Showing posts with label United states. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United states. Show all posts

10 Forgotten American Heroes of WWI

10. Daniel Daly:
           


A Sergeant Major in the United States Marine Corps, Daniel Daly leads off our list with one of the most impressive accomplishments in American military history: he’s one of only 19 men to have received the Medal of Honor…twice. Yes, you read that correctly. Daly earned his first Medal of Honor for service in China in 1900 during the Boxer Rebellion. In that instance, he successfully defended his position virtually singlehandedly while inflicting more than 200 casualties. And that was just a warm up act, seeing as he tacked another Medal of Honor onto his resume 15 years later.

That one came for his service in Haiti, when he led a group of only about 40 men against an attack by hundreds of Haitian insurgents in the Battle of Fort Dipitie. He led his men to safety, and was quickly rewarded for his heroism. Obviously, you might be wondering what any of this has to do with World War I. Well, as you can probably imagine from someone like Daly, he wasn’t done yet. During his service in the Great War, he received the Navy Cross for what were described as “repeated deeds of heroism and great service” during the Battle of Belleau Wood. With his impeccable service record, basically the only reason he’s not higher on our list is the fact that he’s not quite as forgotten as some of these other men. After all, chances are you’ve heard his most famous rallying cry, given to his men at Belleau Wood: “For Christ’s sake men-come on! Do you want to live forever?”


Daly, as you can probably guess based on the fact that his balls and probably every other part of him were made from pure steel, survived the war and retired from the USMC in 1929, passing away in 1937. We’re guessing the reason Hitler waited two more years to start World War II was that he was making sure Daly was truly dead, so he wouldn’t have to deal with such a badass.

9. Eugene Bullard:
                                

There are a lot of “firsts” when it comes to wars, and to life in general. There had to be a first for everything, right? Well, have you ever wondered who the first black, American combat pilot was? The answer is Eugene Bullard, a Haitian-American from Georgia who flew with France during World War I. His father’s family had fled Haiti during the Haitian Revolution, and eventually Bullard made his way to Europe and settled in Paris, thus beginning his allegiance to France at the outset of the war.

Before becoming a combat pilot, Bullard served as a ground troop and machine gunner in the French Foreign Legion until being wounded during the Battle of Verdun. It was during his recuperation that he joined the French Air Service, flying with the Lafayette Flying Corps and taking part in 20 combat missions as a pilot. Over the course of his service, he received 15 commendations and was made a knight of the Legion of Honor, the highest decoration in France, as well as the Medaille militaire.


You might be vaguely familiar with Bullard if you ever saw the movie Flyboys, which is based on the Lafayette Flying Corps – except for the fact that the movie changed Bullard’s name, ignores his background, and puts James Franco front and center.

8. Frank Luke:
                                           

Speaking of flying aces, if there’s any American pilot you’ve heard of from World War I, it’s probably Eddie Rickenbacker. Rickenbacker had more aerial victories than any other American pilot during the Great War. But did you ever wonder who had the second most? No one remembers the silver medalist, right? And that’s why most people have never heard of Frank Luke, who had 18 aerial victories to Rickenbacker’s 26. The Second Lieutenant, sadly, did not make it out of World War I alive. He had been attacking enemy balloons (yes, the hot air kind were actually used during combat in those days) when a machine gunner hit him in his plane. He landed safely but, having been seriously wounded by the bullet, was quickly tracked down and killed by members of the German infantry.


He received a posthumous Medal of Honor for his incredible actions during the Great War, and also received a posthumous promotion to First Lieutenant. And while he may have played second fiddle to Rickenbacker during the war, the famed pilot held Luke in the highest regard, saying of his friendly rival, “He was the most daring aviator and greatest fighter pilot of the entire war.” According to Rickenbacker, Luke “went on a rampage and shot down 14 enemy aircraft, including 10 balloons, in eight days. No other ace, even the dreaded Ricthofen [a.k.a. the Red Baron], had ever come close to that.”

