<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>LOST AT WAR - Horns Up Archives - Texas Legacy Support Network</title>
	<atom:link href="https://texaslsn.org/category/lost-at-war-horns-%f0%9f%a4%98-up/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>https://texaslsn.org/category/lost-at-war-horns-🤘-up/</link>
	<description>History of Longhorn Sports by TLSN</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Mon, 02 Mar 2026 12:16:14 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>en-US</language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>
	hourly	</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>
	1	</sy:updateFrequency>
	

<image>
	<url>https://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/cropped-texas-legacy-icon-32x32.jpg</url>
	<title>LOST AT WAR - Horns Up Archives - Texas Legacy Support Network</title>
	<link>https://texaslsn.org/category/lost-at-war-horns-🤘-up/</link>
	<width>32</width>
	<height>32</height>
</image> 
	<item>
		<title>May 30, 2011 Bill Little Commentary: Memorial Day- Flanders Field</title>
		<link>https://texaslsn.org/may-30-2011-bill-little-commentary-memorial-day-flanders-field/</link>
					<comments>https://texaslsn.org/may-30-2011-bill-little-commentary-memorial-day-flanders-field/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Billy Dale]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Feb 2026 12:26:22 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[LOST AT WAR - Horns Up]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Field]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Flanders]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Little]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WWI]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WWII]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://texaslsn.org/?p=47178</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Remembering fallen Longhorns of World War I and WWII As Americans remember those who have served in the United States military and died while in the line of duty, there’s no better time to remember the ultimate sacrifice paid by several Texas Longhorn athletes. According to the 1919 edition of the University of Texas’s official...</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/may-30-2011-bill-little-commentary-memorial-day-flanders-field/">May 30, 2011 Bill Little Commentary: Memorial Day- Flanders Field</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<h3 class="kt-adv-heading47178_cf9a36-25_0 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading47178_cf9a36-25_0">Remembering fallen Longhorns of World War I and WWII</h3>



<figure class="wp-block-image aligncenter size-full is-resized"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" width="640" height="330" src="https://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/rp_primary_2016_Bill_Little_Lifetime_Achievement_graphic_copy-5.png" alt="" class="wp-image-19066" style="aspect-ratio:1.9394384203797528;width:374px;height:auto" srcset="https://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/rp_primary_2016_Bill_Little_Lifetime_Achievement_graphic_copy-5.png 640w, https://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/rp_primary_2016_Bill_Little_Lifetime_Achievement_graphic_copy-5-300x155.png 300w" sizes="(max-width: 640px) 100vw, 640px" /><figcaption class="wp-element-caption"><mark style="background-color:rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)" class="has-inline-color has-theme-palette-1-color"><strong>2016  Bill Little </strong></mark></figcaption></figure>



<p class="kt-adv-heading47178_06926b-ae_0 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading47178_06926b-ae_0">As Americans remember those who have served in the United States military and died while in the line of duty, there’s no better time to remember the ultimate sacrifice paid by several Texas Longhorn athletes.</p>



<p class="kt-adv-heading47178_06926b-ae_1 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading47178_06926b-ae_1">According to the 1919 edition of the University of Texas’s official yearbook, the Cactus, 75 ex-students died while serving in World War I. Four of them were former Longhorn football lettermen.</p>



<p class="kt-adv-heading47178_06926b-ae_2 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading47178_06926b-ae_2">This post focuses on the school’s athletes who lost their lives at war, but TLSN also remembers ALL who attended UT and lost their lives at war.</p>



<p class="kt-adv-heading47178_06926b-ae_3 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading47178_06926b-ae_3">The link below shares an article written by Bill Little about Flanders Field and remembers many of the Longhorn athletes who gave their lives for the rest of us.</p>



<p class="kt-adv-heading47178_6d02a3-c9_0 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading47178_6d02a3-c9_0">When I Get to Where I Am Going   <strong>Songwriters: Teren George G., and Rutherford Melvern Rivers</strong><br><a href="https://youtu.be/yYHT-TF4KO4">https://youtu.be/yYHT-TF4KO4</a></p>



