The Last World War Two Veterans Will Soon Be Gone

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  • Опубликовано: 7 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @iammrbeat
    @iammrbeat  Месяц назад +1432

    If you are lucky enough to know or to have met a World War Two veteran, what was the biggest lesson you learned from them?

    • @TheOldSalt
      @TheOldSalt Месяц назад +126

      I met probably the last surviving original Seabee in a grocery store. I couldn’t understand him very well due to a speech impediment he had, but he was very happy to have someone to talk to. It’s the lesson of check on your neighbor and fellow human, see how they’re feeling.

    • @MrGiygas1
      @MrGiygas1 Месяц назад +61

      I met a WW2 pilot that served in the Pacific theater. He didn’t give me words if wisdom, only the fact that he was a pilot in the war against Japan.

    • @FlourishPorridge
      @FlourishPorridge Месяц назад +51

      My Grandfather was born in 1921, he didn't join the army - I doubt he even would be allowed to, since he was an Italian Immigrant to the UK - but he did work as a firefighter when the Germans bombed Portsmouth. He's still alive today and in pretty good shape.

    • @theintrospective255
      @theintrospective255 Месяц назад +23

      I've only met 2 veterans (one was Ken Potts the penultimate USS Arizona survivor) but I'm impressed by their charisma and hopefulness in life even with all they went through in that time. It helps me know that even when given bad cards in life there can be joy found regardless. Thanks Mr. Beat for helping preserve these stories and history

    • @JourneyLT
      @JourneyLT Месяц назад +17

      My granddad just missed out on the draft, but he was conscripted into the coal mines for the post war recovery once he came of age in 1946.
      He was one of the Bevin Boys.

  • @windbuster
    @windbuster Месяц назад +6049

    We’re the last generation alive to talk with these legends…

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  Месяц назад +604

      Yes we are

    • @MrGiygas1
      @MrGiygas1 Месяц назад +177

      I’ve had the golden opportunity to meet a WW2 pilot veteran at a military museum.

    • @TheMntnG
      @TheMntnG Месяц назад +91

      legends? my german grandfather was a nazi!

    • @MiguelPerez-zx2wg
      @MiguelPerez-zx2wg Месяц назад +117

      It's ironic just 80 years ago when these guys were in their 20s or 30s, there were still Civil War Veterans but very few left.

    • @jerrysmooth24
      @jerrysmooth24 Месяц назад +23

      we are only 5 people away from columbus

  • @mono-no-aware.Lem.
    @mono-no-aware.Lem. Месяц назад +1473

    2:40 I can only hope to not only LIVE to 100 but be as lucid and familiar with my experiences as that man

    • @theparadigm8149
      @theparadigm8149 Месяц назад +97

      Yeah, no doubt! If I didn’t know any better, I would honestly think he was only about 80 years old

    • @John-i7o
      @John-i7o Месяц назад +25

      I mean it *WAS* WW2, I doubt that if you have an atleast decent memory you could remember what you felt

    • @lukastaylor1397
      @lukastaylor1397 Месяц назад +45

      @@mono-no-aware.Lem. my great grandmother lived to be 103 years and was sharp as a tack until about a month before her death. She made the local news for being able to play her gospel songs on the harmonica at that age. Very sweet lady, truly the greatest generation.

    • @CrankyCain_EndoTrubbish
      @CrankyCain_EndoTrubbish Месяц назад +17

      And also age as well! One whole century on the planet and he looks like someone who I would mistake as 80. In reality, an 80-year-old could be his son!

    • @anthonychrisbradley
      @anthonychrisbradley 23 дня назад

      Guy is sharper than most 70 year olds out there, pretty incredible

  • @PhantomOfDarkness
    @PhantomOfDarkness Месяц назад +4422

    it wasn't too long ago since we were saying goodbye to the last of the World War One veterans. truly will be the end of an era.

    • @DiamondKingStudios
      @DiamondKingStudios Месяц назад +357

      I was a very young kid when I happened to be at the funeral of Frank Buckles (1901-2011). I don’t know why I was there in Arlington National Cemetery (we lived in Alexandria and my father was stationed in the area at the time), but I remember the ceremonial gunfire terrifying me, and practically nothing else.
      I come to find years later that he was the last surviving American to serve in WWI, and was one hundred and ten years old when he passed.

    • @Iwatch2019cartoonsobsessively
      @Iwatch2019cartoonsobsessively Месяц назад +52

      @@DiamondKingStudios wow. Why were you there? Was he a family friend, or a relative?

    • @amosbackstrom5366
      @amosbackstrom5366 Месяц назад +87

      He said his dad was stationed in the area, so it was probably a big military funeral with thousands of people attending.

    • @Iwatch2019cartoonsobsessively
      @Iwatch2019cartoonsobsessively Месяц назад +11

      Oh yeah

    • @RevSinkiller
      @RevSinkiller Месяц назад +47

      The last known World War I veteran, American soldier Frank Buckles, died on February 27, 2011 at the age of 110.

  • @adriancarroll2926
    @adriancarroll2926 Месяц назад +136

    These dudes look 25 years younger than you think they would. Thank you for doing your part in saving the world.

    • @laukpauk6053
      @laukpauk6053 Месяц назад +7

      @@adriancarroll2926 meanwhile gen z nowadays look like they're in their 50s

    • @GalacticNovaOverlord
      @GalacticNovaOverlord Месяц назад +8

      ​@@laukpauk6053not at all

    • @Lexivor
      @Lexivor Месяц назад +6

      @@laukpauk6053 No they don't.

    • @Zen-sx5io
      @Zen-sx5io Месяц назад +4

      @@laukpauk6053 Come on now you're exaggerating.

    • @ligma212
      @ligma212 28 дней назад +2

      ​@@laukpauk6053 lmao no they don't. I'm a millennial and the Gen z I see look like they are in their early teens in their early 20s. You have a weird bias against Gen z

  • @tokyowwww
    @tokyowwww Месяц назад +2510

    That first 100 year old guy looks like he's no older than 65 wow!

    • @MrColtrainJones
      @MrColtrainJones Месяц назад +145

      Is day like 80-85 but still

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  Месяц назад +452

      He still drives around like it ain't no thing, too.

    • @adamogden5212
      @adamogden5212 Месяц назад +72

      I hope I look this good if I make it to 100

    • @hoodie7257
      @hoodie7257 Месяц назад +51

      He looks good but I don’t know what 65 year olds you are around that look that old

    • @TheU.S.
      @TheU.S. Месяц назад +23

      He looks 75

  • @megarigged
    @megarigged Месяц назад +337

    My grandmother married a WWII vet, and she unfortunately passed this January, right before her 100th birthday. I regret that I never asked to hear some stories.