7. George W. Hamilton:
                           

     
           
It’s kind of amazing that a man so revered in some circles that a book was written with a title literally claiming him to be “America’s Greatest World War I Hero” could be more or less forgotten, but such is the case for George W. Hamilton. The United States Marine Corps Major led the American forces in the Battle of Belleau Wood (the same battle for which Daniel Daly received his Navy Cross, for those keeping track at home), and over the course of his military career received the Distinguished Service Cross and the Croix de Guerre.


His fellow Marines, over the years, have also recognized his tremendous courage and acts of heroism. In addition to his heroics at Belleau Wood, he also served with so much valor that he was recommended for the Medal of Honor on multiple occasions, and was hailed by his peers as the “most outstanding Marine Corps hero of World War I.” Sadly, despite surviving the duration of the war despite participating in virtually every major action, Hamilton was killed in a plane crash at a hypothetical reenactment at Gettysburg – by which we mean, a reenactment of the Battle of Gettysburg, but using the technology of the day, hence the inclusion of the small plane Hamilton was piloting. It was about as unceremonious and unfortunate an end as a hero of Hamilton’s stature could have had, and unfortunately he’s become so forgotten over time that he doesn’t even have a Wikipedia page.

6. Charles Whittlesey: 
                                       

You may have heard of the famous “Lost Battalion” but chances are, you never knew the name of the man who commanded it: Lieutenant Colonel Charles Whittlesey. The Wisconsin native was awarded the Medal of Honor for his acts of courage in the Argonne Forest, in a story that’s pretty unfortunately ignored over the years. Amazingly, it’s a story that’s been most famously represented by a TV movie starring Rick Schroeder as Whittlesey.The story of what happened there is the stuff of military legend. Whittlesey and his battalion of 554 men pushed forward through the Argonne but were quickly cut off from supply lines and reinforcements, and found themselves surrounded and seemingly at the mercy of the Germans. They had no food or water, and since they had no means of receiving supplies, ammunition was precious. Snipers and German attacks came consistently for a period of four days, but somehow, amazingly, Whittlesey and his men held off wave after wave of the enemy attacks. The Germans eventually sent in a blindfolded American prisoner with a message imploring Whittlesey to surrender, but – and he denied saying it but like we said, it’s the stuff of legend so as always, we feel the need to print the legend – replied with a simple statement of, “You go to hell!”


107 of his men were killed, 190 were wounded, and 63 were missing in action at the end of those four days. Whittlesey was so revered in military circles that he served as a pallbearer for the Unknown Soldier at Arlington Cemetery. Sadly, despite surviving the war, he went missing shortly after boarding a ship from New York to Havana. It’s presumed he committed suicide by jumping overboard, as he’d written several letters to his family members and prepared a will, which he left in his room aboard the ship.

5. Edouard Izac:
                                      

An Iowa native who rose to the rank of Lieutenant Commander of the United States Navy, Edouard Izac served in the troop transport ship USS President Lincoln, and it was his time on this vessel that earned him a Medal of Honor for his brave exploits. Izac was aboard the Lincoln when she was struck by three torpedoes from a German U-Boat, sinking her and allowing Izac to be taken prisoner aboard the U-90. Rather than sitting idly by, Izac used his time as a POW to learn as much as he could about German submarine movements and attempted to escape in order to relay the information to US forces.


His first attempt to escape by jumping from a moving train, but the attempt was unsuccessful due to an injury he sustained in making the leap. However, he did eventually escape from capture and fled to neutral Switzerland. Of course by then, the war was nearly over and his information was no longer of much use to the Navy but his repeated attempts at foiling the Germans earned him his Medal of Honor for basically laughing in the face of death and repeatedly putting his life on the line to help his country win the war. He later became a Congressman and personally selected by Dwight Eisenhower to tour and inspect recently liberated concentration camps at the end of World War II. He died in 1990, having been the last surviving Medal of Honor winner from World War I.

4. William J. Donovan:
                                       


You may know the name William Donovan, but chances are if you’re familiar with the man, it’s much less about his World War I heroics than it is his being considered the “Father of Central Intelligence.” Donovan was the head of the Office of Strategic Services during World War II – a department which would later morph into the Central Intelligence Agency. It’s as the father of modern American espionage that Donovan is best remembered, despite being one of the most highly decorated American soldiers in the Great War.


