Source :
https://9gag.com/gag/ajgVB0Q
https://en.topwar.ru/188854-21-ijunja-stalin-dilemma-prinjatija-reshenija.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Barbarossa
World War II, WW2, Color, Farbe, Berwarna, ORI, Original, Germany, Italy, Japan, USA, Nazi, Great Britain, France, Soviet Union, Red Army, Waffen-SS, Luftwaffe, Kriegsmarine, Soldiers, Generals, Officers, Tank, Panzer, Tiger, Panther, Sherman, Aircraft, Bomber, Messerschmitt, Spitfire, Hitler, Churchill, Stalin, Rommel, Himmler, Goering, Roosevelt, Patton, Guderian, Mustang, Zero, Admiral, Sailot, Battleship, Holocaust, Third Reich, fascist, Kaigun, Rikugun, RAF, Battle, Operation
Erich Marcks was born on June 6, 1891 in Berlin. He is the son of the historian Erich Marcks. In 1909 he studied philosophy in Freiburg. But after only three semesters, he began his career in the army in October 1910. Twenty years later, in the early 1930s, he became the communications officer of the Ministry of the Armed Forces before working directly for Chancellors Franz von Papen and Kurt von Schleicher.
Marcks fought in World War I. He completed General Staff Training and was transferred to the Imperial General Staff Corps in 1917. Marcks was awarded the Iron Cross 2nd Class and then 1st Class, and posted to the German Supreme Command. After the war, Marcks fought with the paramilitary Freikorps. He joined the Army of the German Republic (Reichsheer); between 1921 and 1933, he held several staff and command positions, and then served in the Ministry of Defense. On 1 April 1933, after Hitler came to power, Marcks was transferred to the army, serving as Chief of Staff of VIII Corps.
During the campaign of France in 1940, he worked on the staff of the 18th Army (it was during this period that Erich Marcks opposed the bombing of the city of Bruges and the destruction of the bridges of Paris, believing that even in time of war the historical monuments must be preserved) and then work on the invasion plans of the Soviet Union.
During Operation Barbarossa, he commanded the 101st Light Division and was severely injured in Ukraine on June 26, 1941, which cost him the amputation of one of his legs. In addition, two of his three sons are killed on the Russian front.
Before taking command of the 84th Army Corps in Normandy in 1944, he successively headed the 337th Infantry Division in Paris, the 66th Corps at Clermont-Ferrand and the 87th Corps at north of Brittany. Unlike most general officers, Erich Marcks believes in the possibility of landing in Normandy.
On June 6, 1944 he celebrated his fifty-third birthday, a date which also turns out to be D-Day for the Allied offensive in Normandy. After the start of the Overlord operation, he was one of the first German general officers to react without delay by launching a counter-attack on D-Day, but that breaks with the Americans.
During an inspection on the front June 12, 1944, an Allied air attack forced him to abandon his car near Hebecrevon (northwest of Saint-Lo). Nevertheless, he is seriously injured in the groin by a 20-mm shell that cuts off the femoral artery: transported by his driver in a ditch, he empties his blood and dies at 9:45.
In the film The Longest Day, Marcks is played by Richard Münch. In the TV Movie Rommel, he is played by Hans Kremer.
Decorations & Awards:
24.06.1944 Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (503,) as General der Artillerie and Kom.Gen. LXXXIV.Armee-Korps / 7.Armee / Heeresgruppe B (D) / OB West
26.06.1941 Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes: as Generalleutnant, Kdr. 101.leichten Infanterie-Division / LII.Armee-Korps / 17.Armee / Heeresgruppe Süd
29.09.1939 1939 Spange zum 1914 Eisernes Kreuz I. Klasse
21.09.1939 1939 Spange zum 1914 Eisernes Kreuz II. Klasse
00.08.1915 1914 Eisernes Kreuz I. Klasse
25.09.1914 1914 Eisernes Kreuz II. Klasse
00.00.191_ Hamburgisches Hanseatenkreuz
ca. 1941 Verwundetenabzeichen, 1939 in Gold
ca. 1918 Verwundetenabzeichen, 1918 in Schwarz
13.06.1944 Mentioned in the Wehrmachtbericht
ca. 1934 Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer
00.00.193_ Wehrmacht-Dienstauszeichnungen
Source :
https://artsandculture.google.com/entity/m064km4b?hl=en
https://www.dday-overlord.com/en/battle-of-normandy/biographies/germany/erich-marcks
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erich_Marcks
https://www.oocities.org/~orion47/WEHRMACHT/HEER/General2/MARCKS_ERICH.html
US Navy Capt. David McCampbell wasn't just the top naval ace of World War II — he's considered the service's all-time leader in aerial combat. His spirit and leadership are what made his air group one of the war's most decorated, and they earned him the Medal of Honor.
