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12/05/2022

After the N***s killed his mother, five brothers and 20 other family members, Joe Holm (z’’l), born May 7, 1922, escaped into the Parczew forest in Poland, joining the partisan group under the leadership of Chiel Grynszpan.

Just 19 years old, Joe proved himself skilled with a gun, and adept at demolition. His extensive knowledge of the forest and local villages made him an invaluable guide for his group. Joe traveled in and out of the forest, finding food and medical supplies critical to the group’s survival, and on one trip brought Rose Duman back with him to join the group.

Remaining with the Grynszpan group throughout the war, Rose and Joe carried out dozens of missions. Married after the war, they were together for 65 years, until Joe's death in December 2009.

Read more about Joe and Rose Holm here: http://jewishpartisans.org/joeandroseholm

30/04/2022

God Bless this American Hero WWII Vet Corporal Ira Hayes:
Ira Hamilton Hayes was born on January 12th, 1923 in Sacaton, Arizona. He was a member of the Gila River Pima Indian Reservation. His father was farmer and a WWI veteran. It was said by childhood friends and acquaintances that he was shy and sensitive as a child. Loyal to this country he was outraged when the attack on Pearl Harbor was orchestrated. He vowed to defend the United States. In 1942 from May until June he served in the Civilian Conservation Corps.

On August 26th, 1942 he joined the Marine Corps. In San Diego, California he completed recruit training. After this he volunteered for the paratrooping program for the marines. He trained at Camp Gillespie at the Marine Parachute School where he graduated with silver jump wings.

On December 1st, 1942 he was promoted to Private First Class. On December 2nd, he joined Company B, 3rd Parachute Battalion, Divisional Special Troops, 3rd Marine Division. On March 14th, 1943 his company set out for New Caledonia in the Pacific Ocean. He was assigned to Camp Kisner from March 25th until September 26th. His company was renamed to Company K, 3rd Parachute Battalion, 1st Marine Parachute regiment of the Marine Amphibious Corps. On October 14th, he was sent to Guadalcanal and Vella Lavella on the Solomon Islands for occupational duty.

On December 4th, 1943 he was sent to Bougainville and fought against the Japanese forces. He served as an automatic rifleman. He was ordered back to California in early 1944 where his company was disbanded. He was reassigned to Company E, 2nd Battalion, 28th Regiment of the 5th Marine Division and then sent to Hawaii to train for the invasion of Iwo Jima.

On February 19th, 1945 he and his company landed on the beach of Iwo Jima near Mount Suribachi. On February 23rd Mount Suribachi was captured by American forces. Hayes and three other members of his platoon were ordered to lay telephone wire up Mount Suribachi. Other marines were sent to replace the American Flag atop the mount. This moment was immortalized in photograph by associated press photographer, Joe Rosenthal. This image cemented in the American civilian minds and helped insure hero status for all those involved.

On March 26th, 1945 he left Iwo Jima. He was one of five surviving members of his platoon. On April 15th, 1945 he was commissioned by President Franklin Roosevelt to help sell war bonds to pay for the war. His status as a hero was thought to help bolster the sale of war bonds. He continued to do this until May 24th.

On June 18th he was promoted to Corporal. He joined the E Company Battalion, 28th Marines. From September 22nd until October 28th, 1945 he served occupation duty in Japan.
After returning from the War he received a lot of fame an recognition for his act of flag raising on Iwo Jima.

In 1949 he played himself in Sands of Iwo Jima. It detailed the capturing of Mount Suribachi. Unfortunately fame did not sit well with Ira Hayes. He also could not reconcile what he saw in the war and the fact that he survived when so many of his comrades never came home alive. He also had no taste for the pomp and circumstance of being deemed a war hero. Ira found solace in alcohol and became addicted. He could never manage to hold a steady job and was more often than not being arrested for public intoxication.

On January 24th, 1955 he was found dead from exposure to the cold and alcohol poisoning. He was buried in Arlington National Cemetery. He was immortalized and remember in several manners. In 1954 the Marine Corps War Memorial was erected in Arlington, Virginia. In 1961 The Outsider was a film that was released which detailed his life story. In 1964 Johnny Cash recorded The Ballad of Ira Hayes which painted a rather sad picture of his life. More recently in 2006, Clint Eastwood directed a film, Flags of Our Fathers which covered the raising of the flag on Mount Suribachi.

