FOX LAKE, IiewiczLL -- The shooting death of Lt. Charles Joseph Gliniewicz on Tuesday is the
lastest in a string killings that have claimed the lives of law enforcement officers and military personnel since early spring.
Gliniewicz, the father of four sons, was responding to three suspicious people near Route 12 and Sayton Road in Fox Lake, a town about 60 miles north of Chicago, when the 52-year-old officer was shot, according to ABC7Chicago.
Hundreds of law enforcement, military and marine personnel participated in a 14-hour manhunt for the suspects after he was killed. The manhunt was called off Wednesday, but the investigation of his death and search for the three suspects -- two white and one black -- will continue, according to Lake County Major Crimes Task Force Chief George Filenko.
Links:
http://abc7chicago.com/news/fox-lake-manhunt-ends-after-officer-killed/966463/
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
Memorial Day Ceremonies Continued Despite Rain, Wind
SOUTH MISSISSIPPI -- Rain curtailed some outdoor activities during the Memorial Day Weekend, but residents throughout the six counties found ways to honor military personnel who have given their lives to safeguard the U.S. and its way of life.
Several people walked through the Mississippi Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Ocean Springs, leaving bouquets of flowers and other mementos. There was no official ceremony, but flags flew at half-staff, in many countries a symbol of respect, mourning or distress.
In Gautier, rain moved the second annual Avenue of Flags from the state's only Veterans' Tribute Tower outside Gautier City Hall to indoors at American Legion Post 1992, event co-sponsor along with the City of Gautier.
"It turned out wonderful. We knew the weather was going to be bad, so we moved it inside of the building and huge crowds. Everybody was standing and singing God Bless America. Let me tell you, our fallen heroes are not forgotten," said local American Legion Commander Bill Whitely said. -- WLOX TV-13
Gautier Holds Emotional Service to Honor Fallen Soldiers
WLOX TV-13/May
In addition, Veterans Post 2539 and the City of Gulfport paid special recognition to Vietnam veterans Chief Master Sgt. Richard Etchberger and Construction Mechanic 3rd class Marvin Shields, both Medal of Honor recipients, during a Memorial Day ceremony at Jones Park.
The annual service at Biloxi National Cemetery featured Capt. Paul Odenthal, commanding officer of Naval Construction Battalion Center in Gulfport. WLOX reported that more than 200 people showed up for the ceremony that included threatening clouds but people undaunted by the weather. Volunteers had spent the weekend decorating the cemetery's military gravesites with small flags, and reclaimed those flags today.
Veterans Post 139 hosted a ceremony at St. Mary's Cemetery in Bay St. Louis.
D'Lo, which is reported to have had more residents per capita serve in World War II, conducted a service for military personnel who have died in American wars and conflicts.
Memorial Day Services Honor Fallen Soldiers
Sun Herald/May 24, 2015
Remembrance and Celebration Memorial Day has Serious, Lighter Sides
Sun Herald/May 23, 2015
Visit media sets at WLOX TV-13, Sun Herald, and Mississippi Press for online broadcasts, articles and photographs of services and events in South Mississippi.
Several people walked through the Mississippi Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Ocean Springs, leaving bouquets of flowers and other mementos. There was no official ceremony, but flags flew at half-staff, in many countries a symbol of respect, mourning or distress.
In Gautier, rain moved the second annual Avenue of Flags from the state's only Veterans' Tribute Tower outside Gautier City Hall to indoors at American Legion Post 1992, event co-sponsor along with the City of Gautier.
"It turned out wonderful. We knew the weather was going to be bad, so we moved it inside of the building and huge crowds. Everybody was standing and singing God Bless America. Let me tell you, our fallen heroes are not forgotten," said local American Legion Commander Bill Whitely said. -- WLOX TV-13
Gautier Holds Emotional Service to Honor Fallen Soldiers
WLOX TV-13/May
In addition, Veterans Post 2539 and the City of Gulfport paid special recognition to Vietnam veterans Chief Master Sgt. Richard Etchberger and Construction Mechanic 3rd class Marvin Shields, both Medal of Honor recipients, during a Memorial Day ceremony at Jones Park.
