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    • The Rooster
    • Salvage Sailor
      China Liberation Medal (1945)    
    • John Parker Jr.
      Would you pay $250 on it on its actual condition?
    • YourLocalHistoryGuy
      What is this uniform worth with Railhead Regulating Station uniform sleeve patch. 
    • JohnC99
      The German ones look like they are from the German Reichsarchiv official history of WW1. A multi-volume set published through the 1920s and 30s. Neither rare nor particularly collectable.
    • rathbonemuseum.com
      From a negative with no identification    
    • Salvage Sailor
      The Key to the ID is likely "Miles 01", crack that code and the squadron number will follow...
    • Martinjmpr
      Yes, I was on active duty then.  For some reason I thought it was in the 1987 - 89 time frame.     Prior to that it was common to see foreign awards over the right pocket on BDUs.  Even one of my drill sergeants had the German proficiency badge.     I think what happened was that the badges were never officially authorized on fatigue/bdu uniforms, but the practice was widely tolerated throughout the Army especially in the late 70s - early 80s.  Then finally someone got a bee in their bonnet and said "I'm tired of seeing all these soldiers with unauthorized foreign badges on their BDUs" and the order was put out to take them off.     FWIW when I was in a few different SF units, soldiers would still wear foreign wings on their BDUs as the command typically looked the other way.  But if that soldier had to go to a "big army" school like an NCO school, they would remove the unauthorized badge before going.    
    • Benjaminn
      Here's a news article about her detailing her experiences: https://lancasteronline.com/news/former-army-nurse-remembers-the-days-she-spent-helping-soldiers-during-world-war-ii/article_ada4632e-f425-5f34-a202-d9fe8c49eca6.html   There are also some of her items on loan to a museum somewhere, and plenty more websites talking about her.
    • Benjaminn
      Here's a grouping I sold about two years ago. I still regret it! Hopefully, one day I can get it back. Here's the write-up I made when I first got it.   Everything in these pictures belonged to 1st LT. Freida Margaret "Margie" Holbein (Maiden name of Himelwright). She was born in 1922 in Lancaster, PA. She remained there all her life until her death in 2014. She married Clyde R. Holbein, a Navy vet, in 1949. Below is a brief summary I have put together of her service.   Mrs. Holbein was a frontline nurse serving in France and Germany. She primarily served on hospital train No.75. Her time often consisted of caring for 66 or more patients at a time. "During the day shift, each nurse on Train No. 75 tended the wounded in two litter cars, with up to 33 patients per car. Another nurse was assigned to both ambulatory cars that were often filled with more than 150 wounded persons".   In 1944, "She cared for the severely injured young men who fought in the Battle of the Bulge, a decisive fight that raged from Dec. 16, 1944, to Jan. 25, 1945". In a three-and-a-half-hour interview, she noted a time when two soldiers, one shot across the neck talked to her about his wife and children. It is noted that Margaret teared up and stated, "God only knows if he made it". Margaret endured unimaginable hardship on the frontline.   Near the war's end, she was transferred to the 236th General Hospital, where she rode in trucks across the frontline, here she witnessed the liberation of the camps. The interviewer Stephanie Bradford wrote down what Margaret described the sight as. "Driving from Ludwigshafen to Epinal, Holbein saw "this old truck full of bodies … nothing but skin and bones, no clothes, nothing on them, lying one on top of the other. Men, women, children, everything. I couldn't believe what I was seeing.""   She was shipped off to Japan for the frontline, but during her voyage, the capitulation of Japan was announced, where she recalled a tremendous celebration of more than 4000 soldiers, where she soloed "I'll be seeing you" by Billie Holiday.   She stayed in the army until January 1947. Her last post was Fort McClellan, where she helped deliver babies.   She was notably haunted by what she saw, but she notably found comfort that god was taking good care of the soldiers she helped in their final moments.   Thank you all for reading, and please take a moment to remember Margaret Holbein, a true hero.   
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