Ira Hayes was a courageous soldier who was loyal to his comrades and believed in his duty to defend his country. It is disheartening but understandable that he fell into the clutches of alcoholism and was never able to reconcile the terrors of war and the emptiness of returning home without most of your comrades. However, his memory will forever live on as one of the famous and heroic flag raisers at Iwo Jima.

The Giant Killer book details the incredible life of the smallest soldier, Green Beret Captain Richard Flaherty along with the harrowing stories from the men of the 101st Airborne in Vietnam. The Giant Killer FB page honors these incredible war heroes making sure their stories of valor and sacrifice are never forgotten. God Bless our Vets! Available now on Amazon & Walmart.

28/04/2022

One of Peter Gorog’s very first memories is of his mother’s arrest. He was just three-and-a-half years old when he watched Hungarian policemen take her away.

“I still remember the morning when two gendarmes, wearing their distinctive tall hats with cockfeathers, showed up at our apartment. We were having breakfast.”

Though Jews were previously subjected to Hungarian antisemitic persecution, life in Budapest became much more dangerous when the German occupation began in March 1944. Peter and his mother, Olga, were forced to live in designated housing marked with a yellow Star of David. When Olga was arrested, she was taken to a jail in Budapest.

“At that time she was determined that we were going to survive no matter what,” recalled Peter.

Hear Peter’s story of survival live on Facebook today at 1 p.m. ET.

Photo: USHMM, courtesy of Peter Gorog

17/04/2022

𝗖𝗛𝗔𝗥𝗟𝗘𝗦 𝗪𝗔𝗟𝗧𝗘𝗥 𝗗𝗔𝗩𝗜𝗗 𝗝𝗥. (1917-1943)

Steward’s Mate First Class Charles Walter David was an African American Coast Guardsman, responsible for saving ninety-three people from a torpedoed naval cutter. David was born on June 20, 1917 in New York, New York. Many details about his early life are unknown. By the time of his enlistment into the US Coast Guard, on March 6, 1941, David was married to a woman named Kathleen and had a three-year-old son named Neil. David started as part of the kitchen staff and worked his way up to Steward’s Mate, where he was responsible for tending to officers’ quarters.

Late in 1942, David was assigned to the Coast Guard cutter the Comanche that was part of convoy SG-19, escorting two merchant marine ships, SS Lutz, and SS Biscaya, and one troop transport, the USAT Dorchester. The convoy left St. John’s, Newfoundland, bound for the Army Command Base at Narsarsuaq in Southern Greenland in February 1943. The Comanche, the Escabana, and the Tampa were three cutters ordered to assure the safety of the ships carrying men and supplies to the base. On the ship, David played the harmonica, and white shipmate Richard Swanson played the saxophone, to entertain the crew.

The path to Greenland required passing through an area known as “Torpedo Alley,” due to the number of ships sunk there by German submarines. On February 3, at 12:55 am, the Dorchester was hit by a torpedo by German U-boat U-233. The damage to the ship was severe and prevented the crew from sending a radio distress signal or rockets or flares to alert the escorts. The huge luxury liner began to sink quickly, listing heavily to one side, making access to some lifeboats and jackets impossible. The available lifeboats were quickly overcrowded, as there were 904 men aboard the ship. The waters were rough and many men were quickly pitched over the sides into frigid waters.

Sailing immediately behind the Dorchester, twelve men from the Comanche volunteered to rescue men from the frigid waters, including David, one of the lowest-ranking men. They dove into the waters, putting ropes around men’s waists because most were suffering from hypothermia, and could not grab a rescue line. David rescued ninety-three of the two hundred and twenty-seven survivors, including ranking officer Lt. Robert Anderson.

The convoy continued to Greenland, and David and others were taken to the hospital. David died of pneumonia on March 29, 1943, fifty-four days after the ordeal, at the age of twenty-six. He was posthumously awarded the Navy and Marine Corps Medal for Heroism in 1943. His wife and three-year-old son received the award from RADM S.V. Parker, along with Lt. Anderson, who was rescued by David. This award was followed by the American Defense Service Medal, the American Campaign Medal, the European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal, and the WWII Victory Medal. He was honored with a certificate for his heroism by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1963. The Immortal Chaplains Foundation awarded David with their prestigious Prize for Humanity in 1999, and in 2010, the USCGC Charles David Jr. was named as the seventh new Sentinel Class Cutter in his honor.

