Posts Tagged ‘medal’

A Pinch of Sand

Tuesday, October 30th, 2012

“Those who died on Omaha Beach on the longest day are not forgotten and still live in the hearts of free men everywhere”

Written by Gregory “Skip” Dreps

I was a geology student at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale in the 1960s before I was drafted into the Army for duty in Vietnam. I was asked by an instructor to find the richest known mineral deposit on Earth. It was a single question final exam that we had all term to answer. Little did I know that for weeks I searched for the answer with a forensic eye for value based on riches. Was it where there was diamonds, oil, uranium, gold or fossils?

The question begged to define the word richest and it wasn’t in the ground where I would find its answer, but in my heart.

I grew up in Chicago and was blessed that my public education included periodic visits by World War II veterans. There I learned that the most expensive piece of Earth was in France in a place called Normandy. I remember clearly a pinch of that sand was worth many a man’s life or limb, and on the longest day in history it was worth the world.

My argument was worth a passing grade my instructor lamented after the term, but it was clearly not the answer for a course in forensic geology. The instructor remarked it was an abstract solution and suggested I should change my major to philosophy. I postulated that if I had a sample from Omaha Beach, and a day with an electronic microscope, I could prove the sand contained the richest mineral deposit in the remains of war where the greatest price was paid for my freedom and a free world. It would be another twenty years until my proof was discovered.

Earle McBride and Dane Picard were traveling across France conducting geologic fieldwork in 1988 when they took time out to play tourists at Omaha Beach, site of one of the most ferocious battles during the D-Day invasion more than forty years earlier. It was a miserably cold and blustery day. They tarried just long enough to scoop a sample of beach sand into a little baggie.

McBride, a professor emeritus in the Jackson School of Geosciences at the University of Texas at Austin, collects sand pretty much any chance he gets. By analyzing sand from modern dunes, beaches and rivers from a wide range of sites around the world, he can link the mineral compositions of ancient sandstones to the kinds of environments that forged them.

A few years after the French trip, he put the beach sand under a microscope and discovered tiny metal shards mixed in with the ordinary bits of quartz and other materials that he expected to see. Those shards turned out to be shrapnel from the famous World War II invasion. On closer examination, he also found iron and glass beads that had resulted from the intense heat unleashed by explosions in the air and sand.

“It is of course not surprising that shrapnel was added to the Omaha Beach sand at the time of the battle, but it is surprising that it survived forty-plus years and is doubtless still there today,” wrote McBride and Picard, currently a professor emeritus at the University of Utah, in an article for Earth magazine last year.

In the early hours of June 6, 1944, more than 160,000 Allied troops poured from planes and ships onto the heavily fortified shores of Normandy, France. Omaha Beach was one of five Allied landing points along a fifty-mile (eighty-kilometer) stretch of coastline.

“The battles were bloody and brutal,” wrote McBride and Picard, “but by day’s end, the Allies had established a beachhead.” It proved to be the turning point of the war. McBride was just twelve years old in 1944. I had not yet been born.

To analyze the sand, McBride first mixed the tiny grains with a blue epoxy, making what amounted to artificial sandstone, and then sliced it into thin sections. Under an optical microscope operating in transmission mode (in which light passes through the sample), he could see opaque grains.

In the 1960s, detectives with the Texas Department of Public Safety brought Earle McBride a sample of sand collected from the pant cuff of a murder suspect. They wanted to know if the suspect had been to the Rio Grande. Within seconds, McBride could tell that the sand was from the Colorado River near Austin. Some telltale signs: It had pink potassium feldspar grains derived from granite in the Llano region, which are commonly found in the Colorado River but not in the Rio Grande; and there were no sand grains derived from volcanic rocks, something common in sands from the Rio Grande but not from the Colorado.

“Unfortunately, that wasn’t the answer the police wanted, so I got dismissed,” he said. “That was my first foray into forensic science.” McBride’s sand collection is carefully stored in hundreds of bags and bottles in row after row of metal drawers in the basement of the Jackson Geosciences Building.

Adding another light source to see reflected light, the grains of sand from Omaha Beach appeared shiny, an unusual feature for naturally occurring minerals. The shard-like angularity of the grains suggested these were not naturally formed. Ordinary ocean wave action along the shore tends to blunt sharp edges. Other tests showed the metal shards contained large amounts of iron and were magnetic. At this point, he had no doubt these were pieces of shrapnel.

McBride reported that four percent of the sand is made up of these bits of shrapnel, ranging in size from very fine to coarse (0.06 to 1 millimeter). Because the beach surface is continually being reworked by wind and waves, a sample taken on another day might have yielded a different abundance.

