Click on small photos

Cadet will not Lie, Cheat, Steal, or Tolerate Those Who Do


USMA at West Point


We have changed the wording of our Alma Mater to reflect the fact that our Women Graduates have also given their lives serving this Nation.


----- Class of 2012 Motto ------

- "For More Than Ourselves" -Thank you Class of 2012 - for the Honor of Marching with you The Class of 62 - Can Do


Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First


Motto -- Duty Honor Country


The Cadets of West Point


They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game. They were the Team that Gave The Most


Washington's Letter recommending the establishment of the Academy and the History of West Point


The Oaths We Take


West Points Medal of Honor Winners


Jefferson Hall - the Academy's new Library.


Douglas MacArthur

Vinegar Joe Stilwell cleaning his Thompson -The Walkout -Burma 1942

George Patton


The Monuments of West Point


Kosciuszko Monument - Guarding the Hudson ensuring there is no passage of British Man of War


Forts of the Hudson

So we'll sing our reminiscences of Benny Havens, Oh!


Academic Excellence


---- Colonel Thayer


West Point


Trophy Point


L'Ecole Polytechnique Monument, or The French Monument by Cadets


Superintendent's Quarters viewed from Thayer Road

Superintendant was not Happy Black '57



Home of the Dean


Quarters 104

Cadet Chapel


Michie Stadium


Arvin Gym


Kimsey Athletic Center


Holleder Center


Washington Monument


United States Military Academy Band


Cadet Barracks


Rugby Complex


Great Chain


Plain looking toward Washington Hall


Battle Monument


Washington Hall with Cadet Chapel on rocks above.


Hudson River


Captured Trophies


Battle Monument


West Point Cemetery


Plain


Cost to this Nation of Differing Views


Trophy Point -- Our Flag


Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s


Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s


Sending the Army Team off to Beat Navy


Army Mule


Color Guard


Band Box Review Early 1950's in Central Area


Battalion Mass Early 50's


Flirtation Walk



Arvin Gym


Duty Honor Country


Cadet will not Lie, Cheat, Steal, or Tolerate Those Who Do


Motto -- Duty Honor Country

Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First

Academic Excellence

--They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game. They were the Team that Gave The Most

Colonel Thayer

West Point mid 60's

Trophy Point

L'Ecole Polytechnique Monument, or The French Monument by Cadets

Superintendent's Quarters viewed from Thayer Road

Cadet Chapel

Michie Stadium

Arvin Gym

Kimsey Athletic Center

Holleder Center

Washington Monument

United States Military Academy Band

Barracks

Rugby Complex

Great Chain

Plain looking toward Washington Hall

Battle Monument

Washington Hall with Cadet Chapel on rocks above.

Hudson River

Captured Trophies

Battle Monument

West Point Cemetery

Plain

Cost to this Nation of Differing Views

Trophy Point -- Our Flag

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Sending the Army Team off to Beat Navy

Army Mule

Color Guard

Band Box Review Early 1950's in Central Area

Battalion Mass Early 50's

Flirtation Walk

Cadet will not Lie, Cheat, Steal, or Tolerate Those Who Do

Motto -- Duty Honor Country

Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First

Academic Excellence

They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game. They were the Team that Gave The Most

Colonel Thayer

West Point mid 60's

Trophy Point

L'Ecole Polytechnique Monument, or The French Monument by Cadets

Superintendent's Quarters viewed from Thayer Road

Cadet Chapel

Michie Stadium

Arvin Gym

Kimsey Athletic Center

Holleder Center

Washington Monument

United States Military Academy Band

Barracks

Rugby Complex

Great Chain

Plain looking toward Washington Hall

Battle Monument

Washington Hall with Cadet Chapel on rocks above.

Hudson River

Captured Trophies

Battle Monument

West Point Cemetery

Plain

- Cost to this Nation of Differing Views

Trophy Point -- Our Flag

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Sending the Army Team off to Beat Navy

- Army Mule

Color Guard

Band Box Review Early 1950's in Central Area

Battalion Mass Early 50's

Flirtation Walk

Click on Photos Below

Please note it takes a couple of hours to update all pages as material is added to this section. You may have to return to the home page to see all of the current links

Cadet will not Lie, Cheat, Steal, or Tolerate Those Who Do

We have changed the wording of our Alma Mater to reflect the fact that our Women Graduates have also given their lives serving this Nation.

