Mentioned in passing already, David Niven. Pre-war British Army (Highland Light Infantry), returned from Hollywood to the UK to fight in 1939 and was promptly hit with a massive tax bill for doing so. During WW2 he ended up as a Company Commander in a recce unit (Phantom), with Peter Ustinov as his batman.
Honoring a Hollywood legend and war hero
Charles Durning will be honored for lifetime achievement by the Screen Actors Guild.
Durning, 84, will receive the award for fostering the “finest ideals of the acting profession” during the 14th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards show Jan. 27, the guild said Monday in a statement.
“Throughout his career, he has epitomized the art and grace of acting and brought something special to every role,” SAG president Alan Rosenberg said in a statement. “He is above all things a great actor with the talent to which we all aspire: the power to create indelible characters.”
Durning received Oscar nominations for his roles in “To Be or Not to Be” and “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas.” His movie credits also include “The Sting,” “Dog Day Afternoon,” “Tootsie” and “O Brother, Where Art Thou?”
During World War II, Durning was seriously wounded as a member of the first wave of soldiers to land on Omaha Beach during the D-Day Normandy invasion on June 6, 1944, according to the guild statement.
He was taken prisoner during the Battle of the Bulge and was one of a few survivors of the attack on American POWs at Malmedy, Belgium.
Durning was honored with three Purple Hearts and a Silver Star.>ASSOCIATED PRESS
As a traffic cop in Southern California, I actually handled a traffic collision he was involved in years ago. Strangley enough he was hit by another actor.
David Niven
David Niven, and his wife Primula
http://www.thepeerage.com/183111_001.jpg
http://www.thepeerage.com/p18312.htm
David Niven
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Niven
Early military service
After attending Stowe as a boy, Niven trained at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, which gave him the “officer and gentleman” bearing that was to be his trademark. Although he had done well at Sandhurst, Niven did not enjoy his time in the regular Army, in part because he was not accepted for the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders on which he had set his heart. He served for two years in Malta and two years in Dover with the Highland Light Infantry. While on Malta, he became acquainted and friendly with Captain Roy Urquhart, who would later lead the British 1st Airborne Division in the ill-fated Operation Market-Garden.
Niven grew tired of the peacetime Army and saw no opportunity for promotion or advancement. As he related in his memoirs, his ultimate decision to resign came after a lengthy lecture on machine guns, which was interfering with his plans for dinner with a particularly attractive young lady. At the end of the speech, the major general giving the lecture asked if there were any questions. Showing the typical rebelliousness of his early years, Niven stated that he felt compelled to ask, “Could you tell me the time, sir? I have to catch a train.”[6]
After being placed under close arrest for this act of insubordination, Niven claims to have finished a bottle of whisky with the officer who was guarding him and, with the connivance of the latter, escaped from a first floor window. En route across the Atlantic, Niven sent a telegram resigning his commission. Niven relocated to New York, where he began an unsuccessful career in whisky sales and horse rodeo promotion in Atlantic City. After subsequent detours to Bermuda and Cuba, he finally arrived in Hollywood in the summer of 1934.
World War II service
After the United Kingdom declared war in 1939, Niven was one of the first British actors to return to England. He rejoined the British Army. First serving with the Rifle Brigade, Niven was assigned to a motor training battalion. Niven later interviewed for a position with the British Commandos, and was assigned to a training base at Inverailort House in the Western Highlands of Scotland. Niven would later claim credit for introducing British hero Robert Laycock to the Commandos. Working with the Army Film Unit, he also took part in the deception campaign, using a minor actor M.E. Clifton James, a Montgomery lookalike, to convince the Germans that the D-Day landings would be made in the Mediterranean. Promoted to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel by General Frederick E. Morgan and assigned as a liaison officer between the British Second Army and the First United States Army, Niven took part in the Normandy landings, arriving several days after D-Day. He acted in two films during the war, both of strong propaganda value: The First of the Few (1942) and The Way Ahead (1944). During his war service, his batman was Private Peter Ustinov (with whom he would later co-star in Death on the Nile).
