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December 13, 2009

Report from 2010 Planning Meeting

On 12 DEC, members of the 1st Allied Airborne’s B/502 held their 2010 planning meeting at the Military Air Preservation Society Museum in Akron, Ohio. The minutes are as follows:

1. Pvt. Penix gave a debriefing on the field exercise conducted by the 83rd ID. A very enjoyable and educational activity. We did a lot of close order drill, attack and patrol formations, as well a live firing of weapons. Our thanks to Lt. Mike Felmlee and Maj. Bo Johnstone for allowing us to participate.

2. The 65th Battle of the Bulge reenactment at Ft. Indiantown Gap was discussed. It looks as if we will not have as many troopers attending unless some logistics change for some of the other guys. Doc Bottomley gave us a run-down as to what to expect at the event. We also discussed proper equipment, uniforms, and travel arrangements.

3. Our 2010 event schedule was discussed and fleshed out. We do not have specific dates for everything but more information will be forth coming.

29 -31 JAN: 65th Battle of the Bulge. Ft. Indiantown Gap, PA (www.wwiifederation.com)

27-28 MAR: Spring Tactical, Mansfield, OH

1-2 MAY: Military Show, Mansfield, OH*

15-17 MAY: Armed Forces Day Show, Findlay, OH


20-22 AUG: Dennison Railroad Depot, Dennison, OH (invitation only)

24-26 SEP: Ride Through History, Alliance, OH


POSSIBLE OTHER EVENTS

4-6 JUN: Reading WWII Weekend (
http://www.maam.org/maamwwii.html)


4. Blank manufacturing. Pvt. Gaynor will be setting up shop to produce more .30-06 blanks for the season. We currently have 500 pieces of brass to de-prime, clean, and size.

5. This year, the unit plans to make a concentrated effort to recruit new members. We will be setting up recruiting information at the D-Day Quartermaster booth at the Mansfield Military Show.* We noticed in Gettysburg for the Remembrance Day weekend this past November, many of the Civil War reenactment sutler shops are featuring a WWII reenacting section. This means that many of the WWII reenactors are coming from the Civil War reenacting community as an additional hobby.

SUBMITTED:

Pvt. C.L. Smith
Chairman
1st Allied Airborne Reenactors

December 10, 2009

Airborne meeting reminder

Just a reminder of the meeting this Saturday to brief on Ft. Indiantown Gap and discuss events for 2010. Again, the meeting information is as follows:

TDG: 1000 hrs / 12 DEC 09

LOC: Military Air Preservation Society (MAPS) Museum - http://www.mapsairmuseum.org/
2260 International Parkway, North Canton, OH

Following the meeting we will get a personal tour of the museum by one of the former combat pilots that volunteers there. Discount cost for the group is $6.50 per person.

If anyone is interested, after the tour we can grab a bite to eat.

December 1, 2009

2010 Planning meeting

This will be our annual meeting to plan for WWII reenacting events in 2010. We will also be conducting a briefing of uniforms, equipment and assignment for the 65th Battle of the Bulge reenactment at Ft. Indiantown Gap (FIG).

The meeting will be held at the MAPS Air Museum. Following the meeting, there will be a personally guided tour for the group by one of the volunteers who is a former military pilot.

Cost is $6.50 per person which is a discount over the normal $8.00 rate. Please RSVP to chris@ddayquartermaster.com.

REMEMBER!!! Registration for FIG MUST be postmarked no later than December 4th. That is THIS Friday!!

November 16, 2009

PRIORITY MESSAGE: Battle of the Bulge 2010

TO: All Personnel
MSSG FOLLOWS: Priority

During the training weekend in Centerburg, we were able to gather some information on the unit's involvement at the Battle of the Bulge reenactment at Ft. Indiantown Gap, PA.

Dates and Registration

The unit will be deploying to the event on Thursday, January 28 and returning in the morning on January 31st. The battle scenarios are on Friday and Saturday.

Registration is $50.00 and MUST be postmark BEFORE 7 DEC 10! You must send this in your self. The link to the registration is as follows:

http://wwiifederation.com/files/RegistrationForm.pdf

Please READ the entire package. There is important information for you to know. MAKE SURE to check the box next to "option B event no Dinner" AND next to "Regt HQ" on the form as this is who we will be attached to. It will also make sure you are assigned to the correct barracks.

Again, you MUST have this post marked NO LATER than 7 DEC 10!

