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Stop everything, it's December 7th!!!

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  • GSpencerGSpencer Posts: 61 ✭✭✭

    @JBK said:

    @DNADave said:

    Is that an unissued WWII .45? How does stuff like that even exist? Any idea on ballpark value?

    http://thecmp.org/cmp_sales/1911-information/

  • FullHornFullHorn Posts: 1,139 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Again

  • bearcavebearcave Posts: 3,996 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Not to many left that seen action. My uncles are already gone and they never talked about it. :)

    Ken
  • OKbustchaserOKbustchaser Posts: 5,546 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Here's to my father (along with so many others) who enlisted in the Navy on 8 December. He served in the submarine service throughout WWII, Korea, and the beginning of Vietnam.

    Here's to my Uncle Floyd, a Marine survivor of the Bataan Death March after the fall of Corregidor. He was 5'9 and 172 pounds when they surrendered to the Japanese. In 1945 when released he was 5'7 and a half and only weighed 87 pounds.

    Here's to my Uncle Bill who was wounded on Guadalcanal and spent the rest of the war recovering.

    I'd drink to the rest of the "greatest generation", but 3 drinks are already over my limit.

    Just because I'm old doesn't mean I don't love to look at a pretty bust.
  • DrDarrylDrDarryl Posts: 645 ✭✭✭✭✭

    This infographic is 9 years old but the history behind it applies today...

  • braddickbraddick Posts: 24,781 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Netflix has recently colorized this event. It is their top documentary right now. As much as you think you know the history behind this day, there is always a little tidbit gained by watching.

    peacockcoins

  • BustDMsBustDMs Posts: 1,689 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I remember every year as a younger man seeing an article on the front page of the newspaper every year remembering and reminding everyone of the horrors of that fateful day. Now, for the past years NOTHING! Shame on you editors!!! Today’s youth do not remember. Change that! I tell a number of younger people every year about the day. Those who don’t remember may be subjected to the same disaster someday.
    My father ended up fighting in Europe. His, and multitudes of others sacrifices, do, and will not, go unappreciated by me or anyone I can tell to remember.
    I can only say that the darkness that descended on the world in that time will not happen again should I have anything to do to prevent it.
    I can only hope that December 7th will continue to “live in infamy” forever.

    Q: When does a collector become a numismatist?



    A: The year they spend more on their library than their coin collection.



    A numismatist is judged more on the content of their library than the content of their cabinet.
  • I inherited these from my great-grandmother who passed in 1998. She had three brothers serve during World War II; one of which earned a Silver Star. My great-grandfather had three brothers serve and had a sister lose a husband in the AAF when the SS Paul Hamilton was lost in the Mediterranean in 1944.


    If common sense is so common, why is it so uncommon?
  • morgansforevermorgansforever Posts: 8,473 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited December 7, 2020 6:44PM

    I was surprised to see the thread I created a year ago. I can't imagine sleeping in on a Sunday morning awakening to carnage and destruction. The weeks and days leading up to this, the Japanese Empire expressed hope and peace. All day long I thought about it, no one at work even knew the significance of this day, except for one. God bless those lost on this tragic day.

    World coins FSHO Hundreds of successful BST transactions U.S. coins FSHO
  • jwittenjwitten Posts: 5,231 ✭✭✭✭✭

    My December 1942 M1 Garand. Issued one year after the start of the war.

  • BryceMBryceM Posts: 11,853 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I posted this on another thread, but perhaps someone will enjoy the photos here too:

    My family is watching "Pearl Harbor" right now. They enjoy it, despite the historical liberties.

    These photos are from a visit in 2011. The oil is still seeping up, all these years later. I have memories of seeing that during my first visit to the place in 1979. The last photo was taken from the deck of the USS Missouri (Mighty Mo). The Japanese signed the instruments of surrender in Tokyo harbor on her deck on September 2, 1945 - the final act in a damnable part of human history.

    image
    image
    image
    image

  • TomBTomB Posts: 22,070 ✭✭✭✭✭

    That's a great picture, @SeattleSlammer! Who is in the painting behind you?

    Thomas Bush Numismatics & Numismatic Photography

    In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson

    image
  • SeattleSlammerSeattleSlammer Posts: 10,048 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited December 7, 2020 10:00PM

    @TomB said:
    That's a great picture, @SeattleSlammer! Who is in the painting behind you?

    I’m fortunate to have many pics of us enjoying libations together over the years. Some of the most meaningful times of my life. That is my great, great, great grandfather (on my grandmother’s side) in the painting — born 1820.

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