President Barack Obama has said: My grandfather marched with - TopicsExpress



          

President Barack Obama has said: My grandfather marched with Patton across Europe. What he should have said: My grandfather served in Europe with Courtney Hodges First Army, then briefly with Patton late in the war. The Marching with Patton symbolic theme, or close variations thereof, has been spoken by President Obama many times during 2008-2009, always without elaboration, but with understandable pride in his grandfathers WWII service. As early as Obamas 1995 autobiography, he wrote that his grandfather was sloshing around the mud of France, part of Pattons Army. The facts, however, paint a different picture. (See details of his grandfathers service further below, based on new research by the Associated Press and as published in the Army Times on 6/6/2009.) Apparently the President, like perhaps 99% of the American public, wrongly assumes that it was Pattons Army that liberated western Europe and defeated Nazi Germany. And who can fault the President or the public? There has been a never-ending and often careless bombardment, so to speak, of the Patton name and image from television, magazines, books, Hollywood, and most recently from a production by famed documentary film director Ken Burns, as well as repeatedly from The History Channel.No one can dispute the brilliance and accomplishments of Gen. Patton in North Africa, Sicily, and western Europe. But with regard to contributing to the Allied victory in Europe, consider this: It was not Pattons Third Army, but Hodges First Army, initially and briefly under command of Omar Bradley, that achieved the following: Landed on the beaches of Normandy on D-Day Led the break-out from Normandy at St. Lô Liberated Paris First to cross the Seine River First to fire artillery into Germany First to enter German soil First to cross the Siegfried Line First to capture major German cities First to cross the Rhine River Largest total capture of German troops by a U.S. force First to link up with Soviet forces Largest U.S. force under single command in WWII (18 divisions at peak) Beginning on August 1st, 1944, following St. Lô, it was Gen. Courtney Hodges who commanded the First Army all the way to the German surrender in May, 1945. Our hope is that President Obama, Ken Burns, the producers at The History Channel, and media professionals everywhere, will finally discover Courtney Hodges, arguably the real Patton of the Allied victory in Europe, whose greatest flaws seem to have been his reserved, thoughtful demeanor (i.e., uncolorful) and an aversion to self-promotion. About President Obamas Grandfather, Sgt. Stanley A. Dunham: Dunham served in the Army Air Corps with a supply & maintenance ground unit of the 9th Air Force in support of Gen. Pattons Third Army. However that was limited to about two months during February to early April, 1945, after the Battle of the Bulge. Prior to that, starting in Normandy in late July, 1944, and for the next six months, Dunhams unit was in support of Gen. Courtney Hodges First Army. During that time, Hodges troops advanced from Normandy through northern France, then into Belgium, and then becoming the first Allied ground force to enter Germany. Again, the 3rd Armored Division (no connection to Patton or the Third Army) was often the lead unit in Hodges advance. https://youtube/watch?v=d4_47O2Pfy8
Posted on: Tue, 04 Nov 2014 06:20:57 +0000

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