He also found trace amounts of spherical iron beads and glass beads. Some iron beads were broken, revealing hollow centers. Using a scanning electron microscope, he was able to study the shape, texture and size of all three explosively produced structure types in greater detail.

McBride and Picard published their full results in the September 2011 edition of The Sedimentary Record, a quarterly journal of The Society for Sedimentary Geology (SEPM).

“Today, the only visible indications of the horrific battles fought at Omaha Beach are some concrete casements above the beach and nearby cemeteries that quietly mark the thousands of lives lost,” wrote McBride and Picard.

Gone are the wrecks of planes, ships and tanks, the shell casings, the scraps of rotted boot leather, and all the other detritus of war long since spirited away by generations of beachcombers. And so it fell to a pair of geologists to pluck one last relic from the sand, hidden under the feet of thousands of tourists every year.

Unlike the global layer of radioactive fallout from the 1950s atomic bomb tests that geologists and others now use to calibrate their tools for dating geologic materials, the microscopic fingerprint of the D-Day invasion probably won’t endure long.

McBride says the iron-rich shrapnel shards could probably withstand the scouring action of waves alone for hundreds of thousands of years. But studying the shrapnel grains under high magnification, he observed particles of iron oxide, or rust, created by a chemical reaction between saltwater and iron. Waves churn the iron fragments, which rubs off some of the rust and exposes fresh material, which is more amenable to rusting, which in turn gets rubbed off, and so on.

“The net result is these things will get smaller and smaller and then finally get carried away by storms or hurricanes and be taken out of the beach,” says McBride, “so their time is numbered.”

“The combination of chemical corrosion and abrasion will likely destroy the grains in a century or so,” wrote McBride and Picard, “leaving only the memorials and people’s memories to recall the extent of devastation suffered by those directly engaged in World War II.”

My military experience took me to Normandy twice in the 1970s. The first time was when I was selected as a jumpmaster to re-enact the 30th anniversary of the D-Day parachute assault in Eindhoven. Following the jump, a couple of us earned a three-day pass and headed off to visit the American Cemetery in Normandy and visited Omaha Beach. We walked the 7,000 yards of pristine sand alone; it took us a couple hours and we hardly said a word. The experience was so overwhelming we all forgot to take some sand, but we left with a memory that we would never forget.

We walked on the most expensive beach in history. The price paid there could not be measured in the more than nine thousand white stones in the cemetery or the families that they left behind, or never had; or the way that they could have changed the world, but didn’t get a second chance; and the cost for that longest day could not be measured in the years it took to plan for that moment when the first boat in the first wave hit the beach that started to turn the ocean red.

My second time in Normandy was a year later after I finished French Commando training in Kiel. Another three days free, following training patterned after the tactics developed by the French Resistance in World War II, I was determined to see the beach again to give my body time to heal from the three week school in urban warfare that included a brutal course in escape and evasion. My other classmates went to Paris and I travelled alone across France.

This time I didn’t walk the beach; I just sat for a long time in one spot and watched the waves meet the sand. I wanted to focus into a single pointedness my memory of the moment so I would never forget. Soon I made contact of sound with the sense organ of the ear; then by contact of smell with the sense organ of the nose; by contact of taste with the sense organ of the tongue; by contact of touch with the sense organ of the body; and by contact of mental objects with the sense organ of the mind.

It became clear that each grain of sand on that empty beach was not inert, but filled with life. A life-energy had been burned into it with a countless baptism of heroic spirit. If I could see into a grain of sand the 360 degrees of cutting surface with an electronic microscope, then I would also see in a grain of Omaha Beach sand forensic evidence that there had been a great battle fought here. Looking at it with my mind’s eye, I could see countless faces between every degree in every grain and in every face there was a peaceful smile.

I returned to my unit and left France for my station in Italy without a grain of sand from the beach, but with a new sense of what was important in life. I was a richer man for the experience. My travels had taken me twice to a place that contained the richest minerals in the world in a single grain of sand on a beach that was miles long and feet deep. I felt like I gained the wisdom of the richest king in the Bible; the greatest gift in life is freedom and that is what each grain of sand from Omaha Beach means to me.

It is a great comfort to know that even if in a hundred years, or thousands, all the grains of sand on Normandy’s Omaha Beach that witnessed the longest day disappear and are replaced, purified by Nature, we will still remember in stone in the cemetery the sacrifice to make Omaha Beach sand the richest mineral on Earth. One day, far away, when Nature turns even that stone to sand and disappears from beach to ocean, our children’s children will still remember.