Niven remained politely, but firmly, close-mouthed about the war, despite public interest in celebrities in combat and a reputation for telling good stories over and over again. He said once: “I will, however, tell you just one thing about the war, my first story and my last. I was asked by some American friends to search out the grave of their son near Bastogne. I found it where they told me I would, but it was among 27,000 others, and I told myself that here, Niven, were 27,000 reasons why you should keep your mouth shut after the war.” Niven also had special scorn for the newspaper columnists covering the war who typed out self-glorifying and excessively florid prose about their meagre wartime experiences. Niven stated, “Anyone who says a bullet sings past, hums past, flies, pings, or whines past, has never heard one − they go crack.”[6] One story has surfaced: about to lead his men into a battle with an expectation of heavy casualties, Niven supposedly eased their nervousness by telling them, “It’s all very well for you chaps, but I’ll have to do this all over again in Hollywood with Errol Flynn!”
He did, however, finally open up about his war experience in his 1971 autobiography, The Moon’s a Balloon, mentioning his private conversations with Winston Churchill, the bombings, and what it was like entering a nearly completely destroyed Germany with the occupation forces. Niven stated that he first met Churchill during a dinner party in February 1940 when Churchill singled him out from the crowd and stated, “Young man, you did a fine thing to give up your film career to fight for your country. Mark you, had you not done so − it would have been despicable.”[6]
In spite of a six year virtual absence from the screen, he came second in the 1945 Popularity Poll of British film stars. On his return to Hollywood after the war, he was made a Legionnaire of the Legion of Merit, the highest American order that can be earned by a foreigner. This was presented to Lt. Col. David Niven by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower.
David Niven was actually a member of the specialist Phantom Signals Unit, and was responsible for reporting and locating enemy positions, bomb lines and also keeping rear Commanders up to date on changing battle lines. Niven was posted at one time to Chilham in Kent. Eisenhower was so disappointed with communications difficulty on D-Day that he personally ordered a Phantom Unit to be attached to his headquarters.
David Niven
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=3552
Born in London, England, the son of a British Army Captain who was killed at Gallipoli in 1915. He attended Stowe School and Sandhurst Military Academy, where he was commissioned and served two years with the Highland Light Infantry. Leaving the army in 1931, he worked at a variety of jobs before trying his hand at acting. His first role was in “There Goes the Bride” (1932). When Britain declared war on Germany in 1939, he immediately returned to England and enlisted in the British Army, serving in the commandos and rising to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.
I didn’t see Charleton Heston on the list above. He was a gunner on a B-25 Mitchell in the Aluetians towards the end of the war.
Charlton Heston
http://www.screenhead.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/charlton-heston.jpg
http://www.screenhead.com/reviews/legendary-actor-charlton-heston-dies/
Charlton Heston
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlton_Heston
Charlton Heston (born John Charles Carter; October 4, 1923 – April 5, 2008) was an American actor of film, theater and television. Heston is known for having played heroic roles, such as Moses in The Ten Commandments, Colonel George Taylor in Planet of the Apes and Judah Ben-Hur in Ben-Hur, for which he won the Academy Award for Best Actor. He was one of a handful of Hollywood actors to speak openly against racism and was an active supporter of the Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s and 1960s. Initially a liberal Democrat, he later supported conservative politics and was president of the National Rifle Association from 1998 to 2003.
Heston was born John Charles Carter in No Man’s Land, an unincorporated area between Evanston and Wilmette, Illinois, the son of Lilla (née Charlton) and Russell Whitford Carter, a mill operator. (However, the 1930 Census for Richfield, Michigan (see St. Helen, Michigan), where the family then lived, reports Russell Whitford Carter was a real estate salesman. Heston himself in his autobiography refers only to his father participating in his family’s construction business.) Heston was of English and Scottish descent and a member of the Fraser clan.
When he was ten, his parents divorced. Shortly thereafter, his mother married Chester Heston. The new family moved to well-off Wilmette, Illinois, a northern suburb of Chicago. Heston (his new surname) attended New Trier High School.
[b]World War II service
Heston enlisted in the United States Army Air Forces in 1944. He served for two years as a B-25 radio operator and gunner stationed in the Alaskan Aleutian Islands with the Eleventh Air Force, rising to the rank of Staff Sergeant. He married Northwestern student Lydia Marie Clarke in the same year.[/b]
Real Hollywood Heroes
http://arosebyname.wordpress.com/2006/06/28/hollywood-yesterday-versus-today/
Alec Guinness (Star Wars) operated a British Royal Navy landing craft on D-Day.
James Doohan (”Scotty” on Star Trek) landed in Normandy with the U. S. Army on D-Day.
