The Pennsylvania Military Museum is an attractive facility in Boalsburg, right around the corner from State College. There is a particular focus on the 28th Division.
Its collection includes good exhibits on WWII and its extensive grounds contain a number of monuments, including one Bulge monument erected by our predecessor, VBOB. Its regular programs include a 28th Division commemoration, in May, and a WWII weekend, usually held on Memorial Day.
BOBA is looking for ways to become more involved in this museum’s programs.
We hope our distribution issues are behind us and we’re now at work on the next issue of the Bugle. This next issue will contain a report on the January 2024 commemoration and Gettysburg conference; plans for what’s going to be a truly outstanding reunion in St. Charles, Missouri; news on the departures of some valued members and on the activities of some who are very much with us; chapter news; and an exciting new feature profiling our division members. And much more.
The deadline is March 10, but if I know you’re sending something, you can have a few more days. For those sending me material, please:
If you’ve already set me something, remind me what you sent and when. I’ve been assembling folders of material but I’d like a cross check to be sure I haven’t missed anything.
If you know of an event we should mention, please notify me of the basics: what it is, when and where, point of contact. This can include things like World War II shows, air shows, conferences, new museum exhibits, etc. Or it can include major member milestones: 100th birthdays, awards, etc.
If you’re planning to submit something, let me know right away. E mail me about topic, length, photos, etc., and let me know when I can expect it.
Join our Bulge veterans and their families to recognize all those who participated and sacrificed their youth at the Battle of the Bulge. We have exciting events planned including an educational program, wreath ceremonies and a reception at the Embassy of Belgium in DC.
JANUARY 24, 2024 – WWII educational program with speakers, Bulge veterans, and WWII displays! Featured Speakers – Author Andrew Biggio (pictured far right)will share stories from his latest book, The Rifle 2. Books will be available and a book signing with Andrew as well as with Bulge veteran Jake Ruser (pictured in the center)who is featured in the book. Also, BOBA Historian Jim Trieslerwill host a panel of our WWII veterans who are in attendance and our Bugle Editor Leon Reed will also be a presenter.
JANUARY 25, 2024 – Join us for a guided tour to commemorate the 79th Anniversary of the Battle of the Bulge with wreath-laying ceremonies at the Battle of the Bulge Memorial, Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and WWII Memorial, then celebrate with a reception hosted by the Embassy of Belgium!
REGISTRATION HAS ENDED FOR DC/VA EVENT REGISTRATION STILL OPEN FOR JAN 27TH GETTYSBURG EVENT…….
“In a Small Church,” by Michael V. Altamura, 750th Tank Battalion, originally printed in VBOB, Battle of the Bulge: True Stories from the Men and Women Who Survived, Aperture Press, 2014.
We were in a picturesque, snow-covered valley in Belgium during the Battle of the Bulge in December of 1944. It was Sunday morning. A small Catholic church stood on a slight slope overlooking the snow-covered fir trees. At the other end of the valley was a coal-fueled electric power plant. Every once in a while a German buzz bomb came over attempting to knock out the power plant. A group of tankers and infantrymen decided to attend church that Sunday morning. We stood in the back of the church with our guns slung over our shoulders as the priest gave the mass in Latin. The congregation was kneeling in prayer.
We heard the “put-put” of a buzz bomb overhead, and then the sound cut off. When the sound ceased, we knew the rocket engine had stopped propelling the airborne buzz bomb and it would fall, exploding when it hit the ground. The congregation looked upwards as if to accept their fate. Th priest’s intonations stopped. We stood in the rear as if accepting our fate. The bomb hit pretty close to the church. The ground shook; a few of the stained glass windows cracked. No one moved or said a word; the priest resumed his mass in Latin. I thank God for sparing us that Sunday morning in a small Belgian church during the Ardennes battle.
Best Western Hotel in Gettysburg has agreed to give people attending the Bulge conference a special room rate of $85 a night. The Best Western is a new hotel and very nice, right on Gettysburg’s glittering “Strip,” Steinwehr Ave.
As of Sunday, January 14, seven rooms were still available and the hotel will honor the rate as long as the rooms last. Guests should call the hotel at (717) 334-1188 and say “Battle of the Bulge conference”
The official conference will take place at the World War II American Experience, which is located a few miles northwest of town. A pre-conference activity is being planned at the hotel the night before. Stay tuned for more details.
In his memoirs, Ike reflected on what we owe the American GIs who fought in the Battle of the Bulge:
“More than the constant threat of imminent death, our men had overcome all that the unbridled elements could inflict on them in the way of snow and ice and sleet, clammy fog and freezing rain; all the pain of arduous marches and sleepless watches. They had given up their wives and children, or set aside their hope of wives and children, overcome luxuries or poverty, fought down their own inclinations to rest their tired bodies, to play it safe, to search out a hiding place.
