Voice of the People- November 11, 2009

World War II program offers amazing stories

By Jackson Citizen Patriot staff

November 04, 2009, 10:38AM
SANDSTONE TOWNSHIP — Thank you Jackson District Library and the World War II program "In Their Own Words," presented by Larry Martin. What a privilege it has been for my wife and I to meet these brave veterans and hear their courageous life stories during the war.

My own father was one of the veterans interviewed, and we gained a whole new appreciation for his service to our country through the excellent interview Mr. Martin did with him. Mr. Martin's love for his country and for those who have served it comes through with his patience and compassion for these brave men and women.

I commend all of those involved and highly recommend that anyone, young or old, that are interested in our country's history and the men and women who preserved our freedom to attend future programs. They are excellent.


Amy Bakker- November 7th program

Here is an article that was recently published in the Jackson Citizen Patriot about Amy Bakker and the November 7th program.


POW's wife to speak at Jackson church about World War II experiences

Robert Paul Photographs

Photographs of Robert Paul During World War II

Click on the Pictures for a Larger View
























October 3rd Program Overview ~ Don Goss

Hello my name is Larry Martin, I am the coordinator for the WWII program thru the Jackson District Library and I would like to tell you something about our October 3rd program.  
   
The veterans name is Mr. Don Goss (Pictured Below), Don was a infantryman in the 29 Div. he went into Omaha Beach at 0930 on 6 June 1944 in Normandy commonly known as D-Day. The troups that had hit Omaha beach at 0630 was the 1st Infantry div. one of the men that landed at 0630 was a actor named Charles Durning who plays a ongoing role on Everybody Loves Ramond, Mr. Durning plays the Catholic Priest on several shows. For those of you who know of the Slaughter at Malmady Mr Durning was one of a handful of soldiers that survived the slaughter.  
   
Mr Goss broke into sobbing when he related his landing to me in 2007, when he spoke of his landing craft running over the dead soldiers from the first attack at 0630. Omaha beach was a killing field, the Germans under General Irwin Romel (The Desert Fox) had had several years to build up their defenses and they did. Mr. Goss fought thru the Hedgerow country before being shot by a sniper. He was hospitalized for 19 months. 

FREEDOM IS NOT FREE
Larry Martin

Click on the Picture for a Larger View

Pictured above: Don Goss and Robert O'Brian

D-Day - 29th Division Infantryman

Landed in Normandy, France June 6th, 1944

Don Goss and D-Day Overview

I would like to speak a little about the larger picture concerning the D-Day invasion on 6 June 1944 at Normandy. The speaker at this week's program is a man named Mr. Don Goss. He is a Jackson native who landed on Omaha Beach at 0930 on D-Day. But now I wish to speak of what the landing that day meant to the entire war effort.

The war started on 1 Sept. 1939 with the German invasion of Poland, but lets go back one month to August 1939 when Hitler and the dictator of Russia Joseph Stalin signed a non-aggression pact. What that did was give Hitler something that he needed very badly which was a one front war. He knew that he was going to attack France and England as soon as he had finished Poland which was over in about one month. Russia and Germany carved Poland up between the two of them. Hitler then set his sights on England and France, the latter fell in June of 1940 and England was then on her own though the United States had what was called the Lend Lease act which gave England some military hardware and money but we were still ruled by what was then called the isolationist in Congress.

To get back to why the landing on Normandy was so important. Hitler attacked his partner in crime on June 21 1941 because he felt like he had England on the ropes and he could now attack a country that he very much hated: Russia. By the end of World War II the US had lost about 400,000 men and England lost about 300,000 men. In comparison our now ally Russia lost about 20,000,000 people! Stalin had been threatening to sue for a peace with Germany which they did in WW l and they just quit and we did not want Russia to quit fighting the Germans because of the strength that Germany still had in June of 1944. What Stalin wanted was an allied invasion of the European Continent in the West to take some of the pressure off the eastern front where he was losing millions of people.

