765th Letter

765thletter by Nancy

sent by daughter Val Green

750th Railway Operating Battalion Historical Documents

750_PartI by Nancy


750_PartII by Nancy

733rd Railway Operating Battalion Historical Documents

733RDROBCOMPLTE02PGSrs by Nancy

720th Railway Operating Battalion Historical Documents

720THROBCOMPLTE31PGSrs by Nancy

718th Railway Operating Battalion Historical Documents

718THROBCOMPLETE1-20rs by Nancy

718THROBCOMPLETE21-40rs by Nancy

718THROBCOMPLETE41-60rs by Nancy

718THROBCOMPLETE61-85rs by Nancy

Thanks Bob Hill

717th Railway Operating Battalion

Thanks to Bob Hill

717THROBCOMPLTEPG1-25rs by Nancy

717THROBCOMPLTE26-43rs by Nancy

713th Railway Operating Battalion- Battalion History

713THROBCOMPLTE6PGSrs by Nancy

712th Railway Operating Battalion: Historical reports and records from War Department files

The first of some amazing new documents on various ROB ( Railway Operating Battalions) sent to me by Bill Hill from the 723rd Association. Thanks so much , Bill!

712THROBCOMPLETE22PGSrs by Nancy

Locomotive WWI and WWII France

Type I. Wire photo. Measures 8x10. Has a stamp on the back. American boys in France have found an engine which was brought over to France in 1917 and is still in use, they have made minor repairs and are using the engine again. France, July 13 1944. This is part of a collection from a former employee of the UPI in Tribune Towers

744th Railway Operating Battalion, memories from World War II

The 744th Railway Operating Battalion, memories from World War II


Author: Louise Greenfield

Publisher: Livonia, Mich. : [s.n.], ©1985.

Edition/Format: Book : EnglishDocument Type: Book


All Authors / Contributors: Louise Greenfield

Find more information about:

OCLC Number: 13102383

Description: 91 p., [5] leaves of plates : ill., maps ; 29 cm.

Other Titles: Memories from World War II., Seven Forty-fourth Railway Operating Battalion.

Responsibility: Louise Greenfield.

1. US Army Ft Eustis Post Library
FT EUSTIS, VA 23604 United States

2. US Army, Mil Hist Institute

US Army Heritage & Education Center

CARLISLE, PA 17013 United States

714th Railway Operating Battalion.

714th Railway Operating Battalion.

Document Type: Book


All Authors / Contributors: United States. Army. 714th Railway Operating Battalion.

OCLC Number: 35265615

Notes: Written at Fort Eustis where the battalion was located.--cf. 4th leaf. Includes roster.

Description: 1 v. illus. 28 cm.

Author: United States. Army. 714th Railway Operating Battalion.

Publisher: [San Angelo, 1945?]* World War, 1939-1945 -- Regimental histories -- United States -- 714th Railway Operating Battalion.

* World War, 1939-1945 -- Transportation -- Alaska.


1. New York Public Library
NEW YORK, NY 10018 United States

2. Bangor Public Library
BANGOR, ME 04401 United States

746th Railway Operating Battalion, 1944-1946.

746th Railway Operating Battalion, 1944-1946.


Publisher: [S.l. : s.n., 1984?]

Edition/Format: Book : EnglishDocument Type: Book


OCLC Number: 13907623

Notes: Cover title. "Roster of enlisted men moving overseas with the battalion": leaves 39-50. "Roster of original officers and home addresses": leaves 51-53.

Description: 53, [1] leaves : ill., maps, ports.
 
available
US Army, Field Artillery School
FT SILL, OK 73503 United States
2. US Army Ft Eustis Post Library
FT EUSTIS, VA 23604 United States
3. US Army, Mil Hist Institute
US Army Heritage & Education Center
CARLISLE, PA 17013 United States

740th Railway Operating Battalion

740th Railway Operating Battalion


Author: John Livingstone

Publisher: New York, N.Y. : Carlton Press, ©1981.

Edition/Format: Book : Biography : EnglishView all editions and formats
 
Material Type: Biography


Document Type: Book

All Authors / Contributors: John Livingstone

Find more information about:

OCLC Number: 8333189

Notes: "A Hearthstone Book."

Description: 271 p. : ill., maps, ports. ; 22 cm.

Responsibility: John Livingstone.
 
Many holdings here

729th The Soxos : 729th Railway Operating Battalion : two and one half years in Europe, 1943-1945

The Soxos : 729th Railway Operating Battalion : two and one half years in Europe, 1943-1945


Author: J A Vargas; United States. Army. Railroad Operating Battalion, 729th.

