WWII VETERAN HAS STAYED BUSY FOR 96 YEARS
Some entered World War II feeling they were born to fly. Others felt born to sail. Lynn Rachel knew he was born to drive a
jeep. “They made me an ammo carrier at
first, but when the opportunity to drive a jeep came up, I jumped all over it!”
GREENSBORO'S LYNN RACHEL SAYS HE WAS BORN TO DRIVE A JEEP |
Rachel logged a good number of stateside miles in Army
jeeps, but the drive from Normandy to Austria is most memorable – the timeline
of his war is marked by jeep events.
“We had to get our jeeps and trucks all fixed up before
leaving the States, I must have fixed 40 flats one day! I shouldn’t have worried, because when we got
to England, I never saw so many jeeps – they were all brand spanking new!
We hiked and trained all over England, it seemed, but no one
complained – we knew we were headed for the war zone soon. In short order, I learned to drive my jeep on
the wrong side of the road and to always carry a raincoat – it rained almost
every day we were there.”
On an LST landing craft headed to Normandy, Rachel learned
about sailors, “They got upset because I didn’t tie my jeep down – I got upset
because I couldn’t find any ropes or chains.
Fortunately, the seas were calm and my jeep stayed put.”
The Battle of the Bulge was on the horizon when the 99th
Infantry Division made shore. “We
convoyed 200 miles towards Bastogne. At
first, the weather was decent so we were ordered to drive with windshields down
and tops off. The order never changed,
even when it rained, and then snowed – I learned that was the Army way!
RACHEL FOUND DECK OF "RACHEL" GERMAN PLAYING CARDS IN PILLBOX |
Major General Walter Lauer was our commanding officer -- he said
he knew we could fight, and exhorted us to do it!”
Rachel’s division manned a 22-mile battle front under trying
conditions and unfavorable odds, “The Germans stole our uniforms, weapons and
even radio frequencies -- and used them all against us.” The Germans made some advances, but the 99th
Infantry Division held their sector.
With the arrival of better weather and General Patton’s 3rd
Army, Allied forces prevailed. The march
toward Germany began. Rachel had a marker
for that too, “General Lauer stood on the hood of a jeep to tell us we did a
good job and that the Germans were on the run.”
Enemy pillboxes along the Siegfried Line were impressive to
Rachel, “They were made of steel and concrete four feet thick, with steel doors
like those on ships.” Even more
impressive was a deck of German playing cards he found in one of the pillboxes
– engraved, “Rachel.” He carries a
“Rachel” card in his wallet to this day.
Rachel was up close and personal with the race to the Rhine,
“After Bastogne we moved north for a while before being ordered south. After almost 300 miles we came upon the worst
traffic jam I ever saw.”
The 99th Infantry Division was the first complete
division to cross the Ludendorff Bridge at Remagen. Ironically, Hitler had ordered the bridge
destroyed after German troops withdrew.
The bridge withstood attacks from weaponry of all sorts: mortars, mines,
howitzers, rockets, and Luftwaffe bombers.
It collapsed on its own, just days after the last U.S. troops crossed.
ONLY WEST COLUMNS OF BRIDGE AT REMAGEN REMAIN -- MUSEUM UNDERNEATH. WRITER AND WIFE VISITED SITE DURING RV CARAVAN IN 2000 |
“We proceeded up the Ruhr Valley and across Germany, liberating
two concentration camps and collecting over 3,000 German prisoners,” recalls
Rachel.
“We were just seven miles from Austria when V-E Day was
announced. After the war, a German
general said nobody fought harder than the 99th Infantry Division.”
Before being drafted, Rachel worked at Proximity Mill – he
returned to Proximity after the war and retired 40 years later. Insisting that staying busy keeps you young,
Rachel worked in maintenance at Four Seasons Mall for 27 years, retiring again
in February, 2017.
At 96, he lives by his “stay busy” mantra, “I go to the mall
and walk four or five days a week.” The
day before I visited, he was busy trimming and mowing his yard.
He married Ruth Manuel in 1946; she died 15 years ago – they
had one daughter, four grandchildren, and two great-grand-children.
RACHEL ENJOYS SHARING WW II MEMORIES WITH FRIENDS |
Rachel and friends have met for coffee over the past 40
years. At their bequest, on Rachel’s 95th
birthday, Congressman Mark Walker presented him a flag that had flown over the
U.S. Capitol, and a letter commemorating his service.
His friends also submitted a copy of Battle Babies, a book
written by General Lauer about the 99th Infantry Division, to the Virginia
Military Institute library -- Rachel has a framed letter of acceptance.
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