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optid
Mar-29-2007, 03:15 AM
At one time there were over 4.7 million US veterans of World War One. But one of the last five died earlier this week. Charlotte Winters, the last female US veteran of that war, passed away in Boonesboro, MD. She was 109.

The Herald-Mail (http://www.herald-mail.com/?module=displaystory&story_id=161826&format=print) of nearby Hagerstown, MD, has more on the life of Ms. Winters.


Wednesday March 28, 2007

Last of her kind
WWI veteran Charlotte Winters dies at 109

by KAREN HANNA

BOONSBORO - A 109-year-old woman who was believed to be the country's last living female veteran of World War I died Tuesday at Fahrney-Keedy Home near Boonsboro.

Friends of Charlotte Louise Berry Winters, who worked as a secretary for the U.S. Navy, said she was proud of her accomplishments, but she did not understand the fuss displayed for her in her later years.

"She would say, 'Why are they doing this for me? I don't deserve all this,'" said Doug Bast of Boonsboro.

Kelly Auber, who grew up on South Mountain, where Winters and her husband, John Winters, settled, recalled walking with her sister to her neighbors' house for tea and cookies.

"An absolutely refined lady," Auber said.

Winters met with Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels in 1916 to persuade him to allow women in the service. When the Navy opened support roles to women, Winters and her sister, Sophie, joined immediately, Auber said.

Winters was a yeoman second-class when she was discharged after the war, but she continued to work for the Navy in Washington, D.C., until her retirement in 1953, Auber said.

Scripps Howard News Service reported Winters was the last known living female World War I veteran.

"She was very proud of her accomplishments, and when asked, she'd say it was the thing to do, to be patriotic. And, she was very patriotic," said Auber, who now lives in Baltimore County, Md.

Winters was active in the American Legion - she was a member of Betsy Ross Post 1 before the unit became Jacob Jones Post 2 - and she was the chairwoman of the sesquicentennial anniversary of the U.S. Constitution celebration in 1936, Auber said.

Bast said Winters and her husband traveled the country looking for the burial spots of fallen Civil War generals.

Bast, who has amassed a huge collection of historical items, including Egyptian mummies and Russian icons, said over the years, he bought some Civil War items from Winters' husband.

Winters' husband also passed down some items, including a Bible used by the Union provost marshal in Washington, D.C. An inscription on one of the pages says more than 10,000 Confederate rebels swore on the book their renewed allegiance to the country, Bast said.

Auber said Winters and her husband met at the Naval yard and married in 1949. As a new bride, Charlotte Winters already was more than 50 years old. The couple settled on South Mountain to be near the area's Civil War heritage.

Despite an age difference of about 65 years, Auber called her former neighbor a mentor, and she still relishes memories of the teas at Winter's house.

"She was trying to teach my sister and I to be ladies," Auber said.

http://www.herald-mail.com/photos/00013709-constrain-240x280.jpeg
Charlotte Winters

For the record, according to the Navy Times (http://www.navytimes.com/news/2007/03/gns_worldwarI_survivor_070328/), these are the last four surviving US veterans of World War One.
• Frank Buckles, 106, of Charles Town, WV
• <s>Lloyd Brown, 105, of Charlotte Hall, MD</s> R.I.P.
• Russell Coffey, 108, of North Baltimore, OH
• Harry Landis, 107, of Sun City Center, FL

hehe
Mar-29-2007, 03:35 AM
Wow. Only four WWI vets left in the U.S. One of them even from the 19th century. Those people must have great stories to tell, and lots of them!

optid
Mar-29-2007, 09:19 AM
Wow. Only four WWI vets left in the U.S. One of them even from the 19th century. Those people must have great stories to tell, and lots of them!Over a quarter of the 12+ million World War Two veterans are still around. But even the youngest of those, provided that they lied about their ages to enlist when they were 15 or 16 in 1945, would be in their late 70s.
If we'd like to hear first hand and in person accounts of World War Two or the Great Depression, we shouldn't wait too long to talk with them.

hehe
Mar-29-2007, 02:00 PM
Over a quarter of the 12+ million World War Two veterans are still around. But even the youngest of those, provided that they lied about their ages to enlist when they were 15 or 16 in 1945, would be in their late 70s.
If we'd like to hear first hand and in person accounts of World War Two or the Great Depression, we shouldn't wait too long to talk with them.