<figure class="wp-block-image size-full is-resized"><img decoding="async" src="https://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/FlandersField.jpg" alt="" class="wp-image-2923" style="aspect-ratio:1.3350785340314135;width:812px;height:auto"/><figcaption class="wp-element-caption">Flanders Field </figcaption></figure>



<figure class="wp-block-gallery has-nested-images columns-default is-cropped wp-block-gallery-1 is-layout-flex wp-block-gallery-is-layout-flex">
<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img data-dominant-color="8a7771" data-has-transparency="false" style="--dominant-color: #8a7771;" decoding="async" width="429" height="266" data-id="47181" src="https://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Flanders-Field.avif" alt="" class="wp-image-47181 not-transparent" srcset="https://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Flanders-Field.avif 429w, https://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Flanders-Field-300x186.avif 300w" sizes="(max-width: 429px) 100vw, 429px" /></figure>



<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img data-dominant-color="8e6f54" data-has-transparency="false" style="--dominant-color: #8e6f54;" decoding="async" width="475" height="317" data-id="47182" src="https://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Flanders-Field-3.avif" alt="" class="wp-image-47182 not-transparent" srcset="https://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Flanders-Field-3.avif 475w, https://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Flanders-Field-3-300x200.avif 300w" sizes="(max-width: 475px) 100vw, 475px" /></figure>
</figure>



<p class="kt-adv-heading47178_8259a2-ce_0 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading47178_8259a2-ce_0">&#8220;In Flanders Fields The Poppies Blow, Between The Crosses Row On Row, That Mark Our Place; And In The Sky</p>



<p class="kt-adv-heading47178_8259a2-ce_1 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading47178_8259a2-ce_1">The Larks, Still Bravely Singing, Fly Scarce Heard Amid The Guns Below.</p>



<p class="kt-adv-heading47178_8259a2-ce_2 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading47178_8259a2-ce_2">We Are The Dead. Short Days Ago; We Lived, Felt Dawn, Saw Sunset Glow, Loved And Were Loved, And Now We Lie,</p>



<p class="kt-adv-heading47178_8259a2-ce_3 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading47178_8259a2-ce_3">Take Up Our Quarrel With The Foe, To You From Failing Hands We Throw;</p>



<p class="kt-adv-heading47178_8259a2-ce_4 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading47178_8259a2-ce_4">The Torch; Be Yours To Hold It High. If Ye Break Faith With Us Who Die;</p>



<p class="kt-adv-heading47178_8259a2-ce_5 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading47178_8259a2-ce_5">We Shall Not Sleep, Though Poppies Grow In Flanders Fields.&#8221;</p>