“I believe we can always rely, even as I had to in the Battle of the Bulge and the concurrent winter fighting from the North Sea to the Italian Alps, on the willingness and readiness of Americans, including young ones, to endure greatly in their country’s cause.”
Nice program in the national cemetery in observance of the 79th anniversary of the start of the Battle of the Bulge. Eisenhower National Historic Site ranger Dan Vermilya led the program. He observed that Gettysburg “is hallowed ground not just for what happened here in July 1863, or in November 1863.” He noted that Gettysburg is one of few places “where you can see in a small area the grass of people who died defending freedom in 1944 and in the Pacific and in World War I through Vietnam.”
Dan will be on of the speakers at our Gettysburg conference on January 27. Two other speakers, BOBA member Tom Vossler and Bugle editor Leon Reed, also attended.
ELECTED OFFICERS President & CEO: Steve Landry Executive Vice President: Barbara Mooneyhan Vice President Membership: Wayne Jacobs Vice President Chapters: Dr. Andy Waskie Vice President Military & Veteran Affairs: Doris Davis Treasurer: Mary Ann Smith Recording Secretary: Gail C. Larke
ELECTED BOARD MEMBERS Madeleine Bryant, Chaplain Kristen Faller Ken Larke Jim Triesler, Historian Betsy Rose
After the Commemoration, extend your trip to Gettysburg, PA on January 27, 2024 for the Battle of the Bulge educational conference.Click here for details.
January 27, 2024. Extend your trip for the Commemoration. Come to Gettysburg for a power-packed speaker’s lineup. Single-day conference. Speakers include:
Stuart Dempsey, licensed battlefield guide and owner-operator of historic tours company., speaks on the106th Division.
Leon Reed, BOBA editor and author, gives a GI-level presentation on the 80th Division’s role in breaking the siege of Bastogne;
Jim Triesler, BOBA historian and Education Director of the Virginia War Memorial, speaks on the Victims of Malmedy;
Dan Vermilya, supervisory park ranger at Eisenhower Historic site, speaks on the WWII dead of Gettysburg National Cemetery.
Tom Vossler, licensed guide, former chief of military history, and Eisenhower Society trust, speaks on Ike and leadership
Count on our friends in Ettelbruck to come through. About a month ago, we posted a query requesting information on a stained glass window in the church in Ettelbruck. (See below.) It referred to “Ettelbruck 1944,” so it seemed probable that it was connected with the Ardenns campaign. But how?
Susan Tyson of Ettelbruck’s Patton Museum was the first to come through with information.She wrote telling us the artist was named Probst.
But our member Joseph Dondelinger, a native of Luxembourg who enthralled the audience at our 2023 reunion with his presentation on Luxembourg Then and Now, truly came through with information. His letter is reproduced below.
“The triple window on the right side of the Ettelbruck church is part of the church restoration and significant architectural remodeling done between 1946 and 1948. The church was heavily damaged in the Bulge. The window(s) depict(s) the suffering of the town/parish patron saint, St. Sebastian, and the phases of his martyrdom, linking it to the martyrdom of the town. The bottom shows some of the major and most familiar buildings in Ettelbruck. The Latin inscription reads A FAME MORTE (IN?) BELLO LIBERA NOS DOMINE ETTELBRUCK 1944.
“Regarding the Latin, the translation could be “From a fate of death in war, free our town” (or “free us Lord”). I need to verify the latter.
“The window was designed by brothers Emil and Josef Probst and produced in the shop of the Linster Brothers in Mondorf. (Mondorf is in the extreme south-east of Luxembourg and the location of the place code named “Ashcan” where the top Nazis were incarcerated before their transfer to Nuremberg.)
“Please give all credit to my younger brother Albert who still resides in Luxembourg for tipping me off about the resource to find the answer.”
BOBA thanks both Joseph and Albert Dondelinger for coming through with information.
Today, October 17th, PVT James Hampton Coates would have been 101 years old. Instead, James sadly was one of 86 servicemen who was killed in the Malmédy Massacre in Belgium during the Battle of the Bulge. He served in the 13 FAOB HQ from 1942-44. During that time he landed on Utah Beach D-Day+1 and was injured in July by a mine or dud, but stayed with the battalion under field medical care. In October 1944, he joined 285 FAOB BTRY B, and two months later he was killed in the massacre.
James left behind a wife and two children: a 2-year-old daughter and 7-month-old son. He was buried in Henri Chapelle Cemetery, Belgium and later reinterred in his hometown of Kilmarnock, Virginia. His daugther, Mary Ann Coates Smith, is currently the President of BOBA’s Virginia Crater Chapter.