed Normandy’s beaches 72 years and 5 months ago because they’ve been memorialized in the neat and tidy The Longest Day, and in the stunningly realistic Saving Private Ryan, and as one who sees and hears and feels and smells and tastes history, I don’t know how they did what they did that day. You know how you blanch when facing headwinds and slanting rain and the natural sense is to squint from it and recoil and run for cover. Well imagine the raindrops are eight-ounce parcels of lead coming at you like slanting rain. We’re all waterproof so the rain can’t really hurt us although we act as if it could. None of us are bulletproof and for thousands of those guys that day, the rainstorm ended in instant death or worse.

Where do the warbirds fit in this story? Well, I didn’t know before writingMission exactly how the war had played out up to the point that the LSTs hit the beaches of France. I knew there was an air war and a ground war in Europe, but it didn’t sink in that the air war came first and made the ground war possible, which means that for Americans over a two-year period, the front lines in the war for Europe were manned by flyers of the U.S. Army Air Forces. They climbed into their warbirds every morning not knowing if they’d ever walk the earth again. They’d give a thumbs-up and take off not into a glorious sunrise but into pea soup because, after all, this was England and the English weather is usually dreary.

And the warbirds themselves; yikes. Sure you had your sleek and nasty fighter planes, your Warhawks and Thunderbolts and Mustangs and the kids who climbed into them fought like the glamorous swashbucklers they were. Theirs was the grave responsibility of guarding and defending the most unglamorous of warbirds, the heavy bombers. And that is the core story of Mission.

Two heavy bombers flew for America in WWII, the B-17 Flying Fortress and the B-24 Liberator. The relative beauty of the 17 and its lethal firepower made it the media darling of the war. Think Memphis Belle. The 24 was described as “the packing crate the B-17 came in.” It was boxy; it was decidedly unglamorous. Imagine this as a verbal portrait of your airplane: “On the ground it looks like a slab-sided prehistoric monster wading through swamps.”

But the boys assigned to the B-24 Liberators loved their airplanes. They cared for each as if it were a hotrod, as if the thing wasn’t a flying death trap. The Liberators Jim Stewart flew exclusively in the war had real problems, like controls that required muscle at all times, and leaks in the fuel lines that would, all of a sudden, cause them to blow up in the air, usually on ascent when loaded with gas and bombs. Ka-BOOM! Ten men obliterated over friendly skies because of spark meeting fuel leak: pilot, copilot, bombardier, navigator, radio operator, engineer, waist gunners, ball turret gunner, tail gunner, all gone. This happened to Lt. Earle Metcalf and crew of Stewart’s squadron one morning. There one moment and vanished the next, with no trace ever found.

On each mission to Germany, missions sent up every possible day, hundreds of planes would take off from a cluster of bases each five miles from the next in eastern England into that pea soup I described earlier featuring low cloud cover. If the pilot didn’t fly precisely in that cloud cover, as in, fly straight for 47 seconds after takeoff while climbing to 5,000 feet at an air speed of 150 and then on the 48th second turn right to a precise compass heading, ka-BOOM! Two bombers both flying blind would collide—loaded with gas and bombs—and not 10 but 20 men would be erased from the roster. That happened more than once on missions Jim commanded. He would hear the deafening explosion close by, muscle the controls as the shock wave hit his plane, and know that a score of fine flyers alive five seconds ago were now dead. Young men he had just seen and eaten breakfast with.

Dear readers, we haven’t even left friendly airspace yet! This was the easy part before hitting an enemy coastline that featured hundreds of anti-aircraft batteries aimed at Forts and Libs lumbering straight and level across the sky as if targets in a carnival shooting gallery. Each plane held 10 males somewhere between 19 and 26, except for Jim, the old man of 35. They were kids, so very young, so very brave, so very skilled who died by the hundreds and thousands for the two years leading up to D-Day in an ongoing effort to smash Hitler’s ability to manufacture weapons of war. Not until they had succeeded in the task of fighting and fighting and fighting on endless brutal missions to knock out enough of the German air fleet did D-Day even become possible.