#𝗕𝗹𝗮𝗰𝗸𝗛𝗶𝘀𝘁𝗼𝗿𝘆 #𝗕𝗹𝗮𝗰𝗸𝗛𝗶𝘀𝘁𝗼𝗿𝘆𝗢𝘂𝗿𝗛𝗶𝘀𝘁𝗼𝗿𝘆 🤎 ✊🏾

16/04/2022

Remembering Anthony Clement McAuliffe, was a senior US Army officer who earned fame as the acting commander of the 101st Airborne Division defending Bastogne, Belgium, during the Battle of the Bulge in World War II. He is celebrated for his one-word reply to a German surrender ultimatum: "Nuts!"
After the battle, McAuliffe was promoted and given command of the 103rd Infantry Division, which he led January 1945 to July 1945. In the post-war era, he was commander of United States Army Europe.
Born in Washington D.C., on July 2, 1898. McAuliffe enrolled at West Point in 1917, he was part of an accelerated program and graduated shortly after the end of World War I, in 1918. McAuliffe held various field artillery positions before World War II. On the eve of D-Day, McAuliffe jumped with the first wave as a commander of division artillery, although he had never received formal parachute training.
On December 21, 1944, during the siege of Bastogne, Belgium, German army units surrounded the 101st Airborne Division, Brigadier General Anthony McAuliffe was acting commander of the 101st in Major General Maxwell D. Taylor's absence.
On 22 December, the German commander, Heinrich Freiherr von Lüttwitz, sent McAuliffe an ultimatium, demanding that he surrender the town or face immediate annihilation. McAuliffe sent von Lüttwitz a one-word reply: "NUTS."
Over the next five days, the 101st repeatedly drove off German attacks. When elements of the Third Army, under General George S. Patton, broke through the German lines from the south, the 101st resumed the offensive and pushed the Germans back from Bastogne.
McAuliffe received the Distinguished Service Cross for his actions defending Bastogne.
General McAuliffe continued to serve on active duty, including assignments as Chief Chemical Officer of the Army Chemical Corps, and Commander-In-Chief of the U.S. Army, Europe. He was promoted to four-star general in 1955. In 1956, McAuliffe retired from the army. He died in Washingotn D.C. in 1975 at age 77 and is buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
We're grateful for his extraordinary service and sacrifice for our country. Lest we forget. 🇺🇸
https://fallenyetnotforgotten.com/

16/04/2022

We post some incredible stories of valor on this page but this story of a Navy Seal refusing to leave a man behind has to be in the top three.

Medal of Honor recepient Navy Seal Michael Thorton was born in Greenville, South Carolina and raised on the family farm near Spartanburg. Thornton joined the Navy upon graduating from high school in 1967 and completed the rigorous training to join the SEALs, the Navy’s elite sea-air-land special operations force. As overall American conventional forces were gradually withdrawn from Vietnam in the early 1970s, the “unconventional warfare” role of Navy SEALs grew. In the spring of 1972, Petty Officer Thornton was assigned to a mission under the command of Lt. Thomas Norris. Michael Thornton’s Medal of Honor citation reads:
For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while participating in a daring operation against enemy forces.

“PO Thornton, as Assistant U.S. Navy Advisor, along with a U.S. Navy lieutenant serving as Senior Advisor, accompanied a three-man Vietnamese Navy SEAL patrol on an intelligence gathering and prisoner capture operation against an enemy-occupied naval river base. Launched from a Vietnamese Navy junk in a rubber boat, the patrol reached land and was continuing on foot toward its objective when it suddenly came under heavy fire from a numerically superior force.

“The patrol called in naval gunfire support and then engaged the enemy in a fierce firefight, accounting for many enemy casualties before moving back to the waterline to prevent encirclement.
“Upon learning that the Senior Advisor had been hit by enemy fire and was believed to be dead, PO Thornton returned through a hail of fire to the lieutenant’s last position; quickly disposed of two enemy soldiers about to overrun the position, and succeeded in removing the seriously wounded and unconscious Senior Naval Advisor to the water’s edge. He then inflated the lieutenant’s lifejacket and towed him seaward for approximately two hours until picked up by support craft.

“By his extraordinary courage and perseverance, PO Thornton was directly responsible for saving the life of his superior officer and enabling the safe extraction of all patrol members, thereby upholding the highest traditions of the U.S. Naval Service.”
Collier provides more detail of the engagement and rescue:
“During the five-hour firefight, Thornton was wounded in his back. Norris ordered Thornton and two of the South Vietnamese SEALs to fall back to a sand dune to the north and provide covering fire. Not long after, the Vietnamese SEAL who had stayed behind arrived at Thornton’s position and told him that Norris had been killed. Thornton charged back over 500 yards of open terrain to Norris. When he got there, he killed two enemy soldiers standing over the lieutenant’s body. He lifted Norris, barely alive and with a shattered skull, and began to run back toward the beach, enemy fire kicking up all around him.