Donald Pleasance (The Great Escape) really was an R. A. F. pilot who was shot down, held prisoner and tortured by the Germans.
David Niven was a Sandhurst graduate and Lt. Colonel of the British Commandos in Normandy.
Earnest Borgnine was a U. S. Navy Gunners Mate 1935-1945.
Eddie Albert (Green Acres TV) was awarded a Bronze Star for his heroic action as a U. S. Naval officer aiding Marines at the horrific battle on the island of Tarawa in the Pacific Nov. 1943.
Brian Keith served as a U.S. Marine rear gunner in several actions against the Japanese on Rabal in the Pacific.
James Stewart Entered the Army Air Force as a private and worked his way to the rank of Colonel. During World War II, Stewart served as a bomber pilot, his service record crediting him with leading more than 20 missions over Germany, and taking part in hundreds of air strikes during his tour of duty. Stewart earned the Air Medal, the Distinguished Flying Cross, France’s Croix de Guerre, and 7 Battle Stars during World War II. In peace time, Stewart continued to be an active member of the Air Force as a reservist, reaching the rank of Brigadier General before retiring in the late 1950s.
Charlton Heston was an Army Air Corps Sergeant in Kodiak.
Charles Durning was a U. S. Army Ranger at Normandy earning a Silver Star and awarded the Purple Heart.
Clark Gable (Mega-Movie Star when war broke out) Although he was beyond the draft age at the time the U.S. entered WW II, Clark Gable enlisted as a private in the AAF on Aug. 12, 1942 at Los Angeles. He attended the Officers’ Candidate School at Miami Beach, Fla. and graduated as a second lieutenant on Oct. 28, 1942. He then attended aerial gunnery school and in Feb. 1943 he was assigned to the 351st Bomb Group at Polebrook where flew operational missions over Europe in B-17s Capt. Gable returned to the U.S. in Oct. 1943 and was relieved from active duty as a major on Jun. 12, 1944 at his own request, since he was over-age for combat.
Charles Bronson was a tail gunner in the Army Air Corps, more specifically on B-29s in the 20th Air Force out of Guam, Tinian, and Saipan.
Tyrone Power (an established movie star when Pearl Harbor was bombed) joined the U.S. Marines, was a pilot flying supplies into, and wounded Marines out of, Iwo Jima and Okinawa.
George C. Scott was a decorated U. S. Marine.
Lee Marvin was a U.S. Marine on Saipan during the Marianas campaign when he was wounded earning the Purple Heart.
John Russell: In 1942, he enlisted in the Marine Corps where he received a battlefield commission and was wounded and highly decorated for valor at Guadalcanal.
Robert Ryan was a U. S. Marine who served with the O. S. S. in Yugoslavia…
Audie Murphy, little 5′5″ tall 110 pound guy from Texas who played cowboy parts was the Most Decorated serviceman of WWII and earned: Medal of Honor, Distinguished Service Cross, 2 Silver Star Medals, Legion of Merit, 2 Bronze Star Medals with “V”, 2 Purple Hearts, U.S. Army Outstanding Civilian Service Medal, Good Conduct Medal, 2 Distinguished Unit Emblems, American Campaign Medal, European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal with One Silver Star, Four Bronze Service Stars (representing nine campaigns) and one Bronze Arrowhead (representing assault landing at Sicily and Southern France) World War II Victory Medal Army of Occupation Medal with Germany Clasp, Armed Forces Reserve Medal, Combat Infantry Badge, Marksman Badge with Rifle Bar, Expert Badge with Bayonet Bar, French Fourragere in Colors of the Croix de Guerre, French Legion of Honor, Grade of Chevalier, French Croix de Guerre With Silver Star, French Croix de Guerre with Palm, Medal of Liberated France, Belgian Croix de Guerre 1940 Palm.
So how do you feel the real heroes of the silver screen acted when compared to the hollywonks today who spew out anti-American drivel as they bite the hand that feeds them? Can you imagine these stars of yesteryear saying they hate our flag, making antiwar speeches, marching in anti-American parades and saying they hate our president? I thought not, neither did I!”
Here are more stars/celebrities who have served their country during war and peace:
WWII:
Don Adams (Get Smart) - Marines
Gene Autry (The Singing Cowboy) - Air Transport Command
Tony Bennett - Army
Mel Brooks - Army
Art Carney (The Honeymooners) - Army
Johnny Carson - Navy
Julia Childs (chef) - O.S.S.