----- Class of 2012 Motto ----- "For More Than Ourselves" Thank you Class of 2012 for the Honor of Marching with you The Class of 62

---------- Class of 2008 --------- ----- Class Crest & Motto ----- "No Mission Too Great"

---- Their Commencement ---- "Here am I; Send me."

Thank you Class of 2008 and Please Thank the Men & Women --- the Soldiers you will lead --- The Class of 62.

Motto -- Duty Honor Country

Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First

Jefferson Hall - the Academy's new Library.

Academic Excellence

--They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game. They were the Team that Gave The Most

---- Colonel Thayer

West Point mid 60's

Trophy Point

L'Ecole Polytechnique Monument, or The French Monument by Cadets

Superintendent's Quarters viewed from Thayer Road

Cadet Chapel

Michie Stadium

Arvin Gym

Kimsey Athletic Center

Holleder Center

Washington Monument

United States Military Academy Band

Barracks

Rugby Complex

Great Chain

Plain looking toward Washington Hall

Battle Monument

Washington Hall with Cadet Chapel on rocks above.

Hudson River

Captured Trophies

Battle Monument

West Point Cemetery

Plain

- Cost to this Nation of Differing Views

Trophy Point -- Our Flag

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Sending the Army Team off to Beat Navy

- Army Mule

Color Guard

Band Box Review Early 1950's in Central Area

Battalion Mass Early 50's

Flirtation Walk

Arvin Gym

Duty Honor Country

Cadet will not Lie, Cheat, Steal, or Tolerate Those Who Do

Motto -- Duty Honor Country

Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First

Academic Excellence

--They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game. They were the Team that Gave The Most

---- Colonel Thayer

West Point mid 60's

Trophy Point

L'Ecole Polytechnique Monument, or The French Monument by Cadets

Superintendent's Quarters viewed from Thayer Road

Cadet Chapel

Michie Stadium

Arvin Gym

Kimsey Athletic Center

Holleder Center

Washington Monument

United States Military Academy Band

Barracks

Rugby Complex

Great Chain

Plain looking toward Washington Hall

Battle Monument

Washington Hall with Cadet Chapel on rocks above.

Hudson River

Captured Trophies

Battle Monument

West Point Cemetery

Plain

- Cost to this Nation of Differing Views

Trophy Point -- Our Flag

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Sending the Army Team off to Beat Navy

- Army Mule

Color Guard

Band Box Review Early 1950's in Central Area

Battalion Mass Early 50's

Flirtation Walk

Cadet will not Lie, Cheat, Steal, or Tolerate Those Who Do

Motto -- Duty Honor Country

Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First

Academic Excellence

--They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game. They were the Team that Gave The Most

---- Colonel Thayer

West Point mid 60's

Trophy Point

L'Ecole Polytechnique Monument, or The French Monument by Cadets

Superintendent's Quarters viewed from Thayer Road

Cadet Chapel

Michie Stadium

Arvin Gym

Kimsey Athletic Center

Holleder Center

Washington Monument

The material below this point is a site a work area.


Page 2








































































The '54 Crest

General MacArthur stated it would take

"at least 10 years"

to return Army Football to Respectability


28th Infantry Regiment
Black Lion Award is intended to go to the person on his team "who best exemplifies the character of Don Holleder: leadership, courage, devotion to duty, self-sacrifice, and - above all -

an unselfish concern for the team ahead of himself."


General George Patton

"The Army moves as a team, eats as a team, and fights as a team."


The '55 Crest











They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game.

They were the Team that Gave The Most


Don Hollender Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First


Vann and Holleder


9 Army A's


The '56 Crest


The '57 Crest










Can Do


Gen Van Fleet addressing the Corps prior to the Navy Game


Constructed under supervision of Jay Gould "54 and the Ord Dept from a German Rocket Gun captured at Kasserine Pass. First used in the Duke Game.


COL "Red" Reeder granted the Cheerleaders Corps Squad status to obtain financial support for their spirit-inducing initiatives.


Bob Mischak - - It should be pointed out that Bob was an All American selection, but is not recognized by the Academy as such because of the organization which selected him.









Ubel scores 3 Times against Navy - Vann's facking results in Peter getting tackled - #10 on the ground behind Ubel

Vann to Sisson

Army's B Squad

Vann to Mischak.