Publisher: [S.l. : s.n., 2008?]

Edition/Format: Book : National government publication : English : Double anniversary ed
Document Type: Book


All Authors / Contributors: J A Vargas; United States. Army. Railroad Operating Battalion, 729th.

Find more information about:

OCLC Number: 317716908

Notes: Cover title. Reprint. Originally published: Maastricht, Holland : 729th Railway Operating Battalion, Public Relations Section, 1945. Includes unit rosters. Prepared under the auspices of the 729th Railroad Operating Battalion?

Description: 51 p ; 28 cm.

Contents: Overseas chronological history, 2 years overseas --

Message from commanding officer, Lt. Col. W. C. Smith --

Headquarters Company report --

Headquarters Company roster --

Company A report --

Company A roster --

Company B report --

Company B roster --

Company C report --

Company C roster --

The Medical Detachment --

The chaplain's activities --

729th rolling photo lab --

Special service --

Club Soxo --

Athletic program --

Officers' report --

Soxo service --

Championship golf --

Medals and decorations --

Buzz bombs and rockets in Antwerp --

Battle stars --

OCS news --

Brig. Gen Carl E. Gay's letter [regarding] this report --

Col. L. R. Sexton's letter of commendation.

Other Titles: Seven Hundred Twenty-Ninth Railway Operating Battalion : 2-1/2 years in Europe, 1943-1945

Responsibility: [J. A. Vargas ... et. al].
 
copy
US Army, Mil Hist Institute


US Army Heritage & Education Center

CARLISLE, PA 17013 United States

727th Fort Eustis honors little-known WWII service

The infantry grabbed headlines in World War II. So did tank crews, pilots and sailors. But it took more than that to win the war.
Last week at Fort Eustis, the Army paid homage to two units that didn’t get a lot of attention, but whose members risked their lives to help win the war.
Meet the 727th Railway Operating Battalion and the Small Ships Section, both honored during the U.S. Army Transportation Conference held at Fort Eustis.
Representing the 727th at the conference was Allen Metzger, a native of Altoona, Pa. and an apprentice for the Pennsylvania Railroad when war broke out. He served throughout North Africa and Europe as one of 43,500 soldier railroaders.
Metzger was a machinist who inspected incoming locomotives, made out work orders on what needed fixing, got people to fix it and inspected the work afterwards. Sounds routine.
But railroaders didn’t have it easy in WWII. Germans were always looking to knock out supply lines, and he had to dodge strafing from an enemy fighter, potshots from a sniper and had one particularly nasty encounter with a bomb.
During a German bombing run, he was working in a pit underneath a locomotive when he felt the shock wave of a blast.
“It picked me up and threw me to the end of the pit, and hit me up against the wall,” he recalled. “In a pit, there’s a lot of water and grease and dirt. I was a mess.”
What happened then? He got cleaned up and went back to work.
“A bombing doesn’t last very long,” he joked.

The Small Ships Section was another little-known transportation service. It made its mark early in the Pacific Theater, when the Japanese were.
It started by conducting amphibious landings and supporting resupply and operational maneuvers during the New Guinea Campaign.
But here’s the thing: These “ships” were whatever was at hand. Motorboats. Tugboats. Sailboats.
Ernest Flint, a native of Australia, enlisted in the ship service when he was 17 years old. Today, he’s president of the U.S. Small Ships Association.
His first boat was a 40-foot wooden tug.
“I always had visions of walking up a gangway. I didn’t,” he said. “I climbed down a ladder.”
The ships ferried supplies to Allied troops and took out the wounded and the dead. During the day, they hid from Japanese aircraft, resting in small inlets and covering their boats with branches or other camouflage.
The inception of the Ship Service was traced to two brothers who had been part of two famous South Seas exploration expeditions in 1934 and 1940. It convinced them that small watercraft were needed for the war in the Pacific.
In December 1941, they recruited members from their own old crew for the duty. One member still survives: Philip Farley, a yachtsman from New York, who attended last week’s conference.
“For a year and a half, we were up and down the coast of New Guinea,” he said.
The civilian ships were armed with 50-caliber machine guns, but that was it. And if you served with Farley, you knew how to stay loose.
“I also was the one who made the best booze for everybody,” he joked.

http://weblogs.dailypress.com/news/local/military/blog/2010/07/fort_eustis_honors_littleknown.html