Yeah--that's definately true. I had the opportunity to talk with my grandpa about the great depression. It was very interesting to learn about how things were back then. His family had it relatively well during that time, but things weren't easy by any means.

I haven't talked too much to WWII vets, but there was a person at a senior living center I volunteered at a long time ago that had a tattoo on their arm from the concentration camps. I don't think I ever got to talk to that person, but I'm sure they had painful stories worth listening to.

optid
Mar-29-2007, 03:40 PM
Living history is an often overlooked idea for senior projects in HS. Local public libraries and historical societies may be interested in your research as much as your school would be.
And there really are quite a few details of history that never make it into textbooks.

U.S.-NAVY
Mar-29-2007, 04:27 PM
My grandfather was in the 101st Airborne Division in WWII. He was one of the paratroopers who were sent in to disable gun batteries and artillary on Omaha and the adjacent beaches before the amphibious attack on D-Day. He was in the Battle of the bulge. He has two purple hearts and a bronze star, and various campaign medals. He has told me some amazing stories. For instance, he told me once of a time when he and another soldier ran up to a tank to disable it (he was a demolitions/heavy weapons specialist) and he started shoving C4 explosives down the barrel... and then the turret started swiveling... so they ran away (though im sure that tank didnt do so hot when it tried to fire its next round with a barrel filled with C4)... another time he told me of how he was in a foxhole one time and they were getting shelled... and an artillary shel went off and blew up by a cow and threw the cow on top of foxhole!!... Our veterans have some amazing stories and should be listened to before they are all gone...

optid
Apr-02-2007, 07:42 AM
This is uncanny. A second World War One veteran in Maryland died just days after Charlotte Winters did. He is Lloyd Brown of Charlotte Hall, MD. Mr. Brown was the last US Navy veteran of that war. That leaves three surviving US World War One veterans. All served in the Army.

Here's more from an AP story in the Belleville News-Democrat (http://www.belleville.com/mld/belleville/news/state/17012189.htm).

Last known World War I Navy veteran dies at 105
Associated Press

CHARLOTTE HALL, MD - Lloyd Brown, the last known surviving World War I Navy veteran, has died. He was 105.

Brown died Thursday at the Charlotte Hall Veterans Home in St. Mary's County, according to family and the U.S. Naval District in Washington.

His death comes days after the death of the last known surviving American female World War I veteran, Charlotte L. Winters, 109. Their deaths leave three known survivors who served in the Army, and a fourth who lives in Washington state but served in the Canadian army, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The fourth of nine children, Brown was born Oct. 7, 1901, in Lutie, Mo., a small farming town in the Ozarks. His family later moved to Chadwick, Mo., where Brown's father opened a trading post, shipping fresh milk, eggs and ham to St. Louis.

But in 1918, 16-year-old Brown lied about his age to join the Navy and was soon on the gun crew on the battleship USS New Hampshire.

"All the young men were going in the service. They were making the headlines, the boys that enlisted," Brown told the (Baltimore) Sun in a 2005 interview. "And all the girls liked someone in uniform."

Brown finished his tour of duty in 1919, took a break for a couple of years, then re-enlisted. He learned to play the cello at musicians school at Norfolk, Va., and was assigned to an admiral's 10-piece chamber orchestra aboard the USS Seattle.

He married Canadian Ileen Holland on Christmas Eve 1922, and they had a son and daughter. But the marriage fell apart in the late 1920s.

When Brown ended his military career in 1925, he joined the Washington Fire Department's Engine Company 16, which served the White House and embassies.

He married Sadie Mae Rutherford in 1938 and they settled in the District of Columbia and had two daughters. Brown worked as a firefighter until the 1950s, when the family moved to Prince George's County, then the Eastern Shore.