Uebel Intercepts

Cody to Don Holleder








Lasley

Frank Hicks

Burd

Bill Purdue

Cody

Meador Mgr

Ron Melnick







Ralph Chesnauskas

Pat Uebel

Tommy Bell

Sisson headed for another score

Peter Vann stuffs the ball in Jerry's gut

Leroy Lunn & Jerry Lodge

Uebel after taking the handoff from Hagan







Attaya - Army's Fullback

Sisson - one of 3 Great Ends

Bob Mischak

Ralph Chesnauskas


Bob Farris

Vann moving out of the pocket

Peter Vann 10, Billy Chance 38, Herdman 68







Ken Kramer

Joe Lapchick

Kirk Cockrell


Lodge going down tosses to Paul Schweikert for score.




Dick Zeigler

Bob Farris
Played the 2d half of the Navy Game blind in one eye.







Pat Uebel

Tommy Bell

Peter Vann

Freddie Attaya

Mike Zeigler

Jerry Lodge wearing #67, playing fullback.

Johnny Wing




Lowell Sisson


Norm Stephen

Jack Krause

Dick Ziegler

Jerry Lodge

Leroy Lunn






Norm Stephen

Jerry Lodge

Corps of Cadets for Navy Game

Can Do

General MacArthur stated it would take

"at least 10 years"

to return Army Football to Respectability

General George Patton

"The Army moves as a team, eats as a team, and fights as a team."

Don Hollender Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First








The '54 Crest

The '55 Crest

28th Infantry Regiment
Black Lion Award is intended to go to the person on his team "who best exemplifies the character of Don Holleder: leadership, courage, devotion to duty, self-sacrifice, and - above all -

an unselfish concern for the team ahead of himself."


They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game.

They were the Team that Gave The Most


The '56 Crest


The '57 Crest





Joe Stilwell

Vinegar Joe Stilwell

The only soldier ever to be awarded the Combat Infantryman Badge as a General Officer. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combat_Infantryman_Badge

by John Easterbrook Class of '62 - Grandson of Vinegar Joe

The Walkout from Burma 1942. His Aides, Frank Dorn 2d while Dick Young is 3d.
Dick Young Died October of 2009. He was 90 and lived in PaloAlto, Ca. Frank "Pinky Dorn was Class of 1923 - Cullum Number 7122



CBI Patch

ChinaBurmaIndia Theater of War



Inducted into the Army Sports Hall of Fame September 17, 2010




Click on the photos below for detail information and larger scale photos

There are some 300 additional photos at

http://forwhattheygaveonsaturdayafternoon.com/wp-1904/vinegar-joe-stilwell

and

http://forwhattheygaveonsaturdayafternoon.com/wp-1904/vinegar-joe-stilwell-2

Four Years at West Point
1900-1904

Captain of the Cross Country Team, 2 Army A's in Football and --

He Brought Basketball to West Point
First game 1903

The Years from Graduation to CBI

The Walkout - May 1942



Preparation for the Return to Burma
June 1942 - November 1943

Return to Burma
December 1943 - August 1944

Okinawa
June 23, 1945 - October 15, 1945

In 1991 the Chinese Communist Government established a Museum in his Honor.

His papers are at the Hoover Institute

Diaries --- http://www.hoover.org/hila/collections/19401264.html

Biographical Data and Register of his Papers --- http://media.hoover.org/documents/stilwell_guide.pdf

JOSEPH W. STILWELL CHRONOLOGY OF ASSIGNMENTS

is at

http://forwhattheygaveonsaturdayafternoon.com/wp-assignments/joe-stilwell


BIOGRAPHY GENERAL JOSEPH W. STILWELL

General Stilwell was born March 19, 1883, in Palatka, Florida, but spent most of his early years in Yonkers, New York. In high school he excelled in sports and when he entered the United States Military Academy in the summer of 1900, sports continued to be part of his life. He earned his "A" as an Army football quarterback; started basketball at West Point, coaching and playing on Army's first team; and captained the cross-country team.