I spend a great deal of time in Mission driving home the point that, yes, Jim was a hero, but the band of brothers he flew with every day were people who lived and breathed. Each represented the best the United States had to offer. On the morning of a mission, they rode out to their slab-sided reptile of an airplane, a beast that might turn around and bite them at any moment. They struggled inside it while loaded down with flying gear. They held their breath through a lumbering takeoff, each focused on all the tasks essential to keeping that plane in the air for a flight to and from Germany. For many, too many, something would go wrong and they would fly on to glory.

I am writing about the men of the Eighth Air Force today, but I think of them every day. They inspire me to be an American worthy of their bravery and sacrifice.

Robert Matzen is the author of seven books, including the bestsellers Fireball: Carole Lombard and the Mystery of Flight 3 andMission: Jimmy Stewart and the Fight for Europe. Connect with Robert Matzen on GoodreadsAmazonTwitter, Facebook, and at https://robertmatzen.com/

Mission: Jimmy Stewart and the Fight for Europe [GoodKnight Books] is available via Amazon and in brick-and-mortar retailers across the U.S.

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Ridgewood Veterans Day Services

Ridgewood Veterans Day Services
photos by Boyd Loving

November 11,2016

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, American Legion Post #53 hosted the Ridgewood Veteran’s Day Service at 11AM in Memorial Park at Van Neste Square. All were welcome to attend to honor our veteran’s.

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see more photos on: https://www.facebook.com/pg/theridgewoodblog/photos/?tab=album&album_id=1183223605049816

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the Ridgewood Blog Honors Veterans Day

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November 11,2016

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, Veterans Day is an official United States public holiday, observed annually on November 11, that honors military veterans; that is, persons who served in the United States Armed Forces. It coincides with other holidays, including Armistice Day and Remembrance Day, celebrated in other countries that mark the anniversary of the end of World War I; major hostilities of World War I were formally ended at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918, when the Armistice with Germany went into effect. The United States previously observed Armistice Day. The U.S. holiday was renamed Veterans Day in 1954.

Veterans Day is not to be confused with Memorial Day; Veterans Day celebrates the service of all U.S. military veterans, while Memorial Day honors those who died while in military service.

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Bond Street Mortgage LLC and Keller Williams Realty West Monmouth announce Operation “Saving Private Ryan”

Saving Private Ryan
May 29,2016

the staff of the Ridgewood

Ridgewood NJ, Ryan Wares joined the army and was sent to Iraq in 2006, where he spent 12 months on a deployment. During his 10th month there, he had a long discussion with a childhood friend whom had joined the army with him. As Ryan walked outside of the tent they were in, he was startled by the sound of a gunshot. He ran back in to find his friend could not take the pressure of war and decided to end his watch for good. A few months later, during the final days of Ryan’s deployment, his unit was hit by a roadside IED. Ryan was in the blast zone and sustained injuries across his body that are still with him today. He also suffers from severe PTSD and survivor’s guilt. He is classified as 75% disabled. Ryan was honorably discharged from the army, but struggled upon returning home. It was difficult for him to find a job and integrate back into society. Family and friends are helping as much as they can to help Ryan through his tough times.

Keller Williams Realty West Monmouth has chosen Ryan for their RED day* recipient and are looking to find an apartment for him, his fiancé, and 3 small children. Bond Street Mortgage LLC has created a go fund me account for Ryan to help furnish the apartment and pay for as many months up front for his rent as we can for the first year. Any donations are appreciated. https://www.gofundme.com/SavePrivateRyan

*Red Day is an initiative dedicated to celebrating Keller Williams Realty’s year-round commitment to improving our local communities. Each year, on the second Thursday in May, tens of thousands of associates from across the United States and Canada participate in a wide range of projects, devoting their time to renewing and energizing aspects of the neighborhoods in which they serve.

About Bond Street LLC NMLS # 191351: Bond Street Mortgage has built a strong reputation as an outstanding mortgage lending firm, serving the lending needs of real estate professionals, builders and individual home buyers. We are a full service mortgage lender.
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Vandals Deface Vietnam War Memorial In Venice

Vandals Deface Vietnam War Memorial In Venice

May 27, 2016 10:31 PM

VENICE (CBSLA.com) — Vandals defaced a memorial to Vietnam war veterans in Venice – an awful sight on this Memorial Day weekend.Stewart Oscars welled up as he looked at the vandalized mural located on Pacific Avenue near Sunset Court. It was covered in graffiti from end to end.