Duty Assignment

Baker Company will be merged into a combined Info & Recon platoon for the regimental headquarters, headquarters company. Specifically the S-2 section. The platoon will consist of the personnel from the 83rd and 90th ID with a total of at least 35 men. This is a pretty sweet assignment and details will be communicated to the squad at an up-coming meeting.

Pre-Event Planning

As mentioned above, we need to plan a Sunday in December and January to accomplish two things. First, so that Sgt Eddy can cover our duty assignment in detail, logistics of attending the event, and impression with regard to uniforms and equipment. The second meeting will specifically be to load ammunition and cover any other items.

Head Count

For the sake of getting an idea of our numbers, those who are planning to attend should reply to this email along with a few Sundays in December and January when you would be available to attend a meeting.

If you have any questions at all, please don't hesitate to contact myself at chris@ddayquartermaster.com, or Patrick Eddy at patrick51st@yahoo.com.


Submitted:

Pvt Christopher Smith
B/502
Chairman, 1st Allied Airborne Reenactors

October 1, 2009

Ride Through History a good time

For those of you who missed it, the Ride Through History event in Alliance was a hoot! About 6 members of the Baker Company squad attended and we mixed in pretty well with the guys from the 4th Armored and 1st ID.

Check out some of the photos posted by our own Bill "Smokey" Krause.

http://www.flickr.com/groups/alliedairborne

September 17, 2009

Remembering Market Garden

Today, on 17 September 1944, thousands of paratroopers descended from the sky by parachute or glider up to 150 km behind enemy lines. Their goal: to secure two bridges across the rivers in Holland so that the Allied army could advance rapidly northwards and turn right into the lowlands of Germany, hereby skirting around the Siegfried line, the German defence line. If all carried out as planned it should have ended the war by Christmas 1944.

Unfortunately this daring plan, named Operation Market Garden, didn't have the expected outcome. The bridge at Arnhem proved to be 'a bridge too far'. After 10 days of bitter fighting the operation ended with the evacuation of the remainder of the 1st British Airborne Division from the Arnhem area.

Remember those you gave all to fight tyranny.

September 10, 2009

Outstanding photos from Europe

Facebook Friend Jenny Hutchinson writes:

Hello to everyone! I'm an American living in England and as of yet I don't re-enact but I do take photos of those great moments that you recreate of long ago!! It is always a fantastic experience!!

To see some of her fantastic reenacting photos, go to http://www.candaimages.com/

September 7, 2009

Teams Seeking Remains Dig Back to World War II

By ELISABETH BUMILLER - NY Times

BAULER, Germany — At the start of the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944, an American bomber was shot down by German fighter planes and sent into a fiery, nose-first crash in a cow pasture here. The pilot’s body was never found.

Almost 65 years later, on a recent late summer day, a 10-member Defense Department team was in the same pasture, searching through mounds of excavated mud for a trace of the airman. The group had already unearthed shreds of a parachute and part of a leather glove when one of the team's forensic anthropologists, Allysha Powanda Winburn, found a crucial clue to the mystery: a small piece of what she called "possible osseous remains," or potential human bone.

The real mystery, at least to the 77-year-old farmer who witnessed the crash at the age of 13, Hermann Reuter, was the group of Americans who had turned up in the pasture near his home in search of the pilot.

"Why after such a long time?" he asked, perplexed.

As nearly 200,000 United States troops fight in Iraq and Afghanistan, a little-known unit is engaged in the herculean and at times quixotic task of trying to account for more than 84,000 Americans still missing from the nation’s previous wars. Most of the effort has focused on those lost in Vietnam, but under pressure from families, the military has paid new attention in the past two years to a vast majority of the missing — some 74,000 — still unaccounted for in Europe and the Pacific during World War II.

The effort is a powerful part of the military culture to "bring everyone home," no matter how elusive the goal. "We maximize the resources we have, both personnel and money," said Johnie E. Webb, the deputy commander of the 400-person unit, called the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command, based at Hickam Air Force Base in Hawaii. "That's the best we can do until somebody says, 'We’re going to give you the resources to do more.' "

The new focus on World War II comes after years of attention to soldiers who were unaccounted for in the 1960s and 1970s in the jungles of Southeast Asia.

"Vietnam had advocates," said Lisa Phillips, the president of the four-year-old World War II Families for the Return of the Missing. "This was an older generation, and they didn’t know who to turn to."

