BASIC TRAINING OF GLIDER BORNE TROOPS 78804

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 10 дек 2024

Комментарии • 32

  • @kcthecowboy
    @kcthecowboy 3 года назад +25

    I once met a man in the supermarket parking lot. His liscence plate frame read combat glider pilots association. I asked him if he flew the CG 4 and he was shocked anyone would know what tha was. I told him I would be proud to shake the hand of a brave man and fellow vet. Later in the store his wife told me quietly that he was walking a little straighter and prouder. I never got to talk to him again. He passed away about a week later. Be good to those old timers. There aren't that many of them left.

  • @SimonAmazingClarke
    @SimonAmazingClarke 8 месяцев назад +1

    I love these old training films

  • @douglasdopp2479
    @douglasdopp2479 2 года назад +2

    Grew up with my fathers recollections from early development days 13 Ann. Best was description of having side peel off while flying. Now I live in town where gliders were built

  • @t.j.payeur739
    @t.j.payeur739 6 лет назад +22

    My father flew a glider for the Pathfinders on D-Day, he was one of the first Allied soldiers to set foot in occupied Europe. He flew co-pilot for a British glider in the invasion of Sicily, one of only 50 American volunteers. He landed a glider in Southern France and flew 2 missions in Market-Garden, where he won the DFC for staying on the tow after his tow plane was hit and his co-pilot had his throat ripped out by shrapnel so that he could get his men where they belonged. How he managed to not even get hurt is a miracle....

    • @ingojeep1713
      @ingojeep1713 4 года назад

      Pathfinders jumped, not gliders...

    • @AnglicanXn
      @AnglicanXn 3 года назад +2

      My dad flew a glider in Market Garden, and had to walk out from behind the lines with his pilot. Later, he flew a glider filled with gasoline for Patton's tanks on the evening of 26th December, supplying surrounded Bastogne in the Battle of the Bulge. He was in one of ten gliders to make the mission.

    • @JudyMarsile
      @JudyMarsile Год назад +1

      Ever heard of Paul Tuntland?? A pioneer in glider aviation.

  • @l.a.raustadt518
    @l.a.raustadt518 6 лет назад +6

    Our Uncle Bud2 was trained as a rigger in the17th ABN. 194th GIR Company B. He saw action Battle of the Bulge and Oberation Varsity crossing the Rhine. God Bless all our Airborne from then till now. Army Airborne a proud heritage that live s on. Thank you all.

    • @ronaldrobertson2332
      @ronaldrobertson2332 4 года назад

      My dad was in that regiment for sure! PFC Clifford Sterling Robertson. His glider was shot down during Varsity and was briefly captured with wounds to his wrists and ankles. He died in 1999. I didn't know he had a steel plate in his skull from the war, as well as still having shrapnel in his ankles, wrists. Dad was a full-blood Santee Indian.

  • @UTubeGlennAR
    @UTubeGlennAR 5 лет назад +4

    >^..^< Just another reason these men are part of the "Greatest Generation"......

  • @dougearnest7590
    @dougearnest7590 2 года назад

    Thinking of all the effort put in to design of the glider (I presume) regarding weight and balance issues, this video was way more interesting than I thought it would be. Also, using the weight of the jeep to raise the nose via the automatic lifting device cable - brilliant!
    Also, at 27:43 - you can't see it on the video but that was Stalin at Yalta not appreciating all the military hardware sent to the USSR by the Arsenal of Democracy.
    Thanks for posting!

  • @localbod
    @localbod 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks for posting this.
    I find these videos fascinating.
    Most enjoyable viewing.

  • @gregorflopinski9016
    @gregorflopinski9016 5 лет назад +12

    Now i know how to use a 75 year old glider

  • @reddevilparatrooper
    @reddevilparatrooper 2 года назад +1

    The glider guys had a more dangerous job than the paratroopers especially on landing in combat.

  • @nahmastay3300
    @nahmastay3300 3 года назад +1

    This is so cool...though I wonder how much time they would've saved if the just had ratchet straps back then lol

  • @dongilleo9743
    @dongilleo9743 3 года назад

    This must have been early in WW2. The 37mm Antitank gun was obsolete certainly by 1944.

  • @j.dunlop8295
    @j.dunlop8295 8 месяцев назад +2

    "Suicide job,' almost everyone who did it once, didn't do it twice! "Like riding a truck, into a hundred mile an hour crash!" My uncle with 101st engineers, talked about it, when drinking! Never around his own kids! (His Wife wouldn't allow it!) She lost family in WW2!

    • @KurtDavis-o4b
      @KurtDavis-o4b 7 дней назад

      👍🏻My pop was one of those who did fly into combat twice (pilot), DDay and Market Garden. He once told me a quote from an address to a graduating company of soldiers by Walter Cronkite after flying into combat-“I'll tell you straight out: if you've got to go into combat, don't go by glider. Walk, crawl, parachute, swim, float-- anything. But don't go by a glider!" "It was a lifetime cure of constipation."

  • @mids44
    @mids44 2 года назад

    always remember robe is your friend ;-)

  • @johnstacy7902
    @johnstacy7902 5 лет назад +2

    Wouldnt the pilots what to be there at least watching whats going on? I was a helicopter mechnic in the Army and 1/2 the time the pilots did the actual work or at least helped out

    • @mrcharles1602
      @mrcharles1602 3 года назад +1

      In the British airborne during the war, the pilots were ordinary soldiers given glider training much to the disgust of the RAF.

  • @Nderak
    @Nderak 4 года назад

    19:18 this is so cool

  • @patrykwitzleben3722
    @patrykwitzleben3722 4 года назад +1

    glider infantryman had parachute training too ?

    • @terrenceduren3516
      @terrenceduren3516 4 года назад +2

      No.

    • @patrykwitzleben3722
      @patrykwitzleben3722 4 года назад

      @@terrenceduren3516 thx for answer

    • @davecraft8753
      @davecraft8753 3 года назад +1

      187th Infantry did

    • @myballs24
      @myballs24 3 года назад +1

      Some gilder infantry did almost all of the 187th and 188th had parachute training a good amount of 194th glider men were also parachute trained and im sure the 327th and 325th probably had parachute trained men.

  • @Overlord-qq1ew
    @Overlord-qq1ew 4 года назад +1

    Glider at that time is flying coffee .
    And that way they given ( G wings ) which meaning not Glider it's called gut.
    That way many Soldiers say them that gut wings which mean brave man to land this in enemy field I know you think why I say that go to the history of ww2 glider and there you see many Soldiers dies during landing.
    Well that's what i read about in history that may be true or false that way best way to know answer by there son or there grandson ?
    ANY COMMENTS...

  • @jonjon9047
    @jonjon9047 4 года назад

    The Jerry can mount on that jeep is in an odd position

    • @jonjon9047
      @jonjon9047 4 года назад

      No it’s too low. The Jerry can holder is usually mounted about six inches up from the rear cross member. As a Jeep owner I checked.

  • @tizianochiarandon6580
    @tizianochiarandon6580 4 года назад

    I8

  • @phampx1
    @phampx1 5 месяцев назад

    99.9% of online training is trashes.