Of course, all you need to know about what a badass William Donovan was during the First World War is the fact that his nickname was “Wild Bill.” During his time in the service, he rose to the rank of Major General and earned such awards as the Medal of Honor, Distinguished Service Cross, Distinguished Service Medal, Silver Star, and Purple Heart. He earned his Medal of Honor as a Lieutenant Colonel, as he led his outgunned troops on an assault against a heavily organized and fortified position, consistently rallying his troops and, despite taking a bullet to the leg, refusing to be evacuated until his men were all withdrawn to safety. The man made a big name for himself later in life, but it was his heroics in World War I that should have let people know pretty early on he was bound for great things.

3. Freddie Stowers:
                                                           
Sometimes, it takes far too long for courageous actions to be recognized. We’ll get to that with the next entry on our list, also, but for now let’s focus on Freddie Stowers. The Corporal in the 371st Infantry wasn’t rewarded for his deeds until 70 years after his death, when he was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor. A South Carolina native, Stowers was killed in action on September 28, 1918 during an assault on Cote 188. On that day, he and his company were ordered to take the heavily fortified hill, fighting through mortar rounds and a hail of gunfire from the Germans.

The defense of the hill was so vicious that every ranking officer in Stowers’ platoon was killed, leaving the Corporal in command of his rifle squad as they continued the assault on Cote 188. He rallied the remaining troops and pushed forward, but was struck by an enemy machine-gun. That didn’t stop him, of course, and he continued forward, leading his men on. He was struck a second time, but he still kept pushing his men forward, and his act of valor in the face of imminent death inspired them to surge ahead and take out the remaining German defenders and take the hill. Stowers never made it off of that hill, succumbing to the overwhelming blood loss suffered from his multiple bullet wounds.

2. Henry Johnson:
                                    


One of the greatest American heroes of World War I who never got nearly the recognition he deserved is Henry Johnson, a Sergeant who didn’t receive his Medal of Honor until earlier this very year. Johnson, a North Carolina native who only received his long overdue honor after much campaigning by politicians like New York’s Chuck Schumer, was a member of the all black New York National Guard 369th Infantry – better known as the Harlem Hellfighters. His outrageously heroic deeds, needless to say, should have been recognized much, much sooner.


So what exactly did he do that was so great, you ask? Well, how about singlehandedly fighting off a German raiding party while sustaining a staggering 21 wounds and simultaneously preventing the other man on sentry duty with him that night from being captured? Oh, and there’s also the fact that his ability to fight off the Germans using grenades, his fists, and a bolo knife (as well as the butt of his rifle) kept numerous other soldiers alive. It’s speculated that there were as many as 24 Germans in the raiding party, yet somehow, Johnson managed to fend them all off, earning the nickname “Black Death” which, while a little racist in retrospect, is still a pretty badass moniker.

1. Frank Gaffney:
                                           


It’s kind of amazing that a man pretty universally praised as the “second bravest man in the US Military” has become largely forgotten through the years. Unfortunately, unlike guys like Alvin York, he never had a movie made about his courageous, inspirational feats starring Gary Cooper. Nicknamed “The Human Hurricane,” which would have made for a sensational wrestling moniker, Private First Class Frank Gaffney earned the Medal of Honor for, frankly, was basically the same sort of action that earned Sgt. York so much fame in the long run.

Serving as a lowly PFC and rifleman for the 108th Infantry, Gaffney saw his brothers in arms gunned down by the Germans. He was literally the last man standing in his unit, but he pushed forward and singlehandedly took out a German machine-gun post, killing the crew and taking the machine-gun position, which he held against the enemy until relief arrived. He killed four more Germans and bombed several dugouts, and his actions led to the capture of 80 German soldiers. Like we said – pretty much exactly the same thing that Alvin York gained so much fame for, yet Gaffney’s heroics have basically been swept over through time. Gaffney survived the war and passed away in 1948 at the age of 64, and was buried in his hometown of Buffalo, New York. He hadn’t survived the war completely unscathed, though, losing his left arm in battle.


