30 December 2013

Metal memory from the Battle of the Bulge

Daniel Rubin has an article at Philly.com about a piece of World War Two finally come home:
The box arrived at Ted Nobles' house in Middletown, Delaware two days before Christmas, and, for the longest time, he let it sit there, unopened. "I was overwhelmed," he says. The sender was an older man in Fresno, California, a vet who had served in the same part of Europe during World War Two as Nobles' great-uncle Wally.
For more than a decade, Nobles had been researching the history of his family, including his maternal grandmother's only sibling, Lieutenant Wallace Lippincott Jr., a Chester, Pennsylvania-born Quaker from Swarthmore who, after graduating from the University of Delaware, went off to war, drove a tank into the Battle of the Bulge, and never returned.
Nobles' connection to his Uncle Wally was growing faint. His grandmother was now gone, and so was his mother. Once, maybe eleven years ago, Uncle Wally's widow Libby had called him out of the blue and talked about the man. But she spoke fast and he lost the notes he took, so all he remembers was they were married and didn't have time for kids before he shipped off to Europe, where he died in Luxembourg in 1945 at the age of 25.
The story of an unexpected Christmas gift begins there, in Luxembourg, a couple of years ago:
Norbert Morbe and his wife, Romaine, operate a small museum in the town of Berle dedicated to the soldiers who liberated their country. They run the place with their own money. Norbert, a farmer, is permitted to search the nearby woods with a metal detector for artifacts from the battle. That's where he unearthed a battered aluminum canteen.
Scratched into the metal was: Lt. Wal. Lippincott, 712 Tank Bn, a serial number, and the words Sauer Kraut.
Morbe wanted to return the canteen to its proper owner, but wasn't sure how to do so until he hosted Vern Schmidt and his wife. Schmidt, a Californian, had served in the war with the 90th Infantry Division. He said it would be his honor to get the canteen back into the right hands. And he did try, using the Internet in hopes of tracking down Lippincott's relatives. But he got nowhere. Until about two weeks ago. He was on the phone with a newspaper copy editor named Aaron Elson whose father had served in the same company as Lippincott, and who was collecting oral histories of the war. After a half-hour chat, Schmidt happened to mention the canteen. Elson knew of Lippincott and his story; the officer had joined the battalion two weeks before he was killed and had won a Silver Star for putting out a fire in his tank. For Memorial Day, Elson wrote about the German shelling that took Lippincott's life on 14 January 1945. Elson had even talked once to Nobles a decade before. Through Facebook, he made contact with Lippincott's grandnephew again. Which is how that package found its way to Nobles' home a week ago.
When Nobles finally opened the box, he removed some bubble wrap and a letter. He paused before holding the canteen. "I was moved to tears to think that, for sixty-plus years, it laid there. I don't know what, if anything, of him came home from the war. I'm 42. He was killed when my mother was a baby. I never knew him, just stories grandmother had told of him fighting and dying in the war." He decided to surprise his sister, Michelle Nobles Rutter, and her youngest son, Oliver Bowers, with the canteen for Christmas. On Wednesday, he drove to her house in Newark, Delaware and told the whole story: the Luxembourg man who found it, the World War Two vet from Fresno, Elson the chronicler. "There wasn't a dry eye in the house," he says. "It brings a sense a peace and a sort of closure to the story."
He wants to build a shadowbox for the canteen and display it with a photo of his great-uncle in his tank. That way family can visit it anytime and hold it.
He has one more wish: to find his great-aunt Libby, if she's still around. She'd be in her nineties now. Last he knew, her family still lived in Pennsylvania. About fifteen years ago, he determined she had made a gift to the University of Delaware in her first husband's name. Aunt Libby, where are you? he asked in a recent Facebook posting. "I think," he says, "she would be overjoyed."
Rico says it's good when history is not forgotten...

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