You look quite dapper there Air Vice-Marshal Spitfire!No - I am certainly not a spring chicken (- more like an ol' cock.)
You look quite dapper there Air Vice-Marshal Spitfire!No - I am certainly not a spring chicken (- more like an ol' cock.)
Another vet who came out to a Field Reenactment - Leon "Jed" Jedziniak
- See more at: http://www.militarytrader.com/milit...mid=699444&rid=241878292#sthash.xhF4IOqw.dpufLocated in Rockford, Ill., Midway Village is an open air museum comprised of 26 Victorian buildings. Once a year, however, it becomes the pivot point of several reenacted WWII battles, as entusiasts from around the nation converge for the largest event of its kind in the Midwest.
Nearly 1,3000 reenactors from 40 states representing soldiers of the US, Great Britain, France, Russia, Ukraine, Poland, Germany, Italy, and China participated in this year’s event. In addition, about 50 original and recreated vehicles—everything from Jeeps and motorcycles to Kuebelwagens and Kettenkrads—rolled through the village and camps. Heavier vehicles included an M4 Sherman, M22 Locust, M5 Stuart, a Hetzer, Panhard armored car, and many half-tracks, trucks, and field guns.
WWII Days is much more than just a reenactment. A “Behind the Lines” tour on Friday evening guides visitors through the Village to preview the weekend activities. Reenactors labor intensely in the woods, constructing outposts, bunkers, and trench works. On Saturday, this area opened to the public. Skirmishes occurred in the late morning in the woods and the village.
I know where you are coming from on that. I think the concept of REMF is a relatively new one. I never heard any WW-II vet every talk about fellow veterans of the era in those derogatory terms--regardless of what their billet was or where they had served. Of course, there was no love-loss for 4Fs.
I know this was posted 3 years ago, but I have to offer rebuttal. Front line GIs certainly had a notable disdain for what were termed "garrison soldiers." But don't take my word for it, ask Joe and Willie . . .
. . . and there are oh so many more.
I think that there were more female war correspondents at the Rockford event than there was during all of ww2.
And this would be a problem because....