Tony Curtis - Navy
Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. - Naval Reserves (Created the “beach jumpers” of WWII)
Henry Fonda - Naval Intelligence Officer (so what happened with Jane?!)
Malcolm Forbes - Army
Glenn Ford - Navy (served in the reserves during Korea and Viet Nam)
Alan Hale (Gilligan’s Island) - Coast Guard
Jason Robards - Navy (he was a radioman and was on duty when Pearl Harbor was bombed)
Andy Rooney - Army (served with the Artillery Regiment then wrote for Stars & Stripes)
Mickey Rooney - Army
Charles Schultz (cartoonist) - Army
Rod Serling (Twilight Zone) - Army
Rod Steiger - Navy (lied about his age and enlisted at age 16)
Jack Warden - Army (101st Airborne)
Jack Palance (Ripley�s Believe It or Not, City Slickers) - Army Air Corps (with the 455th bomb group. Required facial reconstruction from terrible injuries received in 1943 when his B17 crash landed in Britain)
Surprising/Interesting:
Jimi Hendrix - Army ‘61 (101st Airborne) (discharged when he broke his ankle on his 26th jump)
Audrey Hepburn - With the Resistance (courier) in Holland (she was a child)
Alan Alda - Army Reserve (had a 6 month tour in Korea!)
Humphrey Bogart - Navy (served in WWI, tried to enlist during WWII and was turned down-too old!)
Bill Cosby - Navy (trained as a corpsman and worked with Korean War casualties)
Fred Durst (Limp Bizkit) - Navy (18 months, injured skateboarding and was medically discharged)
Steve McQueen - Marines (cited for saving lives, but was promoted & demoted quite often!)
Chuck Norris - Air Force (learned martial arts while stationed in Korea)
Montel Williams - Marines and Navy (go here to read more about his amazing service and see the others that I haven’t listed here!)
Charles Bronson
http://www.homeofheroes.com/quickquiz/031001_celebrityvets.html
The tail gunner on a bomber was forced to defend his aircraft from within a tiny, cramped cubical from a virtually prone position. He flew 21 combat missions in World War II, most as a tail gunner. He also flew five weather observation missions.
James Doohan (”Scotty” on Star Trek) landed in Normandy with the U. S. Army on D-Day.
James Doohan was Canadian. He did land in Normandy on D-Day, but he was a lieutenant in the Royal Canadian Artillery, and he landed on Juno Beach. He was badly wounded later on in the same day when he was hit by six bullets, four in the leg, one in the chest, and one which took off a finger.
The British actor Anthony Quayle who played an SOE agent in The Guns Of Navarone, was actually an officer in the SOE during WW2 and served as a liaison officer with the partisans in Albania.
I recall reading about Charles Durning’s experiences. I have no idea how he made it out of there…Omaha Beach, the first wave! He SURVIVED THE MALMENDY MASSACRE at the Bulge!
Military service
Durning served as a soldier in World War II, during which he was awarded a Silver Star, three Purple Heart medals, and a Good Conduct Medal. He was drafted into the U.S. Army at the age of 21, and landed on D-Day in the Normandy Invasion on June 6, 1944. Some sources state he was in the 1st Infantry Division at the time, but it is unclear if he was a rifleman or in an artillery unit by 1944.
On Omaha Beach itself, Pvt. Charles Durning was among the first troops to land. Drafted early in the war, he was first assigned as a rifleman with the 398th Infantry Regiment, but later served overseas with the 3rd Army Support troops and the 386th Anti-aircraft Artillery (AAA) Battalion.
Durning was wounded by an “S” Mine on June 15, 1944, at Les Mare des Mares. He was transported by the 499th Medical Collection Company to the 24th Evacuation Hospital. By June 17, he was back in England at the 217th General Hospital. Although severely wounded by shrapnel in the left and right thigh, right hand, the frontal region of the head and the interior left chest wall, Durning recovered quickly and was determined to be “fit for duty” on December 6, 1944. Durning was present for the Battle of the Bulge, the German counter-offensive in December 1944.[1]
He was taken prisoner during the Battle of the Bulge, and was one of the few survivors of the infamous Malmedy massacre of American POWs, perpetrated by a battlegroup under Joachim Peiper of the 1st SS Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler. “He escaped with two others, and returned to find the remainder murdered.”[1]
After being wounded in the chest, Durning was repatriated to the United States where he remained in army hospitals, receiving treatment for both physical and psychological wounds, until discharged with the rank of Private First Class on January 30, 1946.
