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That is Captain Liliyman of the Path Finders, slightly built, he does kinda resemble a female in that picture.

 

Said to be the first US soldier to hit the ground on D-Day .

 

https://www.cnyhistory.org/2019/06/frank-lillyman/

 

Partial info from the link above...

 

"Lillyman went on to have a long military career, which began in 1933. First serving in Hawaii and China followed by recruiting in Syracuse. He eventually went on to serve in the Korean and Vietnam War before retiring as a Lieutenant Colonel in 1968. He passed away on March 6th, 1971."

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Most of the tall and big guys got hit first Larger Targets..And for some reason B,A,R guys had a small stature but big gun to haul around. There was a story about large triple size German Helmet found in WW2 and they said never seen one like it for a

Goliath The German was 6'8 probably was one of the tallest soldiers serving I am sure in the period 19401945 most did not reach that height, tallest we had in the company was like 6.4 I was the midget at 6.1

 

thanks for the guys name brave guy i hope he survived the War.RON K.

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An examination of existing uniforms shows that most WW II Gis were much smaller men than today's soldiers. The average height was about 5'7" and weight about 150 pounds.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Most of the tall and big guys got hit first Larger Targets..And for some reason B,A,R guys had a small stature but big gun to haul around. There was a story about large triple size German Helmet found in WW2 and they said never seen one like it for a

Goliath The German was 6'8 probably was one of the tallest soldiers serving I am sure in the period 19401945 most did not reach that height, tallest we had in the company was like 6.4 I was the midget at 6.1

 

thanks for the guys name brave guy i hope he survived the War.RON K.

 

We had the similar thing in the legion paras, small guys like myself, were assigned to the company 81mm Mortar team. So you always had an extra heavy bit of kit to carry, as well as your regular kit and rifle. I can still recall the weights, even although I did the course 35 years ago, base plate 21Kgs, bipod 20Kgs, and tube 18Kgs. Although the lightest, the tube was a bitch to carry as all the weight was on one small area of the shoulder, and you could never get it comfortable.

 

Stay safe

Richard

excuse metric weights, tht is how I learned them....

Edited by rpbcps
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Only in Hollywood do hero's look like Arnold Schwarzenegger. Many of the Seals, Green Berets, STS and Marine Recon folks I have served with often do not look like the image one sees in Hollywood. Many are short and wiry. The common denominator is they never quit.

 

Semper Fi

Sandman1957

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Only in Hollywood do hero's look like Arnold Schwarzenegger. Many of the Seals, Green Berets, STS and Marine Recon folks I have served with often do not look like the image one sees in Hollywood. Many are short and wiry. The common denominator is they never quit.

 

Semper Fi

Sandman1957

As they say in the legion, "marche ou crève"

 

 

Nous sommes.JPG

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