The Browns later retired to Florida, but returned to Maryland in 1993 as Sadie Brown's health failed. She died in 1998.

Even after reaching 100, Brown remained independent, living alone in his Charlotte Hall bungalow and driving a golf cart around his neighborhood.

Services are planned for Monday at Brinsfield-Echols funeral home in Charlotte Hall. Burial will be Tuesday at Our Lady Queen of Peace cemetery in St. Mary's County.
Ms. Winters herself was buried with full military honors on Friday.
This is from the Hagerstown Herald-Mail (http://www.herald-mail.com/?module=displaystory&story_id=162134&format=html).

Saturday March 31, 2007
A final tribute to a veteran

Charlotte Winters, who was believed to be the country's last living female veteran of World War I, was laid to rest Friday. Above, U.S. Navy Vice Adm. Nancy Brown and the Rev. Philip Wiehe lead the procession at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Frederick, Md. Right, Denny Lynch, Winters' nephew, speaks during the funeral service at All Saints' Episcopal Church in Frederick. Winters died Tuesday at Fahrney-Keedy Home near Boonsboro at the age of 109.

U.S.-NAVY
Apr-03-2007, 07:03 PM
This is uncanny. A second World War One veteran in Maryland died just days after Charlotte Winters did. He is Lloyd Brown of Charlotte Hall, MD. Mr. Brown was the last US Navy veteran of that war. That leaves three surviving US World War One veterans. All served in the Army.

Here's more from an AP story in the Belleville News-Democrat (http://www.belleville.com/mld/belleville/news/state/17012189.htm).

Ms. Winters herself was buried with full military honors on Friday.
This is from the Hagerstown Herald-Mail (http://www.herald-mail.com/?module=displaystory&story_id=162134&format=html).Wow... it seems that it has come time that many of these people are passing away... it is terrible to see these people go, but at the same time, you see the information that we now have from them, which hopefully would make another world war more preventable... this is shocking

steeper
Apr-03-2007, 07:17 PM
Its so strange that the US, with a population so much larger than Canada's, has the same number of world war I vets.

Is the US giving a state funeral to the final veteran? Canadian house of commons recently passed into law that the last veteran will recieve a full state funeral. It caused a huge commotion because its always been reserved for Prime Ministers and Governor Generals.

Cerberus
Apr-03-2007, 07:24 PM
Damn, these people are living a long ass time :P

It's sad though, that our history is dying all around us, and we take it for granted.

Sex
Apr-03-2007, 08:28 PM
awh, now thats a patriot.

optid
Apr-03-2007, 08:46 PM
Its so strange that the US, with a population so much larger than Canada's, has the same number of world war I vets.The US remained neutral and did not declare war until spring of 1917. Wasn't Canada involved much earlier?

BTW, one of the Canadian vets lives in Washington state.

Is the US giving a state funeral to the final veteran? I know of no such plans here. But the Defense Department is working on a big way of honoring the last three vets while they are still alive.

Red Sox Rule!
Apr-03-2007, 08:54 PM
Wow! 109 years old...

steeper
Apr-03-2007, 10:02 PM
The US remained neutral and did not declare war until spring of 1917. Wasn't Canada involved much earlier?We declared war the instant Westminister did, along with the rest of the British Empire. At the time Canada didn't have the right to declare war with its own parliament, it had to be done through the Queen and British parliament.

But regardless, the number of american troops far outnumbered Canada's. We had roughly 630 000 men in europe, Newfoundland sent an additional 12 000 (they had returned to being a colony of England in 1936, and joined Canada in 1949), the US had in excess of 4.3 million.

optid
Apr-06-2007, 12:30 PM
But regardless, the number of american troops far outnumbered Canada's. We had roughly 630 000 men in europe, Newfoundland sent an additional 12 000 (they had returned to being a colony of England in 1936, and joined Canada in 1949), the US had in excess of 4.3 million.I just remembered that Canadians have a slightly longer life expectancy than Americans. Perhaps that accounts for the difference. ;)

Lamborgotti
Apr-06-2007, 12:45 PM
I like old ladies. :)