That is where Mr. Don Goss and several other men from Jackson that I have interviewed came into the picture. The other men that I know that were at Normandy that day are Mr. Fred Bahlau, Mr. Don Brininstool both of the 101st Airborne, as well as Mr Bob Black of Florida who was in the 82nd Airborne. All three of these men parachuted into Normandy at about 0300 in to blackness with thousands and thousands of rounds of hot steel aimed right at them (See picture). Think of the RAW GUTS that it took to take that step out of the C-47 into darkness and seeing all of the tracers coming what must have seemed right at YOU.

Don Goss hit Omaha Beach at 0930. He is still to this day emotionally distraught by what he saw and did on the killing field that day. The German artillery and mortars were pre-registered on that beach. All they had to do was fire and they would more than likely hit an American from the 1st Division at 0630 or the 29th Division which Don Goss was in on that fateful day of June 6th, 1944 D-Day.

12 days later after horrific fighting when all but a couple of dozen of the men in his Company of 250 men had been killed or shot, Don was shot through the jaw by a sniper and hospitalized on and off for 19 months. His buddies got the sniper!!

Article in the Jackson Citizen Patriot


This is an article that was recently published in the Jackson Citizen Patriot. It is about the WWII programs and how they have impacted the lives of the veterans and their families.

Man creates videos to share history of WWII

August 1st Program Overview

Hello my name is Larry Martin, for about 10 yrs I have been interviewing WWll combat veterans. Three yrs ago the Jackson library and I started putting programs on for the public. I feel that it is very important for everyone to know what was given to all of us by these fighting men.
On August 1st we are going to do our first program about a man named Colin McKinzie who was at Pearl Harbor aboard the U.S.S. Pennsylvania, a battleship that was in dry-dock at the time but still able to play her guns on the Japanese planes that attacked them on Dec.7 1941.

The initial attack was at 0755 local time, that was when battleship row was attacked, the Arizona, Oklahoma and the others were sunk or badly damaged.




Images from the Pearl Harbor Attack



At about 9am local time the Japanese Admiral Nagumo ordered a second attack and that was when Mr. McKinzie's ship the Pennsylvania was attacked and hit by one 500 lb bomb, killing and injuring many aboard including Colin who was burned and hospitalized for 4 months. He told me of a Lt. that stopped by his battle station to try to get Colin to move just a few feet so that he would be safer and Colin said that he could not because this was his battle station. The Lt. left and as he left a piece of shrapnel took his head off and according to Colin if the Lt. had just went on his business and not tried to help Colin, the Lt would not have been in the spot where he got hit. This has bothered Colin for 68 yrs.

BattleShip Row - as seen from a Japense Bomber


Another story that was shared was as he was shooting at the Japanese they were so close that he could see them laughing at him because they were flying too close and his guns could not be aimed at them well. He also told me of watching the Battleship Oklahoma which is the ship that we see whenever we see pictures of the attack on Pearl Harbor that went over with her keel up in the air, seeing the sailors trying to crawl up on her keel and because of the oil on her they would slide into the burning water and die. He shared many more stories with me that I have on DVD. If anyone has any questions about Colin or any of the 35 other interviews I have just contact this blog or e-mail me at batt.chief@yahoo.com.

Larry

Colin McKenzie Postcards

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September 12th Program Overview

Hello, I would like to tell you a little about the program that is scheduled for Sept. 12. The man I would like to tell you about is Dr. Eugene Bleil. He was stationed in the Philippines when the Japanese struck Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7 1941 at about the same time they attacked all over the Pacific including where Dr. Bleil was stationed which was Nichols field as an airplane mechanic. Very quickly after the attack, Dr. Bleil was given 15 minutes of infantry training and a 1903 Springfield rifle. I said to him that was an old rifle and he quickly told me that it sure was a better weapon than a stick. He was then in a fight for his life literally everyday for nearly four years.

