Friends - let's head into the weekend on a positive note, with a cool story of a badass Sky Dragon Soldier.
We're talking about NFL tight end (Detroit Lions), war hero, Medal of Honor recipient, Arkansas Lt Governor, and successful businessman Maurice Britt.
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Yesterday, as part of Marne Week, our @3rd_Infantry renamed a Fort Stewart Gate after Maurice. So, let's tell his story here.
Born in a small Arkansas town in 1919, Maurice quickly grew to be a remarkable athlete, excelling in baseball and football.
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After high school, Maurice played football at the University of Arkansas. He was undersized but scrappy and smart. After graduation, he was drafted by the Detroit Lions in 1941.
While Maurice had a promising NFL career, the storm clouds of war were gathering in Europe
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At the conclusion of his rookie year, he was drafted again - this time into the Army. He volunteered for the infantry and was assigned to the 3rd Infantry Division as a platoon leader
His athletic ability and experience with teamwork immediately serve his men well.
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Oct 1943: 1st Lt Britt is wounded while leading his platoon into the Italian Campaign.
His men respect that he continues to fight and lead while wounded.
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November 10, 1943: near Mignano, Italy, Britt leads his company in a counterattack opposing ~ 100 German soldiers. He's wounded again. Without his repulse of this attack, his battalion would have been isolated and his company destroyed.
He earns a Silver Star.
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During this battle, Britt is shot in the ribs. His chest, face, and hands are wounded by grenades. He still manages to throw 32 hand grenades. His leadership saves his platoon and allows several captured GIs to escape.
He earns a Bronze Star Medal for Valor.
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January 1944: Maurice prepares to lead his platoon to the Anzio beachhead. He's by now among the most respected leaders in Company L, 3rd Infantry Division.
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Jan 22nd: Maurice leads his platoon onto Anzio.
2 days later, while defending vs advancing German tanks, an arty rounds hits his defensive position. Britt is gravely injured: his right arm is blown off from elbow down, his right leg is broken, he loses his right lung.
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Maurice survives, but his war is over.
He's made 4 beach landings, earned the Distinguished Service Cross, Silver Star, Bronze Star, multiple Purple Hearts, the Military Cross of the British Empire and the Al Valoré Militaré Merit from the Italians.
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His command nominates him for the Medal of Honor and it's approved.
Britt receives the Nation's highest award for valor in a ceremony on the UA football field during the 1944 commencement ceremony.
He is the 1st American to win every award for valor in a single war
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Britt settles into Fort Smith, Arkansas with his Family. He's a legend in Arkansas: the local boy who went to the NFL and then became a war hero.
He develops a successful manufacturing business.
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1966: Britt runs for lieutenant governor on the Republican ticket under Winthrop Rockefeller. He serves two terms, ending in 1970.
Britt died on November 26, 1995 at age 76. He's buried in the Little Rock National Cemetery.
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Maurice Britt led several incredible lives, serving as a Soldier and a statesman. Tough, gritty, smart, he's the embodiment of the Dog Face Soldier.
Fort Stewart's Britt Gate now serves as a tribute to his legacy.
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Happy 115th Birthday to Curtis "Bombs Away" LeMay. Curtis, who died in 1990, grew from a small Ohio town to become one of the most polarizing figures of the early Cold War.
The aggressive Air Force general had unyielding faith in the strategic value of aerial bombing.
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One of the principle architects of the policy that came to be known with derision as "Mutually Assured Destruction," Curtis was the inspiration for General Jack D. Ripper in Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove.
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In real life, Curtis chewed a cigar stub to disguise the Bell’s palsy partial facial paralysis that made one side of his lower lip droop. [He was struck with Bell's palsy while flying in the cold]
This morning's #TDIDCH referenced a news story in a Lebanese magazine released #OTD in 1986 reporting the US illegally sold missiles to Iran [an enemy state under an arms embargo].
Here's a screenshot from that explosive story, which was initially denied by Washington
The administration hoped that in exchange for the arms, Iran would get Hezbollah [a group with Iranian ties] to free 7 American hostages [including this man, CIA Station Chief for Lebanon William Buckley] being held in Lebanon by Hezbollah.
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It later emerged that the Reagan White House funneled profits from the sale to the Contras, anti-communist guerrillas in Nicaragua, an act forbidden by Congress [the Contras committed atrocities against citizens].
The stories turned into a scandal, dubbed "Iran-Contra.
38 years ago today, the US invaded a tiny Caribbean island, rescued a bunch of medical students, and rounded-up a group of gang members, along with their Cuban communist backers.
Don't remember this Cold War endeavor? Don't what we're talking about?
Read on.
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Operation Urgent Fury, the American invasion of Grenada, began on the morning of October 25th, 1983 with assaults on airstrips at Point Salines and Pearls.
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Over the next four days, US troops:
👉rescued US citizens
👉restored a popular native government
👉eliminated a threat to the stability of the Caribbean
👉eliminated US strategic interests in the region
We've had some cool guests, such as entrepreneur Gary Vee [apple.co/3CZsssN], who spoke about empathetic leadership, motivation, and the value of failing.
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We had @PaulRieckhoff for Episode 56. As you'd expect, he had MUCH to say about the end of the war in Afghanistan, the 20th anniversary of 9/11, and the need for veterans to reach out for help: apple.co/2Y1dDXB