Military Members post pics of you in your uniforms.

Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules

Ballad of the Green Beret

Fighting Soldiers from the Skies,
Fearless men, who jump and die!
Men who Mean, just what They say,
The brave men of the Green Beret!
Silver wings, upon their Chest,
These are men, America's Best!
One-Hundred men, will test Today,
Put on their Green
When the Green Beret!
Trained to live off Nature's Land,
Trained in Combat, hand-to-hand!
Men who fight, by Night and Day,
Courage ticked, from The Green Beret!
Silver Wings, upon their Chest!
These are men, America's Best!
One-Hundred Men, will test today,
Put on their Green, when the Green Beret!
Back at home a young wife waits,
Her Green Beret has meet his fate!
He has died for those oppressed!
Leaving her, this Last request,
Put Silver wings on my son's chest,
Make him one of America's best!
He'll be a man, they'll test one day,
Have him when, The Green Beret!


Thats my Favorite Army Song! Ballad of the Green Beret! My dad knew a Green Beret where he lived. Awesome story! Ill tell you guys later.
 
P38 Pilot said:
I dont know about that. He was very patriotic and seemed like a guy who might have been in the Texas National Guard.

He never served.....

Jimmy Stewart, Eddie Albert, Clark Gable, Gene Autry, Mel Brooks, Art Carney, Kirk Douglas, Charles Durning, Henry Fonda, Steve McQueen, and Charles Schultz all served in WW2
 
Art Carney - US Army. Carney went to Normandy in July of 1944 as a replacement to the 28th Division in position around St Lô. He was part of a 30 calibre machine gun squad. On 15 August 1944 he had just taken up his position and was hit in the right leg by mortar shrapnel. After receiving field treatment, he was sent back to Britain and then the US. He once said of his military career, "Never fired a shot and maybe never wanted to. I really cost the government money."

Check out this site:

http://www.jodavidsmeyer.com/combat/military/actors_in_wwii.html
 
FLYBOYJ said:
Art Carney - US Army. Carney went to Normandy in July of 1944 as a replacement to the 28th Division in position around St Lô. He was part of a 30 calibre machine gun squad. On 15 August 1944 he had just taken up his position and was hit in the right leg by mortar shrapnel. After receiving field treatment, he was sent back to Britain and then the US. He once said of his military career, "Never fired a shot and maybe never wanted to. I really cost the government money."

Check out this site:

http://www.jodavidsmeyer.com/combat/military/actors_in_wwii.html

Is that the 28th Infantry because my great-uncle who died in WW2 was with the 28th. He also landed a few days with Normandy at St. Lo.
 

Attachments

  • 28th_infantry_lrg_819.jpg
    28th_infantry_lrg_819.jpg
    11.4 KB · Views: 218
Fonda served for three years, initially as a Quartermaster 3rd Class on the destroyer USS Satterlee; he was later commissioned as a Lieutenant Junior Grade in Air Combat Intelligence in the Central Pacific and won a Presidential Citation and the Bronze Star.
 
I don't know if anyone would care, but a few famous Canadians I can think of who did their part during WWII were guys like James Doohan (as many of you already know), Leslie Nielson, and Lorne Greene. Doohan was in the Royal Canadian Artillery and was at Juno Beach on D-Day, Nielson was an aerial gunner in the RCAF, and although he didn't serve in the military, Lorne Greene was the most recognized voice on CBC Radio during the war. He was the main newscaster giving the war news to the country. He was givin the handle "The voice of doom", due to his deep voice and the often grim news he would report.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back