The annual service at Biloxi National Cemetery featured Capt. Paul Odenthal, commanding officer of Naval Construction Battalion Center in Gulfport. WLOX reported that more than 200 people showed up for the ceremony that included threatening clouds but people undaunted by the weather. Volunteers had spent the weekend decorating the cemetery's military gravesites with small flags, and reclaimed those flags today.
Veterans Post 139 hosted a ceremony at St. Mary's Cemetery in Bay St. Louis.
D'Lo, which is reported to have had more residents per capita serve in World War II, conducted a service for military personnel who have died in American wars and conflicts.
Memorial Day Services Honor Fallen Soldiers
Sun Herald/May 24, 2015
Remembrance and Celebration Memorial Day has Serious, Lighter Sides
Sun Herald/May 23, 2015
Visit media sets at WLOX TV-13, Sun Herald, and Mississippi Press for online broadcasts, articles and photographs of services and events in South Mississippi.
Monday, May 18, 2015
Family, Friends, Comrades Remember Officer Tate
HATTIESBURG, Miss. -- The second officer who was gunned down earlier this month was laid to rest when services for Officer Liquori Tate were conducted Saturday among remembrances of his dedication to law enforcement and passion for life.
Tate, 25, and Patrolman Benjamin Deen, 34, were shot and killed May 9 during a traffic stop near East Fourth and Bouie streets.
Thousands Attend Funeral for 2nd Slain Hattiesburg Officer
Sun Herald/May 16, 2015
Media outlets estimate that more than 2,000 people, including law enforcement officers from across the U.S., lined the streets and attended the visitation, funeral and final procession for the young officer. Among those were the family of Officer Deen, who attended the service at West Point Baptist Church. Tate's family had attended Deen's funeral on Thursday.
Photos: Funeral for Officer Liquori Tate
Hattiesburg American
Family and friends said that Tate, known as "CoCo," was passionate about his chosen career, family and life, according to report from the Hattiesburg American, and had had a childhood dream of becoming a law enforcement officer. Fellow officers said he
Visitation for Officer Liquori Tate
Hattiesburg American
"Life is too short. So if I die today I'm happy how my life turned out. And I'm happy that I had a chance to meet the people that I met and I enjoyed every moment that I have spent with each and every one of them. That's my word." -- Liquori Tate on Facebook, as reported by Sun Herald.
Tate was shy just under a month from celebrating a year as a police officer with the Hattiesburg Police Department. He was sworn in June 11, 2014. He had worked for ABC Security prior to that.
Tate, 25, and Patrolman Benjamin Deen, 34, were shot and killed May 9 during a traffic stop near East Fourth and Bouie streets.
Thousands Attend Funeral for 2nd Slain Hattiesburg Officer
Sun Herald/May 16, 2015
Media outlets estimate that more than 2,000 people, including law enforcement officers from across the U.S., lined the streets and attended the visitation, funeral and final procession for the young officer. Among those were the family of Officer Deen, who attended the service at West Point Baptist Church. Tate's family had attended Deen's funeral on Thursday.
Photos: Funeral for Officer Liquori Tate
Hattiesburg American
Family and friends said that Tate, known as "CoCo," was passionate about his chosen career, family and life, according to report from the Hattiesburg American, and had had a childhood dream of becoming a law enforcement officer. Fellow officers said he
Visitation for Officer Liquori Tate
Hattiesburg American
"Life is too short. So if I die today I'm happy how my life turned out. And I'm happy that I had a chance to meet the people that I met and I enjoyed every moment that I have spent with each and every one of them. That's my word." -- Liquori Tate on Facebook, as reported by Sun Herald.
Tate was shy just under a month from celebrating a year as a police officer with the Hattiesburg Police Department. He was sworn in June 11, 2014. He had worked for ABC Security prior to that.
Friday, May 15, 2015
20-year-old Naval Academy Student Among Victims of Amtrak Derailment
PHILADELPHIA -- Justin Zemser, a 20-year-old midshipman at the U.S.
Naval Academy in Maryland, will be the first of victim of this week's Amtrak derailment to be buried when funeral services are held today at the Boulevard-Riverside-Hewlett Chapel on Long Island.
The sophomore student lives in New York City and was on his way home from Annapolis, Maryland, when the train derailed Tuesday night. He wanted to be a Navy Seal, and was an only child, according to a report from CNN.
Zemser was among eight people killed and more than 200 injured among the 243 people aboard train 188 in the Philadelphia, Penn., wreck.
