BlueLion wrote:1942 - My grandfather who flew for Pan American was suddenly in the Army Air Corps, flying VIP's between the states and England and my father started his tour in the pacific theater with the merchant marines.
Take time to talk to someone that live during that period before it's to late, some of the stories are incredible. Your coin will probably out last the entire generation.
My father didn't get in to the military in WW2 . . . a critical occupation here in the states, Railroad Engineer. And flat footed also.
He has written many stories, I have them on hard copy, about his adventures on troop trains, and other railroad adventures whilst he was railroading.
A much simpler time IMO. Good reading nonetheless. Rather like listening to Paul Harvey.
He's putting them all on a CD now, so they don't disappear.
When I drove up to Alaska after I retired in 2001, I drove thru Montana, thru a place names Harlowton. The old roundhouse for the Milwaukee Road is there, where they switched steam for electric. Pop use to tell me tales about an engineer named Heinie Schneider that owned a Steak House in Harlowton and would run the Milwaukee Road's Hiawatha between Harlowton and some other town . . . when the train would get back to Harlowton at 8pm, Heinie would always have a steak dinner from his restaurant delivered to the locomotive at the depot on arrival.
There are a lot of other interesting stories he's published. Good reading. Pay attention, the world isn't nearly as ssimple as it used to be.
LET'S GO BRANDON!!!!