Now, time is running out in Europe, where many elderly witnesses and local historians, crucial in helping to locate crash sites, are dying or already gone. There are other hurdles in Washington, where the Pentagon devotes a sliver of its annual budget, $55 million out of a half trillion dollars, toward the search. Although the teams identify more than 70 of the missing each year, at that rate it will take 500 years to find all of the 35,000 whom the Pentagon classifies as potentially "recoverable." Many thousands of the others were lost at sea.

To the Defense Department teams, staffed by anthropologists and military veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, the meaning of the mission lies not in the numbers but in individual lives. "I think that goes toward answering, 'Well, you'll never get finished so why bother to start at all?'" said Andrew Tyrrell, the other anthropologist working in the cow pasture. "It's not necessarily all about finishing. While it's important to have that as an ultimate goal, what's also important is that the stories of all of these people get remembered.”

The Pentagon would not reveal the name of the lost pilot because his relatives were unaware of the search, Mr. Webb said, and there were fears of getting their hopes up. But if any remains are identified - in many cases through advances in DNA testing that extract samples from shards of bone - the family will be contacted and the pilot will be given a full military funeral at Arlington National Cemetery.

For now, the Defense Department will say only that the pilot died in a Martin B-26 Marauder on a terrible day for the Allies. The plane was on its way from a base in France to bomb a viaduct in the German town of Ahrweiler, but was ambushed and never reached its target. There were six on board: two crew members who parachuted out and were captured by the Germans and released after the war; and four who died in the crash, three of whose bodies were recovered. The plane was one of 39 B-26s lost in the area on that day alone. In all, an estimated 19,000 Americans died during the six-week Battle of the Bulge in the Ardennes, the bloodiest fighting of the war.

The military team has been searching the pasture since early August and is to remain until mid-September. They are surrounded by wooded hills and volcanic lakes in this idyllic hiking region on the border with Luxembourg, but they spend their days pouring buckets of thick mud onto quarter-inch screens, then hosing them down to catch their finds: molten bits of aircraft, a piece of a boot, hundreds of .50-caliber bullets for the plane’s 11 machine guns. At sites in the Pacific, some have found family photographs and wedding rings.

The work is monotonous, but members of the team, who have had multiple deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan, and expect in many cases to return there, say they have developed a kinship with the pilot they never knew. "It's the same family essentially going back for our own," said Capt. Melissa Ova, the team leader, who served in Iraq in 2007.

At times the work is maddeningly slow. Last week in another village in what was once East Germany, a different team was trying to locate a B-24 bomber with nine Americans aboard, six still missing, which had been shot down in February 1944.

An elderly witness said the plane sank in a boggy field near a river, so Staff Sgt. Kurtis Witt, a Marine who had three tours sweeping roads for explosive devices in Iraq, spanning 2004 to 2008, spent two hours tromping through tall grass with a magnetometer — only to be told afterward by Kristina Giannotta, the historian leading the team, that she had just spoken to a 90-year-old woman in the village who said the plane had gone down in a completely different field. By day's end, four more witnesses had put the bomber in four other areas.

"You can ask people two hours after they saw something and they'll have different stories," Dr. Giannotta said. "After 65 years it's like they saw a purple rainbow."

But to Captain Ova the frustrations are worth it. "For me, it's a comfort to know that if something happens, somebody will come get me, eventually," she said.

August 31, 2009

Field Training Exercise for November

Members of the organization will participate in a weekend field training exercise on 13-15 NOV 09 being conducted by the 83rd. The location is Centerburg, Ohio (just northeast of Columbus). There will be a nominal fee for barracks accommodations and chow.

In addition to the standard training cycle, there will also be live fire marksmanship training. Ammo will be issued by the NCOIC at the range under very controlled, monitored conditions. This is your chance to see how good you really are or aren't with your M1.

Please contact Patrick Eddy at patrick51st@yahoo.com if you plan to attend. More orders will follow.

August 22, 2009

SITREP: Ride Through History

EVENT: 25-27 SEP 09 - Alliance, OH

I had a very good meeting with the folks from the Marlboro Volunteers who host Ride Through History here in Ohio. I was given a tour of the facility and layout. We also discussed the various activities at the event. My report follows.

