'When you are one of the few who are left:' A World War II vet recalls D-Day and those who died for freedom (2024)

At 101, Gene Kleindl has some long-established routines:

He likes to grab an occasional late lunch at Uncle John’s Pancake House: Three Swedish pancakes with lingonberry sauce.

Unless the heat gets too oppressive, he usually wears his original World War II Eisenhower jacket, complete with combat medals and the distinctive patch of the unit with which he landed on Utah Beach: the 90th Infantry Division.

And as often as possible, he travels back to Normandy, where he served as an Army medic in the most iconic military operation in modern history.

“You gotta keep busy,” Kleindl says simply.

At the beginning of June, this remarkable veteran will return to France for the 80th anniversary of D-Day. It will be his third trip in the last five years alone.

Kleindl, who lives on an acreage just outside Rockford, has made dear friends with several French families and prominent Normandy historians. His trips allow him to revisit all the places he sees daily, in his mind’s eye: the old stone building where he set up an aid station to treat the wounded, the creek where seven beleaguered German soldiers surrendered to him.

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“I remember crossing the English Channel in that Higgins boat, approaching the coastline,” he said. “I think about that still — how young we were, how we didn’t know enough to even be scared.”

At the beginning of June, the U.S. Army will host more than 100 events in Normandy to commemorate the start of the arduous campaign to wrest Europe from the tyranny of Nazi occupation. Tens of thousands of visitors will flood the bucolic countryside and historic beaches. Among them will be Kleindl and about 130 other veterans from that conflict.

Sadly, it will likely be the last major anniversary where so many heroes like Kleindl join us in France. Of the more than 16 million Americans who served in World War II, only slightly more than 100,000 are still living.

The unit I serve in today, First Army, commanded all ground and airborne forces during the D-Day invasion, and I will be leading a group of our soldiers back to Normandy to honor our history and lineage. It has been with awe that we’ve learned the stories of the veterans who will attend.

Kleindl enlisted shortly after Pearl Harbor for two simple reasons: to protect his country and to protect his brother.

“My older brother, who was very special to me, had gotten drafted into the infantry,” he remembers. “I thought, ‘The infantry — the front lines — is exactly where we don’t need to be. All he was thinking was, ‘That’s where the action is.’ I was thinking: ‘Someone’s got to watch that daredevil.’”

The 90th Infantry Division landed at Utah Beach. It didn’t go smoothly. One troop ship sank on approach; all soldiers survived but a significant amount of their weaponry didn’t. Almost immediately, the division was stymied in heavy fighting. Kleindl’s battalion suffered 129 casualties by the end of the first day. By July 11, the division had lost 5,000 men. For a young, untested medic, it was baptism by fire.

“I started carrying a pistol, even though medics weren’t supposed to,” Kleindl said. “And I learned you can dig a foxhole awfully fast when you need to.”

Twice, as he treated his wounded men, Kleindl was notified his brother had been injured. He rushed to try to help him, but he’d already been moved to the rear. Kleindl vividly remembers meeting his brother after he’d been returned to duty.

'When you are one of the few who are left:' A World War II vet recalls D-Day and those who died for freedom (1)

“I shook his hand, and he didn’t have any grip left at all,” he says, shaking his head. “Like it was a different guy.”

Despite its rough start, the 90th Infantry Division later would be lauded by First Army and the commanding general, Omar Bradley, as one of the “finest” combat units on the Allied front.

It would go on to help close the Falaise Gap. It fought in the battles in Metz, the Bulge and the Ardennes. The 90th smashed through the Siegfried Line and had just crossed the Czech border when troops encountered a sight that haunts Kleindl still.

“The Flossenbürg concentration camp,” he says, describing the nearly 1,500 starving prisoners they liberated. “Oh, those poor souls.”

A week later, the war was over.

Like so many of his generation, Kleindl returned and picked up where he left off. He attended college and opened a printing business near Rockford. He married the love of his life, JoAnn, and began a family. He always lived close to the brother who served in the 90th. They attended unit reunions until most of the guys were gone. Now he returns to Normandy to keep their memories alive.

“When you are one of the few who are left, it’s up to you to remember those who did so much,” Kleindl says.

The soldiers of First Army look forward to seeing Kleindl in Normandy, and we make him a solemn promise: We will never forget.

(Editor’s note: 405,399 Americans died in World War II; another 670,846 were wounded.)

Maj. Gen. William A. Ryan is the acting commander of First Army, headquartered at Rock Island Arsenal.