  • @MahkyVmedia1
    @MahkyVmedia1 Месяц назад +1845

    Damn that 101 year old is doing amazing! Unbelievable

  • @tavish4699
    @tavish4699 Месяц назад +161

    i interviewed my greatuncle when i was 16 for my school exams and filmed it .He had been an aircraft mechanic in the german airforce.He was 96 at the time.He survived numerous encirclements bombattacks and saw the ruins of dresden after the horrible bombing attack.
    3 months later i visited him in the hospice where he would lay in agony and pain all over the body screaming for someone to shoot him already. Im not ashamed to say i balled my eyes out when i left that place.
    he had gotten a simple cough that developed into a lung infection and he passed soon after.
    That man is my hero, he never hurt anyone and was well respected in our village.A kind hearted man, with a handshake so strong that it rivaled the one of healthy 20 year olds.
    listen to your freaking grandparents guys , if we dont we will be the generation to sit in a trench again !

    • @motormann2083
      @motormann2083 Месяц назад +4

      The last sentence are very wise words. Thats a mantra our whole generation should keep in mind, always.

  • @bomboclat159
    @bomboclat159 Месяц назад +792

    My great grandfather proudly fought in WW2 and passed on in April ~20 days before his 100th birthday. I’m proud of his service to the nation and to his family.
    Time’s passed so much, it’s hard to imagine that by 2040, most of the Vietnam war vets are probably gonna be gone, too. Just realizing it is sad to see 😢

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  Месяц назад +105

      Thanks for sharing this. I hope you got to spend some quality time with your great grandfather before he passed.

    • @TheMntnG
      @TheMntnG Месяц назад

      was he a nazi?

    • @blurredlights5235
      @blurredlights5235 Месяц назад +14

      The loss of the character of this generation will be a tragedy

    • @bomboclat159
      @bomboclat159 Месяц назад +8

      @@iammrbeat Thank you, you are one of my favorite youtubers and it means much for you to comment ❤️

    • @bomboclat159
      @bomboclat159 Месяц назад +1

      @@blurredlights5235 Indeed

  • @icey2203
    @icey2203 Месяц назад +25

    So many of these men seem so coherent and physically able for the age.

  • @Spongebrain97
    @Spongebrain97 Месяц назад +565

    Here in El Paso there is a local WW2 vet named Eliseo Fernandez who turned 100 years old the other day. It's always neat to hear their lifestories. He's lived long enough to now be a great great grandfather

    • @austinwhite6685
      @austinwhite6685 Месяц назад +4

      Do you know his story? I’m interested

    • @Spongebrain97
      @Spongebrain97 Месяц назад +65

      ​@austinwhite6685 just from a social media post made about him. He was born in Colorado in 1924 before moving to El Paso in the 30s. When the war began he enlisted in the military as an infantryman and saw combat in the Burma campaign where he was injured and recieved the Bronze Star and Purple Heart. And after the war he returned to El Paso and raised his big family

    • @austinwhite6685
      @austinwhite6685 Месяц назад +8

      @@Spongebrain97 That’s pretty awesome! Thanks for sharing 🙂

    • @koolaid33
      @koolaid33 Месяц назад +8

      Great, GREAT grandfather? That's insane to me! When I hear the term great great grandfather, I think of someone who would've lived in the 1800s, but it's crazy that there are people living right now who are old enough to be a great great grandfather.

    • @greaterglider
      @greaterglider Месяц назад

      thats amazing

  • @mustang8206
    @mustang8206 Месяц назад +45

    WWII was truly one of humanity's darkest hours. I have nothing but respect for those men who stepped up when needed

    • @akfkodm
      @akfkodm Месяц назад +2

      Nah. Today is 10x worse 💀

    • @davidsmith8826
      @davidsmith8826 Месяц назад

      @@akfkodmyeah, today’s issues are so much worse than a war where at the lowest estimates killed 60 million.

    • @Knightgang5431
      @Knightgang5431 Месяц назад +16

      @akfkodm how tf is it worse

    • @ligma212
      @ligma212 28 дней назад +2

      ​@@akfkodmbro your comment history is some serious cope. You said "the wrong enemy lost in WW2"

    • @ligma212
      @ligma212 28 дней назад +1

      ​@@akfkodm your comment history is some serious cope. You said "the wrong enemy lost in WW2".

  • @babyinuyasha
    @babyinuyasha Месяц назад +509

    There was a triple dipper (World War Two, Korean War, Vietnam War) in my VFW district who died just shy of his 100th birthday. He was soft spoken, but had a youthful personality even at 96 when I last saw him.
    As a kid, no more than 10, I had my picture taken with Lieutenant Colonel Edward Saylor, one of the last living Doolittle Raiders at the time.

    • @Garlic_Bread_1749
      @Garlic_Bread_1749 Месяц назад +31

      @@babyinuyasha my great grandpa also served in WW2, Vietnam, and Korea, as well as being involved in covert intelligence missions during the Cold War. Unfortunately he passed in 2015, but I was at least old enough to have been blessed to know him for as long as I did.

    • @babyinuyasha
      @babyinuyasha Месяц назад +5

      @@Garlic_Bread_1749 my great grandfather fought in World War Two

    • @John-i7o
      @John-i7o Месяц назад +5

      ​@@babyinuyashayour great grandfather was an incredibly lucky man who survived the biggest war in history and two other wars that were almost as significant, you are lucky to have met him just in time

    • @DanaTheInsane
      @DanaTheInsane Месяц назад +1

      My Grandpa was like that, Started in WWII Army Air Corps, was in in Korea, and was in Vietnam with Air America. He finally retired in 68.

    • @donaldbothe3518
      @donaldbothe3518 Месяц назад +2

      My great grandfather was in the same boat, triple dipper, full army carrer, only left vietnam when his whole group got an odd jungle rash and his superiors werent helping or being straight with him about it

  • @oldbees648
    @oldbees648 Месяц назад +54

    I just lost my grandfather a few months ago, he was a prison guard during WW2 and he had so many stories of Germans who spoke English telling him about how unwilling they were to be a part of Hitler's regime. It's heartbreaking knowing how many good people got thrown into this by the powers that be. He made it to 97. Thank you for this video Mr. Beat and sharing the stories of these others

  • @bonecanoe86
    @bonecanoe86 Месяц назад +454

    When I was a Sophomore in 2001 my history teacher gave an assignment for each of us to interview someone who fought in World War 2. (Or was otherwise involved in some way like with the Home Front). It was such a universal thing at the time to have a grandfather or great uncle that was a WW2 veteran that nobody in class had trouble finding someone to interview. It's sad that my own kids will not be able to do the same thing when they reach high school. But such is the passage of time. We need to celebrate these veterans while they are still here.