LOCATION: RTH is held on the property of the old Taylorcraft factory in Alliance, Ohio where the L2 Grasshopper spotter planes were built and tested during World War II. The runways behind the plant are now overgrown with woods and brush. This is the area where the living history and history "vignettes" are held for roughly 2000 spectators over the weekend.

CAMPS: Throughout the woods, various areas have been cleared to feature living history camps from the Revolution, Civil War, WWII, Korea, and Vietnam.

The WWII camp area is split between the German and Allied set ups. In addition to our Allied Airborne personnel, the 4th Armored will also be there with an M20 Armored Car and Halftrack.

Our camp will be very simple. We will have a US wall tent as a CP. This will give Robert a chance to come up with a really cool set up for his Warrant Officer impression. Supporting the CP, we will be able to construct several above ground fighting positions using logs, dirt and sandbags. The reason for no fox holes is demonstrated by the German trenches from last year. The water table is so shallow at this location that the trenches continually fill with water. We will be able to use our camo net and additional canvas to build out our fighting/living positions. As we get closer to the event, we can discuss the arrival time of our personnel so we can work together to build our camp.

VIGNETTES: The RTH actually takes place on the other over grown runway. Spectators board several military troop trucks and travel down a trail progressing through a Revolutionary War redoubt where soldiers are engaged, a Civil War artillery firing supported by Federal cavalry, a WWII Market Garden period engagement between Germans in bunkers and Airborne in a building (finally with support of US armor). A Korean period US engineering unit working on a project, and finally a Vietnam era US infantry squad engaged in a rice paddy. Each of theses "vignettes" last about 10 to 15 minutes (the total spectator ride runs about 45 minutes). Just think of watching your favorite scene from Band of Brothers, and then going back to the beginning of the chapter on the DVD to watch it again. That is what we will be doing. Over and over.

The actual rides run from 0900 hrs to 1600 hrs Saturday and Sunday. Those not engaged in the vignettes will be in the living history camps talking with the public. If we have enough personnel, we can do a rotation to give everyone a bit of a break and a chance to have chow.

OTHER ACTIVITIES: There will be a lot to see and do for those who have friends and family wishing to attend. In addition to the aforementioned, there will be a military vehicle display and motor pool where personnel will be performing field maintenance on vehicles from various periods and talking to the public. A stage area will feature programming including a demonstration of military small arms from flint locks to current weapons. There will also be vendors selling militaria.

REENACTOR AMENITIES: There is NO registration fee for participants. A complete field kitchen and mess tent will be set up. If you wish, you can buy a $15.00 meal ticket good for the entire weekend and includes two breakfasts, two lunches, and dinner. All participants with have 24 hour access to water, lemonade, iced tea, and coffee at no charge.

The event will be providing a limited amount of blank .30-06 ammo, as well as some .30 carbine rounds to the US reenactors.

ROLL CALL: I will need to provide the event organizers with a head count by the beginning of September. I would like to request that all Airborne participants (para and glider) please email me with confirmation of your attendance no later than 5 SEP. Please provide your name, rank, and the unit you represent. You do not need to be a member of our organization to participate. We are happy to have you!

If you have any questions or comment, PLEASE do not hesitate to drop me a message.

SUBMITTED:

Christopher L. Smith
Chairman
1st Allied Airborne Reenactors

August 12, 2009

Airborne photos

There are some great Airborne photos posted to our Facebook Group from other reenactors around the world.

Check it out! 1st Allied Airborne Facebook Group

August 10, 2009

Dennison AAR

This past weekend 5 of our group took part in the reenactment at Dennison, and in my opinion it was by far the best event that we have been to since we started our group.

The Germans had a very strong defensive position with 4 log and earth bunkers all connected by trench works,and surrounded by barbed wire. It was impressive to see!! We spent the weekend in pre-dug foxholes using anything we could find for cover, and were under mortar attack most of the weekend. We attacked from those positions 3 times, the last being a successful attempt. A photographer from the times reporter was there and has pictures posted on there web site...even has a few of us.

CLICK HERE and HERE

I hope next year we can get a better turn out..it was a blast. I wont be missing it!


Patrick Eddy

July 31, 2009

Ride Through History

Our organization has been requested to set up at an invitation-only event on September 26-27 in Alliance, Ohio for the Marlboro Volunteers' "Ride Through History".

This is part living history and part battle. As you know, spectators board military vehicles and make their way through open and wooded terrain coming across a Civil War battle and camps. Further down the trail they witness a World War II battle and trenches. Finally, they emerge from the woods at a Vietnam fire base.

