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RIP Dick Winters (Read 786 times)
Edith Grove
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RIP Dick Winters
Jan 10th, 2011 at 11:19am
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Dick Winters, of 'Band of Brothers' fame, dies

By MONICA VON DOBENECK, The Patriot-News

...
The Patriot-News, 2004Dick Winters introduced President George W. Bush to a crowd of about 20,000 during a rally in 2004 at Hersheypark Stadium in Derry Township.

Dick Winters, the former World War II commander whose war story was told in the book and miniseries “Band of Brothers,” has died.

Dick Winters led a quiet life on his Fredericksburg farm and in his Hershey home until the book and miniseries “Band of Brothers” threw him into the international spotlight.

Since then, the former World War II commander of Easy Company had received hundreds of requests for interviews and appearances all over the world.

He stood at the podium with President George W. Bush in Hershey during the presidential campaign in 2004. He accepted the “Four Freedoms” award from Tom Brokaw on behalf of the Army. He was on familiar terms with Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg, producers of the HBO mini-series, the most expensive television series ever produced.

Winters was always gracious about his new-found celebrity, but never really comfortable with it. He never claimed to be a hero and said that he had nothing to do with the national effort to get him the Medal of Honor, the nation’s highest military honor.

When people asked him if he was a hero, he liked to answer the way his World War II buddy, Mike Ranney, did.

“No,” Ranney said. “But I served in a company of heroes.” That became the tag line for the miniseries.

They weren’t out to save the world. They hated the blood, carnage, exhaustion and filth of war. But they were horrified at the thought of letting down their buddies.

On D-Day, June 6, 1944, Winters and his troops from Easy Company, 506th regiment of the 101st Airborne Division, parachuted behind enemy lines to take on a German artillery nest on Utah Beach. Winters made himself a promise then that if he lived through the war, all he wanted was peace and quiet.

His company fought through the Battle of the Bulge, the liberation of a death camp at Dachau and to Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest at Berchtesgaden.

The war described in “Band of Brothers” is ugly, but the young men developed character under fire, Winters said. He was glad the miniseries showed war realistically, not either glorified or demonized as in so many movies.

He wanted people to understand that success in war depends not on heroics but on bonding, character, getting the job done and “hanging tough,” his lifelong motto. In combat, he wrote 50 years after the war, “your reward for a good job done is that you get the next tough mission.”

When the war ended, Winters kept his promise to himself. He married Ethel, bought a bucolic farm in Fredericksburg, raised two children and worked in the agricultural feed business. He didn’t talk about the war until the late historian Stephen Ambrose wanted to put Easy Company’s exploits on paper.

Following the miniseries, Winters turned down most requests for interviews because he said he didn’t want to appear like he was bragging.

But he did feel the story of Easy Company was an important one, especially for young people. He was more likely to accept invitations by local school groups and spent time with students at Cedar Crest High School, among others. A talk he gave at Palmyra Middle School drew hundreds of spectators.

People who knew Winters during and after the war said he is exactly what he appears to be. He could lead without ever raising his voice or swearing. His friend Bob Hoffman, a Lebanon architect, said Winters’ eyes could “burn a hole right through you.”

The men who served under him and people who only met him later in life call him a hero, no matter what he says.

According to the book, one wounded member of Easy Company wrote Winters from a hospital bed in 1945, “I would follow you into hell.”

He received a standing ovation from 500 veterans when he spoke at the dedication of the Army’s Military History Institute in Middlesex Township in September.

When President Bush was in Hershey in April, he called Winters “a fine example ... for those brave souls who now wear our nation’s uniform.”

Ambrose, the author of “Band of Brothers,” said in a 2001 BBC interview that he hopes young people say. “I want to be like Dick Winters.”

“Not necessarily as soldiers, but as that kind of leader, that kind of man, with basic honesty and virtue and an understanding of the difference between right and wrong,” Ambrose said.

http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2011/01/dick_winters_of_band_of_broth...

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Re: RIP Dick Winters
Reply #1 - Jan 10th, 2011 at 2:13pm
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that guy was so awesome... i just watched BoB on Blu-ray, again, last week with my oldest son. I still get filled with joy and amazement when he says, I wasn't a hero during the war, I served in a company of heros!!!
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Re: RIP Dick Winters
Reply #2 - Jan 10th, 2011 at 3:55pm
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I miss Bush.
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Re: RIP Dick Winters
Reply #3 - Jan 10th, 2011 at 3:58pm
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steel driving hammer wrote on Jan 10th, 2011 at 3:55pm:
I miss Bush.


just trim is ok... you don't need to shave it bald!
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Re: RIP Dick Winters
Reply #4 - Jan 10th, 2011 at 10:09pm
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wow.

not that we didn't know it was coming...he was 93 fer chrissakes. that being said, the pappa of that outfit is gone, and that has to bring a tear to your eye.

of the main characters in that miniseries, the only ones left are: Buck Compton, Bill Guarnere, Babe Heffron, Malarkey, & Frank Perconte. hope i'm not forgetting anyone. damn...that's a short list.

RIP!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Easy_Company_(506_PIR)_veterans

http://www.menofeasycompany.com/nieuws/index.php
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Re: RIP Dick Winters
Reply #5 - Jan 11th, 2011 at 3:49am
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sad news - RIP
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