Throughout his life he took pride in staying in good physical shape primarily through running and walking. (During his assignment as an instructor at West Point, 1906-10, he would run the hills early in the early mornings. On one such run he observed two cadets returning from Highland Falls and chased them back to the barracks. In 1939, when Stilwell was promoted to brigadier general he received a congratulatory letter that read: "Ever since you chased Carberry and myself from the South Gate around the reservoir and the barracks and then didn't report us, I have been your enthusiastic booster, so I am naturally delighted at your promotion. " The letter was signed by George Patton.

http://forwhattheygaveonsaturdayafternoon.com/wp-letter/patton-stilwell

Stilwell was commissioned a lieutenant in the Army in 1904, and requested assignment to the Philippines where he took part in guerilla suppression actions. He was the first of his class to return to West Point as an instructor, and during World War I he served as Intelligence Officer for the US IV Corps, planning the St. Mihiel offensive. Following the War he became the Army's first Chinese language student.

In the 1920's and 1930's he served ten years in China as a language student, in the US 15th Infantry, and as our attach to China and Siam, gaining intimate knowledge of the Chinese people and actively observing and reporting on the Sino-Japanese War. In the mid-1930's he served under then COL George C. Marshall as a tactics instructor at Fort Benning, Georgia; it was here that he received his "Vinegar Joe" nickname for correctly imprinting a lesson on a young officer in training who tried to bluff his way through an exercise that in combat would have cost lives.

In the years just prior to World War II, he successively held commands at the brigade level at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, at the division level with the 7th Division at Fort Ord, and at the corps level with III Corps at the Presidio of Monterey. It was during these assignments that he earned recognition as the Army's most capable large unit field commander.

Very shortly after the United States entered the War, General Marshall called Stilwell to Washington to plan and command the first US offensive action of World War II, the invasion of North Africa. However, concurrently the need arose to keep China in the War to tie down hundreds of thousands of Japanese troops. With his China background, Stilwell was personally selected by Secretary of War Stimson and General Marshall to be the senior officer to go to China. Despite his desires for combat command of US troops in the first major engagement of the War, and the certainty of the China-Burma-India Theater assignment being to one of the backwaters of the War, ripe with international politics and no command of US troops, he accepted with a simple "I'll go where I'm needed."

Arriving in the China-Burma-India Theater just in time to experience the collapse of the Allied defense of Burma, and thus cutting China off from all land and sea supply routes, his courageous walkout from Burma, and his bluntly honest assessment of the situation captured the imagination of the American public.

When Stilwell arrived in New Delhi on May 24, he was greeted by a crowd of news correspondents anxious for comment on his ordeal and for his view of the military disaster. Later that evening, the general held a press conference at which he described the campaign in Burma.

"I claim we got a hell of a beating," he snapped. "We got run out of Burma, and it is humiliating as hell. I think we ought to find out what caused it, go back and retake it."

Stilwell then established a training center for two divisions of Chinese troops in India, and in late 1943, launched a campaign with those units to recapture northern Burma. His offensive defeated the Japanese in northern Burma, shortened the air "Hump" supply route and eventually reopened the Burma Road (later renamed the Stilwell Road) as a land supply route. During the combat in both the first and second Burma campaigns, he was often at the front lines urging aggressive action by the Chinese forces. He saw more frontline combat than any other general officer during the War.

1944 General Stilwell back in Burma - If anyone questions if he was a front line General - Note the cloths line and laundry in the back ground.

At the height of his success, in October 1944, he was recalled from the Theater by President Roosevelt. As Barbara Tuchman relates in her book Stilwell and the American Experience in China, he was sacrificed as a political expedience. He later served as Commander of Army Ground Forces, Tenth Army Commander in the closing battle for Okinawa, and as Sixth Army Commander, dying on October 12, 1946, of cancer at the Presidio of San Francisco while still on active duty.

Among his military decorations are the Distinguished Service Cross, Distinguished Service Medal with one Oak Leaf Cluster, the Legion of Merit degree of Commander, the Bronze Star, and, the decoration he esteemed more than any other and which was presented to him the day before he died, the Combat Infantryman Badge.

Throughout his life General Stilwell displayed quintessential American character traits, and his life was never tainted by scandal or questionable morals. Above all was his sense of integrity; he was an absolutely honest and straightforward man, highly respected by all who came in contact with him for this trait. Close behind was the fact that he was a decisive man of action with extraordinary drive, persistence, and energy. Concurrently he had a keen insight into what was right and stuck by his positions. Of his disagreements with China's Chiang Kai-shek and his recall from China he wrote: "The trouble was largely one of posture. I tried to stand on my feet instead of my knees. I did not think the knee position was a suitable one for Americans."

