New Group Will Run Darien Memorial Day Parade

Posted on 16th May 2012 in The monuments of world

The Darien Monuments and Ceremonies Commission is looking for new volunteers to plan the Memorial Day parade.

Photo credit: Casey Donahue

DARIEN, Conn. – Darien’s Memorial Day Parade will no longer be run by the town’s Monuments and Ceremonies Commission after this year. In an email to parade participants, commission Chairman Phil Kraft announced that the parade will instead most likely be run by a committee of volunteers in the future.

“For nearly 12 years, the planning and managing of the parade has been done by a shrinking group of volunteers on the town’s Monuments and Ceremonies Commission, whose ages now range from mid-60s to over 90,” he wrote. At 63, Kraft is the youngest member of the commission. “Clearly, it is time for others to step up and take over.”

Kraft met with First Selectmen Jayme Stevenson and decided that a committee will be appointed five months before Memorial Day 2013 and be responsible for all the details. The Monuments and Ceremonies Commission will still be in charge of the ceremony at Spring Grove Cemetery, regardless of whether there is a parade. They will also serve in an advisory capacity to help the new committee.

“It seems logical to approach the loyal participants of the parade and ask them to see if they might be able to sacrifice a little more time to help enhance the exposure of their group by enabling them to continue to honor Darien’s war dead by marching to the cemetery in a celebration of their lives each Memorial Day.”

Kraft thanked the parade participants for their continued support. “Every year, I am proud to look at all the citizens of Darien whose lives are touched by the parade, marching down the Post Road, and waving and applauding from the curbs and storefronts.”

This year’s parade will be May 28. It will begin in the Goodwives Shopping Center at 10 a.m., rain or shine, and proceed to Spring Grove. World War II veteran John Geoghegan will be the grand marshal.

World War II veterans make Hero Flight to Washington

Posted on 6th May 2012 in The monuments of world
COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa -

More than 24 WWII veterans from Central Nebraska flew to Washington, D.C. on Saturday to visit memorials and monuments.

Marine veteran William Abshier said he was humbled by the flight.

“When we left Grand Island, people were lined up along the streets all over, honoring us with flags and things like that,” Abshier said.

Teresa Hongsermeier helped raise money to pay the expenses to send the veterans on the trip. She said the $200,000 donated by those living near Grand Island was completely worth it.

“It’s been awesome. They’ve been so excited. We tell them to load up, and we just have to stand back and get out of the way because they’re ready to get on the buses and go,” Hongsermeier said.

Army veteran Ray Arnold said he looked forward to visiting the monuments and sharing old war stories.

“We’ve all got something in common. I think there’s going to be a lot of bonding before this trip is over,” he said. “It’s going to be a trip of a lifetime.”

The group was expected to be in Washington, D.C. until Monday.

“These are guys who are used to taking care of things for themselves, and they’re like, ‘No, I’ll take my suitcase in,’ and it’s like, ‘We’ll take your suitcase. We’re going to spoil you as much as we can,’” Hongsermeier said.

Second U.P. Honor Flight a success

Posted on 27th April 2012 in The monuments of world

U.P. veterans travel to see monuments in Washington D.C.

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ESCANABA — The second Upper Peninsula Honor Flight returned at Delta County Airport in Escanaba at 9:30 p.m. Thursday.

The World War II vets from all over the U.P. traveled with medical personnel and their guardians to see the monuments in Washington D.C.

The plane took off bright and early Thursday morning at 6:30 a.m.

There was quite a bit of fanfare just when the 79 veterans prepared to board.

They were met by family, friends, and the U.P. Detachment 444 of the Marine Corps League.

“I saw the enthusiasm of the last group and I said, wow, I want to go too. But I did see it when we were in there a year or so ago,” explains veteran Niron Virch.

The plane flew straight to Baltimore Washington International.

From there, it was a day of touring the monuments.

When the Honor Flight landed back in Escanaba at 9:30 p.m., they were met by an even bigger crowd.

And even though it was a long day, the vets were still very excited.