    • @MSterling27
      @MSterling27 Месяц назад +37

      They are now doing the same thing but with people who lived through 9/11. Prepare to feel old

    • @eligostheexalted
      @eligostheexalted Месяц назад +13

      @@MSterling27 Technically I lived through 9/11. I was 9 months old and can't remember a second of it but I lived through it.

    • @mike04574
      @mike04574 Месяц назад +21

      Even in 2001 they were already in their 80s and 90s. I remember going to the parade in the 70s seeing a huge number of ww1 vets almost as many as ww2

    • @finchborat
      @finchborat Месяц назад +2

      My APUSH teacher use to do a similar thing regarding memories of the JFK assassination. However, that ended by the time I had her in 2008.

    • @KentPetersonmoney
      @KentPetersonmoney Месяц назад +1

      ​@@mike04574yeah even back then they were old.

  • @DarkElfDiva
    @DarkElfDiva Месяц назад +342

    "It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather, we should thank God that such men lived." -George S. Patton

    • @quentinsummers2531
      @quentinsummers2531 Месяц назад +14

      "We defeated the wrong enemy" - George S. Patton

    • @colonelcorn9500
      @colonelcorn9500 Месяц назад +47

      @@quentinsummers2531That quote was not him defending the Nazis. That quote was him saying that the Soviet Union was of a higher priority. Don't manipulate the man's words.

    • @quentinsummers2531
      @quentinsummers2531 Месяц назад +33

      @@colonelcorn9500 "I had never heard that we fought to de-Nazify Germany- live and learn. What we are doing is to utterly destroy the only semi- modern state in Europe so that Russia can swallow the whole." - Patton in a letter to his wife, September 14, 1945
      He also developed a resistance to removing Nazi Party members from power.
      I have many more quotes that show this. I can post a few more if you want.

    • @spike_-pw9iz
      @spike_-pw9iz Месяц назад

      @@DarkElfDiva Patton also saw American POWS and said some shit like you're a disgrace to the us for being captured

    • @DumbEpicGaming
      @DumbEpicGaming Месяц назад +3

      @@quentinsummers2531 thats crazy

  • @DUMB_PHAK
    @DUMB_PHAK Месяц назад +482

    My Great Grandpa fought on the Western front. He fought from D-Day until being injured during the Battle of the Bulge. Unfortunately I never got to meet him because he died in 2009 one year after I was born but I’ll never forget the stories I’ve been told about him. There is one story my mom said he would always tell people when they asked about the war. He would say that he was clearing houses in Normandy when he busted down a door and saw a man pointing a gun right back at him. Though when he shot the man he said that he exploded into a million pieces. Because there was no man… he had shot a mirror.
    Thank you Mr. Beat for talking about this. I wish my Great Grandpa was still around so I could ask him about his experiences.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  Месяц назад +68

      I wish he was around, too. Thanks for the kind words and for sharing that.

    • @JediJared-bs1wt
      @JediJared-bs1wt Месяц назад +10

      Whoa that was a genuinely great plot twist!

    • @jtgd
      @jtgd Месяц назад +8

      Man I’m old

    • @John-i7o
      @John-i7o Месяц назад

      That was funny

    • @tenplusten1116
      @tenplusten1116 Месяц назад +4

      @@iammrbeatMy friends great grandpa was in the navy in WWII, hes the oldest living veteran in my state at 107

  • @bonnieperkins6296
    @bonnieperkins6296 Месяц назад +48

    I'm not ashamed to say that I have spent almost an entire day on You Tube watching videos of these veterans tell their stories. I feel that I owe it to them to listen.

  • @J_Swish
    @J_Swish Месяц назад +406

    Thank you for talking about this Mr. Beat.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  Месяц назад +56

      It's my pleasure

    • @ecclesiasticman4417
      @ecclesiasticman4417 Месяц назад +3

      @@iammrbeat When will you make a response video to Dawson and Weddle?

    • @ElizabetFlores-qg4kk
      @ElizabetFlores-qg4kk Месяц назад +4

      @@ecclesiasticman4417 This is not mrbeast. Lol.

    • @TitaniumTurbine
      @TitaniumTurbine Месяц назад +1

      @@ElizabetFlores-qg4kk They have to be joking, right? No one is that braindead. lol

    • @ElizabetFlores-qg4kk
      @ElizabetFlores-qg4kk Месяц назад

      @TitaniumTurbine Fr. How can someone get confused with Mr.beat with Mrbeast. Besides, Mrbeast doesn't do this content, and I hope the person is actually joking.

  • @joeyager8479
    @joeyager8479 Месяц назад +43

    My dad was one of the younger WWII vets, he would've been 98 this year. As a Boomer, I worked with many WWII vets in my younger years. Some wouldn't talk about it and some would. Many were only 18 and most had never been more than 50 miles from home and suddenly they were thousands of miles from home. I heard a lot of interesting and sad stories over the years. All those guy that I worked with are now gone.

    • @joellelolers1254
      @joellelolers1254 9 дней назад

      such interesting and also horrible stories you hear from vets, personally its one of my favorite things to do, as listening to peoples backgrounds always gives insight in the things that you dont really get to do, yknow?

  • @talbot9255
    @talbot9255 Месяц назад +153

    My great grandfather was a american soldier who died of in 1992. It’s shocking that men alive at the same time as him are still alive and so well spoken.

  • @eliseleonard3477
    @eliseleonard3477 Месяц назад +14

    Wow, thanks for highlighting this Mr. Beat! My dad was born in Oct 1926. He was chomping at the bit to join up when he turned 18, and was such a small skinny guy he had to drink almost a gallon of water so he would weigh enough at the induction center. He barfed immediately after the weigh in. Lucky for us 5 kids he was still training with the Army Air Corps when the war ended.

  • @PhantomOfDarkness
    @PhantomOfDarkness Месяц назад +643

    bit of a fun fact as well but...James Robinson, was an African American soldier, born in 1753. he was a veteran of the revolutionary war as well as the war of 1812 and lived to the remarkable age of 115. he died on March 27, 1868. Robinson's enslaver had him enlist at age 24 and fight in a Virginia Light Infantry Regiment with the promise that he could earn his freedom.