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D-Day Hero Honored

Friday, June 8th, 2012

On Wednesday, June 6, Evergreen Washelli, along with family, friends, and veterans paid tribute to Technical Sergeant Gerald M. Henderson and all veterans who participated in D-Day.

Technical Sergeant Gerald M. Henderson was killed in action on Omaha Beach on June 6, 1944. For this activity, Technical Sergeant Henderson was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross. Retired Colonel Phil Smart, Sr. of Seattle assisted the family in obtaining the Distinguished Service Cross to honor their loved one. General Peter Chiarelli, USA (Ret.), formerly Vice Chief Staff of the United States Army, presented the award to the family.

King 5 news was in attendance, thank you to Travis Pittman and King 5 for their coverage of this prestigious event.

Technical Sergeant Henderson

Below are Evergreen Washelli’s photos of the event.

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National Medal of Honor Day

Monday, March 5th, 2012

Medal of Honor day is March 25th

National Medal of Honor Day is March 25th, 2012

The Medal of Honor is the highest award for bravery that can be given to any individual in the United States of America.  The deed of the person must be proved by incontestable evidence of at least two eye witnesses; it must be so outstanding that it clearly distinguishes his or her gallantry beyond the call of duty from lesser forms of bravery; it must involve the risk of his or her own life; and it must be the type of deed which, if he or she had not done it, would not subject him or her to any justified criticism.

Evergreen Washelli is proud to have in our care several Medal of Honor Recipients. We invite you to discover more about the lives and service of each brave soldier.

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Medal of Honor Tribute Ceremony

Friday, July 15th, 2011

Medal of Honor Flag

Please join us in honoring our Medal of Honor and Silver Star recipients on Saturday, July 16th at 11:00am.

Evergreen Washelli is proud to have in our care several Medal of Honor Recipients. Please join us on July 16th to honor them at a special ceremony.  We pay tribute to these Medal of Honor and Silver Star recipients on Memorial Day and Veterans Day, and we are now creating a permanent marker that will tell each medal recipient’s heroic story. This permanent tribute is our way of thanking each medal recipient and their families for their selfless and courageous service to this country. 

On July 16th, the ceremony will be preceded by the Washington Letter Carriers’ Band performance at 10:30am, and the ceremony will commence at 11:00am in the Veterans Memorial Cemetery located within Evergreen Washelli Memorial Park. Our guest speaker is MG James M. Collins, Jr.

This special ceremony will pay tribute to our Medal of Honor Recipients: Lewis Albanese (Vietnam), William C. Horton (Spanish/American), Robert Ronald Leisy (Vietnam), William Kenzo Nakamura (World War II), Orville Emil Bloch (World War II), Harry Delmar Fadden (Spanish/American), and Silver Star recipient Vesa Juhani Alakulppi (Vietnam).  We invite you to attend the ceremony and witness the unveiling of their permanent memorials, to visit their graves, read their stories and see images of the medals received.  

MG James M. Collins, Jr.

MG James M. Collins, Jr., known to many as “Jimmy”, is Principal with Jimmy Collins & Associates in Washington state. He recently completed his military service as Major General in the U.S. Army. Collins is an experienced executive and opinion leader in the business, military, and volunteer communities of Washington state and the nation. Collins’ military experience reflects over 35 years in active duty Army and Reserve leadership roles. In his last active duty assignment from 2002 through 2005, he was Deputy Commanding General and Chief of Staff for I Corps at FT Lewis, WA. In that role he led over 30,000 soldiers and employees. He also spent substantial time deployed in Asia and working with America’s allies in Thailand, Japan, Korea, Singapore, and the Philippines. His military awards include the Army’s Distinguished Service Medal. His formal education includes a BS in Business Administration from the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville; as well as an MA in Social Sciences from Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington. He is a graduate of the U.S. Army War College and the U.S. Department of Defense’s most senior military training course, the Joint Flag Officer Warfighting Course. As to volunteer roles Collins serves as Civilian Aide to the Secretary of the Army for Washington state as well as a member of the TriWest Healthcare Executive Advisory Board. Jimmy is a Distinguished Eagle Scout and a recipient of the Silver Beaver Award from the Boy Scouts of America. Regionally, he serves as Board Chair-Elect with Seattle’s SeaFair Festival connecting and celebrating community spirit of Puget Sound. Jimmy was a founding board member for Hire America’s Heroes to connect major corporations with military veterans, Guardsmen and Reservists as an excellent source of employees. He and his wife Linda have two grown children and reside in Steilacoom, Washington.