“And the Vietnam Veterans Memorial was very moving to see,” says Navy veteran John Vasseau. “It was very special for all of us. It was awesome.”

Honor Flight organizers said they’re hoping to have another flight leave sometime this September.

 

Space shuttle Discovery makes final takeoff

Posted on 17th April 2012 in The monuments of world

CAPE CANAVERAL, FL – After three decades of space service, NASA’s oldest and most traveled shuttle, Discovery, began its new life as a museum relic Tuesday with one final takeoff.

Discovery departed Florida’s Kennedy Space Center at daybreak Tuesday aboard a modified jumbo jet bound for Washington, where it will become a Smithsonian exhibit.

Nearly 2,000 people — former shuttle workers, VIPs, tourists and journalists — gathered along the old shuttle landing strip to see Discovery off. A cheer went up as the plane taxied down the runway and took off into a clear sky.

The plane and shuttle headed south and made one last flight over the beaches of Cape Canaveral — thousands jammed the shore for a glimpse of Discovery — then returned to the space center in a final salute. Cheers erupted once more as the pair came in low over the runway it had left 20 minutes earlier and finally turned toward the north.

A similar flyover was planned over the monuments in the nation’s capital, later in the morning.

Discovery — the fleet leader with 39 space missions — is the first of the three retired space shuttles to head to a museum. It will go on display at Dulles International Airport in Virginia, taking the place of the shuttle prototype Enterprise. The Enterprise will go to New York City.

Endeavour will head to Los Angeles this fall. Atlantis will remain at Kennedy.

NASA ended the shuttle program last summer after a 30-year run to focus on destinations beyond low-Earth orbit. Private U.S. companies hope to pick up the slack, beginning with space station cargo and then, hopefully, astronauts. The first commercial cargo run, by Space Exploration Technologies Corp., is set to take place in just another few weeks.

(Copyright ©2012 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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City's veterans answer this call

Posted on 31st March 2012 in The monuments of world

City’s veterans answer this call

BY GEORGE W. RHODES SUN CHRONICLE STAFF

Saturday, March 31, 2012 2:43 AM EDT




The World War II Memorial on the Attleboro Common. (Photo by Mark Stockwell)


Memorials will have at least 60 new names

ATTLEBORO – The call that went out for old soldiers who were inadvertently left off the city’s war memorials has been answered – again and again and again.

To date, 60 additional names have been confirmed for inclusion on the monuments dedicated to the veterans of World War I, World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam war.

Veterans Agent Carl Bradshaw said he expected to get a few names, maybe even a dozen, but not nearly the number that’s come in.

And, more could be on the way as word about the effort reaches Attleboro natives who have moved to all corners of the nation.

Veterans or family members have called from as far away as Florida and Utah, Bradshaw said. And more calls come in every day.

“It’s going to be a pretty big rededication over there,” he said of the ceremony scheduled for the day before Memorial Day at Veterans Memorial Common.

And, it’s going to be an important day.

“Those 60 people or their families are emotional and excited about it. It’s a big deal for them,” Bradshaw said.

Each of the new names will be read during the ceremonies, he said.

It’s the last time the city will add veterans to the monuments, which have been inplace for 20 years.

Of the 60 people who will be added, 30 served during World War II, 20 served during Vietnam and 10 served at the time of the Korean War.

No new names for World War I have emerged.

The deadline for submission of new names is April 11.

All told, the monuments contain 7,282 names: 1,526 from World War I, 3,211 from World War II, 1,111 from Korea and 1,434 from Vietnam.

Service personnel eligible for the World War I monument must have served at some point from April 6, 1917, through Nov. 11, 1918.

The World War II dates start at Dec. 7, 1941, and run through Dec. 31, 1946.

The Korean War dates begin on June 27, 1950, and run through Jan. 31, 1955.

To be included on the Vietnam War memorial a serviceman or woman had to have been in the military at some point from Aug. 5, 1964, through May 7, 1975.

For those who served on the ground in Vietnam, the starting date is Feb. 28, 1961.