    • @DiamondKingStudios
      @DiamondKingStudios Месяц назад +82

      Considering that the earliest person I know to hold the record of longest-lived man was a Danish-American who died in 1998 at the age of 115, any claim before that would probably be hard to verify due to the scant records of the time (especially in Robinson’s case). I don’t doubt for a moment that it could have happened (probably more likely than not did), but it probably took at least a century after we developed sophisticated birth registries for any record-keeping of longevity could be properly conducted.
      But had he lived to 115, he would have been the oldest man to ever live up to that time in recorded history.

    • @PhantomOfDarkness
      @PhantomOfDarkness Месяц назад +33

      @@DiamondKingStudios fair, we don't know for sure. also, Margret Anne neave was a lady born in 1792. she lived until 1903. so, while we dont know 100%, there were cases of longevity that existed in the 19th century.

    • @DiamondKingStudios
      @DiamondKingStudios Месяц назад +26

      @@PhantomOfDarkness The conventionally accepted longest-lived person ever lived from 1875 to 1997. Considering she was able to live through the conditions of the late 19th and early 20th centuries (from which we have since improved greatly in medicine and public safety), there were almost certainly supercentenarians born in the late 18th century.
      Sir Moses Montefiore, a prominent British Jewish activist, lived from 1784 to 1885. Longevity’s been around quite a while.

    • @jakefromstatefarm6969
      @jakefromstatefarm6969 Месяц назад +29

      ​@@DiamondKingStudiosthere's a radical difference between 101 and 115

    • @DiamondKingStudios
      @DiamondKingStudios Месяц назад +9

      @@jakefromstatefarm6969 Even then I’d be lucky to get to either age.

  • @maeson676
    @maeson676 Месяц назад +28

    I supported Memoirs of WWII for some time but had to stop for financial reasons. It is amazing that you are spreading their message, they are an inspiration to me. As are all these men who served. ❤

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  Месяц назад +8

      Thank you so much for all your support ❤️

  • @alonkatz4633
    @alonkatz4633 Месяц назад +229

    It's an honor to listen to these heroes. It's impressive how coherent they are. Thank you so much for sharing this project.
    You are one lucky man, Mr. Beat!

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  Месяц назад +32

      I was lucky, indeed. They were awesome to talk to.

    • @TheMntnG
      @TheMntnG Месяц назад

      @@iammrbeat
      sorry but no, did you ever learn about ww1?
      the uk was evil

    • @TheMntnG
      @TheMntnG Месяц назад

      nazis were heroes?

  • @ChessJew
    @ChessJew Месяц назад +35

    This makes me miss my grandpa. He was the most decent man I ever knew - never heard a bad word out of him, he just went to work and loved his family.
    I knew he served in the Pacific, but he never talked about it. I was playing the video game Close Combat once, and he just looked at it for a bit and walked away.
    When he died, we went through his sock drawer and we found a Bronze Star. Never mentioned it once.

  • @keizervanenerc5180
    @keizervanenerc5180 Месяц назад +161

    Not an American, but Dutch. My great-grandmother is still alive at age 95. She was a teenager during the war and the German occupation of the Netherlands and told me about her experiences during the was when i was a teenager myself. Wrote down a couple of pages of her stories.
    She claimed that her father was in the resistance later in the war and got caught and send to work in the factories in Germany, while she herself sometimes drove around on a bicycle delivering secrer resistance newspapers. Also during the hunger winter of 1944-1945 she had to go out on her own to the countryside to beg for food and almost got arrested once.
    Always was proud of her and her father's deeds but now i am sad i never recorded any of it. While she luckily is still alive she unfortunately has at least some stage of mental decline and while she can talk about the past now, it's basically a coin flip is she is telling true stories or complete nonsense... :(
    Also in a darker twist a few years back i read my writings on her stories again and did some research based on those stories and found out the "department" her father worked at before he "got arrested" was actually a german controlled government body so there is a non-zero chance she either lied to me or that her father lied to HER as a kid telling her he was in the resistance while in truth he was a collaborator that just went into hiding at the last stages of the war....

    • @briantarigan7685
      @briantarigan7685 Месяц назад +22

      to be honest, i won't blame your grandfather for it, vast majority of people just wanted to survive at that point, he definitely wasn't a hero, but he definitely wasn't a villain either, just a man who wants the best for his family and himself.
      as an Indonesian, i just hope that none of your families are being shipped to supress Indonesia's Revolutionary war during the post war period.

    • @404_nowheresnotfound3
      @404_nowheresnotfound3 Месяц назад +4

      @@briantarigan7685 sounds like they weren’t in the best shape so probably not.

  • @antlionworkerfan2007
    @antlionworkerfan2007 Месяц назад +8

    I still have a WW2 veteran in my family, this videos given me a different perspective, and I think I need to have a couple more chats with him.

  • @christianehmling5080
    @christianehmling5080 Месяц назад +59

    I lost my great grandfather, Billy J Morgan, on December 14, 2019, 6 months after his 100th birthday. He served during the Pacific War, and was at Okinawa.
    I miss him dearly every day, and im so blessed to have been able to talk to him and hear his stories. I wish i still had my video interview of him i made for a high school project.
    I miss him a lot, so so much. If it werent for him, i wouldnt be the man i am today.

    • @Tyler-ce3um
      @Tyler-ce3um Месяц назад

      My moms grandfather was also in the Pacific War, he told my father a story about how he fought in the war and told him he'd tell him more but then a few weeks later he passed, this was all a few months before I was born.

  • @TheProGoat-69
    @TheProGoat-69 Месяц назад +19

    My grandfather grew up poor like most in the depression and lied about his age to enlist in the army cause he figured it couldn’t get much worse. He was a paratrooper in Operation Varsity and later served in Korea and Vietnam. He miraculously pushed through it all and lovingly fathered 10 kids. Despite his military discipline he was a gentle and huggable person and didn’t want his kids to have to do what he experienced. Harold was a man I deeply admire despite me being too young to remember him.

    • @MrPolandball
      @MrPolandball Месяц назад

      Those Gen Zs living in silent depression are going to follow same fate in WW3

    • @tylerdoss7644
      @tylerdoss7644 Месяц назад

      ​@MrPolandball ill be seeing service taiwan soon I'd bet

  • @DropkickMurphysFan01
    @DropkickMurphysFan01 Месяц назад +14

    My grandfather served during WWII. He was a healthy 94 when he passed. He was an only child and said his mother cried when he was drafted. He only made it as far as Colorado, serving as an orderly but Imwas very proud to know him.
    Great video, I'd be interested to see a video on the last surviving veterans (and spouses) of wars America fought in.

