Friday, June 13, 2014

In Memory of Anne Frank - 85 Years After Her BIrth



Anne Frank
Eighty-five years ago yesterday, Annelies Marie "Anne" Frank was born.
Anne won our hearts through the teenage journal she kept during WW II that was later made into a book, The Diary of a Young Girl.

Anne was born June 12, 1929 in Frankfurt, Germany to a Jewish couple, Otto Frank and his wife Edith. In 1933, Ann’s family moved to Amsterdam; the same year the Nazis took over Germany.


Nazi Germany
Adolph Hitler
By 1940 Europe had changed: Adolph Hitler was dictator and Jews were being “removed” from society. Anne and her family were trapped in the Netherlands along with thousands of other Jewish families. In 1942 when Anne’s older sister Margot received orders to report to a work camp, the Franks went into hiding.


Bookcase The Hid Doorway to Annex
Inside Secret Annex
The family hid in what was called the “Secret Annex” with another family, the Van Pels; two small rooms located on the second floor of a building that had housed her father’s former business. A ladder to the attic offered them a chance to get up on the roof and take in fresh air at night.

Nazis Occupation
As a teenager during the war years, Anne wrote about her life, her family’s struggles, and their experiences while hiding from the Nazis during the German occupation.

Peter van Pels
She shared her problems about dealing with her mother, the gradual understanding that developed between her and her older sister, her feelings of irritation toward the other family sharing their secret rooms, and her infatuation, and first kiss with Peter van Pels.



Anne Writing
It was during this time that Anne realized she wanted to be a journalist. Her entry on Wednesday, April 5, 1944 stated in part: “When I write I can shake off all my cares. My sorrow disappears, my spirits are revived! But, and that's a big question, will I ever be able to write something great, will I ever become a journalist or a writer?”



 

Concentration Camp
Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp
In August 1944, the Frank family was betrayed to the Nazis, taken to a concentration camp and sentenced to hard labor. After arriving at the camp, half the passengers were taken directly to the gas chambers. Anne and her sister were spared because they were young and could work. The Frank sisters were forced to haul rocks and dig holes along with hundreds of other women and girls.




Anne Frank
Margot Frank
Anne, and her sister Margot, died of typhus in March 1945 at Bergen-Belsen concentration camp; victims of the Holocaust. Anne was 15-years-old. Just a few weeks later, on April 15, the camp was liberated by Allied troops.


Otto Frank
1st Edition in Dutch
The story could have ended there but Anne’s father, Otto Frank, (the only member of the family to survive) was given her notes retrieved by family friends from the secret annex. Moved by her wishes to become a published journalist, her father used her original diary and her edited version to create her book. The diary, and book, chronicles her life from June 12, 1942 (her 13th birthday) to August 1, 1944.

Due to Otto Frank’s devoted efforts, Anne’s diary was published in the Netherlands in 1947. Soon after, the book was released in Germany and France, with publication in Britain and the U.S. in 1952. The world learned of what had happened to so many millions of people – through the voice of one young girl.

Anne’s personal thoughts and unguarded words about life, war, suffering, and social persecution under the Nazis regime has touched generations and made those injustices come alive as few others could.

In a passage in Anne’s diary she states, “I want to be useful or bring enjoyment to all people, even those I've never met. I want to go on living even after my death!”

And, indeed she has. Her words and her legacy live on - 69 years later …

~ Joy



Friday, June 6, 2014

21 Facts About D-Day: 70 Years Ago Today

Operation Overlord
It was 70 years ago today, June 6, 1944, when World War Two Allied forces invaded Normandy, France by air and sea, in what was known as Operation Overlord: the Battle of Normandy.



General Omar Bradley
Despite poor weather conditions, air attacks began around midnight in Normandy with over 2,200 British and American bombers taking part. The American amphibious assault included over 73,000 men, 15,600 from the airborne divisions with General Omar Bradley as commander of the American contingent. This was the largest operation in U.S. military history since General Ulysses S. Grant landed at Bruinsberg during the Civil War.