ABCNEWS reported profiles of Zemser and the other victims who include Laura Finamore, Derrick Griffith, Jim Gaines, Bob Gildersleeve, Abid Gilani, Rachel Jacobs, and Giuseppe Piras.
PROFILE:
Photo from Google.com
Photo from Google.com
Justin Zemser, a popular student leader and athlete, was on a break from the U.S. Naval Academy and heading home to Rockaway Beach, New York, where playing high school football helped him and his teammates through the devastation of Superstorm Sandy.
Navy Secretary Ray Mabus called Zemser a "crucial member" of the institution.
The 20-year-old's family released a statement mourning "a loving son, nephew and cousin who was very community-minded." They said the tragedy "has shocked us all in the worst way."
Zemser was in his second year. He served as vice president of the Jewish Midshipmen Club and played wide receiver on the academy's sprint football team. Friends at the Naval Academy remembered him for his endearing leadership qualities.
Midshipman James Lieto recalled how his sprint football teammate helped lead first-year students through the academy's Sea Trials hours before the crash. The trials, which began at 3 a.m. on Tuesday, encompass a rigorous 14-hour day of physical challenges.
Zemser, who was known as "Z," wore a floppy sun hat in the early morning darkness to lighten the mood.
"He was always there to pick other people up," Lieto said Thursday.
At Channel View School for Research in New York, Zemser was valedictorian, student government president and captain of the football team.
Outside of school, Zemser interned for New York City Councilman Eric Ulrich and former Councilman James Sanders. Ulrich called him "truly a bright, talented and patriotic young man."
Zemser also volunteered with a church program, a soup kitchen and a nursing home and mentored children with autism, U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer said. Schumer and U.S. Rep. Gregory Meeks nominated Zemser to the Naval Academy, and Meeks was struck by his "high character, intellectual curiosity and maturity beyond his years."
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Patrolman Benjamin Deen Laid to Rest
HATTIESBURG, Miss. -- Patrolman Benjamin J. Deen was laid to rest today during a funeral service
and final procession that included hundreds of law enforcement members from across the United States.
Deen was one of two Hattiesburg police officers gunned down May 9 during a traffic stop. Officer Liquori Tate, 25, whose family attended the service for Deen,will be laid to rest on Saturday.
Officers from as far as New York City attended the service that remembered Deen, 34, as a dedicated officer, family man, and friend with a great sense of humor.
Hundreds of residents not attending service at Temple Baptist Church lined the streets for the procession to the church and to Deen's final resting place at Military Baptist in Sumrall.
Colleagues From Around US Attend Funeral for Slain Hattiesburg Officer
Sun Herald/May 14, 2015
Photographs of funeral ceremonies
Sun Herald/May 14, 2015
Officer Deen Remembered for Service, Humor, Devotion to Family
WLOX-TV/photos/May 14, 2015
and final procession that included hundreds of law enforcement members from across the United States.
Deen was one of two Hattiesburg police officers gunned down May 9 during a traffic stop. Officer Liquori Tate, 25, whose family attended the service for Deen,will be laid to rest on Saturday.
Officers from as far as New York City attended the service that remembered Deen, 34, as a dedicated officer, family man, and friend with a great sense of humor.
Hundreds of residents not attending service at Temple Baptist Church lined the streets for the procession to the church and to Deen's final resting place at Military Baptist in Sumrall.
Colleagues From Around US Attend Funeral for Slain Hattiesburg Officer
Sun Herald/May 14, 2015
Photographs of funeral ceremonies
Sun Herald/May 14, 2015
Officer Deen Remembered for Service, Humor, Devotion to Family
WLOX-TV/photos/May 14, 2015
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Candlelight Vigil Honors Mississippi Fallen Officers
JACKSON, Miss. -- Attorney General Jim Hood and the Mississippi Association of Chiefs of Police join together to host the state’s fifth annual “Mississippi Fallen Law Enforcement Officer’s Candlelight Vigil.”
The event will be held today, May 12, at 6:30 p.m. at the Mississippi Fallen Officers Memorial between the Sillers and Gartin Justice buildings off High Street in downtown Jackson.
“We began this ceremony five years ago following the creation of the memorial wall,” said Attorney General Hood. “If you haven’t had a chance to visit the memorial, this is a great opportunity to do so and to honor our state’s fallen officers.
