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    Bob Harmon

    Victory In Europe – VE Day

    May 7, 2024 by denisefrisino Leave a Comment

    Victory In Europe – VE Day

    On September 3, 1939 the British and France declared war on Germany after the Nazi’s invaded Poland. On December 11, 1941, after the United States was attacked by the Japanese at Pearl Harbor, Germany declared war on the US.

    Six years of global battle for the Brits and four years for America had taken their toll when finally Germany fell to the combined forces of the Allies.

    On May 7th, 1945 the first unconditional surrender of Germany ending WWII was signed. Due to some needed rewriting of the legal document, the definitive Act of Military Surrender, was signed by all parties and recorded as midnight on May 8th.


    Those at the table included the Allied Expeditionary Force, the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW), the Supreme High Command of the Soviet Red Army, along with other French and US representatives signing as witnesses. Thus, May 8th is the day most celebrate the end of the Second World War.

    The press had already been leaked the information so some headlines around the globe reflect the first signing at Reims on May 7th as the end of the war in Europe.

    The events leading up to this glorious day were hard fought and deadly.

    Troops under General’s Dwight D. Eisenhower and George Patton had just fought through one of the coldest winters in history on the Western Front, the Battle of the Bulge, considered the bloodiest and largest single battle fought in Europe by the US during WWII.

    By April of 1945 the German Army, many of them untrained young teenagers, were spread in small pockets across Europe fighting a losing battle.

    By the end of March, the combined forces of the Allies had reached the eastern shores of the Rhine River. On April 25th, Americans and Russian troops meet for the first time at the Elbe River. The East and West united against the Nazi’s.

    Since mid-February the United States Air Force, along with the British RAF, had been dropping thousands of bombs demolishing Dresden. The bombing of larger German towns continued.

    Allied victory was imminent.

    Top-Right: Berlin. Bottom Row: Dresden, Dresden, Cologne, Nuremburg .

    After May 2nd, when the Soviets took Berlin, the Associated Press claimed:

    “Berlin, greatest city of the European Continent, fell yesterday afternoon to the Russians as 70,000 German troops laid down their arms in the surrender that Adolf Hitler had said never would come.”

    Thousands of German soldiers surrender, with towns showing little resistance, as the Allies claimed the remaining territory held by the Nazis.

    The first exchange toward surrender between the Germans and Allies happened in western Holland on April 28th, the same day Mussolini’s fascist state collapsed and the Russians furthered their attacks in Berlin. The Nazi world was crumbling. In two days’ time, Hitler would take his own life.

    It is said that the Germans preferred to surrender to the Allies rather than to the Red Army as they did not believe the Russians would honor the terms of surrender for the German civilians.

    World War Two Rages On

    With the war in Europe over, pressure mounted to end the continuing battle with Japan, a country whose troops would rather commit suicide, than surrender. For many of the young American soldiers who had just finished battling in Europe yet did not have the required amount of time in the service to be released, their biggest fear was being sent to the Pacific Theater.

    Professor Bob Harmon who taught for decades at Seattle University, and is featured in the attached video filmed in 2017, remembers the surrender of Weimar, Germany very well. It was April 12th, the day he turned 20, when his squad accepted the Germans surrender. He also told me he didn’t think he would survive if sent to Japan. He felt he had used up all of his ‘good luck’ surviving the Battle of the Bulge through to the end of the war. He was thrilled to be assigned guarding the salt mines at Altaussee, Austria, where all the valuable artwork, gold and other prizes sized by Hitlers men had been stored. Then later in life, meeting George Clooney as he made the movie, Monuments Men. (That story to follow.)

    We are forever grateful to the likes of Harmon and all who fought across Europe to bring us Victory in Europe Day – V E Day. And to those who continued to fight for our freedom across the Pacific against Japan.


    Thank you for Our Freedom.

    Filed Under: Armed Forces, V-E Day, World War II Tagged With: 1945, Act of Military Surrender, Allied Victory, Bob Harmon, Elbe River, General’s Eisenhower and Patton, Germany Surrenders, Hitler, Japanese, May 7, May 8, Monuments Men, Mussolini’s fascist, Nazi’s Surrender, Oberkommando der Wehrmacht, Pearl Harbor, Rhine River, Russians, Soviet Red Army, unconditional surrender of Germany, US Armies, VE Day, Victory in Europe, World War Two, WWII Ends

    Victory In Europe – VE Day

    May 6, 2021 by denisefrisino Leave a Comment

    Victory In Europe – VE Day

    On September 3, 1939 the British and France declared war on Germany after the Nazi’s invaded Poland. On December 11, 1941, after the United States was attacked by the Japanese at Pearl Harbor, Germany declared war on the US.

    Six years of global battle for the Brits and four years for America had taken their toll when finally Germany fell to the combined forces of the Allies.