<p class="kt-adv-heading47178_29bbb8-bf wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading47178_29bbb8-bf"></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/may-30-2011-bill-little-commentary-memorial-day-flanders-field/">May 30, 2011 Bill Little Commentary: Memorial Day- Flanders Field</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
					<wfw:commentRss>https://texaslsn.org/may-30-2011-bill-little-commentary-memorial-day-flanders-field/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
			<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Survivors and those Lost in  American wars</title>
		<link>https://texaslsn.org/survivors-and-those-lost-in-american-wars/</link>
					<comments>https://texaslsn.org/survivors-and-those-lost-in-american-wars/#comments</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Billy Dale]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 07 Jul 2024 08:49:40 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[LOST AT WAR - Horns Up]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[died]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[survivors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[veterans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[war]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://texaslsn.org/survivors-of-american-wars/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>A salute to the military veterans of Texas Longhorns football Here’s a list of Longhorn football lettermen known to have served in the military, from the Spanish-American War to the wars of the 21st century. By Jonathan Wells@jwells1982 Updated Nov 11, 2022, 11:17am CST  Ben “Stookie” Allen (1924) — Corsicana — WWII, Army Leroy Anderson...</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/survivors-and-those-lost-in-american-wars/">Survivors and those Lost in  American wars</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="sqs-html-content">
<h1 style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><strong>A salute to the military veterans of Texas Longhorns football</strong></h1>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><em>Here’s a list of Longhorn football lettermen known to have served in the military, from the Spanish-American War to the wars of the 21st century.</em></p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">By <a href="https://www.sbnation.com/users/Jonathan%20Wells">Jonathan Wells</a><a href="https://www.twitter.com/jwells1982">@jwells1982</a> Updated Nov 11, 2022, 11:17am CST</p>
</div>
<div class="sqs-html-content">
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;"> Ben “Stookie” Allen (1924) — Corsicana — WWII, Army</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Leroy Anderson (1944) — Wilmot, Wisconsin — Navy</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Kenneth Anglin (1952) — Groom — Korean War, Marines</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Judson Atchison (1935-37) — Baird — WWII</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Thomas Adam Austin (1916) — Laredo — Army colonel; later began the ROTC program at Lanier High School in Montgomery, Alabama</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Robert Baldridge (1931) — Clifton — WWII</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">John Gaddis Bass (1913) — Houston — WWI</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">James Henry “Jack” Beall, Jr. (1916) — Sweetwater — WWI, Army</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Maxie Bell (1944-45) — Vernon — Navy</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><a href="http://texasmilitaryforcesmuseum.org/hallofhonor/berrykl.htm"><strong>Kearie Lee “K.L.” Berry</strong></a> (1912, 14-15, 24) — Denton — Army; WWII, survived the Bataan Death March at age 48 and spent over 3 years in a prisoner of war camp, retired from active duty as a Brigadier General</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Cade Bethea (1897-99) — Seven Oaks — Spanish-American War</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Dana X. Bible (head football coach 1937-46) — Jefferson City, Tennessee — WWI, Air Corps</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Robert Blaine (1915-16, 19) — Houston — Army</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">William Bartlett Blocker (1904-05) — San Antonio — WWI</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Ralph “Peppy” Blount (1945, 47-48) — Big Spring — WWII, Army Air Corps</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Edwin Bluestein (1922-23) — Port Arthur — WWI, Navy</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Daniel Philip “Phil” Bolin (1943-44) — Wichita Falls — WWII, Navy</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><a href="https://nateboyer.com/bio/"><strong>Nate Boyer</strong></a> (2012-14) — El Cerrito, California — Army, Green Berets; Iraq, Afghanistan</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Edward Young “E.Y.” Boynton (1916) — Waco — WWI, Army</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Dewey Bradford (1917) — Austin — WWI, Marines</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Fred Brechtel (1945) — New Orleans, Louisiana — Navy</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Wilson Brennan (1917-19) — Denison — WWI, Army</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Clinton Giddings Brown (1901) — San Antonio — WWI</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Shelby Buck (1938-39) — Crosbyton — WWII, Royal Canadian Air Force and U.S. Air Force; killed in a plane crash in England in May 1943</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Max Bumgardner (1942, 46-47) — Wichita Falls — WWII, Army Corps of Engineers</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Edmond Franklin Butler (1943) — Lubbock — Navy</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Jerome Buxkemper (1945) — Ballinger — Teacher and coach at Department of Defense Dependents schools in Japan and Germany</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">James Ross Callahan (1943) — Wink — Navy</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Paul Campbell (1948-49) — Breckenridge — WWII, Army Air Corps</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Jim Canady (1943, 46-47) — Austin — WWII, Navy</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">David C. “Bobby” Cannon (1919) — Crockett— Navy</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">Henry James Casey (1916) — Sherman — WWI artillery captain</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><a href="https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/page/veterans111214wulfChevigny/football-war-hero"><strong>John Edward “Jack” Chevigny</strong></a> (head football coach, 1934-36) — Hammond, Indiana — Army, Marine Corps; killed at the Battle of Iwo Jima on February 19, 1945</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">James Stewart Clarke (1896-97) — Boerne — Army</p>
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;" data-rte-preserve-empty="true"> </p>
</div>