Overlord Beach Assualt

Landing on Omaha Beach
The U.S. was concentrated on taking two beaches code named Utah Beach and Omaha Beach. The British were assigned to Gold Beach, Sword Beach, and Juno Beach where the Canadians also assisted. A total of 156,000 Allied soldiers landed on the shores of Normandy: The largest invasion by sea ever accomplished in history.


Allied causality figures of those injured, missing or dead have been estimated around 10,000 with U.S casualties alone numbering over 6,600. The British sustained approximately 2,700 and the Canadians had over 900.



Cemetery Overlooks Omaha Beach
American Causalities
Although the Allies were victorious in the Normandy invasion, the loss of life was great. On June 8th the U.S. First Army established the first American cemetery in Europe for the war dead. Today, it is known as the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial, and is located near Colleville-sur Mer, France. It is the final resting place for 9,386 U.S. WW II service men, and also one aviator killed in action during WW I; Quentin Roosevelt, son of President Theodore Roosevelt.


Memorial
A memorial for the 1,557 Americans who died in the Normandy campaign but could not be identified or located was constructed from 1953 - 1956. The names of those missing men are inscribed on the walls of the curved memorial at the east end of a retaining pool.


In honor of the day, here are 21 facts about D-Day you might not know:

1) Operation Overlord included American, British and Canadian armies.

2) Operation Overlord was originally planned for June 5th but weather forced a one-day postponement.

3) The “D” stands for the secret “day” scheduled for the invasion.

4) Allied forces trained for one year before the Battle of Normandy.

5) Over 156,000 allied troops landed in Normandy on D-Day.

6) Close to 2,300 landing crafts carried men, vehicles and supplies to Normandy.

7) This was the largest seaborne invasion in history.

8) During the first eight hours of the assault, over 11,000 Allied aircraft flew 14,674 sorties.

9) The Germans flew over 300 sorties, most never reaching the beaches.

10) Six parachute regiments, made up of over 13,000 men, were flown from nine British airfields.

11) Dummy paratroopers called Ruperts were also dropped in different locations to confuse the Germans.

12) Over 18,000 parachutists were on the ground before dawn.

13) At 6:30 am, Allied soldiers began going ashore across a 60-mile front.

14) Those first off the landing crafts carried over 80-pounds of gear.

15) German Field Marshall Erwin Rommel was not present when the invasion began – He was in Germany, celebrating his wife’s birthday.

16) German U-boats sank only one ship, a Norwegian destroyer named Svenner, on D-Day.

17) Germans were captured at a rate of 30,000 per month from D-Day through December 1944.

18) Texas housed 33 detention facilities during the war for German prisoners.

19) The National D-Day Memorial is located in Bedford, Virginia: the home of 21 men who were killed on D-Day. www.dday.org.

20) The National D-Day Museum is now known as the National WWII Museum and is located in New Orleans, Louisiana. www.nationalww2museum.org

21) General Dwight D. Eisenhower issued this order to begin the Battle of Normandy: "I have full confidence in your courage and devotion to duty and skill in battle. We will accept nothing less than full Victory! Good luck! And let us beseech the blessing of Almighty God upon this great and noble undertaking."


~ Joy

Friday, May 30, 2014

Crown Hill Cemetery Celebrates 150 Years



New Crown Hill Book
This Sunday, June 1st Crown Hill Cemetery will celebrate 150 years! In celebration of the sesquicentennial, the Crown Hill Heritage Foundation and Indiana Historical Society Press have published a 380-page book entitled “Crown Hill: History, Spirit, Sanctuary”.

View of the Cemetery
The Indianapolis Indiana cemetery was dedicated June 1, 1864 and the first interment was held the next day. Today, over 200,000 people rest among 555 rolling, tree-covered acres, making it the third largest non-government cemetery in the U.S.



View from the Crown
The park-like setting is home to thousands of stories, many of which the book shares, along with photos. The history of, and in, this cemetery is interesting and informative. 




Grave of Lucy Ann Seaton
The first burial at Crown Hill was held one day after the dedication ceremony, on June 2nd. Lucy Ann Seaton, a 33 year-old mother had died of consumption (tuberculosis.)  Her husband John, a Union Captain serving in the Civil War, had inscribed on her stone, “Lucy, God grant that I can meet you in heaven.”