I am coordinating with them on what kind of set up we will need. This may be a Market Garden scenario (M43 uniforms). We will be in the woods and we can get them to set up fox holes for us. I will have parachute and drop container we can string out in the trees. This set up is where we will live for the weekend as well.

Between our jump jockeys and glider-riders, I would like to have at least be at squad strength. Please let me know if you plan to attend by emailing me at chris@tinywarriors.com. I need to know how many of us will be there so we know how much room we will need. I would like to see some of our Airborne brothers from Michigan and PA attend.

You can visit the event web site at www.marlborovolunteersinc.com

June 27, 2009

Night Patrol and compass course after action report

Okay, I'll make this short. The compass course was a good first start at learning land navigation. We were all able to follow our compass azimuth heading and arrive at the designated way points without any difficulty. Finding the tokens at the way points was another story. With that said I would judge this exercise as a success simply because we were able to move to the designated points. We learned several things during this first exercise and will schedule a second compass training course with modifications that were discussed later in the year, date TBD.

The Night patrol training finished up exposing several areas we need to work on. I gage it a partial success and we must remember that is why it is called training, so we all learn. We will also schedule a training day and second night patrol exercise for later in the year, date TBD. We will incorporate what we learned and expand on it for the next training.

Muddy

Dennison, OH event August 7-9

Come in Kickoff, over,

The Dennison Railroad Depot Museum in Dennison, OH is hosting their annual WWII living history and public display battle August 7-9. They have installed replica WWII trench works for the battle and will have living history areas set up for the public to see. Several of you have expressed interest in going and we have been extended an invitation from one of the hosting units, the 83rd Division. See their email (Warning Orders) below. If you are planning on attending please reply by no later than July 6, so we can get a count and forward the number to the 83rd Division CO Mike Felmlee. Registration is at the gate and according to the schedule, events on Saturday August 8, start at 0900 and run through 2100. There are two skirmishes scheduled for Saturday, one at 1100, the other at 1600. Everyone we have talked to says this is an excellent event and we will hopefully put some of our training to good use.

Uniform of the day for Dennision will be the M43 Market Garden time frame. Some from the 83rd have requested we bring our 1919A6, do we have any volunteers to crew it?

More information will follow as we get closer to the event and as it becomes available.

Muddy out

83rd Division Warning orders below;

Attn. 3rd Platoon,

Alright, let's not forget that we have committed to the Brunswick, OH event July 17-19, 2009. Here is a link: http://www.brunswickhistory.com/events_ww2.html
Let's go light campaign-style to this one. Shelter halves and live out of our pockets. We will be participating in the "ride through history" part of the event where we are the entertainment. We will be the display as the public is brought through. This is the opportunity to just be us and live in the field for a couple of days.

The weekend after (July 25-26) is the final work weekend for the Dennison event. If at all possible, try to come out for one or both days to help put the finishing touches on our foxholes and weapons pits. Bring modern or period sleeping/camping gear wear work clothes, bring food and water.Link to Dennison: http://www.dennisondepot.org/

We are putting in an all out max effort for the Dennison event (Aug 7-9). The people in the town and the museum really want us there, so let's give them a good show. This is shaping up to be the big Ohio event in the future. It has all of the elements it would need to be a great event. It is up to us to make that happen.
I hope to see you all soon.

Thanks,

Mike

June 25, 2009

Things to remember for this Friday

Please remember for tomorrow's exercise:

1. The weather will be warm. You will only need to wear a white t-shirt or your undershirt beneath the uniform jacket.

2. Bring bug spray.

3. Bring extra water! A couple of bottles to put in your pack or rigger pockets his a must in addition to a full canteen. Hydrate!!

Looking forward to seeing everyone there.

June 22, 2009

Airborne history website

Fellow trooper John Brueck has been in contact and shares his wonderful web site with lots of photos and video. John gives tours of the drop zones in Normandy and has found some interesting goodies laying about.

Check out his web site at: http://normandy1944.multiply.com/

June 19, 2009

Shifty Powers passes

Veteran a part of ‘Band of Brothers’
Darrell “Shifty” Powers, who died at age 86, was a hero on the battlefield and to his family.

By Neil Harvey

In a 2001 interview with The Roanoke Times, Darrell “Shifty” Powers talked about some of his experiences during World War II.