“The blast from an incoming round fired by the USS Newport News blew both men into the air. Thornton picked up Norris again and raced for a sand dune and then retreated 300 yards to the water. As he plunged into the surf, Thornton lashed his life vest to the unconscious officer’s body. When another SEAL was hit in the hip and couldn’t swim, Thornton grabbed him and slowly and painfully swam both men out to sea. Despite his wounds, Thornton swam for more than two hours. All three wounded men were rescued by the same junk that had dropped them off 16 hours earlier.

The Giant Killer book & page honors these incredible war heroes making sure their stories of valor and sacrifice are never forgotten. God Bless our Vets! The book is available on Amazon & Walmart.

04/03/2022

In honor of the beginning of Womens History Month, we would like to recognize Col. Ruby Bradley. Born on December 19, 1907, in Spencer, West Virginia, Ruby Bradley was an Army surgical nurse and veteran of World War II and Korean War. She was one of the most decorated women in the United States military, earning 34 medals and citations of bravery including two Legion of Merit medals, two Bronze Stars, a UN Korean Service Medal and the Florence Nightingale Medal from the International Red Cross.
As a career Army nurse prior to World War II, Colonel Bradley served as the hospital administrator in Luzon in the Philippines in 1941, when the Japanese invaded, she and a doctor and fellow nurse hid in the hills, but three weeks later, she was captured by the Japanese army and held as a Prisoner of War for over three years. During that time, Bradley help treating fellow POWs, assisted in more than 230 major surgeries and delivered 13 babies. She would regularly smuggle food to hungry children in the camp, despite dropping to under 90 pounds herself when the Americans liberated the camp in 1945. She was returned to the United States where she continued her career in the army. Bradley served as the 8th Army’s chief nurse on the front lines of the Korean war in 1950. She managed to evacuate all of the wounded soldiers onto a plane while under heavy fire and was the last to jump aboard the plane just as her ambulance was shelled. In 1958, Bradley was promoted to the rank of Colonel and retired in the Army in 1963. After her retirement, Ruby worked as a supervising nurse in West Virginia for 17 years. This true American hero passed away on May 28, 2002 at age of 94 and was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
We salute and honor Colonel Ruth Bradley's exemplary service for our country.
https://fallenyetnotforgotten.com/

28/02/2022

Remembering Eugene Jaques Bullard, the first black American military pilot. Originally born in the USA, Eugene had decided on his eleventh birthday that he would run away to France, where he could escape racial injustice. A boxer and talented jazz musician, he made his way to Europe and was given the French nickname "L'Hirondelle noire", meaning Black Swallow. In 1914, when the WWI started, he served under France. Bullard received his wings in May 1917 and fought until WWI ended. Bullard attempted to join the U.S. Air Service, but was not accepted and was rejected because of the racial prejudice that existed in the American military during that time. He was removed from the French Air Force after an apparent confrontation with a French officer. He volunteered again for France during WWII, but was seriously wounded by an exploding shell in 1940, returning to the US. Bullard received 14 decorations and medals from the government of France. On October 12, 1961, Bullard passed away, and is interred in the same cemetery as his friend, Louis Armstrong, in Queens, NY.
In 1989, he was posthumously inducted into the inaugural class of the Georgia Aviation Hall of Fame. In 1994 - Bullard was posthumously commissioned a second lieutenant in the United States Air Force.
In October 2019, the Museum of Aviation in Warner Robins, Georgia erected a statue in Bullard's honor.

28/02/2022
28/02/2022

🇺🇦The outcome of the Soviet rule in Ukraine

Soviet Ukraine was born in late 1917, existed briefly in 1918, and re-emerged in 1919. By 30 December 1922, when it joined the USSR as the Ukrainian Socialist Soviet Republic, the communists had clashed for power and territory with, among others, Ukrainian People’s Republic, General Denikin, German-sponsored Second Hetmanate, and again UPR, allied with Poland. Only after the 1921 Treaty of Riga did they consolidate their rule over the bulk of Ukraine – and this part, compared to the regions that ended up within Polish, Czech or Romanian borders, drew the shorter straw.

