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How We Served, is an anecdotal history of a century of military and homefront service around the globe during times of peace and war. Told by the men and women who so served, or their loved ones, their service is memorialized to varying degrees, from longer first hand reflections, to shorter summations raising a hand to be counted as having been there. All are included, for all served, and that service deserves our remembrance, and our thanks.
How We Served, is an anecdotal history of a century of military and homefront service around the globe during times of peace and war. Told by the men and women who so served, or their loved ones, their service is memorialized to varying degrees, from longer first hand reflections, to shorter summations raising a hand to be counted as having been there. All are included, for all served, and that service deserves our remembrance, and our thanks.
How We Served, is an anecdotal history of a century of military and homefront service around the globe during times of peace and war. Told by the men and women who so served, or their loved ones, their service is memorialized to varying degrees, from longer first hand reflections, to shorter summations raising a hand to be counted as having been there. All are included, for all served, and that service deserves our remembrance, and our thanks.
How We Served, is an anecdotal history of a century of military and homefront service around the globe during times of peace and war. Told by the men and women who so served, or their loved ones, their service is memorialized to varying degrees, from longer first hand reflections, to shorter summations raising a hand to be counted as having been there. All are included, for all served, and that service deserves our remembrance, and our thanks.
Thirty Dollars a Day, One Day a Month is an anecdotal history of the Civilian Conservation Corps as told through by CCC men in their own words or through their recollections as provided by their family members. In addition it contains notations of the service of other men without elaboration, either by the CCC member himself or by his family.The Civilian Conservation Corps, or CCC, was a New Deal program that provided work for three million forced into unemployment by the Great Depression. During its existence from 1933 to 1942, the CCC men fought pestilence, forest fires and soil erosion in addition to opening our national and state parks to the public. It is hoped that through these pages the reader will learn what it was like to live in that time, to find hope and in the CCCs, to work in its camps, live in its barracks, make friends in its ranks, and feel a pride in its accomplishments. Volume II contains the information of men with last names beginning with the letters G to P.
Thirty Dollars a Day, One Day A Month, refers to the Monthly Salary paid to the three million members of the Civilian Conservation Corps from 1933 to 1942. Within these pages are contained memories and memorials in the words of CCC Enrollees or their families. Some are merely hands raised to be counted as one of those who participated in this unique and important part of American history. Others are windows into those desperate times and the hope and pride the young men of the CCCs gained from working in thousands of camps spread across the nation. All are presented to honor those men who helped pull America back from the brink of ruin and lead it onward to Victory in War and Prosperity in Peace.
How We Served, is an anecdotal history of a century of military and homefront service around the globe during times of peace and war. Told by the men and women who so served, or their loved ones, their service is memorialized to varying degrees, from longer first hand reflections, to shorter summations raising a hand to be counted as having been there. All are included, for all served, and that service deserves our remembrance, and our thanks.
How We Served, is an anecdotal history of a century of military and homefront service around the globe during times of peace and war. Told by the men and women who so served, or their loved ones, their service is memorialized to varying degrees, from longer first hand reflections, to shorter summations raising a hand to be counted as having been there. All are included, for all served, and that service deserves our remembrance, and our thanks. This Volume, Volume IV, Veteran Memories M to P, tells the tales of men whose last names start with the letters M to P.
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