Powers, a United States Army paratrooper and sharpshooter, belonged to Easy Company, part of the legendary 101st Airborne Division. He recalled a bitterly cold day in the Ardennes when he was able to draw down on a German sniper, sighting his target by the misty cloud of the man’s breath. He killed him with one shot.

“Right there,” he said, touching his forehead. “Between the eyes.”

But Powers, of Dickenson County, who died Wednesday of natural causes at age 86, was also reflective about such matters.

In the second-to-last episode of “Band of Brothers,” an HBO miniseries that documented Easy Company’s wartime exploits, Powers spoke on camera about the soldiers he fought and also hinted at the intrinsic tragedy of combat.

“We might have had a lot in common. He might’ve liked to fish, you know, he might’ve liked to hunt,” Powers said. “Of course, they were doing what they were supposed to do, and I was doing what I was supposed to do.

“But under different circumstances, we might have been good friends.”

Powers, who got the nickname “Shifty” playing basketball as a youngster, served three years in the Army during World War II and later worked as a machinist for Clinchfield Coal Corp. He found renewed notoriety when his military experiences were depicted on film and in the Stephen Ambrose book of the same name.

“He actually hadn’t talked about it, his war years, until the book came out,” said his daughter-in-law, Sandy Powers. “He gets fan mail from all over the world, and calls.”

“For me and my kids, it’s just amazing that our regular, sweet uncle was such a hero,” said his niece, Cheryl Gilliland of Roanoke. “It sure changed his life in later years. He went places and met people he never would have otherwise.”

Darrell Powers met a German soldier in 2005 who had fought against him at the notoriously brutal siege of Bastogne during the winter of 1944.

According to his son, Wayne, he had in September been scheduled to travel to Iraq to meet with U.S. soldiers, but health problems prevented it.

“He was so disappointed. He wanted to meet with the soldiers so badly,” Sandy Powers said.

One of his closest friends, Earl McClung, of Colorado, in 2001 called Darrell Powers “a heck of a good soldier and a heck of a good shot.”

“And he was there every time I looked up,” he added.

“Our family had four boys and one girl, and I’m the only one left,” said Powers’ sister, Gaynell Sykes of Roanoke, on Wednesday. “He was a great brother. I know he was great at a lot of other things, too — great father, great son, great husband.”

The Roanoke Times

June 17, 2009

B/502 at the MVPA Convoy

Members of the unit attended the MVPA Transcontinental Convoy as it was layed-over in Wooster, Ohio on its way to California. A great time was had by all and we even met a vet who served with the 17th Airborne during World War II.

Click here to check out some of the photos.

June 13, 2009

MVPA Convoy Layover UPDATE

Just a reminder that this Tuesday, 16 June, members of the 1st Allied Airborne will be traveling to the Wayne County Fairgrounds to visit with the participants and vehicles of the Military Vehicle Preservation Association's Transcontinental Convoy as they have a lay-over in Wooster, Ohio.

Unit members will meet starting at 1700 hrs at the Fairgrounds parking area. Uniform of the Day can be either M42 (as it is still June) or M43. Weapons are permitted but NO AMMO. Family members are encouraged.

After our stay, we will find a place for chow and more jocularity.

Click here for the location of the Wayne County Fairgrounds.



June 11, 2009

Night Patrol Exercise

26 JUNE 09: 1800 - 2300 hrs.

Our next training date will be composed of two parts. A compass course (we will split up into small 2-3 man groups using our compasses and maps to locate and move to and from designated points and then meet at a rally point).

The second part of the training will be night patrolling, this is critical for achieving success in the upcoming POW event later this year or spring of next year.

If you plan to attend, please email chris@tinywarriors.com or visit our Facebook events page.

This is open to any and all Allied WWII reenactors.

June 8, 2009

Repro 502nd T-Shirt

As seen in Mark Bando's book on the 101st Airborne Division, some members of the 502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment wore a white t-shirt with the "Widow Maker" emblem under their M42 or M43 field uniforms.

We have reproduced the shirt just for reenactors portraying members of the Five-O-Duece. Click here to place your order.

June 7, 2009

Unit photos

Please bookmark this link to get to the unit photo web page as it is updated on a regular basis.

http://photobucket.com/alliedairborne

D-Day training after action report and proposed new training date

B Co, 502 PIR

6 June 2009,

Subject: After action report

To: B Co, 502

We started the day 0800 with breakfast at a small Cafe on the outskirts of Saint Mer-Zoar. At 0930 we formed-up and advanced to our assembly area where we were instructed in basic compass and map reading by Bulldog Smith. This was very informative and critical learning for our upcoming mission.

