Wars aren't
won by force alone, but the men and women who work in support
of the infantry are too often taken for granted. Here are stories
of the intelligence agents and the nurses, the scientists and
the mapmakers, the storekeepers and the entertainers who all
played
their own roles on the broad stage that is war. |

John
Enman examines the aerial photographs he helped create for pilots
in the China-Burma-India
Theater during World War II.
(page
172) |
{ ONE
FAMILY'S STORY }

MALCOLM,
FREDERICK
& WARREN STILSON
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The
more members a family sends off to war, the more likely that
one will not return. Frederick Stilson and his two sons, Malcolm
and Warren, all served their country proudly in two wars. Frederick
and Malcolm were the lucky ones; though they were shipped overseas,
they never fired a weapon and were rarely in harm’s way.
Warren, Malcolm’s younger brother, served in the infantry
and was killed in action leading up to the Battle of the Bulge. |
Learn more about:
Malcolm
Harvey and Warren Stilson (pages
212-215)
Frederick
Clarence Stilson (pages
212-215)
Jump
to other stories featured in Chapter Four
* Page numbers refer to the pages in Voices
of War on which
the veteran appears. |
|
“It
goes without saying that knowing enemy intentions is half the
battle.”
-- Warren Tsuneishi
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{ ADDITIONAL FEATURED STORIES }
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