The large flag draped the coffin of my Uncle Harold, who served in WW2 in the SouthPacific. He was, oops, is a Marine ("Once a Marine, always a Marine") and he survived the GuadalCanal invasion. I have never met a Marine who could talk about those days, without choking up with tears rising in their eyes and some of them spilling over, as they began to relive those sad days. It was easier not to talk about that day. In those days men didn't boast or complain about the horror they witnessed. He was a big man, standing 6'4", and he talked like a gangster, for you see, he was from New York, and this little girl idealized him. He was my Uncle Harold.
Friday, July 4, 2008
OLD GLORY STILL FLIES
The large flag draped the coffin of my Uncle Harold, who served in WW2 in the SouthPacific. He was, oops, is a Marine ("Once a Marine, always a Marine") and he survived the GuadalCanal invasion. I have never met a Marine who could talk about those days, without choking up with tears rising in their eyes and some of them spilling over, as they began to relive those sad days. It was easier not to talk about that day. In those days men didn't boast or complain about the horror they witnessed. He was a big man, standing 6'4", and he talked like a gangster, for you see, he was from New York, and this little girl idealized him. He was my Uncle Harold.
Labels: knit, crochet, yarn, fiber, ravelry
Harold Smithers 4th-of-July Marines Semper-Fi GuadalCanal honor duty uncle WW2 World-War-2 Great-War Tears
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2 comments:
What a beautiful post. My grandfather served in WW 2 and he never boasted either. He would tell stories though that were very inpiring.
Thank you for the comment on my "un-invention."
Keep on Knitting, your pink hat is very pretty:)
Thank you for your support. Very nice hearing from u.
Sally
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