Hunt Talk Radio - Look for it on your favorite Podcast platform

Old Military Photos from Hunttalkers

We only ran buttoned up when we had to for training or were off trail driving over / thru the trees. The risk of a widow maker hurting some was too high. Otherwise with all those hatches open it wasn’t bad.

We had this beast too, nothing in the Army’s fleet that it won’t pull out of the worst situation.
I was in 3650th Maintenance Company training at Dugway, Utah when one of these overturned. They needed the big cranes to lift them off the bodies. Not a purty sight. I had to take pictures and do the LOD investigation paperwork while my LT wrote it up in draft form for me to do the formal paperwork. The driver and crew chief was partially ejected. Not sure how it flipped. That part went to higher ups to do a more detailed investigation.
 
I found a picture of my father when he was in the Filippines in WWII. I didn’t even know this picture existed until I saw it in the school where he was a kid and they had pictures of all the servicemen that served from Musselshell, Montana….

ED561305-C655-481B-BDA9-E0F634FA986B.jpeg
 
My Uncle Lee served in the US Army in northern Africa. My dad and mom, with a family of boys, moved to Portland to work in the shipyard building military landing craft boats during WWII. My dad was a welder and my mom was "Rosie the Riveter" and also a welder.

View attachment 255989
What a coincidence; in addition to helping build a high tension powerline across NY and most of New England to an aluminum plant, working at Laurinburg-Maxton Airbase where they trained glider pilots for the invasion, my Dad was a welder on Liberty ships in Wilmington, NC.
 
Received a pretty cool gift today , a bronze plaque my grandfather picked off the boat that he served on in Korea. He recently passed away peacefully at the age of 92. He served in Korea and Vietnam before retiring from the Navy. He was extremely proud of his service and made sure the last song to be played at his funeral was that dreaded Navy song.

Such an incredible generation between him and his brother (GREAT uncle Bob). He always made sure I emphasized the great. Uncle Bob served in WW2 (Pacific), Korea, and Vietnam. Even at a young age I was always fascinated with listening to them talk about their service time in different conflicts. Eventually, the tide of time turned and they were very interested and intrigued to listen to me and my buddies as we spoke about our time in GWOT and deployments.

Finally got the headstone set for Grandpa at the National Veterans cemetery in Kansas. He loved the Walnut Valley in south Central KS and that's where he'll rest. Uncle Bob got his wish after his passing and is in great company in Arlington.



My grandfather:

57668.jpeg

My GREAT uncle Bob:

31114.jpeg

The plaque:

PXL_20240919_152821336.jpg
 

Forum statistics

Threads
112,919
Messages
2,004,154
Members
35,899
Latest member
jacksoncsalmon
Back
Top