<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_9a3b96-db wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_9a3b96-db">Filed under:</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_508651-46 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_508651-46">Texas Longhorns Football</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_bf3a12-9f wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_bf3a12-9f">Texas Longhorns History</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_7660b9-05 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_7660b9-05">An historic list of Texas football’s military veterans</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_74acae-94 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_74acae-94">Over 270 Longhorn football lettermen and six head coaches have served in the U.S. military in some capacity.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_21e7fa-e7 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_21e7fa-e7">By Jonathan Wells  Nov 10, 2023, 9:00am CST  9 Comments / 9 New</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_24b63b-9a wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_24b63b-9a">If you buy something from an SB Nation link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_0db444-39 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_0db444-39">Share this story</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_03de18-c7 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_03de18-c7">Share this on Facebook (opens in new window)</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_2fe23c-d4 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_2fe23c-d4">Share this on Twitter (opens in new window)</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_96b5a2-00 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_96b5a2-00">Share</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_ddfe29-9e wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_ddfe29-9e">All sharing options</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_5b5426-cc wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_5b5426-cc">Tomorrow is Veterans Day, which has been observed annually on November 11 in the United States since 1919, with the first such observance occurring on the first anniversary of the formal end of World War I. (Due to Veterans Day falling on a Saturday this year, it will be observed as a federal holiday today.) Originally known as “Armistice Day” in the U.S. and in several other countries prominently involved in the fighting of World War I, it officially became “Veterans Day” when an act of Congress so amended it in 1954, and it is a date intended to honor the military veterans of the many branches of the United States Armed Forces.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_81f519-70 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_81f519-70">Many thousands of students, faculty, and staff members at the University of Texas from throughout the university’s 140-year history have served in the military, and hundreds of Longhorn student-athletes have done so. UT football players in particular have served in the Army, Navy, Marines, Air Force, and Coast Guard, and in conflicts and wars ranging chronologically from the Spanish-American War to the 21st century wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Some served primarily in training or teaching roles, and many who were in active duty never had to see combat before their discharge. But hundreds of Longhorns made the ultimate sacrifice while in uniform.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_89fb8e-22 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_89fb8e-22">Seventy-five former UT students or staff members perished while serving in World War I, including four Texas football lettermen. At least 664 Longhorns died while serving in World War II, including 24 student-athletes, seven football lettermen, and one former head football coach.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_8fe344-0e wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_8fe344-0e">The University of Texas at Austin was ranked among the top twenty “Best Colleges for Veterans” by U.S. News &amp; World Report in September, and it was the highest-graded Texas college in those rankings. The Longhorn football program regularly recognizes veterans during pre-game ceremonies at DKR-Texas Memorial Stadium, and that stadium itself was, upon its completion in 1924, dedicated to the many Texans who had fought and died in World War I.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c2b37f-5e wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c2b37f-5e">There are many programs and benefits that UT and UT Athletics have which are designed for military vets, but one thing the UT Athletic Department evidently has not compiled is a list of student-athletes in general or Texas Longhorn football players in particular who have been military veterans. When I made an inquiry with the Media Relations office in 2021, I was specifically told that they did not have or maintain a list of Longhorn football veterans. So for Veterans Day 2021 I published a list of veterans among Longhorn football lettermen for this site. (A more full list deserves to be made for Longhorn athletes in other sports, but football is the only sport I’ve done such a deep dive on.) That list was far from exhaustive and was mostly based on notes I had compiled during research on many past Longhorns. Several names were added when that post was updated for Veterans Day 2022, and at that point the list contained 209 names of former players and head football coaches who had served in the military.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_95bcbb-79 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_95bcbb-79">Since then I’ve been able to add 67 more names to the list, and it now includes 271 UT football lettermen (about 11.7% of the program’s all-time letter-winners) and six head coaches (Ed Price is the lone member of both categories among Longhorn veterans).