“This knocked me out. So sickening. Just sadness…think of all these people. They’re gone,” Oscars said. “I remember the Vietnam war and how friends went to war, and bodies came back. Somehow, it has to be taught that this is not a good idea. This is actually stupid.”

The memorial was dedicated to service members who were listed as missing in action during the Vietnam War.

George Francisco is the Vice President of the Venice Chamber of Commerce. He also runs a nonprofit called Veterans Foundation Incorporated.

“It’s a desecration. I mean it’s very simple. There’s no sort of other way around it. It isn’t graffiti,” Francisco said.

https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2016/05/27/vandals-deface-vietnam-war-memorial-in-venice/

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Wyckoff teen aims to help vets find peace in fly fishing

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JANUARY 20, 2016    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20, 2016, 1:21 AM
BY TODD SOUTH
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

The Iraq war veteran carefully looped a thread around a steel hook secured in a vice to make a fly-fishing lure as his 15-year-old guide, Will Percy, quietly offered words of advice.

It was an exercise in patience that in some way embodies the challenging task that Will, a Wyckoff resident, has embarked upon: bringing fly-fishing into the lives of disabled veterans.

Nearly a year ago, Will saw a promotion for a non-profit fishing group, Project Healing Waters, that teaches fly-fishing skills to disabled veterans. He contacted the New York chapter and asked if he could get involved. A short time later, the call came back, asking if he would guide a disabled veteran on an outing on the Musconetcong River in northwest New Jersey.

That’s when he realized that the peace he always got from fly-fishing might help someone else. It inspired him to found a North Jersey chapter of the group, whose mission began in therapy classes at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in 2005. Since then, the program has expanded to 209 locations across the 50 states and in Germany.

The organization assisted 6,572 disabled veterans last year, said Daniel Morgan, the spokesman for Project Healing Waters. The non-profit aims to keep disabled veterans involved in fly-fishing for the long term and will outfit a participant with $500 worth of gear

https://www.northjersey.com/community-news/clubs-and-service-organizations/fly-fishing-as-a-way-vets-can-focus-and-reconnect-1.1495238

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IG report: 300,000 vets died while waiting for health care at VA

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file photo Boyd Loving

Published September 03, 2015
FoxNews.com

WASHINGTON –  More than 300,000 American military veterans likely died while waiting for health care — and nearly twice as many are still waiting — according to a new Department of Veterans Affairs inspector general report.

The IG report says “serious” problems with enrollment data are making it impossible to determine exactly how many veterans are actively seeking health care from the VA, and how many were. For example, “data limitations” prevent investigators from determining how many now-deceased veterans applied for health care benefits or when.

But the findings would appear to confirm reports that first surfaced last year that many veterans died while awaiting care, as their applications got stuck in a system that the VA has struggled to overhaul. Some applications, the IG report says, go back nearly two decades.

The report addresses serious issues with the record-keeping itself.

More than half the applications listed as pending as of last year do not have application dates, and investigators “could not reliably determine how many records were associated with actual applications for enrollment” in VA health care, the report said.

The report also says VA workers incorrectly marked thousands of unprocessed health-care applications as completed and may have deleted 10,000 or more electronic “transactions” over the past five years.

Linda Halliday, the VA’s acting inspector general, said the agency’s Health Eligibility Center “has not effectively managed its business processes to ensure the consistent creation and maintenance of essential data” and recommended a multi-year plan to improve accuracy and usefulness of agency records.

Halliday’s report came in response to a whistleblower who said more than 200,000 veterans with pending applications for VA health care were likely deceased.

The inspector general’s report substantiated that claim and others, but said there was no way to tell for sure when or why the person died. Similarly, deficiencies in the VA’s information security — including a lack of audit trails and system backups — limited investigators’ ability to review some issues fully and rule out data manipulation, Halliday said.

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/2015/09/03/ig-report-close-to-300000-vets-died-while-waiting-for-health-care-at-va/?intcmp=hpbt1

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The Office Beer Bar and Grill Now Sells Brix City Brewing beer, Bergen’s First Brewery

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July 25,2015

the stafff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, Two Bergen County residents Joe Delcalzo and Peter Reuther opened the county’s first Brewery, Brix City Brewing, in Little Ferry last month.Due to the small production size of our Brewery we are only on tap at a few bars and restaurants in the area. Make sure to call ahead, as many restaurants and bars rotate taps the beer is sold at . In Ridgewood the Office Beer Bar & Grill  sell the beer.