McCampbell was born Jan. 16, 1910, in Bessemer, Alabama, to parents Andrew and Elizabeth McCampbell. When he was about 12, the family moved him and his older sister, Frances, to West Palm Beach, Florida.
As a teen, McCampbell moved north to attend the Staunton Military Academy in Virginia. His graduation in 1928 earned him an Army commission, according to the Army University Press. Instead, he chose to attend the Georgia Institute of Technology, where he played football and was on the swim team. He also joined Navy ROTC, which led to his appointment to the Naval Academy. While in Annapolis, McCampbell became an accomplished swimmer and diver, competing in and winning various NCAA regional championships.
McCampbell graduated in June of 1933, but since Great Depression-related economic issues had affected the number of commissions that were available, he immediately went into the Naval Reserve. He returned to Alabama to work in construction and at an aircraft assembly plant for a year before finally receiving orders in June 1934 to report for active duty.
The young ensign's first duty station was aboard the USS Portland. By May 1937, he'd worked his way up in the ranks and began flight school in Pensacola, Florida, earning his wings in April 1938. His first few years as an aviator were spent serving on the USS Ranger and the USS Wasp.
World War II began while McCampbell was on the Wasp. The aircraft carrier spent the first half of 1942 in the European theater before being transferred to the Pacific. On Sept. 15, 1942, the ship was sunk during the Guadalcanal campaign. McCampbell, surviving its demise, was promoted to lieutenant commander and brought back to the U.S.
By late 1943, McCampbell was in command of a fighter squadron attached to the USS Essex. He was promoted to commander in January 1944 and put in charge of the ship's Air Group 15 — one of the war's most decorated air groups. It was in this position that McCampbell became one of World War II's great aces.
McCampbell took out his first Japanese aircraft on June 11, 1944. About a week later, during the First Battle of the Philippine Sea, he led several F6F Hellcat fighter aircraft against 80 Japanese carrier-based planes that were headed toward the U.S. fleet. McCampbell personally destroyed seven of those hostile aircraft — five bombers and two fighters — which helped his outnumbered men virtually annihilate the enemy. According to the Encyclopedia of Alabama, McCampbell's team accounted for about 68 of the 600 Japanese downed aircraft.
On Oct. 24, 1944, during the infamous Battle of Leyte Gulf, McCampbell and a fellow pilot, Ensign Roy Rushing, took on 60 hostile Japanese aircraft that were approaching U.S. ships. Despite the overwhelming airpower against them, McCampbell shot down nine Japanese aircraft, setting a U.S. single mission aerial combat record. Rushing took out another six enemy warplanes. Their successes completely threw off the Japanese air group; the remaining aircraft abandoned their mission before any of them reached the U.S. fleet.
In a 1987 U.S. Naval Institute interview, McCampbell explained how he nearly didn't make it back to his ship after that engagement.
"When I got over the ship, I found they had a flight deck full of planes, and I knew that to launch all those planes would take a good 20 minutes, and I didn't have that much gas left," he said.
When the ship did make room for him to land, he said, "I ran out of gas on the deck. They had to push me out of the landing gear area. I found out from the mechanic that re-ammunitioned the guns that I had exactly six rounds left in the starboard outboard gun, and they were all jammed."
"But it worked out all right," he added nonchalantly.
McCampbell returned to the U.S. in December 1944. By then, he had become the Navy's all-time leading ace and top F6F Hellcat ace, having downed 34 Japanese aircraft during his months of aerial combat. His impressive tally made him the third-highest American scoring ace of World War II, behind only Army Maj. Richard Bong and Army Maj. Thomas B. McGuire, neither of whom survived the war.
For his bravery in the skies, McCampbell received the Medal of Honor on Jan. 10, 1945, from President Franklin D. Roosevelt during a ceremony at the White House.
After the war, McCampbell served in various positions, including as a senior naval aviation advisor to the Argentine Navy. After becoming a captain in July 1952, he also notably served as the captain of the aircraft carrier USS Bonhomme Richard and as a member of the Joint Staff in Washington, D.C. In the latter position, McCampbell helped draw up contingency invasion plans during the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, according to a 1996 Palm Beach Post article.
McCampbell was married a few times and had three children, Frances, David and John. He finally retired from the Navy in 1964 after 31 years of service.
According to the Palm Beach Post, McCampbell "dabbled in real estate in the Bahamas" before setting back down near West Palm Beach, where he lived for the rest of his life.
McCampbell died on June 30, 1996, at a veteran's home he'd been living at for about a year. He was buried in Arlington National Cemetery.