</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_88bec2-f6 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_88bec2-f6">My list is expansive in its criteria for “veterans”. For instance, it includes Jerome Buxkemper, a 1945 letterman who was not a soldier but was for several years a teacher and coach at U.S. Department of Defense Dependents schools in Germany and Japan. There’s also Harlan Wetz, a big Longhorn tackle from the same time period who was a longtime officer in the National Guard and is included in a database of veterans maintained by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. I also included Jack Sachse, a three-year letterman and co-captain of the 1944 Longhorns, who enlisted in the Navy soon after the United States’ entry into World War II and was a trainee with the Marines while in college, but who ultimately received a medical discharge due to a shoulder injury that prevented him from being accepted for service in any branch of the military. At least two of those three don’t fit the official definition of “military veteran”, but Buxkemper spent many years teaching and coaching the children of American military personnel stationed overseas, and Sachse enlisted and was prepared to serve in the Marines during a world war before an injury prevented him from being called into active duty, so both of them make my list.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_e9d7f8-46 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_e9d7f8-46">With my list of Texas Longhorn football military vets being expanded by 28% since last year, I thought it more appropriate to create a new post rather than simply add the new names to last year’s post and update the publication date.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_574d75-8f wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_574d75-8f">The list below includes the names of recognized UT football lettermen and head football coaches who served the military in some capacity. The vast majority of them will be unfamiliar names to most readers, but there are many Longhorn greats among this group; by my count, it includes 48 UT Athletics Hall of Honor inductees and 34 Longhorn football team captains, plus at least three others — Ox Emerson, Red Goodwin, and Fred Moore — who were elected captain but were unable to serve in that role for one reason or another.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_5bcb5f-cf wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_5bcb5f-cf">They are listed alphabetically by last name, and the year(s) in parentheses are those in which they won their football letters, or the years they held the position of head football coach. Listed after each name and their years with the UT football program is their hometown, or otherwise the city in which they attended high school (in Texas unless otherwise noted), as well as the branch of the armed services in which they served and the conflict or theater of war in which their service was rendered, if known. There are many compelling individual stories to be told about the men in this group, but that’s a subject for several other posts (or perhaps a book), and this one will stick to the most basic facts about each individual’s service.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_082207-e0 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_082207-e0">I should also note for those who are sticklers for proper terminology that there are some anachronisms and inconsistencies of labeling with some of these veterans’ units, particularly as it regards the “Air Force”. Before the United States Air Force became its own branch of the military in 1947, many pilots served in the Army Air Corps (1926-1941) or Army Air Forces (1941-47), and many of the obituaries for these veterans said that they served in the “Air Force” even if the entirety of their service was prior to 1947. I’ve largely labeled their service according to how it was described in either their obituaries or in contemporary news reports, which were not always technically correct. If you know of a Longhorn football military veteran who should be on this list and isn’t, please let me know or mention them in the comments.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_5b01a0-7b wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_5b01a0-7b">University of Texas football lettermen and head football coaches who served in the U.S. military</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_173b7c-0c wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_173b7c-0c">Ben “Stookie” Allen (1924) — Corsicana — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_a319fa-91 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_a319fa-91">Leroy Anderson (1944) — Wilmot, Wisconsin — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_0599ee-59 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_0599ee-59">Kenneth Anglin (1952) — Groom — Korean War, Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_33b9f4-d6 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_33b9f4-d6">Judson Atchison (1935-37) — Baird — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_90a71f-8c wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_90a71f-8c">Thomas Adam Austin, Jr. (1916) — Laredo — Army; retired as a colonel, and during his Army career he started the ROTC program at Lanier High School in Montgomery, Alabama. Col. Austin’s great-grandson Thomas Austin V is the current offensive line coach at Clemson.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_89bf9e-a2 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_89bf9e-a2">Roy Baines (1937-38) — Odessa — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_1add3c-85 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_1add3c-85">Robert Baldridge (1931) — Clifton — WWII</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_206f4a-02 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_206f4a-02">William Barry (1920) — Dallas — WWI, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_39a260-3b wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_39a260-3b">John Gaddis Bass (1913) — Houston — WWI, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_550be7-70 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_550be7-70">Maurice Baumgarten (1929-31) — Schulenburg — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_91b169-59 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_91b169-59">James Henry “Jack” Beall, Jr. (1916) — Sweetwater — WWI, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_9aba84-cd wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_9aba84-cd">Maxie Bell (1944-45) — Vernon — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_fa2994-ac wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_fa2994-ac">Kearie Lee “K.L.” Berry (1912, 14-15, 24) — Denton — Army; A career Army officer, he was captured in the Philippines by Japanese forces soon after the attack on Pearl Harbor, and he survived the infamous Bataan Death March at age 48 before spending over 3 years in a prisoner of war camp. He was liberated near the end of World War II and retired from active duty in 1947 as a Brigadier General, then spent another 14 years as the Adjutant General of Texas, holding the rank of Major General.