Ukraine joined the Soviet Union just as its war communism – extreme centralization of power and total control of production by the state – was making way for Lenin’s New Economic Policy. Seeing how the previous doctrine had ruined the state and, combined with drought, brought about the 1921-1922 famine that killed milions (including hundreds of thousands Ukrainians), the Bolsheviks decided to introduce a temporary measure of free market, at least in agriculture. From 1922, the Soviet republics, Ukraine included, began slow recovery.

In early and mid-1920s, the communists, trying to strengthen their power, also allowed national aspirations of the Union’s peoples to surface, and even fostered local cultures. At the same time, they were preparing to transform the agricultural economy into an industrialized one. In 1928, Stalin ended NEP with his first five-year plan and speeded up industrialization. Shortly thereafter, in 1929, the countryside was hit with collectivization, aimed at turning peasants, land owners, into forced laborers of the state, slaving away on the nationalized land that used to be theirs.

The whole of USSR saw revolts against the new policy, slaughtering of farm animals and destruction of machines, but the Ukrainian dissent was the most pronounced. Stalin, who remembered the UPR, decided to break this "Ukrainian nationalism" with dekulakization – mass murder and deportation campaign – plus the increase in food quotas to be delivered and confiscation of any surplus. The result was one of the worst famines in the history of mankind, engineered starvation of four to seven milion people on fertile Ukrainian soil, a Soviet plan that crippled Ukrainian peasantry.

The peasantry were historically the base of culture and traditions, both closely linked to religion and the local Orthodox Church – which from early 1930s was hit by severe repressions as well. There was more: parallel to the famine, Ukrainian party leaders, ten years before encouraged by Lenin to promote Ukrainization, were purged, and the survivors sidelined when the capital was moved from Kharkiv to Kyiv in 1934. Sovietization replaced Ukrainization: Ukrainian cultural institutions and newspapers were shut down, the language marginalized, the people harassed.

The famine was a major blow aimed at cutting Ukrainian national identity at the knees through the decimation of the peasant class. Another one was a direct attack on intelligentsia, which, in Stalin’s opinion, was leaning too much toward the West: in late 1920s, only 20% of books in Ukraine were translations of Russian writers, while the rest were penned by local authors or translated from western languages. From 1933, places like the Slovo Building in Kharkiv, a haven of Ukrainian intellectual activity, would not be permitted to last and its members to live.

And in this organized assault on the very idea of Ukraine, thousands of leading Ukrainian authors, journalists, artists and educators found themselves persecuted, imprisoned and usually executed. A great number ended up in the Solovki special camp, but not for long: on 3 November 1937 in Sandarmokh, NKVD officer Matveyev, his only education being two years of elementary school, made poet and translator of Horace Mykola Zerov lie facedown in a shallow grave and shot him in the back of the head - and with him, hundreds of other members of the "Executed Renaissance."

Then, the 1937-1938 Great Terror purged the CP(B)U, the communist party, and NKVD members in Ukraine, while famous Order no. 00447 ("Concerning the Punishment of Former Kulaks, Criminals and Other Anti-Soviet Elements") gave the security services quotas of people to persecute and execute, and the NKVD troikas a carte blanche to persecute and execute anyone they wanted. Such policy removed yet more thousands of Ukrainians – either from the face of the earth or into Siberian labor camps, and the vast majority were victims of blanket terror, not purges.

After WWII, the reign of Soviet terror returned, first under Khruschev, since 1938 the First Secretary of the CP(B)U, then under Melnikov. Post-war repression campaign was mostly of "anticosmopolitan" nature because it targeted people suspected of disloyalty or infecting the Soviet society with western influences: real or alleged N**i collaborators, as well as former POWs and forced laborers returning home. This period also saw a renewed attack on intelligentsia; survivors of the 1930s slaughter, allowed to foster patriotic sentiments in WWII, were in late 1940s accused of "Ukrainian nationalism" and persecuted.

By the time Stalin died in 1953 and Khruschev delivered his "On the Cult of Personality and Its Consequences" speech in 1956, Ukraine lost yet more hundreds of thousands people – deported, imprisoned and executed. The Khruschev thaw began the last three and a half decades of Ukraine in the Soviet Union – slow revival of culture and returning Russification, as well as the birth of dissident movements and resulting repressions from Moscow-controlled security apparatus, all this against the background of gradually deteriorating economy.

After the first three and a half decades, which cut the population of Ukraine by almost a third and its intellectual elites by four-fifths – the other three and a half were, at best, only lesser evil. The history of Soviet Ukraine is seven decades or repressions, planned genocide and countless human tragedies.