Durning has said that he still suffers from nightmares about his war experiences (which is common among veterans living with post-traumatic stress disorder, although Durning himself is not confirmed to have suffered PTSD).[citation needed] He was nominated for an Emmy Award for his extraordinary portrayal of a Marine veteran in “Call of Silence”, an unusual episode of the television series NCIS, first broadcast November 23, 2004. Clearly drawing on his first-hand knowledge of the lingering effects of battle-induced stress, Durning’s character turns himself in to authorities, insisting that he must be prosecuted for having murdered his buddy during ferocious combat on Iwo Jima six decades earlier.[2] The real truth of the incident only becomes known for certain when the guilt-stricken veteran goes through a cathartic reliving of the battlefield events.
Durning is well-known for participating in various functions to honor American veterans. He was the chairman one year of the U.S. National Salute to Hospitalized Veterans.[3]
Of interest, the great Michael Caine was an infantryman in the Royal Fusiliers during the Korean War. I know this because I used to listen to the Howard Stern show, and one of the cohorts on the show recalled talking to Caine after one of their gags, sending out a stuttering reporter to ask celebrities silly and embarrassing questions. He said that Caine related having a flashback to Korea, as he could smell his fear in the form of the stench of the Chinese hoards of infantry they could smell coming during an attack…
Caine on his service in Korea:
Whenever I killed someone there was no guilt, no remorse ? it didn’t feel real. It was during the Korean War and I was just trying to stay alive. It was self-defence. It was always done at night and we never had any idea who we had killed. I didn’t even think about it ? we had machine guns and we just did it. I never did anything close up or hand-to-hand. It didn’t give me nightmares, because the Army brutalises you. It was like the World War I trenches ? half a mile apart ? and we were just firing backwards and forwards, so we never knew who any of our victims were as individuals. You never saw the whites of a man’s eyes when you killed him.
I know how it feels to think you’re going to die. In Korea there were four of us on patrol in a valley, in the middle of some rice paddies. We were surrounded by Chinese and we knew we were going to die so we agreed to take as many with us as possible. As they closed in, the officer said, “Let’s run towards their line ? they won’t expect it.” So we did and ended up going right round them. They couldn’t find us because they were looking in the wrong place. If we’d gone the other way we would all have died. That night we went back to our bunkers and celebrated with a beer. I faced a moment when I knew I was going to die and I didn’t run, I wasn’t a coward and it affected me deeply. I was at peace with myself for my whole life.
From: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/moslive/article-492670/The-way-I-live-Michael-Caine.html
Michael Caine
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Caine
Early life
Michael Caine was born in Rotherhithe, South East London, the son of Ellen Frances Marie (née Burchell), a cook and charlady, and Maurice Joseph Micklewhite, Sr., a fish market porter. Michael Caine’s father was Catholic, though Michael Caine was raised in his Protestant mother’s religion. He grew up in Camberwell, attending Wilson’s School (at that time Wilson’s Grammar School) and during World War II was evacuated to North Runcton in Norfolk. In 1944 he passed his eleven-plus exam. He left school at sixteen after gaining four O-Levels and did his National Service from April 1952 to 1954 in the Royal Fusiliers, serving in Germany and in combat in the Korean War.
Michael Caine’s Biography
The man and the movies
This Biography was compiled from Michael Caine’s autobiography “What’s it all about?”.
http://www.michaelcaine.com/Biography.htm
After the war, the British Government started a scheme in which every 18 yr old boy learned to defend his country for 2 years, they called it National Service and in 1951 Michael was to join the Queens Royal Regiment and the Royal Fusiliers and serve in Germany and Korea.
In 1953 after completing National Service Michael worked at Westminster repertory in Horsham Sussex and then at Lowestoft Repertory where Michael met his first wife Patricia Haines.
HELL IN KOREA / A HILL IN KOREA - movie 1956
http://www.personenencyclopedie.info/C/Cae/CaineMichael
Michael Caine, among others Michael Medwin, George Baker and Harry Andrews.
Aleksei Smirnov
1920 - 1979
filmography on IMDB.COM
LINK to 49 of his private photos taken during WW2.
Leutenenat of the recon platoon of the 162nd mortar regiment.
