On the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the
eleventh month of 1918, there was a temporary cessation of hostilities on
the Western Front of World War I as a consequence of the armistice signed by
the Allies and Germany.
American troops in France celebrate the armistice |
On its first anniversary President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed November 11, 1919 as the first celebration of Armistice Day. In 1938 this day officially became a federal holiday. Later, in the aftermath of World War II and the Korean War, Armistice Day became known as Veterans Day in the United States. And while the allied nations honor members of their armed forces on Armistice Day – we commemorate it as Veterans Day.
Inasmuch as today is Veterans Day I figure I'd take a moment to talk about my favorite veteran - Howard Gaertner. Who also happens to be my dad. Dad has been gone now for more than thirteen years already but I'm sure he'd appreciate the mention.
This picture of him was taken in Kidderminster England, November 2, 1944.
He'd already spent more than three months in combat - including the invasion at Normandy, the battle of the hedgerows, the breakout of the bocage at Saint-Lô, the dash across northern France with Patton's forces and the liberation of Belgium. He was evacuated to England after being wounded in the Meuse River crossing in September of 1944. Following his convalescence he returned to Germany for much of 1945 with the Army of Occupation.
This was turning out to be much more than an average adventure for a previously skinny depression-era kid who was drafted after graduating high school.
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