Ministerstwo Spraw Zagranicznych Polish Foreign Ministry"

25/02/2022

Jay Johnson supports our local public schools, knowing that they are critical to the health and future of West Texas and the Texas Panhandle.

YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT! Jay Johnson will work to strengthen our local schools and not seek to control, replace, or undermine them from top-down state or federal political control. Our local schools are not for sale.

Jay Johnson has always stood for the values of hard work, faith, and family that make West Texas great. He demonstrated this in his first term on the SBOE by specific actions such as opposing Health curriculum that undermines these values, by supporting pro-energy facts in the Science curriculum standards, and he demonstrated his opposition to CRT by appointing a well-respected conservative scholar for the upcoming Social Studies review.

Vote for the consistent, common-sense conservative who is from here, cares about West Texas, and has personally volunteered for many years in his local schools.

RE-ELECT Jay Johnson for State Board of Education, District 15 . . . BECAUSE WEST TEXAS DESERVES A VOICE.

Political ad paid for by Jay Johnson for Texas State Board of Education, Warren Chisum, treasurer.

25/02/2022

I was raised from birth by my Grandmother, who was born in 1893, so I was surrounded by WW1 people right through my childhood.

Her house and all it contents were very old and there was no telephone or TV in my life until I left to go to work at aged 19. I had a great childhood.

The WW1 people were tough and resilient. Never heard my Grandmother ever complain, no matter what confronted her in life and she saw much heartbreak, even losing her fiancée who was killed in WW1 and her husband (my Grandfather) who died in 1942.

There is a WW1 soldier who was termed the "The Greatest Ever”, but is little known in Australia. The photograph is of Captain George Meysey Hammond MC and Bar, MM, of the 28th Battalion, of Broome WA. A very brave man.

He was born on the 3rd of July 1892, at Handsworth, Staffordshire, England, and arrived in Western Australia in February 1911.

The photograph was probably taken just before his departure for the Somme, where he was awarded a bar to his MC (Military Cross) for heroism at Morlancourt. He is wearing an officer’s cap of British manufacture and an arm sling.

He was awarded the Military Medal (MM) as a sergeant for his bravery near Bois Grenier, France on the 2nd of June 1916 when, under heavy fire, he went forward to gather important reconnaissance on enemy bombardments. He was wounded in the leg at Pozieres on the 29th of July, leaving him with an enduring limp, the same day that he was commissioned a second lieutenant. He incurred a second more serious wound on the 5th of November at Flers when his elbow was shattered, rendering his left arm permanently useless, which had to be supported in a sling. In January 1917 he was promoted to lieutenant.

Despite the handicaps resulting from his wounds, he convinced the authorities to return him to front line service.

For his actions as an Intelligence Officer near Westhoek on the 20th of September 1917, he was awarded the Military Cross (MC). With only one functioning arm and the added handicap of a walking stick, he managed to single-handedly capture 20 German prisoners and gather important information.

On Christmas Day, he had a narrow escape from a sniper when a bullet was stopped by his field notebook and cigarette case as it tore through his breast pocket. In early 1918 he was posted to the Australian War Records Section in England but following numerous appeals to his superiors he returned to his battalion in France in May as captain in command of 'A' company.

His actions near Morlancourt on the 10th of June 1918, were recognised with the award of a further MC, represented by a bar on the ribbon of the original medal. During the fighting he moved across no-mans-land, ten metres in front of his men, directing the attacking line with his walking stick hanging from his useless left arm and a watch in his right hand. Despite the danger he frequently had his back to the enemy while following closely behind the creeping artillery barrage, and would occasionally straighten the line with a wave of his stick. When his men followed him into the German trench, Captain Hammond had already captured a number of enemy prisoners. He was mortally wounded by a sniper’s bullet the following day and died on the 14th.

A fellow officer said of Captain Hammond that 'I am quite sure that [he] did not know what fear meant…I never once saw him duck for either a shell or a bullet'. He is buried in Vignacourt Cemetery.

Lest We Forget.

Photograph and information came from the Australian War Memorial. Image file number AWM A03367

10/01/2022

Lady Dorothie Mary Evelyn Feilding-Moore was a British heiress who shunned her aristocratic background to become a highly decorated volunteer nurse and ambulance driver on the Western Front during WW1. She was the first woman to be awarded the Military Medal for bravery in the field. She also received the 1914 Star, the Croix de guerre from the French and the Order of Leopold II from the Belgians for services to their wounded.

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