1/ As we celebrate Veterans Day, I want to lift up the story of my late grandfather, Val Murphy (his grandkids called him “Pop”), and the unique role he played in World War Two.
Here he is - a new recruit - in 1943, with my great Uncle Fred. Pop is on the left.
2/ Pop had just received his engineering degree from Duke, so he was recruited to join the Army Corp of Engineers.
During a one week leave in December 1943 he married my grandmother. Days later, he was shipped off to Europe. They wouldn’t see each other again for two years.
3/ After D-Day, one of the primary obstacles confronting the Allies were all the bridges that had been destroyed or damaged by Hitler in an effort to frustrate the Allies’ advance.
Pop was assigned to Patton’s Third Army to build and repair bridges, and to do it FAST.
4/ These are photos of the bridges he helped build across Belgium, France, and Germany.
One story Pop told was of the time Patton pulled up to a bridge that wasn’t 100% finished and Pop had to nervously explain to the famously impatient general that it wasn’t safe to cross yet.
5/ Pop wasn’t infantry, but he was always in harm’s way. His job required him to be constantly on the front lines (since bridges came before the troop advances).
And the speed of construction meant safety wasn’t always first. Here he is after being hit in the head by a crane.
6/ After Berlin fell, Pop couldn’t come home. There were bridges to be built in the Pacific. In August 1945 he was on a ship bound for the Pacific theater when the bombs were dropped on Japan.
He was diverted to the Philippines and built bridges there for a few months.
7/ He got back to Connecticut in a snow storm, Christmas 1945. The cabbie who picked him up at Union Station in Hartford, and drove to Wethersfield through the storm, wouldn’t accept payment from a returning young vet.
16 months later, his first child, my father, was born.
8/ Like most veterans, Pop’s commitment to service didn’t end once he came home.
He built an engineering business in Connecticut, was an active member of his church, helped lead efforts to build affordable senior housing in Wethersfield. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg.
9/ I’m so proud of my Pop. He was a strong, quiet type. And I wish I had tried harder to pierce his veil and learn more about his life. But he led by example. Just like so many great Americans we celebrate today - Veterans Day 2021.
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1/ We all need to be deeply concerned by the Sudanese military’s seizure of power and condemn General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan’s actions to dissolve the transitional government.
2/ After decades of suffering under Omar al-Bashir’s corrupt and oppressive regime, the people of Sudan had found hope in a democratic future, but this military coup puts that at risk.
3/ Prime Minister Hamdok and other detained civilian leaders must be swiftly released, the country must return to civilian rule, and peaceful protestors must be allowed to make their voices heard.
Mike and I sat on this bench and talked for a while this morning. A Trump 2016/Biden 2020 voter, I wanted to hear his story. #WalkCT#Middletown
1/ Here it is:
2/ Mike is a lifelong Democrat, but felt like the economy was going nowhere and nobody had a good answer on how to deal with China. He knew we couldn’t bring all the jobs back, but we needed a strategy.
He thought electing “a businessman” would help. In 2016 he voted for Trump.
3/ But Trump’s bungling of COVID shocked Mike. “He’s up there telling us to inject disinfectant into our bodies!” He decided to give Biden a shot.
I just met Aretha, who lives in Hartford’s south end, during my walk across Connecticut. #WalkCT
1/ Let me tell you her story to provide some color on the reality of the new post-pandemic economy.
2/ For years, she was employed as a food service worker at the Department of Motor Vehicles in Wethersfield. It was a good paying, full time job, just a bus ride from her home.
Last year, when DMV employees began working from home, she got laid off.
3/ Aretha liked that job, so she stayed on unemployment hoping she would be rehired. But when that didn’t happen, she started furiously looking for work.
Sure, she still had unemployment, but she WANTED to work. Especially since she knew UI wasn’t forever.
1/ I was 27 on September 11, 2001. A second term state legislator. For people like me, in their formative stage of public service in 2001, 9/11 was definitional. It charted our course.
2/ I was at a meeting at Southington High School, just around the corner from my one bedroom apartment. I watched the initial reports of a plane crash on the small televisions in the school’s library. It looked like an accident at first, and I headed back home.
3/ As a poor state legislator who spent my entire salary on law school tuition, I didn’t own a proper television or have cable back then. So I pulled out a tiny black and white set and found the antenna only picked up one channel - WTNH.