He fought for about four months with very little food or medical supplies. While he never got into hand to hand combat he told me that he was forced to kill at a distance of five feet to survive.

On April 9th 1942 he and about 75,000 men WERE surrendered by General King to stop a total slaughter. That is when he was forced to endure the Bataan Death March of about 65 miles after nearly no food for four months. The Japanese were not prepared for the number of men that WERE surrendered. They were brutal with many beheadings and bayonetings. Once they got to Camp O'Donnell there were up to two hundred deaths a day, due largely to starvation and disease.




Death March Photos - Click for a Larger View

In about mid 1943 he was sent to Japan as slave labor. He was put on what became known as the Hell Ships. Many were sank by our own Navy because they had no insignia on them to let the Navy know that there were US POW'S on them. Men were put into the holes of these ships packed into them so tight that many times they had to stand up with only a five gallon bucket for drinking water and a five gallon bucket for the sanitary needs of as many as 700 men for days at a time in sweltering heat. Men died there and were left there.

One quick story and there are many. One day Dr. Bleil came to the firestation where I worked and had dinner with me, the men did not know of his WW ll experiances. They were teasing the cook about our dinner which was steaks, the men said that the steaks tasted like horse meat, Dr. Bleil very seriously said that this meat did not taste like horse because in the Philippines they had eaten every horse that they had. The mens jaws about hit the floor not knowing if he was kidding or not and when he assured them that he was not kidding they wanted to know more of his experiances.
At the lowest his weight dropped to about 85lbs.

Larry

Below is a Map of the Route for the Bataan Death March - Click for a Larger View

Pvt. Bernard Jack Rinne

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Pvt. Bernard Jack Rinne
Killed in Action - September 17, 1944
Holland: Operation Market Garden
Mr. Rinne was a Resident of Albion, Michigan

Don Brininstool

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Leon Zimmerman Service Photo

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Leo Forster Portrait

Click on the Picture for a Larger ViewThis picture is of Leo Forster, a Lieutenant in the German army, the Wehrmacht. The inscription in German on the back of the picture reads:

"For my friend Larry Martin,
I gave him a copy of the only war picture of myself that survived the second world war, because he is so interested in WWII history. I have told him many things of my war life. In this picture, I was 18 years old. I had just finished officer's boot camp in Oxbol, Denmark. I am the only survivor of the 75 trainees.
I hope you will give me a copy of your notes.

Your friend,
Leo Forster"

Veteran Pictures

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Fall 2008 Interviews

Pictures of Veterans Below. Click on the picture for a larger view.

Same format as 2007 with different World War II Veterans.


A description of this postcard appears below.

Programs will Include:
DVD Interviews
Q & A with a Veteran
Many Mementos, Photos, Weapons, and other historical World War II artifacts!

Programs:
Saturdays
Programs 10 am - 12 (noon)
First United Methodist Church
275 West Michigan Avenue, Jackson MI - 49201


First Program:
August 2, 2008 - Donald Brininstool - 101st Airborne
Sgt. Brininstool parachuted into Normandy on D-Day, June 6th 1944. He also parachuted into Holland.

Second Program
September 6, 2008 - E.B. Andrews - Army Infantryman
Fought in France and Germany.

Third Program
October 4, 2008 - Dick Thelen - U.S. Navy
USS INDIANAPOLIS survivor. 10,000 ft shark infested water for 112 hours.

Fourth Program
November 1, 2008 - Leo Forster - German Wehrmacht (Army) Lt..
Lt.. Forster fought from the Battle of Cassino, Italy up into Germany. Leo's story starts with leaving revolution-torn Russia in 1921. Leo's involvement, as a 13 year old, in Crystal Night - the hanging of 200 German soldiers by the SS. Leo's interview will appear on DVD only, he will be not present at the program. Q & A after the interview will be conducted with Larry Martin, who has had over 30+ hrs. of conversations with Leo.
 
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