    On May 7th, 1945 the first unconditional surrender of Germany ending WWII was signed. Due to some needed rewriting of the legal document, the definitive Act of Military Surrender, was signed by all parties and recorded as midnight on May 8th.


    Those at the table included the Allied Expeditionary Force, the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW), the Supreme High Command of the Soviet Red Army, along with other French and US representatives signing as witnesses. Thus, May 8th is the day most celebrate the end of the Second World War.

    The press had already been leaked the information so some headlines around the globe reflect the first signing at Reims on May 7th as the end of the war in Europe.

    The events leading up to this glorious day were hard fought and deadly.

    Troops under General’s Dwight D. Eisenhower and George Patton had just fought through one of the coldest winters in history on the Western Front, the Battle of the Bulge, considered the bloodiest and largest single battle fought in Europe by the US during WWII.

    By April of 1945 the German Army, many of them untrained young teenagers, were spread in small pockets across Europe fighting a losing battle.

    By the end of March, the combined forces of the Allies had reached the eastern shores of the Rhine River. On April 25th, Americans and Russian troops meet for the first time at the Elbe River. The East and West united against the Nazi’s.

    Since mid-February the United States Air Force, along with the British RAF, had been dropping thousands of bombs demolishing Dresden. The bombing of larger German towns continued.

    Allied victory was imminent.

    Top-Right: Berlin. Bottom Row: Dresden, Dresden, Cologne, Nuremburg .

    After May 2nd, when the Soviets took Berlin, the Associated Press claimed:

    “Berlin, greatest city of the European Continent, fell yesterday afternoon to the Russians as 70,000 German troops laid down their arms in the surrender that Adolf Hitler had said never would come.”

    Thousands of German soldiers surrender, with towns showing little resistance, as the Allies claimed the remaining territory held by the Nazis.

    The first exchange toward surrender between the Germans and Allies happened in western Holland on April 28th, the same day Mussolini’s fascist state collapsed and the Russians furthered their attacks in Berlin. The Nazi world was crumbling. In two days’ time, Hitler would take his own life.

    It is said that the Germans preferred to surrender to the Allies rather than to the Red Army as they did not believe the Russians would honor the terms of surrender for the German civilians.

    World War Two Rages On

    With the war in Europe over, pressure mounted to end the continuing battle with Japan, a country whose troops would rather commit suicide, than surrender. For many of the young American soldiers who had just finished battling in Europe yet did not have the required amount of time in the service to be released, their biggest fear was being sent to the Pacific Theater.

    Professor Bob Harmon who taught for decades at Seattle University, and is featured in the attached video filmed in 2017, remembers the surrender of Weimar, Germany very well. It was April 12th, the day he turned 20, when his squad accepted the Germans surrender. He also told me he didn’t think he would survive if sent to Japan. He felt he had used up all of his ‘good luck’ surviving the Battle of the Bulge through to the end of the war. He was thrilled to be assigned guarding the salt mines at Altaussee, Austria, where all the valuable artwork, gold and other prizes sized by Hitlers men had been stored. Then later in life, meeting George Clooney as he made the movie, Monuments Men. (That story to follow.)

    We are forever grateful to the likes of Harmon and all who fought across Europe to bring us Victory in Europe Day – V E Day. And to those who continued to fight for our freedom across the Pacific against Japan.

    Thank you for Our Freedom.

    Filed Under: Armed Forces, V-E Day, World War II Tagged With: 1945, Act of Military Surrender, Allied Victory, Bob Harmon, Elbe River, General’s Eisenhower and Patton, Germany Surrenders, Hitler, Japanese, May 7, May 8, Monuments Men, Mussolini’s fascist, Nazi’s Surrender, Oberkommando der Wehrmacht, Pearl Harbor, Rhine River, Russians, Soviet Red Army, unconditional surrender of Germany, US Armies, VE Day, Victory in Europe, World War Two, WWII Ends

    D-Day Mistakes, Madness and Miracles –The First Wave

    June 5, 2019 by denisefrisino Leave a Comment

    The very few living survivors of the ‘First Wave’ at D-Day all concur on one thing—tragic mistakes were made that morning of June 6, 1944, costing thousands of Allied lives.

    For starters, the landing parties headed ashore later in the day than planned. They missed the opportunity of the lowest tide and the deeper water would claim hundreds of young lives.

    For many, this was their first battle, fresh from their training grounds these soldiers were to attack the battle hardened, dug in enemy. The Germans had prepared the beach with land mines, barbered wire, barricades and a strip of heavy wire that ran across the surf impacting the landing crafts.

    Just before the troops were sent ashore, Allied planes flew low across the beach laying down a protective smoke screen. However, this screen worked in reverse for many of the landing parties creating confusion as they could not tell where they were heading. Eventually, when the winds lifted the film, the Germans sitting above on Omaha Beach in their pill boxes made light work of the wet, anxious soldiers below them.

