| LAST U.S. WORLD WAR
I VETERAN TURNS 109
Frank Buckles said he has much to be thankful for as he blew out
109 candles on his birthday cake.
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Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
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109 and counting
Frank W. Buckles marks birthday
By Beth Henry, Journal city editor
http://www.journal-news.net/page/content.d
etail/id/531249.html?nav=5006
CHARLES TOWN - America's last
surviving World War I veteran marked his birthday Monday with
family and close friends, noting that he has much to be thankful
for as he blew out 109 candles.
Frank Woodruff Buckles, who lives on Gap View Farm near Charles
Town, was born Feb. 1, 1901, in Harrison County, Mo.
He's often said that he knew he would have a long life, but he
never expected to become the very last "doughboy" - after all,
there were 4,734,991 Americans who served from 1917 to 1918 during
the Great War. Now there is one left.
Family
spokesperson and biographer David DeJonge said Buckles was excited
about his birthday party, and he is looking forward to at least a
few more.
"He said, 'I don't think 115 is any different from 109," DeJonge
said.
Buckles has a birthday wish that he's waiting for Congress to do
something about - he wants to see the dedication of a World War I
memorial in Washington, D.C.
Buckles serves as the honorary chairman of the World War I
Memorial Foundation, which is a nonprofit organization that would
raise private funding to support the national memorial. He joined
U.S. Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., and other senators on Capitol
Hill in early December to support the Frank Buckles World War I
Memorial Act. The bill would dedicate a National and District of
Columbia World War I Memorial to honor the sacrifices made by
American WWI veterans.
It would rename an existing structure, the District of Columbia
War Memorial, which was dedicated in 1931 to D.C. residents who
served in the Great War, including those who lost their lives.
Rockefeller is still pushing for the bill's passage, and he sent a
birthday message to Buckles on Monday.
"I wish a very happy birthday to my friend Frank Buckles - a true
patriot, a proud West Virginian and the last surviving veteran of
World War I - who turns 109 on Feb. 1. On this special occasion, I
am enormously proud to recognize Frank's leadership as honorary
chairman of the World War I Memorial Foundation," Rockefeller said
in a news release. "I share the foundation's unwavering commitment
to rededicating the existing ... memorial as a national monument
honoring every one of our nation's WWI veterans. And I will
continue to champion the Senate legislation (Senate Bill 2097)
that will make it possible."
DeJonge, president of the World War I Memorial Foundation, said
the bill doesn't seem to be moving forward much yet.
"We haven't heard really a whole lot," he said.
In the meantime, DeJonge has been working on a documentary about
Buckles' life, as well as updating the veteran's Web site,
www.frankbuckles.org .
"Mr. Buckles is an international icon, a true patriot and the
embodiment of the American 20th century," he said.
DeJonge anticipates the film production will take approximately 12
months to complete with a targeted release in late 2011 or early
2012, hopefully in the United States and Great Britain. The team
is seeking a corporate sponsor for the film and is in discussions
with broadcast outlets.
Buckles certainly has plenty of stories to share for the film.
After working as a banker at the age of 15, he decided that he
wanted to enlist in the military when World War I propaganda
posters caught his eye.
He enlisted on Aug. 14, 1917, when he was 16 years old, after
fibbing about his age to an Army recruiter.
Buckles sailed to Scotland aboard the Carpathia before serving two
years overseas during World War I, in England and France. He
worked as an ambulance driver, and after Armistice Day he was
assigned to a prisoner-of-war escort company to help return
prisoners back to Germany.
Buckles returned to the United States in 1920 as a corporal.
Years later, he was captured as a prisoner of war at the beginning
of World War II, when he was working as a civilian for a shipping
company in the Philippines. He spent more than three years in
Japanese prison camps in Santo Tomas and Los Banos, and he was
rescued on Feb. 23, 1945.
After recovering and returning to the States, he met and married
his wife, Audrey, in California. They lived in San Francisco for a
few years, before they bought Gap View Farm near Charles Town in
January 1954 and had their daughter in 1955.
His daughter, Susannah Buckles Flanagan, and her husband live with
him on his farm.
Genetics, healthy eating and exercise are vital for a long life,
Buckles said during an interview when he was 106, but one more
thing ranks higher.
"The will to survive is what's most important," he said.
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