    • @Gigrunt887
      @Gigrunt887 Месяц назад

      Rest in peace god bless

  • @OrangeHarrisonRB3
    @OrangeHarrisonRB3 Месяц назад +79

    2:02 I can only wish I'll be that articulate at 100.

    • @thunderb00m
      @thunderb00m Месяц назад +3

      @@OrangeHarrisonRB3 exactly. Doesn't look a day over 80

  • @malafunkshun8086
    @malafunkshun8086 Месяц назад +14

    One of the most important things I’ve learned from studying History is the importance of remembering. And forgetting.
    As those who directly witness a past event die, we lose that personal connection to the Past.
    New memories take over, including new worries. Also new sorrows and outrages.
    Lessons are forgotten.
    That is why the stories we choose to tell matter.
    That is why this story matters.
    Aloha 🙏🏼🤙🏼

    • @someguy9070
      @someguy9070 Месяц назад

      @@malafunkshun8086 well said my friend, well said. You’re not wrong.

  • @TheHistoryUnderground
    @TheHistoryUnderground Месяц назад +58

    Hard to see these old guys pass on but I'm glad that we live in a time where technology is allowing us to capture their stories. Sidenote: the gentleman who was with the 83rd Division would have seen vicious combat. They were in the Hurtgen Forest and later liberated one of the subcamps of Buchenwald. Hard to imagine what these guys experienced. Appreciate you sharing it.

  • @jjsantangelo49
    @jjsantangelo49 Месяц назад +5

    Thank you for this Mr. Beat, it’s been an honor watching countless of your videos since history class in 10th grade. Thank you to all WWII service members, and all US service members active or veteran.

  • @ramal5708
    @ramal5708 Месяц назад +39

    My dad also said that he was honored to meet the WWI veterans in 70s and 80s and now he said all of them are gone, now our generation have to endure that the WWII veterans are slowly passing away from us.

    • @KentPetersonmoney
      @KentPetersonmoney Месяц назад +11

      Also when you think about it when WW2 was going on some civil war veterans were still alive. Some people in this video may have knew some.

  • @baeZipster
    @baeZipster Месяц назад +9

    goodbye to these legends
    i hope no one forgets your stories, because when that happens then i fear the worst, we will end up repeating this history...

  • @KenobiEditz66
    @KenobiEditz66 Месяц назад +37

    Beautiful video, Mr. Beat, personally I believe this is one of your best. It’s a tragedy that this is the last generation we will talk to these men and women who helped save the world.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  Месяц назад +5

      Thanks so much. It's a tragedy, indeed.

    • @youknow227
      @youknow227 Месяц назад +3

      @@iammrbeat I met a veteran at the memorial for d day in my town, the first time i had ever met a veteran
      I didn't get a chance to talk to him because the guy running for power in my town wouldn't shut up about convincing me to vote
      By the way, for him, NEVER

    • @davidluciemable3778
      @davidluciemable3778 Месяц назад

      Literally - they really did help save the world…

  • @diddit_dunnit
    @diddit_dunnit Месяц назад +7

    Memoirs of WWII is such a gem of a channel doing something so important. I immediately recognized Josh’s voice when the video cut to the initial interview with him. I’m so happy to see these two channels connect.

  • @MAVJ
    @MAVJ Месяц назад +7

    Growing up, we always had veterans come speak during school assemblies on Veterans Day. I remember most being ww2 veterans, including my grandfather who served in the pacific from 44-46.
    Fast forward to last year, as a younger Marine Corps veteran, my old school asked me to come speak on Veterans day. Not one ww2 vet was left.
    If you get the chance to talk with any of these men, do yourself a favor and take as much time as they're willing to give and hear their stories. I lost my grandfather in 2016 and I still kick myself for the things I never got to ask.

  • @jljordan1
    @jljordan1 Месяц назад +45

    Great video, as always.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  Месяц назад +15

      Thank you, Jennifer!

  • @RoachDogJR7445
    @RoachDogJR7445 Месяц назад +11

    I had the amazing opportunity to interact with many WWII veterans when I was a boy scout about 15-20 years ago. I would usually serve them during our towns annual Memorial Day pancake breakfast for veterans. Many of them were WWII guys and they would always tell me to be optimistic despite whatever the country was going through, as this was during the lead up and beginning of the 2007 Recession. My Great Grandfather served in the US Army during WWII and he passed away in 1973, so I never had the chance to have those real personal WWII connections that many other people had in their lives. These guys would always tell me amazing stories.

  • @tylercooper1551
    @tylercooper1551 Месяц назад +11

    I had a great grandmother that passed away when i was 12, she was 97. Born 1900 and i loved listening to her stories! She grew up in harlem when it was a predominantly white neighborhood, was a flapper girl, survived the spanish flu, remembered when the titanic sank, though, that one wasn't all that big of a deal to most people as it was only romantocized long after it happened. Remembered WW1 like it was yesterday.
    My parents wpupd beg me to leave her alone but i couldnt help it, the stories were always just so fascinating.!!

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  Месяц назад

      And here you are all these years later still learning history. The world needs more folks like you, frankly. :)

    • @tylercooper1551
      @tylercooper1551 Месяц назад

      @@iammrbeat her husband, my great grandfather, was actually on the original team that was developing the microwave but they lost out on the patent because another team figured it out sooner. She said she refused to ever have a microwave in her house because because she was incredibly afraid of it.

  • @brendanjrice7307
    @brendanjrice7307 Месяц назад +11

    I was walking in Manhattan with my gf one evening, and she is French from Paris. I walked by a ww2 veteran and all I could do was smile as I saw him. I regret never asking him his name… he smiled back, and I wonder if he knew that what he did made it possible for me as an American, to date and love someone from France, a nation he helped to liberate… I really hope he is still around, and I really wish I could talk to him

  • @PaladinOfNerds
    @PaladinOfNerds Месяц назад +15

    A 90 year old D-Day radio tech came in for our history class in my second to last year of high school. I’m sure he’s passed on by now. It was such an honor to speak with him, although I didn’t have very many questions, I only wanted to listen. What sticks out the most in my memory is “ thank God I didn’t have to kill anybody, but I’ve never forgotten the face of that dead German boy I had to sleep beside the first night on the beach.”

  • @GlobalVeteranStories
    @GlobalVeteranStories Месяц назад +6

    This is incredible! I've been interviewing WW2 Veterans for the last 3 years, been able to meet over 50 Veterans from 8 different countries. The oldest WW2 Vet I interviewed yesterday in Fort Erie Ontario, Canada is 109 Year Old! Great video Mr.Beat, Josh and his team from Memoirs of WW2 do amazing work as well!