"Since we last held this ceremony, Mississippi has lost seven heroes in the line of duty, two in 2014 and five in 2015. There are another 227 names on the memorial,” he said.
Mississippi’s most recently fallen officers are:
John Thomas Collum May 9, 2014 Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks
John Robert Street December 16, 2014 George Co. S.O.
John Ballard Gorman January 21, 2015 Mississippi Gaming Commission
Johnny Gatson March 10, 2015 Warren Co. S.O.
Josie Wells March 10, 2015 United States Marshals Service
Liquori Tate May 9, 2015 Hattiesburg Police Department
Benjamin Deen March 9, 2015 Hattiesburg Police Department
“This vigil is a chance to come together and remember our fallen comrades and to pray for the safety of all our state’s law enforcement officers as they serve and protect,” said Ken Winter, executive director of the Mississippi Association of Chiefs of Police.
Members of the public, along with family and friends of any Mississippi law enforcement officer killed in the line of duty, are invited to join officers from the Mississippi Chiefs of Police Association, the Mississippi Sheriffs Association, the Mississippi Highway Patrol, the Mississippi Wildlife and Fisheries Department, the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics, and the Mississippi Attorney General’s Office at the event.
Community Mourns 2 Officers, Funerals Planned in Hattiesburg
Officers Liquori Tate, 25, and Benjamin Deen,34, were killed in the line of duty Saturday, May 9, 2015, while performing a routine traffic stop in Hattiesburg, Miss. A candlelight vigil for the men was held May 11.
SOUTH MISSISSIPPI -- Officers from South Mississippi attended the vigil held Monday to honor and remember two Hattiesburg officers killed May 9 during a traffic stop.
Liquori Tate, 25, and Benjamin Deen, 34, were shot during a routine traffic stop on Fourth Street, and died shortly after arriving at Forrest County General Hospital for treatment to save their lives. Coroner Butch Benedict told media outlets that one officer was shot in the face and the other was shot in the back.
Four people were arrested Sunday in the deaths of the Hattiesburg officers. Marvin Banks, 26, and Joanie Calloway, 22, have been charged with capital murder. Curtis Banks, 29, has been charged with accessory after the fact for capital murder. Cornelius Clark has been charged with obstruction of justice. The Mississippi Bureau of Investigation is handling the case.
2 Hattiesburg officers killed; 4 suspects in custody
The Clarion-Ledger/May 11, 2015
Tate graduated from the Mississippi Police Academy in June 2014. He was a graduate of South Pike High and Southwest Mississippi Community College before joining the Hattiesburg Police Department.
"I graduated the Police Academy today. I am now a Police Officer. I would like to thank God, the Police Academy, the Police Department, my family, friends, and love ones." -- Liquori Tate/Facebook/June 11
Deen was a K-9 officer with the HPD, and had been named Officer of the Year in 2012.
Hattiesburg Mayor Johnny DuPree and Gov. Phil Bryant spoke during the vigil held Monday night to honor and remember the two officers.
Services for Deen have been set. Visitation will be 5-8 p.m. Wednesday at West Temple Baptist Church campus Funeral service will be at 11 a.m. at the church campus with a ceremony following at the Military Baptist Church Cemetery in Sumrall.
Funeral arrangements released for both fallen officers
WLOX TV-13/May 12, 2015
Funeral arrangements for Tate include visitation from 5-8 p.m. Friday followed by the service at West Point Baptist Church on Hartfield Road in Hattiesburg.
South Mississippi includes the six counties of Jackson, Harrison, Hancock, Pearl River, Stone and George, and is the location of the metropolitan area of Gulfport and Biloxi.
SOUTH MISSISSIPPI -- Officers from South Mississippi attended the vigil held Monday to honor and remember two Hattiesburg officers killed May 9 during a traffic stop.
Liquori Tate, 25, and Benjamin Deen, 34, were shot during a routine traffic stop on Fourth Street, and died shortly after arriving at Forrest County General Hospital for treatment to save their lives. Coroner Butch Benedict told media outlets that one officer was shot in the face and the other was shot in the back.