At 1230 we briefly reviewed hand signals and the basic squad formations and their respective strengths and weakness are. Formations reviewed were squad column closed, column open, column with scouts out and flank guards posted, forming into a skirmish line and skirmish line right and left, squad wedge and the diamond formation for patrolling. A brief demonstration was given on the crawl, low crawl, getting up from a crawl position and observation.

We moved out to take our objective, the Saint Mer-Zoar Bridge of the Tuscany Canal at 1300 in simulated night patrol formation, closed up column. Our former Marine, Robert Eddy played the role of hidden observer/enemy. The critical observations and recommendations given from this observation were extremely helpful and useful. After taking the bridge form the local fishermen we rested and regrouped for our second mission, the log pile. We assembled for our second mission at 1400 and moved out in extended open column formation. We moved our way through narrow paths and dense growth in near perfect formation. Our movement was quite and deliberate so much so that our scout was able to kick out a hiding deer only 20 yards away. The deer didn't run very far acting confused at what it was actually seeing.

We stepped of with our assault on the log pile at 1430 breaking up into three teams, Able (Scouts) Baker (base of fire) and Charlie (assault team). We were a little slow in getting into position for the attack and were spotted by our observer. Our observer's recommendation will require more work on this part.

Next training date;

Our next training date is scheduled for late afternoon and the evening of 26 June, 2009. Start time to be determined, but I would like to propose 1730 - 1800. The training will be composed of two parts, a compass course (we will split up into small 2-3 man groups using our compasses and maps to locate and move to and from designated points and then meet at a rally point). The second part of the training will be night patrolling, this is critical for achieving success in the upcoming POW event later this year or spring of next year.

I would like to thank everyone who attended for their professionalism and dedication to this unit and hobby. We have an excellent group and it is an honor to serve as your commander. From current observations, feedback and past experience we are on our way to becoming one of the better if not the best unit in the WWII reenactment community. With that said I promise you all too work on and improve areas that I am not as proficient in as others. Thank you all for your faith in me; it is a responsibility I do not take lightly.

Muddy
Sgt Co B

June 5, 2009

D-Day Airborne Facts

The U.S. 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions, numbering 13,000 paratroopers and delivered by 12 troop carrier groups of the IX Troop Carrier Command, were less fortunate in quickly completing their main objectives. To achieve surprise, the drops were routed to approach Normandy from the west. Numerous factors affected their performance, but the primary one was the decision to make a massive parachute drop at night (a tactic not used again for the rest of the war). As a result, 45% of units were widely scattered and unable to rally. Efforts of the early wave of pathfinder teams to mark the landing zones were largely ineffective, and the Rebecca/Eureka transponding radar beacons used to guide in the waves of C-47 Skytrains to the drop zones were a flawed system.

Three regiments of 101st Airborne paratroopers were dropped first, between 00:48 and 01:40, followed by the 82nd Airborne's drops between 01:51 and 02:42. Each operation involved approximately 400 C-47 aircraft. Two pre-dawn glider landings brought in anti-tank guns and support troops for each division. On the evening of D-Day two additional glider landings brought in two battalions of artillery and 24 howitzers to the 82nd Airborne. Additional glider operations on 7 June delivered the 325th Glider Infantry Regiment to the 82nd Airborne, and two large supply parachute drops that date were ineffective.

After 24 hours, only 2,500 troops of the 101st and 2,000 of the 82nd were under the control of their divisions, approximating a third of the force dropped. The dispersal of the American airborne troops, however, had the effect of confusing the Germans and fragmenting their response. In addition, the Germans' defensive flooding, in the early stages, also helped to protect the Americans' southern flank.

Paratroopers continued to roam and fight behind enemy lines for days. Many consolidated into small groups, rallied with NCOs or junior officers, and usually were a hodgepodge of men from different companies, battalions, regiments, or even divisions. The 82nd occupied the town of Sainte-Mère-Église early in the morning of 6 June, giving it the claim of the first town liberated in the invasion.

D-Day

Our brother trooper Dave Strichko said is best...

Tomorrow June 6th is the 65th anniversary of the Normandy invasion. Take time to remember all those who served, fought, bled and died on that day. They embarked on a great quest to remove the stranglehold the Nazi’s had on Europe; many of young men would find their final resting place under a white cross in France never to see home again.

