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May 25, 2006
Press Contact: Anneliesa Clump Behrend (202) 707-9822, aclump@loc.gov
Trish Taylor Shuman (202) 707-1940, pash@loc.gov
Public Contact: Veterans History Project (888) 371-5848
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS VETERANS HISTORY PROJECT
FEATURES MORE STORIES ONLINE
“Military Intel: The Inside Story,” a selection
of 22 digitized collections of materials submitted by war veterans
who served in military intelligence will be highlighted on the
Veterans History Project Web site beginning May 25.
“Military Intel will be added to the “Experiencing
War” stories
from the Veterans History Project at www.loc.gov/warstories.
This is the 12th set of individual stories—comprising interviews,
letters, photographs and written memoirs—to be featured
on the site. Past themes have included D-Day, prisoners of war
and military medicine.
Visitors to the “Experiencing War” site can gain
insights to military intelligence through personal accounts of
22 veterans. The presentation is divided into three types of
experiences: “In Harm’s Way,” “In the
Field” and “Behind the Scenes.”
“Very often I actually knew what a German division was
going to do before the German commander of that division knew
it,” recalls
Alexander Standish, a U.S. Army colonel who was 42 years old
when the United States entered World War II. Standish entered
the Army in 1942 and worked with Generals Eisenhower and Bradley
in planning the D-Day invasion and subsequent strategy to regain
Europe from Nazi control. Standish’s online collection
consists of 117 minutes of oral history, 10 photographs, 12 letters,
a personal memoir and 41 supporting documents, such as “secret” memorandums.
Flying reconnaissance missions in a Mohawk aircraft over North
Vietnam and Laos in 1967, George Davis was well aware of the
plane's nickname, “The Widowmaker.” Working at night
without air support or weapons, Davis photographed evidence of
enemy troop movements and construction for use on future bombing
runs. His expertise served him well in directing reconnaissance
missions over the DMZ in Korea and at the Pentagon, where he
coordinated photo analysis for Special Forces operations around
the world.
Louis L. Weinstein, a 29-year-old lawyer when he entered the
Army in 1942, found his niche working as a plainclothes investigator.
His first assignments were in Chicago, where recruiting was taking
place for the Manhattan Project, and his native Detroit. By the
end of World War II, he was in San Francisco, interviewing released
prisoners of the Japanese in preparation for war crimes trials.
Veterans from World War I through the current conflict, and the civilians who
supported them, are coming forward to record their personal stories and contribute
personal documents for a growing archives at the American Folklife Center at
the Library of Congress. The Veterans History Project site has 2,797 stories,
many of which were collected as audio and video interviews, photographs, diaries,
letters and other materials now totaling more than 200,000 items. The goal is
to collect, preserve and share with future generations the stories of all American
war veterans. To date, more than 40,000 individuals have submitted stories to
the Veterans History Project.
Those who are interested in participating are encouraged to e-mail the Veterans
History Project at vohp@loc.gov or to call toll-free (888) 371-5848 to request
a free project kit. For more information about the Veterans History Project,
and to see and hear veterans’ stories, visit www.loc.gov/vets.
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