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_26025f-83 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_26025f-83">Cade Bethea (1897-99) — Seven Oaks — Spanish-American War, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c3b0f3-54 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c3b0f3-54">Dause Bibby (1931-32) — Dublin — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_63734b-13 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_63734b-13">Dana X. Bible (head football coach 1937-46) — Jefferson City, Tennessee — WWI, Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_f6ff91-d5 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_f6ff91-d5">Robert Blaine (1915-16, 19) — Houston — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_833da3-e6 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_833da3-e6">William Bartlett Blocker (1904-05) — San Antonio — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_53770d-bc wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_53770d-bc">Ralph “Peppy” Blount (1945, 47-48) — Big Spring — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_950720-b6 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_950720-b6">Edwin Bluestein (1922-23) — Port Arthur — WWI, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_8b09b3-5d wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_8b09b3-5d">Daniel Philip “Phil” Bolin (1943-44) — Wichita Falls — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_2e6e35-e7 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_2e6e35-e7">Ray Borneman (1948-49) — Houston — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_22b28c-b0 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_22b28c-b0">Nate Boyer (2012-14) — El Cerrito, California — Army, Green Berets; Iraq, Afghanistan</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_96e59d-31 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_96e59d-31">Wesley Boyer (1937-38) — Fort Worth — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_e0a41e-8a wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_e0a41e-8a">Edward Young “E.Y.” Boynton (1916) — Waco — WWI, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_a1aa9d-c7 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_a1aa9d-c7">Dewey Bradford (1917) — Austin — WWI, Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_1b3e10-a2 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_1b3e10-a2">Fred Brechtel (1945) — New Orleans, Louisiana — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_831a5a-d1 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_831a5a-d1">Wilson Brennan (1917-19) — Denison — WWI, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_6d34fc-e3 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_6d34fc-e3">Clinton Giddings Brown (1901) — San Antonio — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_96ea35-74 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_96ea35-74">Shelby Buck (1938-39) — Crosbyton — WWII, Royal Canadian Air Force and U.S. Air Force; killed in a plane crash in England in May 1943</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_bdddc5-70 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_bdddc5-70">Max Bumgardner (1942, 46-47) — Wichita Falls — WWII, Army Corps of Engineers</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_dc062c-5e wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_dc062c-5e">Jimmie Burr (1931-32) — Austin — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_58907c-0e wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_58907c-0e">Edmond Franklin Butler (1943) — Lubbock — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_15068b-ef wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_15068b-ef">Jerome Buxkemper (1945) — Ballinger — Teacher and coach at U.S. Department of Defense Dependents schools in Japan and Germany</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_5a7f7a-72 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_5a7f7a-72">James Ross Callahan (1943) — Wink — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_684d64-05 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_684d64-05">Dougal Cameron (1952-53) — San Saba — Vietnam, Marines; retired from active duty as a lieutenant colonel in 1972.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_ab38ca-e4 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_ab38ca-e4">Paul Campbell (1948-49) — Breckenridge — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_4b6dc0-be wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_4b6dc0-be">James Maurice “Jim” Canady (1943, 46-47) — Austin — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_fc10f2-e6 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_fc10f2-e6">David Clinton “Bobby” Cannon (1919) — Crockett— Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_4a4292-3a wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_4a4292-3a">Henry James Casey (1916) — Sherman — WWI artillery captain</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_2046b6-ac wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_2046b6-ac">Vance LaNoal Castleberry (1956) — Childress — Army Corps of Engineers</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_5ab2e1-fd wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_5ab2e1-fd">John Edward “Jack” Chevigny (head football coach, 1934-36) — Hammond, Indiana — WWII, Army and Marine Corps; killed at the Battle of Iwo Jima on February 19, 1945.