The Medal of Honor is the highest award for bravery that can be given to any individual in the United States of America.  The deed of the person must be proved by incontestable evidence of at least two eye witnesses; it must be so outstanding that it clearly distinguishes his or her gallantry beyond the call of duty from lesser forms of bravery; it must involve the risk of his or her own life; and it must be the type of deed which, if he or she had not done it, would not subject him or her to any justified criticism.

Silver Star is the U.S. Army’s third highest award for bravery.  It is awarded to those individuals whose gallantry in action was performed with distinction, but was not sufficient to warrant the Medal of Honor or the Distinguished Service Cross.

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Memorial Day Guided Veterans Tour

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

 

On Monday, May 30, 2011, Evergreen Washelli will host our 85th Annual Memorial Day Commemorative Service. Following the ceremony, we invite you to attend a guided tour of the Veterans Memorial Cemetery and to learn about the remarkable lives of the Medal of Honor recipients in our care. 

Our guide this year will be David Bloch, son of the Medal of Honor recipient Orville Emil Bloch.  We are extremely honored and excited to have him as our tourguide.

David will guide us through the history of the Veterans Memorial Cemetery, as well as teach us about the stories of Private William C. Horton,Captain Vesa Alakulppi, PFC Lewis Albanese, PFC William Kenzo Nakamura, 2nd LT Robert Ronald Leisy, Coxswain Harry Delmar Fadden, and of course Colonel Orville Emil Bloch

Kindly meet us at the Doughboy Statue in the Veterans Memorial Cemetery at 3:15 pm. We ask for a $5.00 suggested donation for attendance, which will go to the purchase of flags for the Avenue of Flags.  For more information, and to reserve a spot, please call us at (206)362-5200 or email tours@washelli.com.  Tickets for the tour may also be purchased here.

 

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Robert Rowland Allshaw

Monday, May 9th, 2011

Robert R. Allshaw 1932 – 11/11/1968

Around 8:00 pm on Monday, November 11, 1968, 49-year-old William Ogle, a career criminal with a long record of armed robberies, and 42-year-old Elmer O’Neil, a small-time criminal, entered Seattle’s north end Pinehurst IGA Grocery Store at 11522 – 15th Avenue NE, leaving a third man waiting in a car outside the store. Three customers were inside when one of the men produced a .22 caliber revolver and the other held out a Luger-type automatic. They robbed store clerk William Tarbill and another employee, taking several hundred dollars from the store check stands, as four more customers walked in. A witness who was across the street saw what was happening and called police.

The robbers herded all nine people to the rear of the store and were backing out of the store’s front door when Seattle Officer Robert Allshaw, who had arrived alone at the scene, grabbed Ogle from behind and handcuffed him. Using Ogle as a shield, Allshaw then exchanged fire with O’Neil, whom he subsequently grazed in the face and critically shot in the abdomen. With his service pistol still drawn, Officer Allshaw continued to back Ogle into his patrol car just as rookie Officer Gerold LeBorde arrived on the scene. In the darkness Officer LeBorde saw only Ogle, who was blocking the young patrolman’s view of the other officer, and naturally assumed that Ogle was the one holding the drawn pistol. Officer LeBorde drew his own shotgun and just as he fired at the “armed” suspect, Ogle dropped to his knees, exposing Officer Allshaw’s face to the full force of the blast.

Officer Allshaw, who was taken to Northwest Hospital along with O’Neil, was pronounced dead on arrival. Meanwhile, the driver who had been waiting in the suspected getaway car drove off and led other officers who had converged on the scene on a high speed chase. He was apprehended about two miles away at Stone Way Avenue NE and NE 105th Street. It was later learned that Ogle, who had been adjudged a habitual criminal in 1959, had been sentenced to 20 years in the Washington State Penitentiary at Walla Walla, but had been released pending appeal just 11 days prior to this armed robbery.

Officer Allshaw, a lifelong Seattle resident, had been a member of the Police Motorcycle Drill Team, the Police Relief Association, the Police Officers’ Guild, and Moose Lodge 211. On the morning of his death, his drill team had performed in Auburn. The 36-year-old, who had been on the Seattle Police Force for nine years, was described as “the best example of a good policeman you would ever run across.” He was survived by his wife Suzanne, 11-year-old daughter Terri-Lynn, and 8-year-old son Daniel. His death was ruled an “excusable homicide.” Four months after the incident, Officer Allshaw’s widow accepted the Ballard Jaycees Distinguished Service Award in her deceased husband’s name. In 1998, he was also posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor. Robert Allshaw is buried in Washelli Cemetery, Section S.

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