Maybe it’s just us, but he certainly sounds like a man who deserves more than just the few sentences devoted to him on Wikipedia.

Top 10 Best Sculptures in the United States



10. Her Secret Is Patience (2009), by Janet Echelman

her-secret-is-patience
First up is the most recent sculpture on the list. Echelman’s works are made from galvanized steel and polyester twine netting. This one, the title of which derives from a quote by Ralph Waldo Emerson,  is suspended above Civic Space Park at Arizona State University and moves with the wind, a process Echelman deems “wind choreography,” which simulates a cumulus cloud. At night, it is lit with colored lights, giving it the air of a giant jellyfish or a terrestrial version of the aurora borealis. For more on Echelman’s vision, view her TED Talk.

9. Metalmorphosis (2007), by David Cerny

metalmorphosis
Cerny is a Czech sculptor who specializes in big heads and controversy. His TowerBabies is a work installed on the 709-feet tall Zizkov Television Tower in Prague. As the name implies, it’s a series of cast bronze infants climbing the main tower. Another sculpture in Prague features two nude men facing each other, peeing. It’s a fountain, naturally. But Metalmorphosis, at Charlotte’s Whitehall Technology Park, is something else entirely, a fountain made of multiple slices of reflective stainless steel plates that rotate independently. When they align, the plates form a man’s head that is 30 feet tall. The layers move in different directions, forming patterns that become familiar upon repeated viewings. Want to see it in action? Check it out on YouTube. You can just picture the local kids hanging out and getting high watching this thing.

8. Watts Towers, aka Nuestro Pueblo (1921–1954), by Simon Rodia

nuestro-pueblo
From a distance, these giant folk art structures look like steampunk Christmas trees. All together there are 17 structures, and two of them are 99 feet tall. Essentially, the towers are made of found objects—the detritus of urban life, such as bed frames, bottles, and steel pipes. They spiral into the sky, a lacey exoskeleton that is at once futuristic and medieval. Rodia wrapped some of the towers with wire mesh and coated them with mortar, embedding in them little bits of ceramic, sea shells, soda bottles, and especially broken pottery from the factories nearby. It’s a bit like a DIY Sagrada Familia.
Like many eccentrics, Rodia was not well-loved by his neighbors, and he left in 1955, permanently fed up with their scorn over his artistic vision in 1955. The structures came perilously close to being razed, but posterity won out and they were designated a National Historic Landmark in 1990. As the work of one untrained man, the Watts Towers are a monument to bringing one’s vision to fruition.

7. Cloud Gate (2004), by Anish Kapoor

Cloud-Gate
Chicago’s public art scene has so many famous images to choose from: Buckingham Memorial Fountain, Calder’s Flamingo stabile, the Chicago Picasso, Dubuffet’s Monument with Standing Beast, etc. You have to admire the city’s commitment to art in public spaces, no matter how you feel about post-modern metal monstrosities. With the inauguration of Millennium Park in 1004, the city’s residents have a host of new sculptures to enjoy. The most recent favorite statue is Kapoor’s Cloud Gate. A shiny metal bean arising from a concrete plaza, Cloud Gate attracts visitors like a picnic does ants. You want to touch it, gaze into it, whip out your iPhone and take all sorts of pictures as you walk around and through it. You stare at the reflection of your surroundings, picking out details you never noticed before. It’s art with looking-glass precision, kind of like the world’s biggest bathroom mirror: reapply your lipstick, check for parsley in your teeth!

6. Spoonbridge and Cherry (1985–1988) by Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen



This beauty is part of the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden, adjacent to the Walker Art Center. It’s a giant white spoon, with a perfect cherry perched precariously on its tip. Oldenburg and his wife van Bruggen were a fun couple. Their oeuvre includes a giant typewriter eraser (thank god those are extinct), Clothespin outside Philadelphia City Hall, and Free Stamp in Cleveland, Ohio. It’s kitsch with a point. The sculpture is also a fountain of sorts, with a fine mist spray moistening the gazing faces of summer visitors to the park. In the winter, the sculpture, caked with snow, continues to be simultaneously incongruous and integral to the environment.