Nestled in the borough of Little Ferry, Brix City Brewing is one of the newest craft breweries to hit the beer scene in New Jersey. Brix City Brewing is dedicated to bold styled beers that showcase intense flavor profiles and the highest quality ingredients. We make the beer we enjoy drinking, so hopefully you do too.

In 2010, co-founder Pete left the Army after serving in the infantry for four years, two of which were spent in Germany where he began to appreciate the many different styles of beer. Upon his honorable discharge, he was unsure of what he was going to do with his life. At the same time, fellow co-founder Joe was attending college as an accounting major while working part time, also unsure about what he would be doing in the future.

The two men had been friends since high school and both shared a passion for beer. They would soon buy a home brew kit, and before you knew it they were knee deep in the craft brewing world, most of their free time from that point on was spent brewing (and drinking for that matter). Before long, the two had the crazy idea that they could make this wonderful hobby a career and they began developing the brewery that would unfold to be Brix City Brewing.

 

https://www.brixcitybrewing.com/

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SHOCK POLL: VETERANS PREFER TRUMP OVER MCCAIN BY DOUBLE DIGITS

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by JOHN NOLTE24 Jul 20155,793

A YouGov poll conducted through Wednesday not only shows that Donald Trump’s support has surged among Republicans in the wake of the backlash against unfortunate comments the billionaire businessman made about Senator

Sen. John McCain (R-AZ)
43%
’s war record, veterans currently serving in the military view Trump more favorably than McCain.

Among current veterans, a full 53% view Trump favorably compared to just 41% for McCain.

McCain’s unfavorable rating with this group is also higher than Trump’s, 49% to 42% respectively.

https://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2015/07/24/shock-poll-veterans-prefer-trump-over-mccain-by-double-digits/

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Trump : McCain has abandoned our veterans. I will fight for them.

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Trump: I don’t need to be lectured
EDT July 19, 2015

John McCain has called his own constituents who want a secure border “crazies.”  No one in the news media or the establishment, including theRepublican National Committee, criticized the senator for those comments.

Now, as respected reporter Sharyl Attkisson has proved point by point, the news media are also distorting my words. But that is not my point. McCain the politician has failed the state of Arizona and the country.

During my entire business career, I have always made supporting veterans a top priority because our heroes deserve the very best for defending our freedom. Our Department of Veterans Affairs hospitals are outdated dumps. I will build the finest and most modern veterans hospitals in the world. The current medical assistance to our veterans is a disaster. A Trump administration will provide the finest universal access health care for our veterans. They will be able to get the best care anytime and anywhere.

Thanks to McCain and his Senate colleague Bernie Sanders, their legislation to cover up the VA scandal, in which 1,000+ veterans died waiting for medical care, made sure no one has been punished, charged, jailed, fined or held responsible. McCain has abandoned our veterans. I will fight for them.

The reality is that John McCain the politician has made America less safe, sent our brave soldiers into wrong-headed foreign adventures, covered up for President Obama with the VA scandal and has spent most of his time in the Senate pushing amnesty. He would rather protect the Iraqi border than Arizona’s. He even voted for the Iran Nuclear Review Act of 2015, which allows Obama, who McCain lost to in a record defeat, to push his dangerous Iran nuclear agreement through the Senate without a supermajority of votes.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2015/07/19/donald-trump-republican-party-presidential-candidate-editorials-debates/30389993/

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Coincidence connects veterans, Ridgewood High School graduates

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Coincidence connects veterans, Ridgewood High School graduates

NOVEMBER 6, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2014, 2:48 PM
BY JODI WEINBERGER
STAFF WRITER |
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

Paul Grassey was in one of 23 B-24 bomber planes when about a dozen German ME 262 fighter jets attacked.

“We were supposed to bomb a couple of airfields and the Germans broke through,” Grassey said, retelling one of the more memorable of the 13 missions he flew during World War II.

It’s luck, he said, that’s gotten him to 91 years old, surviving through his time as Second Lieutenant with the 8th Air Force, which suffered more than 47,000 casualties and 26,000 deaths during the war.