Full Cavalier of the “Order of Glory” (3 degrees. Only 2500 people attained it.)
Order of “Red Star”.
Not counting ww2 i guess you could say Elvis Presely
Richard Todd, Para
Alec Guiness
http://www.ww2incolor.com/updates?g2_itemId=710244
Charles Bronson
http://www.ww2incolor.com/updates?g2_itemId=710246
Clark Gable
http://www.ww2incolor.com/us-air-force/gable.html
Capra and Ford
http://www.ww2incolor.com/us-army/capra-frank-john-ford.html
Regarding David Niven, in one volume of his autobiography, (not sure which one), he related an amusing account of his original regimental assignment. Asked (on a form) to indicate his preferences (and notwithstanding the fact that he may have indicated particular preferences) he included the comment “any Scottish regiment except the Highland Light Infantry”. Guess where he ended up ?
As for Richard Todd - he served in the King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry before transfer to the Paras. Interestingly, he took part in the capture and defence of Pegasus Bridge at the outset of “Overlord”, under command of Major John Howard. As an actor, he subsequently played the part of Howard in the movie, “The Longest Day”, and did so pretty well. In fact, Todd was to make something of a speciality of playing military parts after the war.
Comments from Michael Caine, regarding the Korea War, are interesting, and have the ring of truth. Mind you, my main military memory of him is from “Zulu”… Best regards, JR.
The Goons
Spike Miligan - served with the RA through North Africa and Italy
Peter Sellers - served with the RAF
Harry Secombe - served with the RA through North Africa and Italy
Michael Bentine - served with the RAF
Milligan and Secombe’s first meeting is recounted in one of his books (Adolf Hitler: my part in his downfall?) - Milligan’s unit dropped a heavy gun down a cliff through Secombe’s unit, closely followed by Milligan sticking his head into Secombe’s wireless truck to ask if anyone had seen a gun. Secombe’s reply is recorded as “what colour?”…
Don’t know whether anybody mentioned Christopher “Count Dracula” Lee, who served as an Intelligence Officer through North Africa and Italy. Also Irish-American movie director John Ford, USN, who managed and supervised much of US official film coverage of the war. Best regards, JR.
Returning thread to active duty…
Some notable examples found at IMDb, link http://www.imdb.com/list/ls003539523/
Audie Murphy
US Army Europe WW2 Medal of Honor.
Paul Newman
Actor
US Navy WW2 Pacific:
Tony Curtis
Actor
US Navy - WWII
Don Knotts
Actor, Andy Griffith Show
WW2 US Army
I apologize if the above actors have already been mentioned .
IMDb link that has some info on actors with military experience, not all WW2:
http://www.imdb.com/list/ls003539523/
Morgan Freeman
Actor, The Shawshank Redemption
US Air Force 1955
Leonard Nimoy
Actor, Star Trek
US Army 1953-1955
Jamie Farr:
Actor MASH
US Army, Korea Veteran
Clint Eastwood
Actor
US Army 1951 to 1953
A few non actors:
Dwight D Eisenhower
US President
WW2 US Army Supreme Allied Commander of Allied Forces in Europe
John F Kennedy
US President
WW2 US Navy PT109
George HW Bush
US President
WW2 US Army Air Corps
Babe Ruth
Baseball player
Army New York National Guard 1924
Jackie Robinson
Baseball Player
WW2 US Army
Glenn Miller
Musician
WW2 US Army (MIA)
Ted Williams
Baseball Player
WW2 US Marine Corps
Joe DiMaggio
Baseball Player
WW2 US Army Air Forces
Ty Cobb
Baseball Player
US Army WW1
Elvis Presley
Musician
US Army 3rd Armored Division 1958
Johnny Cash
Musician
US Air Force 1950
Joe Louis
Boxing Heavy Weight Champion
US Army WW2 Special Services Division
Jimi Hendrix
Musician
US Army 1961 101st Airborne Division
Tom Landry
Dallas Cowboys Football coach
WW2 US Army Air Corps Bomber
Hugh Hefner
Playboy
WW2 US Army 1944 writer
Rocky Marciano
Boxing Heavy Weight Champion (Only one to retire undefeated 49-0)
US Army WW2 Normandy Veteran 150th combat engineers
Jack Dempsey
Boxing Heavy Weight Champion
WW2 US Coast Guard reserve