A veteran must have served at least one day during the prescribed war period to be eligible. Service in a combat zone is not required.

Discharge papers, called “DD Form 214,” are used to verify eligibility.

The soldier’s home of record on the form must be Attleboro, Bradshaw said.

The veterans office can help former service personnel or family members obtain the discharge papers if they don’t have them or lost them.

Send the document to Veterans Dept., 77 Park St, Attleboro, MA 02703 by April 11.

For more information contact Bradshaw at 508-223-2222, extension 3281 or send an email to veteransdirector@cityofattleboro.us

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Monuments Men Foundation donates Nazi albums used by Hitler for Cultural Holocaust

Posted on 28th March 2012 in The monuments of world
Walt Maciborski Reporter

March 28, 2012

DALLAS—

Two albums used by Adolf Hitler to document priceless pieces of art and furniture stolen by the Nazi’s were discovered in private homes and donated to the National Archives.  This is a huge find.  These albums were in the hands of Hitler during World War II and they detail one of the biggest art heists in history.

“These albums are significant because they are the smoking gun of the Nazi’s systematic and premeditated looting of collectors in particular Jews in Paris,” said Robert Edsel, President of the Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art.

The albums are filled with photographs of priceless pieces of art and furniture stolen from wealthy Jewish families and museums during the war.  Every item is meticulously catalogued and dated by the Nazi’s.  American GI’s taken the albums after the war as a kind of souvenir and put them in their attics or garage.  Now, with the help of the Dallas based Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art, the albums were recovered.  During a ceremony at Southern Methodist University, they were donated to the national archives and it’s considered a key discovery.

“It’s huge,” said Archivist of the United States David Ferriero.  “It’s more documentation.  It’s going to fill in gaps in just how widespread this whole campaign was to steal the cultural heritage of Europe.”

The monuments foundation was created by Robert Edsel in Dallas to honor the real Monuments Men and women who recovered millions of pieces of stolen art and artifacts after World War II.   And, it encourages people to see if family members may have something from the war that could hold a lot of historical value like these albums and donate them.

Hollywood star George Clooney was so impressed with the story of the Monuments Men and Edsel’s book on the subject that he is currently writing a feature length movie about their heroism.  Clooney will direct and star in the picture.  Shooting is slated to start next January. 

Families of soldiers donate Nazi art theft pics

Posted on 28th March 2012 in The monuments of world

http://www.armytimes.com/news/2012/03/ap-families-soldiers-donate-nazi-art-theft-albums-032812/

By Jamie Stengle – The Associated Press
Posted : Wednesday Mar 28, 2012 15:14:32 EDT

DALLAS — Among the items U.S. soldiers seized from Adolf Hitler’s Bavarian Alps hideaway in the closing days of World War II were albums meticulously documenting an often forgotten Nazi crime — the massive pillaging of artwork and other cultural items as German troops marched through Europe.

Two of those albums — one filled with photographs of works of art, the other with snapshots of furniture — were donated Tuesday to the U.S. National Archives, which now has custody of 43 albums in a set of what historians believe could be as high as 100.

Robert M. Edsel, founder and president of the Dallas-based Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art, which announced the discovery of the two new albums at a news conference, called them “key pieces of evidence taken from a crime scene that were prized possessions of Adolf Hitler.”

Relatives of the two soldiers who took the albums contacted the foundation, which has previously donated two other albums in the series to the National Archives. They had read stories in the media about the foundation’s mission, which includes continuing the work of the Monuments Men, who helped Allied forces protect cultural treasures during World War II and helped return stolen items after the war.

“We can only hope for more discoveries in the years to come,” U.S. Archivist David S. Ferriero said at the news conference.

The Nazi agency Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg, or ERR, created the series of albums to document the items taken from across Europe. Of the 43 albums identified so far, 39 were discovered in May 1945 at Neuschwanstein Castle in Germany. They were then used as evidence at the Nuremberg trials to document the Nazi looting before eventually going to the National Archives.

In 2007, the Monuments Men donated two additional albums after they were found in the attic of the family of a U.S. soldier, though the foundation has retained possession of one of those for the last few years as a teaching tool.

