Months after finding an article from the Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune featuring a woman dressed in orange camo, sitting atop a deer lawn ornament, I had the pleasure of talking to Mrs. Celette Couette, the widow of Russell "Frenchie" Couette.
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
The power of search
On Monday, February 21, I heard the familiar "pop" notification sound on my phone, indicating I had a new email message from one of the half dozen accounts I maintain (and yes, they all serve a distinct and useful purpose!). Assuming that it was just another Groupon, some deal from Amazon or Lowe's, or a Facebook status update, I opened my inbox and was surprised to see a message from the Picasa Web Gallery that hosts the photos from Grandpa Givan's treasure chest of World War II mementos.
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Quick update - more photos in the gallery
This won't be a long post, but I wanted to let everyone know that there are some additional photos in the Picasa Web gallery. Check out the Camp Maui, Documents and Mementos folders for the latest updates.
Tags:
Photos
Monday, November 22, 2010
A letter from Mr. Nobutaka Hirai to his Friends from America
As I mentioned in the recent post regarding Mike West's gift, there was a copy of a letter from the son of a Japanese soldier. The text of that letter appears below. While it may be a long shot, I will try and contact Mr. Hirai and see if he would be willing or interested in helping with my efforts to return Grandpa's wartime mementos. Hopefully he still lives at the address on the letter!
A present from Mr. Mike West
This afternoon when I arrived home, I was welcomed with a wonderful present in the mail - a package from Mike West, one of the men who served with Grandpa Givan during the war. In the package was a letter, a couple issues of the Leatherneck magazine, the Fighting Fourth newsletter, a copy of a letter from the son of a Japanese soldier on Iwo Jima, and best of all, more photos. Of the half-dozen photos, only one was already a part of my collection, the rest will be scanned and hopefully available tomorrow or Wednesday. One of the photos, while simply a photocopy of the original made me smile - Mike had written the names of the men on the back (George Minch Jr, Nazareth "Curly" Eannacone and himself), along with the location (Camp Maui, February 25, 1944, after the Marshall Island invasion) and at the bottom, the caption "Phil's camera work".
New for mobile users!
For all of you visiting the site on a smartphone, whether that be a Droid, iPhone, Blackberry or Windows Mobile, you can now enjoy a mobile version of the site. Using the browser on your phone, just go to http://awakeningthepast-wwii.blogspot.com and the software will take care of the rest.
Hopefully everything works right - I've tried to capture the "posts" portion of the site to make things a little easier. The tool I'm using is free and offered by a company called Mobify (http://mobify.me/). As I continue to work it, I may enhance the mobile design - right now, it's pretty simple.
Check things out and if you have any problems, definitely let me know.
Thanks again for your support,
Kyle
Hopefully everything works right - I've tried to capture the "posts" portion of the site to make things a little easier. The tool I'm using is free and offered by a company called Mobify (http://mobify.me/). As I continue to work it, I may enhance the mobile design - right now, it's pretty simple.
Check things out and if you have any problems, definitely let me know.
Thanks again for your support,
Kyle
Tags:
Site news
Friday, November 19, 2010
More Japanese treasures
Tucked away in small boxes among medals, Marine lapel pins, and other mementos from Grandpa Givan's time as a United States Marine, I found more treasures that I am working on scanning, photographing, and adding to the collection of war-time treasures featured on this site.
Tags:
Japan
Friday, November 12, 2010
Grandpa Parker
While the content of the site to date has focused on Grandpa Givan, I do have some amazing photos, stories and mementos for Grandpa Parker as well. The only problem - I don't personally have everything - most of it is tucked away in a safe place with Aunt Peg. Another hope that I have for this site is to see if I can borrow things again and redo all of my original photos and scans.
For the time being, I have uploaded some of the photos from the 50th Army Reunion that Peg, Grant and I attended in August 2003. It was a fun weekend and I had the opportunity to meet some of the guys that Grandpa served with. The veterans and families were a great group of people and I'm glad that Peg invited me go along for the ride. (And Grant, if you happen to read this, you are definitely lucky you survived the trip!)
Check out the Picasa photo gallery (link on the right) for photos from the 50th Army Reunion and enjoy!
For the time being, I have uploaded some of the photos from the 50th Army Reunion that Peg, Grant and I attended in August 2003. It was a fun weekend and I had the opportunity to meet some of the guys that Grandpa served with. The veterans and families were a great group of people and I'm glad that Peg invited me go along for the ride. (And Grant, if you happen to read this, you are definitely lucky you survived the trip!)
Check out the Picasa photo gallery (link on the right) for photos from the 50th Army Reunion and enjoy!
Tags:
Photos
Another resource from Dr. Kaji
Dr. Kaji and I continue to email back and forth and his latest correspondence recommended that I contact the Association of Iwo-Jima Japan, a site dedicated to returning items to the families of Japanese soldiers from World War II. While the association must work through the Japanese Health Ministry - War Victims' Relief, they may provide a more "human-like communication".
Tags:
Japan
Thursday, November 11, 2010
The Ralstons
On Tuesday night I had the pleasure of speaking with Mrs. Betty Ralston, the wife of Wallace Ralston. I met the Ralstons on March 19, 2000 while I was working on my thesis, and it is a memory I still cherish ten years later.
It was by chance that I managed to even find them. With nothing but the name "Wallace Ralston" written on the back of a few photos from Camp Maui to go on, I began scouring the Internet to see if anyone matching that name might have been Yahoo'ed (this might seem strange, but Google was just a start-up back then!), spidered, crawled, or indexed amongst the vastness of the world wide web.
It was by chance that I managed to even find them. With nothing but the name "Wallace Ralston" written on the back of a few photos from Camp Maui to go on, I began scouring the Internet to see if anyone matching that name might have been Yahoo'ed (this might seem strange, but Google was just a start-up back then!), spidered, crawled, or indexed amongst the vastness of the world wide web.
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