  • @lobstervortex
    @lobstervortex Месяц назад +21

    I am a student medicine, now doing my internship in a hospital. I try to talk to as many of these people as I can, to hear their stories. I haven't talked to any soldiers yet, only civilians, but their stories are just as interesting to me. I find it very important that these stories are not forgotten, and I thank you and the guys over Memoirs of WWII for helping us remember.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  Месяц назад +2

      Thanks for sharing your experience as well.

  • @Gdub33
    @Gdub33 Месяц назад +4

    These men and their stories are so extremely important..
    We need more of this as anyone under 85 has no idea of the ravages of a world war. We have become complacent and I'm terrified and have legit nightmares about world war 3 because most of us don't understand the hell it was and how it is unacceptable.
    Bless those men you interviewed and I hope they have amazing remaining lives.

  • @Alderman.Gaming
    @Alderman.Gaming Месяц назад +5

    My great grandfather just turned 101 this past weekend and he was a WW2 veteran who served in the marines. He is a great man unfortunately he currently has COVID but he is getting better and it doesn’t look like COVID will get the best of him.

  • @YuriNikolajavič
    @YuriNikolajavič Месяц назад +1

    I do not have any words to say to these vets other than just a simple "Thank you for your service" and just sit down and listen to their stories if I was granted the chance to meet a WWII vet.

  • @Steelflight773
    @Steelflight773 Месяц назад +8

    Band of Brothers is my favorite mini series ever. It is sad to watch the series now since every single person from Easy Company are gone.

  • @bonesawmcgraw9728
    @bonesawmcgraw9728 Месяц назад +14

    There’s a video of a WW2 veteran that met a civil war veteran who fought at Gettysburg. It’s crazy that he was able to pass on the stories that he heard to us all these years later. I wonder what stories we will pass on to future generations.

    • @Ramboost007
      @Ramboost007 Месяц назад

      There's one on RUclips now of a WW2 vet talk to one from the War of Afghanistan

  • @lrosenberg101
    @lrosenberg101 Месяц назад +4

    The fact I'm seeing this today (Monday, 9/16) and they were honored at the Houston Texans game last night in person and I was there in crazy! They got the loudest standing ovation I've ever heard in my life at a sports event honoring veterans.

  • @MirasomeRailfan
    @MirasomeRailfan Месяц назад +26

    My Great Grandpa was a WWII Purple Heart Veteran in the Pacific, lived up to 99, glad I got to talked to him before his death.

  • @uss_04
    @uss_04 Месяц назад +10

    I remember an article in 2003 about how the “Millennials” will be the last generation to see and work with WW2 veterans. They lived into Gen Z, and my own grandfather was a WW2 veteran, but it’s still sad to hear that hearing the voices of WW2 will be reduced to documentaries.

  • @Turkolini
    @Turkolini Месяц назад +35

    Ive spoken to survivors of the Holocaust before but never a WW2 veteran. Its really important that young people hear these stories so we don't forget tragedy. Thank you Mr Beat, been a fan for the last 7 years

    • @akfkodm
      @akfkodm Месяц назад +2

      Bro is talking to imaginary people 😂💀

    • @whathell6t
      @whathell6t Месяц назад +3

      @@akfkodm
      What do you mean?

    • @Suuperwuuper
      @Suuperwuuper 25 дней назад

      @@whathell6t He’s one of those dumbass holocaust deniers

  • @hoppinghessien
    @hoppinghessien Месяц назад +2

    My granddad was in the Pacific. It was always a big deal for me as a kid when he would get his tin of war memorabilia out and let me look at and touch it (I have it now). He didn’t talk about the war much, but we did get him to tell his stories on tape. I treasure that tape.

  • @americanshack176
    @americanshack176 Месяц назад +5

    I had the honor of interviewing a WW2 vet last spring. He signed up in 1946 as an army mp whose objective was to prevent uprisings and more conflict that was brewing just after the wars end that could have caused another war( WW2 vets are classified from 1940 to 46') I got the whole interview on video. It was a truly amazing thing to talk to him. These men are wells of knowledge and the fact that we will lose them all soon is a truly sad prospect.

  • @AFNick
    @AFNick Месяц назад +2

    My grandfather was a WW2 veteran and was a kid during the Great Depression. He died in 2015, and some of my best memories of him were his stories fighting the war and the aftermath of occupation of Japan.

  • @SageArdor
    @SageArdor Месяц назад +12

    I had the privilege, in my sophomore year of high school, of interviewing a surviving veteran who served in World War II as part of my Living History project. He even attended the luncheon that came at the end of the project, as did all of the other interviewed veterans from other students.
    With the exception of one. One veteran unfortunately passed away the day before the luncheon after a long battle with chronic illness.
    These heroes are still humans. And humans are more frail than we realize. Appreciate the ones we have while they're still here, and honor their legacies after they're gone.

  • @cspon_
    @cspon_ Месяц назад +3

    Cspan also has a great collection of video interviews with World War II vets. Thanks for your work, Mr. Beat, Josh and Heather.

  • @chrismorgan1838
    @chrismorgan1838 Месяц назад +9

    The fact the last WW2 Veterans will be leaving us soon weighs heavy on my heart and I was fortunate enough to know one of them. I always wanted to ask him about the war but it would've just stressed him out to talk about it as he had PTSD about being in a foxhole and having the germans shooting at him.

  • @unknownuser8228
    @unknownuser8228 Месяц назад +1

    God bless these fellow men. Keep on living well, vets

  • @stuartriefe1740
    @stuartriefe1740 Месяц назад +14

    My Dad was born in 1920, had a College deferment, had to rush through College in 3 years instead of 4, entered the Navy, was attached to the Attack Cargo Ship AKA-81 USS Valencia. The Valencia participated in the battle of Okinawa. It was probably against regulations, but Dad kept a little black diary that I still have, that notated the ship’s activities from shakedown cruise to returning to the US. The Valencia’s Wikipedia site could learn a few things from that little diary! Dad served from 44-46. He passed in 2004 at age 84 from cancer, just before a Valencia reunion. He never talked about the war much, but he brought home a few souvenirs which I cherish. Miss you Dad.

    • @mikejohnson9606
      @mikejohnson9606 Месяц назад +3

      My dad had 2 purple hearts in the pacific theater. My dad has been gone now 40 years. I love you Dad.

    • @pkobalt
      @pkobalt Месяц назад +3

      You should find some library, museum, or historical society and get them to scan that diary and put it online.

