1901-1922 World War One…
Frank Buckles was born on the
family farm in Harrison County, Missouri in 1901.
At the age of 15 he loaded
the family horses onto a boxcar and traveled to Oakwood,
Oklahoma where he got
a job as a banker, went to high school and lived by himself in
a hotel. In 1917 The United States entered World War I and propaganda posters began to
surface
in this small town. Buckles, an adventurous spirit decided to enlist. After
several rejections he eluded a
recruiter about his young age and enlisted at the age
of 16 in the United
States Army. Training in Ft.
Riley, Kansas. Buckles eventually
deployed
from Hoboken, New Jersey on the Carpathia, the ship that rescued the only
survivors of the Titanic. On the journey Buckles discussed extensively the
first hand
accounts of the crew about the tragedy of the Titanic. Buckles
arrived in Scotland then
served as a motorcycle driver for dignitaries, an
ambulance driver and prison guard in
England, France and Germany where he
served for the American Expeditionary
Forces and assisted escorting German Prisoners back at the
end of the war. Buckles
returned to the United States in 1920 as a corporal.
4,734,991 Americans served
from 1917-1918 during World War One, the Great
War. 116,516 Americans died during and as a result of this war. For Frank
the path
that fait would lead has brought a common American farm boy to have an
uncommon
story and to be the lasting symbol of this war. Now, at
the age of nearly 109 Frank
Woodruff Buckles is the last doughboy, and a legacy of American sacrifice.
Franks
story encompasses a unique example that is deeply woven within the
fabric of the
twentieth century American experience. Surely, his life story
is one that will
profoundly transform all who view it.
His journey to age 16 is a
movie in itself. When you combine the rest
of his life
with it the lines of this story weave together to form an intricate
and award winning
script. Destiny would assure that this adventuresome lifestyle would continue the
rest of his life sometimes by choice
and sometimes by the luck of the draw.
America could not have
requested a better ambassador for the World War One
generation. Frank Buckles is a statesmen, historian and well
versed in global history
clearly demonstrating the power of freedom, survival
and democracy. The historical
value, inspiration and power contained
within it are sure to persuade, encourage
and transform the globe this
influential story.
1922-1945-
World War Two…
Spanning over a century Frank Buckles life experiences as a soldier during World
War I then his storybook
life truly are unimaginable. After being
an ambulance
driver and WWI soldier he was an assistant purser of the ship the Western
World and
working for the American President Lines. His
travels via steam ship eventually
brought him to Manila where he was captured
by the Japanese as a civilian and
became a Prisoner of War in World War II. For 39 months Frank survived on a s
mall tin cup of beans, rice and worm filled mush
until his rescue by the 11th
Airborne Division of the United States
Army on 23 February 1945.
Frank and the other prisoners
were slated for execution that same morning.
To
this day he still has the cup and the memories of what occurred. The cup
serves as an
inspirational reminder for Frank to keep fighting. After nearly
starving to death and
witnessing the Japanese atrocities in the prison camp he
chose a peaceful life and
settled in West Virginia where his family ancestry
and roots began in the 1700’s as
an American Farmer. His cattle farm also dates
back to the 1700’s and overlooks the
mountains of Antietam and Harpers Ferry
where he worked the farm and drove the
family tractor until 102.
2006 and beyond becoming the last witness…