Four people were arrested Sunday in the deaths of the Hattiesburg officers. Marvin Banks, 26, and Joanie Calloway, 22, have been charged with capital murder. Curtis Banks, 29, has been charged with accessory after the fact for capital murder. Cornelius Clark has been charged with obstruction of justice. The Mississippi Bureau of Investigation is handling the case.
2 Hattiesburg officers killed; 4 suspects in custody
The Clarion-Ledger/May 11, 2015
Tate graduated from the Mississippi Police Academy in June 2014. He was a graduate of South Pike High and Southwest Mississippi Community College before joining the Hattiesburg Police Department.
"I graduated the Police Academy today. I am now a Police Officer. I would like to thank God, the Police Academy, the Police Department, my family, friends, and love ones." -- Liquori Tate/Facebook/June 11
Deen was a K-9 officer with the HPD, and had been named Officer of the Year in 2012.
Hattiesburg Mayor Johnny DuPree and Gov. Phil Bryant spoke during the vigil held Monday night to honor and remember the two officers.
Services for Deen have been set. Visitation will be 5-8 p.m. Wednesday at West Temple Baptist Church campus Funeral service will be at 11 a.m. at the church campus with a ceremony following at the Military Baptist Church Cemetery in Sumrall.
Funeral arrangements released for both fallen officers
WLOX TV-13/May 12, 2015
Funeral arrangements for Tate include visitation from 5-8 p.m. Friday followed by the service at West Point Baptist Church on Hartfield Road in Hattiesburg.
South Mississippi includes the six counties of Jackson, Harrison, Hancock, Pearl River, Stone and George, and is the location of the metropolitan area of Gulfport and Biloxi.
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Graduate Inspires Veterans, Students at 15th Annual Breakfast
Tullibee Base submariners and auxiliary members Camilla Edmonds, Jane Hayes, Glen Keller, Steve Walmsley, Herb Edmonds, Charles Gillies, and Glen Bremenkamp were among hundreds of veterans and their family, friends and coastal residents who attended the Gautier High School 15th Annual Veterans Breakfast on Monday. Wounded veteran Anthony McDaniel, a 2006 GHS graduate, was among highlights of the program. (Photo provided by Jane Hayes)
Monday, November 10, 2014
Marine Corps Turns 239 Years Old Today
By KELSEY DRISCOLL
AOL
On November 10, 1775, Philadelphia native Captain Samuel Nicholas formed the the first two battalions of the Continental Marines of the American Revolutionary War after realizing the need for a group able to battle both on water and on land. That institution has transformed and evolved into the few, the proud: the modern day United States Marine Corps.
Today marks 239 years since the creation of the Marine Corps, and it has grown from Captain Nicholas' initial two battalions to roughly 194,000 active members and 40,000 reserve Marines, though it remains the smallest branch of the United States Armed Forces within the Department of Defense.
The official title of United States Marine Corps was incorporated in 1798. The Continental Marines, as well as the Continental Navy, were temporarily disbanded at the completion of the American Revolution. The Marines in particular were reinstated in preparation for the Quasi-War, which was fought against Spain and the French Republic, and mostly at sea.
Since its creation, the Marine Corps has earned recognition by serving in the majority of American wars. Their well-known motto, "Semper Fidelis," often shortened to "Semper Fi," appropriately translates to "Always Loyal." Marines are capable of fighting via land, air and sea, and every member of the Marines receives additional training as a rifleman. The Marine Corps works closely with the United States Navy, as these two services make up the United States Department of the Navy.
Click through the slideshow above to see a brief history of the Marine Corps in photos, and as we commemorate this anniversary and approach Veterans Day, make sure to thank an active soldier or veteran in your life.
http://www.aol.com/article/2014/11/10/commemorating-the-239th-anniversary-of-the-marine-corps/20991552/?icid=maing-grid7%7Cmain5%7Cdl3%7Csec1_lnk2%26pLid%3D561164
AOL
On November 10, 1775, Philadelphia native Captain Samuel Nicholas formed the the first two battalions of the Continental Marines of the American Revolutionary War after realizing the need for a group able to battle both on water and on land. That institution has transformed and evolved into the few, the proud: the modern day United States Marine Corps.
Today marks 239 years since the creation of the Marine Corps, and it has grown from Captain Nicholas' initial two battalions to roughly 194,000 active members and 40,000 reserve Marines, though it remains the smallest branch of the United States Armed Forces within the Department of Defense.
