This man is Jake
McNiece. The write ups on him below are worth
reading from a historical perspective as he is a
veteran of the 101st Airborne Division from
Normandy 1944. The pictures I attached are very
interesting. One of them is a cover photo from
one of his books, the title of which is "The
Filthy Thirteen". The image is actually from a
website belonging to Mark Bando called Trigger
Time (Mark being a historian of the 101st whom I
jumped with in Oklahoma). The other two photos
are of Jake, his wife, my friend Jason, and
myself in Oklahoma in January 2007. Look closely
and you can see the similarity in the faces
between Jake in 1944 and in 2007. The span of
time is 63 years. The more I see images like
this the more I'm in awe when in the presence of
these veterans. These men are the true heroes of
our lifetime. And one of the things they love
doing is sharing their experiences with others
in the public domain.
I wish there was a
way to mass market these living legends as if
they were Nsync, an NBA player, etc. These are
the men that kids need to look up to. On that
note, I have met a lot of ditzy people in chat
rooms. And though many of them are not under age
20, they remain kids. They really need to grow
up. And even a lot of adults, people clear into
their 40s or 50s - who have really crappy
attitudes against the USA and its history in
international relations. It is a callousness I
haven't seen before, and it seems to go in leaps
and bounds, but overall gets worse as time
marches on. It is like this country is spiraling
out of control. Fortunately, those of us that
aren't intellectually limited in powers of
reason are much superior to them and we are the
ones that are the backbone of this country.
People like Jake McNiece are obviously among
those the most valuable to this country. So you
people out there that embrace the
narcissistic view of dissent
against American conservatism need to
know you are mere hot air, and nothing more.
Notice how you have had no effect on George
Bush! I rest my case.
Food for thought!
(A true patriot and
one of the smartest Americans of this generation
who will kick your butt if you wish it so – and
that is not cocky in the least; it is mere
awareness of the situation any of you whiney
liberals need to gain hold of before you decide
to take on myself or any other conservative)
Below write-up extracted from
http://www.wingsoffreedom.org/legend_mcniece.html
Jake McNiece
World War II had its Eisenhower. Its MacArthur.
Its Patton. And then there were the likes of
Jake McNiece, who apparently never saw a fight
he didn't like. An enlisted man, McNiece served
3 1/2 stormy years in the Army, and in Europe in
World War II became knows as the leader of the
"Filthy Thirteen." McNiece said that during
World War II he had a knack for fighting,
whether it was against the Germans or while he
was on leave or had gone AWOL. When he was being
separated from the Army in 1946, after the war
ended in 1945, McNiece said he inquired about
separation pay for the good time he had served.
He remembers a captain telling him that it
appeared he had more bad time and he might owe
the Army. As a soldier, McNiece admits, he liked
to fight, drink, chase women, go AWOL and often
landed in the brig. But, more than anything
else, McNiece was in the business of fighting a
war against the Germans. The gruff-talking
85-year-old believes "The Dirty Dozen" movie
starring Lee Marvin, Ernest Borgnine and Charles
Bronson was loosely based on "The Filthy
Thirteen." In the 1967 classic, Marvin played a
U.S. Army major assigned to train a dozen
convicted murderers for an assassination mission
targeting German officers. "Hollywood," McNiece
says of the movie. "They were all good men," he
says of the other 12 members of "The Filthy
Thirteen," who were paratroopers. But, he adds,
"they were misfits. We didn't salute officers.
We didn't mop barracks. We didn't do all that
crappy nonsense that they had. But, we were all
good combat soldiers," who often wore Mowhawk
haircuts. "We weren't there to play soldier. We
were there to kill Germans," McNiece said. The
Ponca City resident is the author of a book
titled "The Filthy Thirteen." It is subtitled
"The True Story of 'The Dirty Dozen.'" McNiece
said his co-author in writing the book, Richard
Kilblane, at first said several people
"questioned whether these things really
happened." McNiece said Kilblane, a former Ponca
City resident and now an Army historian, became
convinced after around two dozen World War II
enlisted men and around six commissioned
officers said they did. This story is based on
the account by McNiece, who was a member of the
101st Airborne Division.
Book Description -
"The Filthy Thirteen"
Since World War II, the American public
has become fully aware of the exploits of the
101st Airborne Division, the paratroopers who
led the Allied invasions into Nazi-held Europe.
But within the ranks of the 101st, a subunit
attained legendary status at the time, its
reputation persisting among veterans over the
decades. Primarily products of the Dustbowl and
the Depression, the Filthy13 grew notorious,
even within the ranks of the elite 101st. Never
ones to salute an officer, or take a bath, this
squad became singular within the Screaming
Eagles for its hard drinking, and savage
fighting skill and that was only in training.
Just prior to the invasion of Normandy, a "Stars
and Stripes" photographer caught U.S.
paratroopers with heads shaved into Mohawks,
applying war paint to their faces. Unknown to
the American public at the time, these men were
the Filthy 13. After parachuting behind enemy
lines in the dark hours before D-Day, the
Germans got a taste of the reckless courage of
this unit except now the men were fighting with
Tommy guns and explosives, not just bare
knuckles. In its spearhead role, the 13 suffered
heavy casualties, some men wounded and others
blown to bits. By the end of the war 30 men had
passed through the squad. Throughout the war,
however, the heart and soul of the Filthy 13
remained a survivor named Jake McNiece, a
half-breed Indian from Oklahoma the toughest man
in the squad and the one who formed its
character. McNiece made four combat jumps, was
in the forefront of every fight in northern
Europe, yet somehow never made the rank of PFC.
The survivors of the Filthy 13 stayed intact as
a unit until the Allies finally conquered Nazi
Germany. The book does not draw a new portrait
of earnest citizen soldiers. Instead it
describes a group of hardscrabble guys whom any
respectable person would be loath to meet in a
bar or dark alley. But they were an integral
part of the U.S. war against Nazi Germany. A
brawling bunch of no-good niks whose only saving
grace was that they inflicted more damage on the
Germans than on MPs, the English countryside and
their own officers, the Filthy 13 remain a
legend within the ranks of the 101st Airborne.
Members of the
Filthy Thirteeen
Jake McNiece, Jack Womer, John Agnew, Lt.
Charles Mellen, Joseph Oleskiewicz, John Hale,
James T. Green, George Radeka, Clarence Ware,
Robert S. Cone, Roland R. Baribeau, James E.
Leach and Andrew Rassmussen. Others including
Frank Palys and Charles Plaudo were sometimes
members of the group.