He was a man of candor; he did not mince words, coming directly to the point in a no nonsense manner. As with all great leaders, he had a surplus of personal courage; whether it was in the Philippines, during the Sino-Japanese War, on the Walkout from Burma, or during his frequent front line visits in Burma, he was always moving towards the action to imprint his inspirational leadership on all those around him.

General Stilwell was known throughout the Army as the true Soldiers' General, for his personal style of leadership, his belief in the worth of the individual, and for his concern for the welfare of the soldier; his soldiers nicknamed him "Uncle Joe," certainly a more suitable one than the "Vinegar Joe" he essentially gave himself. He was a modest man, never seeking the trappings of office, never putting himself in the limelight, and often making himself the butt of his own jokes. His trademarks were an old campaign hat, GI shoes, and no insignia of rank....he didn't need anything else for he led by example and inspiration and was admired for doing so.

No matter the difficulties, no matter the obstacles, he never wavered in his absolute dedication to his country, always kept the mission in the forefront, and always accomplished it in a superb manner.





Stilwell with his dog, Gary, on the beach in Carmel, late 1944.

He wrote: "If a man can say he did not let his country down, and if he can live with himself, there is nothing more he can reasonably ask for."

Stilwell at the Presidio of San Francisco, CA when he commanded 6th Army, August, 1946.


Links to the China Burma India Theater of War

Web site dedicated to CBI http://warren421.home.comcast.net/~warren421/links.html

1. General Joseph W. Stilwell - CBI Theater of World War II

http://cbi-theater-3.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-3/stilwellpages/stilwell_main.html

2. LIFE - JAPAN FORCES BRITAIN TO CLOSE BURMA ROAD - July 29, 1940

http://cbi-theater-3.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-3/roadclosed/roadclosed.html

3. LIFE - The Burma Road - October 6, 1941

http://cbi-theater-3.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-3/burmaroad/burmaroad.html

4. LIFE - The Rat Trap - May 18, 1942

http://cbi-theater-1.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-1/life051842/life051842.html

5. LIFE - Airborne Raiders in Burma - June 12, 1942

http://cbi-theater-1.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-1/life061244/raiders.html

6. LIFE - Burma Mission - June 15 and 22, 1942

http://cbi-theater.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater/mission/life-mission.html

7. LIFE - British Raid Burma - June 28, 1942

http://cbi-theater-1.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-1/life062843/life062843.html

8. LIFE Photographer in Burma - August 10, 1942

http://cbi-theater-2.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-2/warphotos/warphotographer.html

9. LIFE - Flight from Burma - August 10, 1942

http://cbi-theater-2.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-2/stilwellwalkout/stilwellwalkout.html

10. LIFE - Yanks Make a Hit in India - January 18, 1943

http://cbi-theater-1.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-1/life011843/life011843.html

11. LIFE - China Air Task Force - April 12, 1943

http://cbi-theater-1.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-1/life041243/life041243.html

12. LIFE - British Raid Burma - June 1943

http://cbi-theater-1.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-1/life062843/life062843.html

13. LIFE Visits an Army Hospital in Burma - November 1, 1943

http://cbi-theater-1.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-1/life110143/life110143.html

14. LIFE - The War in Burma - April 10, 1944

http://cbi-theater.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater/burmawar/burmawar.html

15. LIFE - Elephants at War - April 10, 1944

http://cbi-theater.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater/elephants/elephants.html

16. LIFE - Joe Stilwell's War - April 17, 1944

http://cbi-theater.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater/stilwellswar/stilwell.html

17. LIFE - Airborne Raiders in Burma - June 12, 1944

http://cbi-theater-1.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-1/life061244/raiders.html

18. LIFE - The Ledo Road - August 14, 1944

http://cbi-theater.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater/lifeledo/life-ledo.html

19. LIFE - The Hump - September 11, 1944

http://cbi-theater-1.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-1/life091144/life091144.html

20. LIFE - Stilwell Road - February 12, 1945

http://cbi-theater.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater/stilwellroad/stilwellroad.html

21. Numerous links relating to the CBI Theater

http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&rls=en-us&q=Burma+in+World+War+II&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8

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