    ‘Artillery Joe’ Mehelich

    ‘Artillery Joe’ Mehelich, Private First Class, was a young man among the brave soldiers that survived the ‘First Wave.’ Previously, Joe had arrived in Africa to fight with the 2nd Armored Division at age seventeen, months before the attack on Pearl Harbor. At one point, Joe was hit and forced to pour sand over his body to extinguish the leaping flames spreading up his arms and over his boots. While severely burned and unable to wear shoes, he got ‘right back in the tank’ and kept fighting on. In fact, ‘Artillery Joe’, the nickname given to him by his troop, would go on to fight in all five major battles.

    After his company helped secure Sicily, ‘Artillery Joe’ was sent to England for the major assault of D Day. He and a fellow soldier from his company were placed in a DUKW, ‘Duck’, for the landing on Omaha Beach along with about 38 green ‘kids’. The two experienced warriors were there to provide calm for the novice soldiers unaccustomed to battle, to the deafening blast from the enemy’s heavy armor on the cliffs above attempting to sink their transport, and the unnerving number of injured and dying men washing ashore along the sand and surf.

    The result was horrific. Frightened, praying, calling for their mothers, the youth rushed over the sides, some carrying their duffel bags, into the chilling deep water only to be pulled under the rough sea by the weight of their supplies needed to defend themselves.

    Joe tried to stop them, but their fear and duty to America stripped them of reason.

    Only Joe, his friend from his original company and one of the boys from the boat made it to shore. As the three determined which way to head in the dense haze, it began to lift, and they came under attack from a barrage of gunfire from the Germans waiting above in their pill boxes. Miraculously, all lived to fight another day.

    Iconic photos by Robert Capa.
    Above, Hu Riley, 22, of Mercer Island, WA struggles ashore on Omaha Beach

    In the midst of D Day, a young John Joachims fearlessly drove his tank into battle at Normandy. He was eighteen. He would often retell of the horror spread around him on the beach, such a place of beauty transformed to a graveyard of overwhelming magnitude.

    Joachim, 18, celebrates surviving the landing at Normandy Beach.

    The special regiment, the 320th Anti-Aircraft Barrage Balloon Battalion, were trained to handle the large hydrogen filled barrage balloons that floated at about 200 feet, to protect the soldiers and tanks coming ashore. They were the first African American unit to land on D Day and the only balloon unit in France. Although Waverly B. Woodson Jr., an injured medic, was nominated for a Medal of Honor, he never received the medal.

    The first twenty-four hours of ‘Operation Overlord’ claimed thousands of lives. Those lost souls were not only Americans, but also our Allies, the Canadians, the British, and the French. One report claims, between June 6th, 1944 to July 1st of that year the United States casualties totaled 22,119. Missing, possibly some of the young boys swept out to sea, tallied 5,665 American soldiers. A startling 2,811 were killed with 13,564 reported wounded. Of the 79 taken prisoner, their eventual fate is not listed. Many of the dead never fired their guns.

    The drudgery of ‘Operation Overlord’ would last until August 25, 1944. Bob Harman, made it ashore in early August, as the troops were breaking out of Normandy on their way east. Far from being a secured safe zone, Bob remembers the first person he witnessed being shot by a sniper. The German sharpshooter had killed a Medic. Bob instantly understood the brutality of the enemy. The Germans wanted to eliminate anyone who could bring aide to an injured soldier or the dying. To this day, Bob honors the fallen Medic by displaying his blood-stained white arm band with the red cross in a beautiful glass case. Bob carried the Medic’s arm band through many clashes, including the Battle of the Bulge, as a reminder that survival in war is rudimentary: kill or be killed.

    Bob Harmon, Professor Emeritus of History, Seattle University, lectures at Paul Allen’s Flying Heritage & Combat Armor Museum.

    If you have not stood on the cliffs above the designated area called Omaha Beach, where the most difficult landing occurred, or walked the sands of Normandy, be sure to do so. The wind-swept surf carries a hint of the souls lost in this devastating conflict. You will be moved beyond imaging.

    Normandy Today

    On this 75th Anniversary of D Day remember those who gave their all to defend our country and freedom.

    Remember that during World War II, on June 6, 1944, this victory for our freedom came at the most precious price–
    brave young lives.

    WWII Normandy American Cemetery

    Filed Under: Air Force, Armed Forces, Army, D Day, Marines, Military, Navy, U.S. Army Nurse Corps, USCG, World War II Tagged With: ‘Duck’, 2nd Armored Division, 320th Barrage Balloon Battalion, 75th Anniversary of D Day, barbered wire, barricades, Bob Capa, Bob Harmon, British, Canadians, DUKW, England, first African American unit, First Wave’ at D-Day, German, John Joachim, John Joachums, June 6 1944, land mines, Medal of Honor, museum of flight combat armor, Normandy, Omaha Beach, Operation Overlord, Paul Allen, Pearl Harbor, protective smoke screen, Waverly B. Woodson Jr., World War II, WWI, WWI Normandy American Cemetery

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