US Military in WW2: Civilian Heroes
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US Military in WW2: Civilian Heroes

They Call It Pacific, Manila Espionage and Can Do! The Story of the Seabees
 EPUB
Sofort lieferbar | Lieferzeit: Sofort lieferbar I
ISBN-13:
9780359196579
Veröffentl:
2018
Einband:
EPUB
Seiten:
1033
Autor:
Myron B. Goldsmith
Serie:
US Military in WW2
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

US Military in WW2 (Volume 3) Civilian Heroes presents three accounts of life during World War 2 from unsung, behind-the-scenes players: They Call It Pacific by Clark Lee; Manila Espionage by Claire "e;High Pockets"e; Phillips and Can Do! The Story of the Seabees by William Bradford Huie.They Call It Pacificby Clark LeeClark Lee was an AP reporter stationed in Manila when the Japanese invaded the Philippines in December 1941.They Call It Pacificbegins as an account of events leading up to the outbreak of war and then morphs into an exciting real-time account of Lee's mad-dash escape across the islands to the last US ship still in port.Manila Espionageby Claire "e;High Pockets"e; Phillips and Myron B. GoldsmithThe autobiography of Claire Phillips, an American entertainer living in Manila in 1941 who used the city's underground Tsubuki Nightclub as the base for a resistance movement during the Japanese occupation.Can Do! The Story of the Seabeesby William Bradford HuieThe Seabees began as barely armed civilians with no military training. They had an average age of 35. GI's would joke, "e;Never hit a Seabee, for his son might be a Marine."e; But America's bulldozing, jungle-hacking, 'Jap-cracking' Construction Battalion or the Seabees (C.B.'s) soon proved themselves miracle-construction-workers in seemingly impassable combat zones. Before World War 2, Marines were the ones to 'get their first,' but the need for roads in the muddy battlefields of the Pacific meant that claim would pass to the Construction Battalion. Their early motto was 'Can Do!'*Includes original footnotes.*Includes photographs from World War 2.
US Military in WW2 (Volume 3) Civilian Heroes presents three accounts of life during World War 2 from unsung, behind-the-scenes players: They Call It Pacific by Clark Lee; Manila Espionage by Claire "e;High Pockets"e; Phillips and Can Do! The Story of the Seabees by William Bradford Huie.They Call It Pacificby Clark LeeClark Lee was an AP reporter stationed in Manila when the Japanese invaded the Philippines in December 1941.They Call It Pacificbegins as an account of events leading up to the outbreak of war and then morphs into an exciting real-time account of Lee's mad-dash escape across the islands to the last US ship still in port.Manila Espionageby Claire "e;High Pockets"e; Phillips and Myron B. GoldsmithThe autobiography of Claire Phillips, an American entertainer living in Manila in 1941 who used the city's underground Tsubuki Nightclub as the base for a resistance movement during the Japanese occupation.Can Do! The Story of the Seabeesby William Bradford HuieThe Seabees began as barely armed civilians with no military training. They had an average age of 35. GI's would joke, "e;Never hit a Seabee, for his son might be a Marine."e; But America's bulldozing, jungle-hacking, 'Jap-cracking' Construction Battalion or the Seabees (C.B.'s) soon proved themselves miracle-construction-workers in seemingly impassable combat zones. Before World War 2, Marines were the ones to 'get their first,' but the need for roads in the muddy battlefields of the Pacific meant that claim would pass to the Construction Battalion. Their early motto was 'Can Do!'*Includes original footnotes.*Includes photographs from World War 2.

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