'When you are one of the few who are left:' A World War II vet recalls D-Day and those who died for freedom (2024)

FAQs

How many D-Day veterans are still alive? ›

As of 2023, just 119,550 of the 16.4 million who served – less than one percent – were still alive, according to the National WWII Museum in New Orleans.

Are there any World War 2 soldiers still alive? ›

Every day, memories of World War II are disappearing from living history. The men and women who fought and won this great conflict are now in their 90s or older; according to US Department of Veterans Affairs statistics, 119,550 of the 16.4 million Americans who served in World War II are alive as of 2023.

Are there any World War I veterans still alive? ›

Frank Buckles, the last surviving American to serve in World War I, died Sunday, Feb. 27, 2011, at the age of 110 in his home in West Virginia.

How many died on the D-Day invasion? ›

Books often give a figure of 2,500 Allied dead for D-Day. However, research by the US National D-Day Memorial Foundation has uncovered a more accurate figure of 4,415 Allied personnel killed on D-Day. These include 2,501 from the USA, 1,449 British dead, 391 Canadians and 73 from other Allied countries.

What were the odds of surviving D-Day? ›

Overall, about 5%, but it really depended a lot on what your job was in the army. The US 1st Army landed 73,000 . Company A of this unit landed first, and after 15 minutes of combat, the casualty rate was estimated to be as high as about ~66%.

How many Korean War veterans are still alive today? ›

On this seventieth anniversary, the Department of Veterans Affairs honors Korean War Veterans. Between 1950 and 1955, 6.8 million American men and women served worldwide. In 2020, there are over 1 million Korean War Veterans.

Are there any Vietnam veterans still alive? ›

How many Americans living today served during the Vietnam War period? The Department of Veterans Affairs estimates that currently there are more than 7 million Vietnam veterans living in America and abroad, along with 10 million families of those who served during this time frame.

How do I find my father's WWII service records? ›

This site provides information regarding military personnel, health, and medical records stored at NPRC (MPR). If you are a veteran or next-of-kin of a deceased veteran, you may now use vetrecs.archives.gov to order a copy of your military records. For all others, your request is best made using a Standard Form 180.

Are there any WW1 widows still alive? ›

Best estimate is there are just 57 surviving widows from World War I.

How old would a WW1 vet be today? ›

AFAIK: there are no surviving WW-1 Vets. Given that a man would have needed to be at least 17 years old in 1918 to be a WW-1 Vet - his birthdate would have been approximately 1901 making him 124 years old now.

Did any soldier survive all of WW1? ›

Henry John Patch (17 June 1898 – 25 July 2009), dubbed in his later years "the Last Fighting Tommy", was an English supercentenarian, briefly the oldest man in Europe, and the last surviving trench combat soldier of the First World War from any country.

What does the D in D-Day stand for? ›

The Army also cited a Time magazine report saying the D stands for day as a code. The operation is D-4 or four days away or D+4 or four days after. D-Day would, in this definition, mean the day the event occurred.

What was the deadliest day of ww2? ›

I would consider the bloodiest day of World War II to be June 6, 1944, known as D-Day, the day when the Allied forces launched the Normandy invasion. Although some considers bombing of hiroshima and nagasaki atomic bombings to be more fatal.

Was D-Day the bloodiest war? ›

The bloodiest single day in the history of the United States military is either June 6, 1944, with 2,500 soldiers killed during the Invasion of Normandy on D-Day, or September 12th, 1918, at the start of the Battle of Saint Mihiel, with over 2,500 dead (however, this exact figure is unverifiable because of poor ...

Is Veterans Day for those who are still alive? ›

Veterans Day is a well-known holiday often confused with Memorial Day. The annual observance pays tribute to all American veterans – living and dead – but is mainly a time to thank those still alive for their sacrifices.

Who was the oldest soldier at D-Day? ›

Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt Jr. At age 56, the oldest soldier deployed during Operation Overlord + also the highest-ranking American to storm the beaches at Normandy. Roosevelt lead the first wave of assault on Utah beach.

How many Civil War veterans are still alive? ›

The last surviving Civil War veteran, Henry Albert Woolson, who was a drummer boy for the Union Army (age 14), died in 1956. He was 106. There were three other men, who claimed to have served in the Confederate Army, but they were either unable to confirm their enlistment or proved to be frauds.

How old are the veterans of D-Day? ›

D-Day – which marked a turning point against Nazi Germany during World War II – remains history's largest amphibious invasion. Many of the surviving veterans of the attack are now more than 100 years old.

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