    • @stuartriefe1740
      @stuartriefe1740 Месяц назад +1

      @@pkobalt The Wikipedia site had 98% of it. The 2% are personal to individuals, if you get my drift. Plus, congrats to Wikipedia for all the history of Valencia
      AFTER the War. It was a cargo ship for I believe 2 companies and not scrapped until 1970 I believe. Roughly 100 or so AKAs were built. They all have a Wikipedia page!

    • @KentPetersonmoney
      @KentPetersonmoney Месяц назад +1

      If he had a college degree was he an officer. I here you can join the milltary as an officer if you graduate college.

    • @stuartriefe1740
      @stuartriefe1740 Месяц назад +1

      @@KentPetersonmoney I knew this might come up. The story is that he blew a curfew with some friends and got bounced from Officer Training School.
      He spoke to me about this episode in his life exactly once.

  • @dstarsbravo
    @dstarsbravo Месяц назад +1

    One of the things I will always remember is getting to meet and talk to the last remaining WWI American veteran when I was in my teens the stories he told were just absolutely amazing

  • @mushroomatume
    @mushroomatume Месяц назад +8

    If you told me these guys were Vietnam vets, I'd believe you. Astounding the shape they are in. Forever grateful for their service!!!

  • @shaylalauren
    @shaylalauren Месяц назад +4

    While most content creators get big they interview celebs and viral people.
    You literally are preserving information while spreading what other people are doing to preserve our history.
    Sharing these video’s whenever I get the opportunity to.
    Thank y’all

  • @alissathesinger
    @alissathesinger Месяц назад +4

    My Grandfather is a Marine who fought in the Vietnam war, he was a machine gunner on front lines.
    I was lucky enough to interview my own grandfather in a very similar setting to create a documentary for a class at my school called Vet Project and i learned absolutely so much from my grandpas experience, what he learned, less of what he saw, and more of how he felt. It brought me closer to him too.

  • @creighton8069
    @creighton8069 Месяц назад +1

    I am 23 and I feel lucky to have met more than several WW2 vets whom were friends of mine. I feel lucky to have had that opportunity.

  • @liamcrawford9861
    @liamcrawford9861 Месяц назад +5

    I met 3 83rd ID WW2 vets on my 22nd birthday in Aug 2022. One guy was at the Bulge and was a POW. Another one was 107 years old! One month later, I met 3 more vets from WW2. One guy was in the Navy, one guy who was 105 served in the Army in Italy and the 3rd guy was at Iwo Jima as a tanker. I also have a grandfather who was in the war who turns 99 this October.

  • @Officialalmate
    @Officialalmate Месяц назад +1

    I remember being a caregiver for a WWII veteran in 2022. He was really kind and sweet. There will never be another generation like those people.

  • @theschmerlo
    @theschmerlo Месяц назад +5

    My great grandfather was in the royal airforce during world war 2, I wish he didn't pass before I was born so I could hear his story

  • @BobDylan-ho2gd
    @BobDylan-ho2gd 24 дня назад +2

    I'm glad I had a Grandpa from these times. The manliest of men.

  • @DarthRaptor22
    @DarthRaptor22 Месяц назад +3

    My great grandfather was in the war and passed away when I was 19. Unfortunately, by the time i was old enough and interested enough to ask about his time, he was well into his battle with alzhiemers. Dont hesitate, talk to them now

  • @alexandru5369
    @alexandru5369 Месяц назад +2

    Both guys look great and their minds are as sharp as as hell

  • @perceivedvelocity9914
    @perceivedvelocity9914 Месяц назад +6

    My grandfather joined the Navy twords end of WW2. He grew up on a farm and had never seen the ocean. He knew that he was going to be drafted so he chose the Navy. He was finishing training when Japan surrendered. My grandfather was embarrassed that the war ended before he ever stepped on a ship. The people that he grew up with had experienced so much and he didn't. He felt like he let them down and didn't do his part. From our conversations I got the feeling that he had survivors guilt. A lot of people that he knew never came home and he did.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  Месяц назад +4

      Survivors guilt is so real. I got that feeling from talking to some vets myself.

  • @Wickedpissah138
    @Wickedpissah138 Месяц назад +1

    Time goes by so fast. It’s hard to believe my nana and almost everyone from her generation is just about gone. Appreciate your relatives if you still have them around!

  • @Nahasapasa
    @Nahasapasa Месяц назад +36

    0:57 ...so far

    • @b_f_d_d
      @b_f_d_d Месяц назад +5

      Ww3 will probably be the closest that humanity can get to nearing extinction

  • @davidhochstetler4068
    @davidhochstetler4068 Месяц назад +12

    Talk to them. Get to know them while you still can

  • @geisaune793
    @geisaune793 Месяц назад +2

    This is a really meaningful project and video, and it’s unfortunate how easy it can be to take this for granted. When I was a kid, I never thought about how we’re running out of WW2 veterans. They were certainly elderly, but it still seemed like there were plenty of them left. And suddenly they’re almost all gone. It’s crazy to think that my grandparents were kids at a time when they might have known a Civil War veteran. One day, young people will think about me and think about how crazy it is that I was a kid at a time when I knew a WW2 veteran

  • @matthewhedrichjr.5445
    @matthewhedrichjr.5445 Месяц назад +32

    It’s gonna be sad when Jimmy Carter may pass away.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  Месяц назад +9

      Definitely

    • @matthewhedrichjr.5445
      @matthewhedrichjr.5445 Месяц назад +7

      @@iammrbeat let’s pray he shall live to be 100 but we’ll see

    • @sheevpalpatine2901
      @sheevpalpatine2901 Месяц назад

      @@matthewhedrichjr.5445Only 3 more weeks

    • @samuelbarber6177
      @samuelbarber6177 Месяц назад +4

      Fingers crossed, he hasn’t got long before his birthday.
      Incidentally, I share a birthday with him. History’s greatest monster.