The official title of United States Marine Corps was incorporated in 1798. The Continental Marines, as well as the Continental Navy, were temporarily disbanded at the completion of the American Revolution. The Marines in particular were reinstated in preparation for the Quasi-War, which was fought against Spain and the French Republic, and mostly at sea.
Since its creation, the Marine Corps has earned recognition by serving in the majority of American wars. Their well-known motto, "Semper Fidelis," often shortened to "Semper Fi," appropriately translates to "Always Loyal." Marines are capable of fighting via land, air and sea, and every member of the Marines receives additional training as a rifleman. The Marine Corps works closely with the United States Navy, as these two services make up the United States Department of the Navy.
Click through the slideshow above to see a brief history of the Marine Corps in photos, and as we commemorate this anniversary and approach Veterans Day, make sure to thank an active soldier or veteran in your life.
http://www.aol.com/article/2014/11/10/commemorating-the-239th-anniversary-of-the-marine-corps/20991552/?icid=maing-grid7%7Cmain5%7Cdl3%7Csec1_lnk2%26pLid%3D561164
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Vietnam Veterans Receive Medal of Honor
WASHINGTON -- Bennie Adkins and Donald Sloat, who served in the Vietnam War, were awarded the highest military honor on Monday during a ceremony at the White House.
The Medal of Honor was presented to Adkins as the 54th living recipient who fought in Vietnam. William Sloat, accepted the award for his brother, allowing Sloat to join 204 deceased Medal of Honor recipients who served in the war that ran from November 1955 to April 1975.
Adkins, a a command sergeant major, was badly wounded while rescuing fellow comrades during an enemy attack. He had joined the U.S. Army at age 22 during 1956.
A native of Opelika, Ala., he served in the infantry and special forces, and was deployed to Vietnam three times.
Sloat died Jan. 17, 1970, when he fell on an enemy grenade to shield fellow soldiers from further destruction. Sloat joined the Army in 1969 and was a machine gunner after completing training.
For details of their heroics, visit sunherald.com
The Medal of Honor was presented to Adkins as the 54th living recipient who fought in Vietnam. William Sloat, accepted the award for his brother, allowing Sloat to join 204 deceased Medal of Honor recipients who served in the war that ran from November 1955 to April 1975.
Adkins, a a command sergeant major, was badly wounded while rescuing fellow comrades during an enemy attack. He had joined the U.S. Army at age 22 during 1956.
A native of Opelika, Ala., he served in the infantry and special forces, and was deployed to Vietnam three times.
Sloat died Jan. 17, 1970, when he fell on an enemy grenade to shield fellow soldiers from further destruction. Sloat joined the Army in 1969 and was a machine gunner after completing training.
For details of their heroics, visit sunherald.com
Thursday, September 11, 2014
South Mississippi, Nation Remember 9/11 Attacks, Victims and Heroes
SOUTH MISSISSIPPI – Across the country, tributes today
marked the 13th year since nearly 3,000 people lost their lives
during the terrorists attacks in New York, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania on Sept. 11, 2001.
Following a speech Wednesday night promising to send some 400 more troops to help fight ISIS terrorists threatening the U.S., and who recently beheaded two American journalists, President Barack Obama, first lady Michelle Obama and Vice President Joe Biden observed a moment of silence outside the White House before heading to 9/11 tribute at the Pentagon and in New York.
White House Pauses for Moment of Silence (video)
Following a speech Wednesday night promising to send some 400 more troops to help fight ISIS terrorists threatening the U.S., and who recently beheaded two American journalists, President Barack Obama, first lady Michelle Obama and Vice President Joe Biden observed a moment of silence outside the White House before heading to 9/11 tribute at the Pentagon and in New York.
White House Pauses for Moment of Silence (video)
In South Mississippi, events included a variety of memorials
and tributes such as 9/11 Remembrance blood drives in Old Town Presbyterian
Church in Bay St. Louis and at L.H.
“Red” Barnett Senior Center in D’Iberville. Both drives were sponsored by the
Red Cross, and information can be accessed today at redcrossblood.org using code OTPC
for Bay St. Louis and 911DIBERVILLE. CDC
and
A Climb CDC and Americorps 9/11 Service Day was held at
Quarles Elementary School in Long Beach. As well, St. Martin High School’s 9/11
Memorial Tribute featured choir and theater students who performed a combination
of original material, published poetry recitation, choral performance and reading
of victim’s names.
