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Susan E. Kennedy's avatar

My grandmother often talked about her family, so here's what she told me: Her father (this my great-grandfather) was a medic in WWI. When he came home, he wanted to be a doctor, but couldn't go to medical school, so he married and had three children. Of those, the oldest, a son, was drafted in WWII to be a pilot in Europe, despite being nearly blind without his glasses. He came home, also wanted to be a doctor but settled for studying dentistry in PA, married one of his sister's (my grandmother) high school friends, and had three sons. Just before graduating, he was diagnosed with throat cancer and died. He was in his 30s, I believe. My grandmother's younger brother joined the ROTC in college, became an officer, married his college sweetheart, and was stationed in Morocco during the Korean War. After his time of service was done, the army tried to get him to reenlist, he said no, went home, and had three daughters. Switching to my grandfather's family, he grew up on a farm. When Pearl Harbor was bombed, his older brother joined the Army. When my grandfather was old enough, he went to three different military recruiting offices and tried to join. Each sent him home with instructions to grow potatoes for the war effort. I think he was lucky, but I think he regrets having to stay home.

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james r. viar's avatar

My dad fought in the Phillipines, Battle of Leyte Gulf. He was terribly wounded, shipped back to the States where he met a beautiful nurse who took care of his wounds at Valley Forge Hospital. That nurse became my mom......

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