    • @sheevpalpatine2901
      @sheevpalpatine2901 Месяц назад

      @@matthewhedrichjr.5445There are three weeks until he turns 100

  • @TalkToNic
    @TalkToNic Месяц назад +1

    Amazing video. Thank you for sharing these individual stories, and for sharing the creators who are making this a bigger part of their lives

  • @Alex-io5el
    @Alex-io5el Месяц назад +6

    When I was 16, I was visiting my late great-grandmother who had recently moved into her new room at a Maryland nursing home. I briefly stepped outside the front entrance to catch some fresh air and ended up running into a 90 year-old man who was sitting quietly on his walker, but rather somberly. I asked if he was alright and he mentioned that he was depressed; he had lost his wife of nearly 65 years the previous Christmas and did not have immediate family that had visited him frequently. Turns out his late wife had lived in the same room that my family had moved my great-grandmother into and he lived next door to her. His name was Irwin Decker.
    I sat with Irwin as he recalled his life and learned that he served in the Navy as a signalman out of both Savannah, GA and the Pacific Theater during the war. He recalled that he originally wanted to join the Marines, but the convention in New York City that he went to in 1942 had only the Navy. Irwin was just 17 and ended up serving for over 30 years. He showed me his submarine that he was stationed to in Savannah, recalling having to go out in the swamps to rescue new pilots who crashed when flight-training. Post-war, he joined the DC Police Department and served for over 20 years (the last ten of them as a Capitol Police Officer). While there, Irwin got to met Presidents Johnson, Nixon, and Ford in person. He recalled the Kennedy brothers (John F. and Robert) getting more death threats to his office than any senator at the time and that the two of them often broke rules in the Senate.😂
    Less than four months after I met and befriended him, Irwin died of a stroke on Veterans Day, 2015. I was devastated when I found out; I was about to become an Eagle Scout around that time and had planned to invite him to my Court of Honor (he had received his badge in 1940-41). I found Irwin's grave in Frederick, MD just two years ago and every time I am up in the region, I pay my respects to him. Irwin definitely taught me that, even though that most service members don't die in combat, those that live still sacrifice a lot, like time away from their families and putting off their own interests and hobbies.
    A lot to learn from a guy who I knew for only four months.

  • @woodywoodmc2209
    @woodywoodmc2209 Месяц назад +1

    It’s been a wild time to talk with veterans who I’ve met, WW2 and Vietnam vets were always the most interested in telling their stories once you got talking to them

  • @SiVlog1989
    @SiVlog1989 Месяц назад +4

    My grandfather served in the Royal Navy in WW2, he wasn't initially old enough to fight, he was 15 when war broke out in 1939, but he was clearly proud of what he had contributed to. His Navy issue tattoo, while faded, was still discernible even up to his passing aged 91 in May 2016, 2 months short of his 92nd birthday. Whenever I had homework at school to do with Civilian life in Britain during the war, he was a treasure trove of information, including his experience sheltering from Luftwaffe bombing raids in his local London Underground station, Shepherds Bush. One thing about him that I didn't find out about his Navy career until after his passing was to do with a very famous date in the war. On June 6th 1944, aka D-Day, my grandfather was serving on a River Class Frigate, HMS Chelmer, supporting the landings in Normandy. It makes me wonder what horrors he must have seen that day.
    Not only was I a pallbearer at his funeral, but I read a speech about him, including a particular recollection of how he was able to not only engage with children, but hold a serious conversation with adults.
    Every Memorial ceremony, while he was able to, he always laid a wreath for his brother, who was killed in action in Madagascar in 1942

  • @capclip9
    @capclip9 29 дней назад +2

    One of my grandfathers friends is 102 years old and is a WW2 veteran, still active and articulate
    He's planning on going to Mexico in a few weeks

  • @GojiMet86
    @GojiMet86 Месяц назад +7

    Knew WWII vets from church who served in the Pacific, and had the honor of meeting three Tuskagee Airmen at a Flag Day event in 2015:
    Dabney Montgomery (ground crewman attached to the 332nd Air Fighter Group, was a bodyguard for MLK in the Selma March, died 2016).
    Wilfred DeFour (366th Air Service Squadron, reached 100, and died in 2018).
    Audley Coulthurst (member of the B-25 bomber group, and one of the first black CPAs in the country, died 2016).

  • @zippolit4485
    @zippolit4485 Месяц назад +1

    I hope that more people are willing to go and interview these heroes and remind these people that they are heroes who deserve to be remembered and heard by all.

  • @lildreadnaught
    @lildreadnaught Месяц назад +15

    I had a neighbor who moved out recently. When he was a child, maybe 3, the Nazis began their invasion of Yugoslavia. A Nazi bomb landed on his house, destroying it, & deafening him in his (right I think?) ear.

  • @joshthetrainfan
    @joshthetrainfan Месяц назад +1

    I remember getting to talk to one of these when I was younger. We’re the last generation to appreciate these guys.

  • @bendebord2282
    @bendebord2282 Месяц назад +9

    Mr. Beat is a RUclips legend

  • @mrnonsense1031
    @mrnonsense1031 Месяц назад +2

    This is why we need to hear their stories while they're still alive.

  • @tomhalla426
    @tomhalla426 Месяц назад +15

    Both my parents were WWII veterans, born in 1922 and 1924. My father was a combat veteran, but never really spoke of it, aside from mentioning the food was so bad he lost twenty odd pounds in New Guinea and Leyte.

  • @themeparksofamerica
    @themeparksofamerica Месяц назад +2

    My great grandad was a WW2 Veteran and he sadly died back in 2023. R.I.P

  • @KeithJ.
    @KeithJ. Месяц назад +4

    Once I met a ww2 vet at a county fair and he was on the Arizona when the Pearl Harbor attack happened

  • @leakyseal921
    @leakyseal921 Месяц назад +1

    I met a WWII veteran when I went to Washington DC. He was in the room next to me at a hotel. I am so honored to have met him and listen to his amazing stories of bravery. Truly the greatest generation!

  • @theEmeles
    @theEmeles Месяц назад +4

    I really would love a roleplaying game that told the stories of these men and what they endured. Too often we get the empty war games, I'm willing to bet there's a market for a Band of Brothers style game.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  Месяц назад

      I think you're right.

    • @BlossomField91
      @BlossomField91 3 дня назад +1

      Not an RPG, but the Brothers in Arms trilogy on PS2 and PS3 were great. Band of Brothers style story, they're first-person shooters but you play as a paratrooper and squad leader and command your guys in combat. You play as the same guy in the first and third games and it's a continuous story, it went from D-Day to Market Garden. I think there was plans for another sequel that'd be set during the Battle of the Bulge but it never got made.
      I'm not into military shooters/FPS (don't care for Call of Duty, Battlefield, etc) but I enjoyed those.

  • @octaviatheappalled912
    @octaviatheappalled912 Месяц назад

    This is a powerful and much appreciated video so thank you very much for it.
    Neither of my parents were in the armed forces; my father was not yet 30 but he had been in a serious accident that precluded him from joining. So he worked on the Manhattan Project in Hanford, Washington, although no one knew at the time what they were actually working on. My mother was a chemist and so worked in an arms plant developing new kinds of bullets and stuff.

  • @progamerzach1
    @progamerzach1 Месяц назад +4

    Hopefully this will forever remain as the deadliest war in history unless the future has plans of its own.