5. Crazy Horse Memorial (1948– ), by Korczak Ziolkowski

crazy-horse-memorial
It’s the politically correct neighbor of Mount Rushmore, this massive, and unfinished, monument being carved from Thunderhead Mountain in South Dakota’s Black Hills. Depicting the Oglala Lakota warrior Crazy Horse, when finished (don’t hold your breath), it will dwarf Mount Rushmore. The presidents’ heads are 60 feet high, and Crazy Horse’s will be 87. The whole sculpture, consisting of the warrior’s torso, his arm, and his horse’s head and chest, will rise 563 feet. That’s much bigger, and much further from completion, than the ode to the Presidents. A nonprofit endeavor, work has continued since Ziolkowski (who also worked on Mount Rushmore) died in 1982. Like many works of art, this one is not without controversy. Many Lakota oppose the memorial based on the fact that destroying a mountain to honor a man is a perversion of Native American culture.

4. Spiral Jetty (1970), by Robert Smithson

spiral-jetty
One of the original earthwork sculptures, Smithson’s Spiral Jetty is also one of the most enduring. On the shores of the Great Salt Lake near Rozel Point, the Jetty is a great curlicue formed of mud, rocks, salt, and earth, that is a total of 1,500 feet long. Despite its massive size, it took only six days to construct. For most of its existence, the Jetty has been submerged beneath the lake, but visible from the air. Fluctuating water levels, based on drought and snow melt, mean that viewing the work is based on the whim of Mother Nature.
Smithson was inspired by his love of geology and paleontology. In recent years, the work has been threatened by the possibility of oil drilling nearby. Whereas many have rallied to protect Spiral Jetty, Smithson, who died in a plane crash in 1973 at the age of 35, would more than likely prefer that nature take its course, rather than have people take extraordinary measures to preserve it.

3. Gateway Arch (1968), by Eero Saarinen

gateway-arch
You can see it from miles around; it’s a perfect beacon for navigation if your GPS craps out while you’re cruising downtown. Best of all, you can go inside and travel to the top via tram. The Gateway Arch is the tallest stainless steel monument in the world, as well as the tallest memorial in the United States. Memorial of what, you ask? Well, the long form of the park’s name where the arch was built is the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial, which commemorates the Louisiana Purchase and the westward expansion of the United States. Finnish architect Eero Saarinen died just as work began on his soon-to-be beloved monument.

2. Vietnam Veterans Memorial (1982), by Maya Lin

Vietnam-Veterans-Memorial
When you’re talking about the National Mall in Washington, everyone’s got an opinion. Many of the statues are really memorials to past Presidents (Lincoln, Washington, Jefferson), or wars (World War II,Vietnam, Korea). What is undeniable, no matter what your opinion of the current elected officials, is that this grassy expanse will make any US citizen’s heart swell with pride.
Lin’s Vietnam Veterans Memorial is notable for the controversy surrounding its design and construction. The upshot is that Lin’s minimalist design, and inclusion of the names of the war’s fallen, made it an instant cultural icon and destination for the bereaved. Its remarkable power is unusual and undeniable for a work of public art. Its placement in the mall, and its stark design, are in contrast with everything else in the vicinity. Rather than a typical chest-swelling ode to heroism, the memorial is a contemplative, somber manifestation of a historical event that still arouses strong feelings after all these years.

1. Liberty Enlightening the World (1886), by Frederic Auguste Bartholdi

Statue-of-Liberty
Lady Liberty is one awesome gal, and her place at number one is anti-climactic for its obviousness. A gift from the French, she has aged like one of their fine wines. We gave her an island, and you can visit her by boat. You can climb into her crown for a spectacular view of the Manhattan skyline. What more could you ask for? This venerable depiction of hope and freedom is the most enduring symbol of how Americans view themselves.