“I think there’s a lot more of them out there,” said Edsel, who noted that the albums were used as “shopping catalogs” for Hitler to select works of art for various museums.

Of the newly discovered albums, one contains photographs of 69 paintings that were taken as early as 1940. Most of those paintings appear to have been properly restituted, but an ERR database indicates four were not. The other newly found album contains photographs of 41 pieces of furniture, mostly taken from the Rothschild family.

Edsel said that by 1951, the Monuments Men had processed and returned more than 5 million stolen objects.

“It was the greatest treasure hunt in history — one that continues to this day,” Edsel said.

Greg Bradsher, senior archivist at the National Archives, said the recently discovered albums are a reminder of the massive amounts of property Hitler took and a reminder that “to this day, hundreds of thousands” of items are not with their rightful owners.

The albums are also “a reminder that a lot of soldiers in World War II brought souvenirs home — some of them were helmets, bayonets, medals, which are really bounty of war — but others picked up books, albums, other cultural property,” Bradsher said.

One of the newly discovered albums, known as album 15, was taken by Pfc. Yerke Zane Larson, who served in the 501st Battalion of the 101st Airborne Division, the “Screaming Eagles.” Cpl. Albert Lorenzetti, who served in the 989th Field Artillery Battalion, took the other album — known as album 7 — the same week, also from Hitler’s home, called the Berghof. Both are now deceased.

“When you consider what these solders went through, slogging their way through the loss of buddies, through horrible weather conditions, fighting, combat, etc., and then this momentous occasion when they had a chance to take a deep breath, go up there to the Berghof for no reason than to be able to tell their families and future generations, ‘I stood where Hitler’s home was,’” Edsel said. “That’s what motivated the taking of these things.”

Larson’s daughter, Sandra Runde of Rapid City, S.D., said that she can remember her father taking the album out once or twice when she was growing up. Runde said her father, who returned from the war to take a job sweeping the floors at a restaurant supply company before eventually buying it and working there until he was 80, didn’t talk about the war and didn’t elaborate on the album beyond saying that it was from Hitler’s home.

“It was just tucked away somewhere,” Runde said.

Runde said her father, who died on his 87th birthday in 2009, gave the album to her about five years before he died. She said she’s happy that it’s now somewhere safe where people can appreciate it.

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Photo albums related to Nazi art theft unveiled by Monuments Men Foundation

Posted on 28th March 2012 in The monuments of world

DALLAS (AP).- Two albums documenting works of art and furniture stolen by the Nazis during World War II were unveiled Tuesday after being discovered by a Dallas-based foundation that was contacted by relatives of two soldiers who had taken them from Adolf Hitler’s home.

Robert M. Edsel, founder and president of the Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art, said a Dallas news conference that the albums are “key pieces of evidence taken from a crime scene that were prized possessions of Adolf Hitler.”

The albums, which will be donated to the U.S. National Archives, were among those created by the Nazi agency Einsatzstab Richsleiter Rosenberg, or ERR, documenting the items they had taken from across Europe. One album includes photographs of 69 paintings that were taken as early as 1940. Another contains photographs of 41 pieces of furniture, mostly taken from the Rothschild family.

The albums will bring the total number of ERR albums in the custody of the National Archives to 43, including two others that were donated in 2007.

“We can only hope for more discoveries in the years to come,” said U.S. Archivist David S. Ferriero.

For decades, the 39 ERR albums discovered stored at Germany’s Neuschwanstein Castle and were later used as evidence at the Nuremberg trials to document Nazi looting were thought to be the only survivors of about 100, he said.

The Monuments Men Foundation continues the work of those who helped Allied forces protect cultural treasures during World War II and after the war helped return stolen items.

Edsel said that by 1951, the Monuments Men had processed and returned more than 5 million stolen objects.

“It was the greatest treasure hunt in history — one that continues to this day,” Edsel said.