Although the U.S. was able to “out-manufacture the Germans” with bomber planes, Grassey wasn’t sure how they would fare against the new jets.

https://www.northjersey.com/community-news/coincidence-connects-veterans-1.1128444

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Anger explodes over treatment of Bergdahl’s release as veterans, troops call him a deserter

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Anger explodes over treatment of Bergdahl’s release as veterans, troops call him a deserter

BY HANNAH ALLAM AND JONATHAN S. LANDAY

McClatchy Washington BureauJune 2, 2014 

WASHINGTON — For all the yellow ribbons strewn across his hometown in Idaho and the gratitude expressed by his parents in an emotional visit to the White House on Saturday, it’s looking increasingly unlikely that Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl will receive a hero’s welcome when he returns to the United States after nearly five years in Taliban captivity.

From military forums across the country, a groundswell of anger is rising over the Obama administration’s silence on perhaps the most controversial question surrounding the deal that freed Bergdahl in exchange for five senior Taliban members: Was he a deserter?

So far, the U.S. government has shied away from the long-nagging question, which raged anew Monday with growing clamor on the Internet about the circumstances of Bergdahl’s disappearance from his unit’s small forward position in Afghanistan on June 30, 2009.

Military-related blogs, Twitter accounts and Facebook pages were filled with screeds from commenters accusing Bergdahl of being a “traitor” or a Taliban “collaborator.” The online publication The Daily Beast published a nearly 2,000-word first-person account by a former Army infantry officer who said he was privy to details of Bergdahl’s disappearance and who stated flatly that “he was a deserter, and soldiers from his own unit died trying to track him down.”

Read more here: https://www.mcclatchydc.com/2014/06/02/229148/anger-explodes-over-treatment.html#storylink=cpy

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Senate Dems block amendment to restore veteran benefits by closing illegal immigrant welfare loophole

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Senate Dems block amendment to restore veteran benefits by closing illegal immigrant welfare loophole

Amid the growing outrage over corruption and bureaucratic incompetence at the Veterans Administration, the House of Representatives passed legislation 390 to 33 making it easier to fire career bureaucrats at the VA. (The 33 “No” votes were all Democrats.) Senator Marco Rubio (F-FL) tried to bring the bill up for a vote in Senate yesterday, but Democrats objected. That’s not the first time Senate Democrats dissed our vets. In December they voted keep a welfare loophole for illegal aliens rather than stop cuts to veterans benefits. Remember In November! 

commentary by Gary L. Bauer

https://dailycaller.com/2013/12/18/senate-dems-block-amendment-to-restore-veteran-benefits-by-closing-illegal-immigrant-welfare-loophole/

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Lonegan Calls on Congress to Act for Veterans

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Lonegan Calls on Congress to Act for Veterans
Thursday, February 27th, 2014 @ 5:25PM

“An illegal alien can come into this country to have a baby and will be afforded all the welfare benefits available, immediately. It is an absolute disgrace that our returning war veterans are not afforded the same treatment when it comes to receiving the benefits they earned.”

WRIGHTSTOWN, NJ – Steve Lonegan, Republican Candidate for New Jersey’s 3rd Congressional District, stated at a press conference at McGuire Air Force Base today that “It’s about time for Congress to provide the benefits of honor and respect that our returning veterans have earned.”

Surrounded by a newly formed Veteran’s Advisory Committee of 16 American heroes, Steve Lonegan called the inaction of Congress “a blemish on our country.”

“An illegal alien can come into this country to have a baby and will be afforded all the welfare benefits available, immediately,” Lonegan said. “It is an absolute disgrace that our returning war veterans are not afforded the same treatment when it comes to receiving the benefits they earned.” Lonegan called on Congress to put partisan politics aside. “John Boehner and Nancy Pelosi must make this their number one priority,” Lonegan said.

Steve Lonegan stated that President Obama has broken his promise to our veterans, on when they would receive their benefits. Over 850,000 of these American hero’s have waited more than 125 days. “Its unconscionable,” Steve Lonegan stated.

Veterans have no stronger voice in Congress than Steve Lonegan – fighting for their rights, dignity and their benefits.

Steve Lonegan was the Republican nominee in the New Jersey special election for the United States Senate in 2013. He defeated national Democrat favorite Cory Booker by more than 8 points in the 3rd Congressional District. Lonegan continues to stand firmly on his bedrock conservative values of limited government, fiscal responsibility and individual liberty.