Through a Gravestone
Crown Hill: History, Spirit, Sanctuary
Crown Hill has thousands of statues, markers and gravesites. The Crown Hill book features over 600 color photographs from stunning monuments and mausoleums to seasonal vignettes to detailed close-ups of symbols and epitaphs to a bird’s eye view of the “City on the Hill.”


Crown Hill: History, Spirit, Sanctuary
The photos provide intricate and often over-looked details in the cemetery whether depicting chiseled mausoleums, abundant wildlife, or deeply etched shadows on a statue’s face: The fascinating photographic angles give the reader an even greater feel for the subject.






John Dillinger's Grave
Crown Hill: History, Spirit, Sanctuary
Crown Hill is the final resting place of numerous famous and notorious people from politicians to artists, actors, community and state leaders, automotive manufacturers, musicians, and countless others. Many of their stories are captured upon the pages of the Crown Hill anniversary book.

James Whitcomb Riley's Monument
Hoosier Poet James Whitcomb Riley was the first person to be buried on top of the crown in 1917 – 18 months after his death.  From the top or the crown of the hill, you can see downtown Indianapolis, almost 3 miles away.

Eli Lilly Mausoleum
Other well-known people interred in the cemetery include Lyman Ayres, founder of L.S. Ayres Department stores.  Colonel Eli Lilly, Civil War Commander and pioneer pharmacist, who founded Eli Lilly Laboratory in Indianapolis.  Dr. Richard Gatlin, inventor of the Gatlin gun, along with John Dillinger, the infamous 1930’s bank robber.




Graves in National Cemetery
Crown Hill is also home to a National Cemetery. It was 1866 when the U.S. Government purchased 1.4 acres of land within Crown Hill to construct a military cemetery for Civil War soldiers.  Over 700 soldiers were interred by November of that year.  In all, 2,135 soldiers are now buried here, representing every war in which the United States has taken part in up to and including the Viet Nam War.  The last burial was for Air Force Major Robert W Hayes in 1969.

Confederate Mound
There is also another military burial ground in Crown Hill: The Confederate Mound is the final resting place of 1,616 Confederate Prisoners of the Civil War.  These southern soldiers died while being detained at Camp Morton from 1862 through 1865.  Most were originally buried at the City Cemetery, but were moved in 1931 by the War Department.



June Tour Schedule
Tours
Public and private tours of the cemetery are offered throughout the year. There are four different tours scheduled during the anniversary month. Tours will be held on each Saturday this month and include: Angels of Crown Hill (June 7), Heritage Tour, which includes a visit to over 40 graves and monuments of well-known and notable people (June 14), Private Family Mausoleums (June 21), and Skeletons in the Closet, Part 1 (June 28). All tours begin at 7:30 p.m. except June 21 when the mausoleum tour is held at 9:30 a.m.

U.S. Colored Troops Burial Grounds
The “Spirit of Freedom” event, celebrating the African Americans who fought and died during the Civil War, will be held June 5th, 10:45 to 1 p.m.







Cemetery Honey
Crown Hill is alive with nature from Monarch butterflies covering a gravestone to deer grazing peacefully under the trees. The cemetery is also home to over 4,000 inventoried trees; many uncommon to the region, and many that are very old. The cemetery is a-buzz with thousands of bees, which have hives on top of the Art Deco Community Mausoleum. Beekeepers from England’s Apiary of Indianapolis gather the honey a couple of times a year to sell. It has been called, “Gravely delicious.”

Statue in Cemetery
Plan a trip to Crown Hill Cemetery to explore the art, sculptures, history and more. The cemetery is located at 700 West 38th Street in Indianapolis, Indiana. For more information, visit their web page at www.crownhill.org. Or check out the Crown Hill Facebook page at

If you can’t make it for a visit, or would like a beautiful keepsake, consider a copy of the 150th anniversary book, Crown Hill: History, Spirit, Sanctuary. To order visit www.crownhillhf.org

Crown Hill is a true Rural Cemetery offering something for everyone; history, architecture, art, walking tours and nature, all in a serene and beautiful setting.

Happy 150th Anniversary to this magnificent City on the Hill!

~ Joy