Monday, November 11, 2013
Parade and Program Honor Veterans, Active Military
MOSS POINT -- Samuel W. Sylvester Jr., 87, is loving all the attention he's gotten lately from the community honoring WWII veterans for their service and all branches of the military during a number of programs and commemorations in October and November.
He was among the veterans who made the fourth Mississippi Gulf Coast Honor Flight during fall 2012. He also was honored as the oldest African American Marine present during this year's 35th Annual Salute to the Military held in Biloxi.
"I was the only black man they recognized there," said Sylvester, who will turn 88 in January.
Following the Jackson County Veterans Day Parade and Program today in Downtown Moss Point, the Marine recounted the horrors of war while stationed in Japan during WWII. He was aboard a LSD ship when the U.S. dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and then Nagasaki, killing thousands of Japanese and effectively ending the war that was dragging on against the nation of the Rising Sun.
A 'Thank You' For Service:
Nearly 1,000 Turn Out For Long Beach Veterans Parade
Sun Herald/Sunday, November 10, 2013
Within the first two to four months of the bombings, the acute effects killed 90,000–166,000 people in Hiroshima and 60,000–80,000 in Nagasaki, with roughly half of the deaths in each city occurring on the first day, according to Wikipedia
The U.S. lost some 100,000 military personnel during the Pacific War of WWII.
Having served from 1944-46, Sylvester served in other areas of the Pacific before being transferred to Japan, where he was among soldiers who went in to remove the bodies of Japanese civilians killed when the atomic bombs called Little Boy and Fat Man were dropped on the cities.
"I saw a mushroom cloud," he said.
When the Marines went in to clean up the devastation and remove the bodies they used trucks to clear the way. "All the dead people, they pushed them to the side," said Sylvester "Worst smell in the world."
However, today, he and David Blacklege said they enjoyed the Veterans Day program at the Jackson County Veterans Memorial Monument located at the city's Riverfront Park. The hourlong program followed the annual parade on Main Street, which was lined with residents eagerly gathering candy.
"It was great. It was a good program," said Blackledge, who recently retired after 37 years in the Army, including three tours in Iraq and service in Bosnia, Haiti, and other areas around the globe.
(Watch for addition of photos and more information to this story)
He was among the veterans who made the fourth Mississippi Gulf Coast Honor Flight during fall 2012. He also was honored as the oldest African American Marine present during this year's 35th Annual Salute to the Military held in Biloxi.
"I was the only black man they recognized there," said Sylvester, who will turn 88 in January.
Following the Jackson County Veterans Day Parade and Program today in Downtown Moss Point, the Marine recounted the horrors of war while stationed in Japan during WWII. He was aboard a LSD ship when the U.S. dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and then Nagasaki, killing thousands of Japanese and effectively ending the war that was dragging on against the nation of the Rising Sun.
A 'Thank You' For Service:
Nearly 1,000 Turn Out For Long Beach Veterans Parade
Sun Herald/Sunday, November 10, 2013
Within the first two to four months of the bombings, the acute effects killed 90,000–166,000 people in Hiroshima and 60,000–80,000 in Nagasaki, with roughly half of the deaths in each city occurring on the first day, according to Wikipedia
The U.S. lost some 100,000 military personnel during the Pacific War of WWII.
Having served from 1944-46, Sylvester served in other areas of the Pacific before being transferred to Japan, where he was among soldiers who went in to remove the bodies of Japanese civilians killed when the atomic bombs called Little Boy and Fat Man were dropped on the cities.
"I saw a mushroom cloud," he said.
When the Marines went in to clean up the devastation and remove the bodies they used trucks to clear the way. "All the dead people, they pushed them to the side," said Sylvester "Worst smell in the world."
However, today, he and David Blacklege said they enjoyed the Veterans Day program at the Jackson County Veterans Memorial Monument located at the city's Riverfront Park. The hourlong program followed the annual parade on Main Street, which was lined with residents eagerly gathering candy.
"It was great. It was a good program," said Blackledge, who recently retired after 37 years in the Army, including three tours in Iraq and service in Bosnia, Haiti, and other areas around the globe.
(Watch for addition of photos and more information to this story)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)