Greg Bradsher, senior archivist at the National Archives, said that the albums are a reminder of the massive amounts of properties that Hitler took and a reminder that “to this day, hundreds of thousands” of items are not with their rightful owners.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

Hitler's Records of Nazi Art Plunder Resurface

Posted on 27th March 2012 in The monuments of world

In the final days of World War II, Cpl. Albert Lorenzetti and Pfc. Yerke Zane Larson each visited Berghof, Adolf Hitler’s residence in the Bavarian Alps. As was common, the Allied soldiers each grabbed a souvenir, unassuming leather-bound books that contained pictures of artwork and furniture.

[Panorama: Today in photos.]

For years, the picture albums served only as family heirlooms, their original purpose unknown.

It wasn’t until the men’s families turned the albums over to the Monuments Men Foundation, a group committed to recovering artifacts stolen during World War II, that the heirs discovered the books were part of an elaborate set of records the Nazis kept of the art they stole.

Tuesday, the books were formally turned over to the National Archives.

[Check out the latest political cartoons.]

“My uncle was from a generation that grew up making sacrifices and putting others before themselves,” said Lorenzetti’s niece, Jane Gonzalez. “I believe that donating this album to the National Archives and thereby assuring its preservation and availability to the public honors his legacy and is a testament to his personal character and patriotism.”

During the war, the Nazis stole thousands of pieces of art from homes and countries they invaded.

In order to keep track of all of the loot, Hitler created the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg, an agency that meticulously cataloged each piece of art the Nazis stole. Not only were the books filled with pictures of taken items, under each photograph, the ERR wrote a letter and serial number that now offer historians clues about what family the art was taken from. Hitler kept records of the art in hopes of establishing a massive art museum he would call the “Fuhremueseum.” Hitler stored some of his treasured albums at Berghof.

This is not the first time albums of this nature have been discovered. In 1945, the Monuments Men recovered 39 such books, which were entered as evidence of Nazi plundering at the Nuremberg Trials. In 2007, the Monuments Men found two more.

So far, the National Archives possesses 41 albums in all.

“These albums are just the tip of the iceberg for hundreds of thousands of cultural items still missing since World War II,” Monument Men Foundation President Robert M. Edsel stated. “I hope discoveries such as these will encourage other members of the 989th Battalion and their families, as well as all veterans, to look in their attics and basements for any lost wartime items as they may hold the clues to unravel this unsolved mystery.”

National Archives Announces Discovery of Nazi Looted-Art Volumes

Posted on 27th March 2012 in The monuments of world

The National Archives announced Tuesday that two new leather-bound volumes of an infamous catalog of looted art compiled for Hitler during World War II had been discovered among the possessions of former American soldiers. The albums were compiled by a special Nazi task force, the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg, to document the plundering of French museums and private collections undertaken in part for a museum Hitler planned to build in his hometown, Linz, Austria.

The two newly discovered volumes, Albums 7 and 15, were among the possessions of the families of Albert Lorenzetti, who served as a corporal in the 989th Field Artillery Battalion, and Yerke Zane Larson, a private first class in the 501st Battalion of the 101st Airborne Division. Both men, now dead, are thought to have taken the albums from the Berghof, Hitler’s home in the Bavarian Alps, in the waning days of the war.

Their families recently contacted the Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art, a Dallas-based nonprofit organization that has brought attention to the efforts of Allied forces during and after the war to save and recover looted art. (George Clooney has announced plans to direct and star in a movie based on “The Monuments Men: Allied Heroes, Nazi Thieves, and the Greatest Treasure Hunt in History,” written by Robert M. Edsel, the foundation’s president.)

In 2007 the foundation helped find two other volumes of the catalog and donated them to the National Archives. At a ceremony on Tuesday in Dallas, the organization presented Albums 7 and 15 to David S. Ferriero, the archivist of the United States.

“The Foundation often receives calls from veterans and their heirs, who don’t know the importance of items they may have picked up during their service, or aren’t aware that anyone is looking for the items,” Mr. Edsel said. “These albums are just the tip of the iceberg for hundreds of thousands of cultural items still missing since World War II.”