Blood on German Snow: An African American Artilleryman in World War II and BeyondTexas A&M University Press, 2006 - 156 Seiten Emiel Owens served his country in the 777th Field Artillery, involved in actions from Omaha Beach to the occupation army in the Philippines. Like the rest of the U.S. Army at the time, the 777th was a segregated unit. Remarkably few memoirs by African Americans have been published from the World War II era, making Owens's account especially valuable. Because he situates his military experience in the larger context of his life and the society in which he lived, his story also reveals much about the changing racial climate of the last several decades. A native Texan, Owens recounts his early experiences in a small, rural school outside Austin during the hard times of the Depression. In 1943, he was drafted into the army, landing in England in August 1944. Ten days later he was on Omaha Beach. By November 3 Owens and his unit were supporting the 30th Infantry Division as it attacked German towns and cities leading into the Ruhr Pocket and the Huertgen Forest. Owens starkly portrays the horror of the Kohlscheid Penetration. He was awarded a certificate of merit for his actions in that theater. With help from the G.I. bill, Owens returned to college and then to graduate school at Ohio State University, since universities in his home state were still closed to African Americans. He earned a Ph.D. in economics, which led to a productive academic and consulting career. This is a uniquely captivating story of an African American man's journey from a segregated Texas town to the battlefields of Europe and on to postwar success in a world changed forever by the war Americans--black and white--had fought. |
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Seite 6
... young children do, I had a bad habit of always putting things in my mouth, such as pennies and anything tiny and handy that I could get my hands on. My mother was constantly scolding me for this habit. One night, despite the warnings, I ...
... young children do, I had a bad habit of always putting things in my mouth, such as pennies and anything tiny and handy that I could get my hands on. My mother was constantly scolding me for this habit. One night, despite the warnings, I ...
Seite 16
... young man. As she sang almost inaudibly, the young picker opened his eyes briefly at intervals, as if he could hear more of the mournful spiritual than we could, and that perhaps was lifting his spirit. I believe the spiritual was ...
... young man. As she sang almost inaudibly, the young picker opened his eyes briefly at intervals, as if he could hear more of the mournful spiritual than we could, and that perhaps was lifting his spirit. I believe the spiritual was ...
Seite 17
... young picker's body bag. “Somehow if you can see the light of daybreak,” an unknown picker uttered, “it takes away the fear of dying.” No one picked cotton the day after the tragic death. The grower came by and was troubled at the ...
... young picker's body bag. “Somehow if you can see the light of daybreak,” an unknown picker uttered, “it takes away the fear of dying.” No one picked cotton the day after the tragic death. The grower came by and was troubled at the ...
Seite 25
... young soldiers were all sleeping peacefully as if in the dead of the night. Shafts of light were shining through the windows on the west side, but all was silent. To my mind came the scene of being in my grandmother's home and hearing ...
... young soldiers were all sleeping peacefully as if in the dead of the night. Shafts of light were shining through the windows on the west side, but all was silent. To my mind came the scene of being in my grandmother's home and hearing ...
Seite 34
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Blood on German Snow: An African American Artilleryman in World War II and ... Emiel W. Owens Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2006 |
Blood on German Snow: An African American Artilleryman in World War II and ... Emiel W. Owens Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2006 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
777th Field Artillery African American army arrived battalion battle began Camp Beale colored combat commander convoy cotton crossing Daddy dead difficult enemy face field fifteen fighting final finally financial finished fire fired firing firing batteries first day five floating floor flowing Fort Sam Houston Fort Sill front graduate gun crew Hattie haul headed high school Houston hundred Hurtgen Forest infantry killed knew later Liberia lived loaded looked Low Woods miles morning moved movie Nana Kru never office officers Ohio Operation Plunder pick pickers plane Prairie View pulled railroad received Rhine River Richterich Roer River rounds Ruhr Pocket semester sharecroppers shell ship Siegfried line Smithville streets tanker tanks targets Texas thought told took town tractor prime mover tree troops truck United University Utah Beach walked wanted wounded XVI Corps young Zelmo