Thank you to all our Veterans and thank you to all those who are fighting today.

June 3, 2009

D-Day Training details

Just a reminder that this Saturday is our D-Day training exercise. We will be meeting at the Zoar Breakfast Haus and Inn (next to the Zoar Tavern) at 0800 hrs sharp. After breakfast and some remembrance of those who made that jump 65 years ago, we will depart to the training area.

Please review the details of the training requirements below.

We will see you there troopers!

June 1, 2009

Hand signals

To review prior to our training exercise this weekend, below are the standard hand signals used in squad operations. It is important to learn these in order to use non-verbal communication in the field.






May 30, 2009

MVPA Convoy in Ohio

Over 120 vintage military vehicles will be laying over in Wooster, Ohio as they travel from Washington DC to San Francisco, California from June 10th to July 28th. The over-all event recreates the famous 1919 Convoy as a 90th Anniversary celebration of the achievement and in conjunction with the nation's President Lincoln Bicentennial celebration.

Ohio reenactors and military history enthusiats who wish to view the vehicles and talk to the participants are gathering at the Wayne County Fairgrounds on the evening of June 16th.

Click here to visit the event on Facebook.

D-Day Training Exercise

We are planning a unit training activity for 6 JUNE 09 (yes... D-Day) in Zoar, Ohio. We will be conducting a class on map and compass work (including a practical compass course). We will also continue our training on squad tactics.

This is open to other Allied reenactors as well.

Please mark this on your calendars and I will have more information in a
few days. Please email Chris Smith if you plan to attend. You can also visit the event Facebook page by clicking here.

Orders are as follows:



ATTN: Co B, 502 PIR,

Subject: D-Day June 6, training day orders

Tentative agenda subject to change;

0800 Breakfast in Zoar.

1000 Compass and map reading class presented by Bulldog Smith.

1200 Lunch. Pack your own or we can chip in for carry out?

1300 Squad exercises Sgt Muddy. Be prepared to get dirty.

1500 Scouting and recon Cpl McCheap.

Note; The above agenda is provided as a rough outline for the day's activities and is not yet finalized so subject to chage.

502 PIR Uniform;

Since training will take place on June 6, it is only fitting that the M42 jump suit with jump boots be the uniform of the day. For those of you who do not have your Normandy kit yet the M43 uniform is perfectly acceptable.

M2 or M1C helmet with or without net and scrim, and overseas cap.

Web gear appropriate for D-Day is prefered. Rigger ammo pouches would be correct as well as standard issue gear.

327 GIR Uniform;

Standard wool uniform with M41 field jacket or HBY jacket and trousers. Rough-out ankle boots with canvas leggings. For those of you who do not have your Normandy kit yet the M43 uniform is perfectly acceptable.

M1 helmet with or without net, and overseas cap.

Standard issue infantry web gear.

Firearms;

M1, 03 & 03A3 rifles, M1 and M1A1 carbines, Thompson SMG, Grease Gun, 1911A1 pistols are acceptable. BAR for 327 GIR only. Okay maybe someday we'll have a BAR!

NOTE, Do not bring any ammunition period.

May 20, 2009

Authenticity standards

Come in Kickoff, over,

Just FYI, the 502 radio call sign was "Kickoff".

We have received a number of very positive comments on our impression form others in the WWII reenactment community. As a follow on to these comments and to refine our impression I have on order and picked up several books on the 101st during Market Garden and later. There are quite a number of excellent original period photographs showing 101st and 502nd combat gear/uniforms. The material needs to be reviewed for us to be able to set correct authenticity standards for our unit. Any of you who would like to get together one evening, weekend, etc. to review the material please let me know and we can schedule a time. After review we can update our uniform/equipment requirements list.

Muddy out

May 18, 2009

Findlay AAR

Hello troopers:

I just wanted to thank everyone from the 1st Allied Airborne that came to Findlay for the Armed Forces Day weekend. We had a great time and a lot of laughs. There was so much stuff to buy that we didn't have the cargo room or bank account capacity to handle it. Let's just say we did some damage.

We really enjoyed working with the 83rd ID and 5th Rangers. The battles were short but a hell of a lot of fun. We also got some news on a variety of other events. More on this later.


Submitted"
Pvt. Christopher "Bulldog" Smith