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c0a49e-6c wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c0a49e-6c">James Stewart Clarke (1896-97) — Boerne — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_25957e-aa wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_25957e-aa">Randy Clay (1947-49) — Pampa — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_257c28-d0 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_257c28-d0">Howard “Hank” Clewis (1930-32) — Austin — WWII, Army; attained the rank of colonel</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_88c4f6-26 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_88c4f6-26">Donald Cohenour (1940-41) — Orange — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_9683fc-a3 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_9683fc-a3">Joseph Russell “Joe” Coleman (1943) — Ballinger — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_40f68a-2c wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_40f68a-2c">Jack Allison Collins (1934-36) — Denton — WWII, Army Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_16bb0b-39 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_16bb0b-39">William Harold “Spot” Collins (1941-42, 46) — Breckenridge — WWII and Korean War, Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c42b98-c5 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c42b98-c5">William Zuehl Conoly (1941-42) — Corpus Christi — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_60f2d3-0b wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_60f2d3-0b">Ted Constanzo (1975-77, 79) — San Antonio — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_6f5bc6-db wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_6f5bc6-db">Jack Cowley (1926-28) — Paris — WWII, Army Corps of Engineers</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_90139f-1d wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_90139f-1d">Jack Crain (1939-41) — Nocona — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_3732db-53 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_3732db-53">Ed Crane (1903, 05) — Dallas — WWI, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_af286a-c4 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_af286a-c4">Franklin “Sandy” Crow (1944) — Taft — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c0b120-9c wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c0b120-9c">Ward Dabney (1895) — Bonham — Army, Spanish-American War and WWI; an Army officer for 22 years who retired as a colonel.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_5a7584-79 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_5a7584-79">Chal Newton Daniel, Jr. (1939-41) — Longview — WWII, Army Air Corps; killed in a plane crash northwest of New Braunfels on February 13, 1943.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_35e4a2-98 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_35e4a2-98">Milton Enoch “M.E.” Daniel (1916) — Waco — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_601d35-f7 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_601d35-f7">Edward Gilmore “Gilly” Davis (1938-39) — San Benito — Army reserves, civilian pilot instructor</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_dc8c04-21 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_dc8c04-21">Doug Dawkins (1952) — Alexandria, Louisiana — Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_d4f7b7-d2 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_d4f7b7-d2">Ted Dawson (1938-40) — Hondo — WWII</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_8e2b2a-2a wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_8e2b2a-2a">Gustav “Pig” Dittmar (1913-16) — Houston — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_73c6cd-08 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_73c6cd-08">Walter Doell (1929-31) — Mason — Coast Guard</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c45e3f-bb wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c45e3f-bb">Harry Dolan (1916) — Taylor — WWI, Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_3ebbfd-7e wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_3ebbfd-7e">Noble Doss (1939-41) — Temple — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_be6a36-21 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_be6a36-21">Addison Baker Duncan (1915) — Waco — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_e2251f-08 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_e2251f-08">Glen Dyer (1954) — Sinton — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_52b196-20 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_52b196-20">John Franklin Easter (1902) — Itasca — Spanish-American War</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_173881-83 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_173881-83">Robert Lee Edge (1944) — Dallas — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_76620d-a6 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_76620d-a6">James Archibald “Pete” Edmond (1913-15) — Waco — WWI, Army; killed in action in October 1918</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_61564d-52 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_61564d-52">Joseph Ferguson Ellis (1920) — Lockhart — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_64b3f2-e0 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_64b3f2-e0">Joseph Henry Ellis (1918) — San Saba — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_fb0ca7-ec wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_fb0ca7-ec">Gover “Ox” Emerson (1929-30) — Orange — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_2113f8-ad wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_2113f8-ad">Bernard Joseph “Bernie Esunas” (1936-38) — Washington, DC — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_a668f4-80 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_a668f4-80">Don Fambrough (1942) — Longview — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c9317e-e8 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c9317e-e8">Elmo Felfe (1945) — Thorndale — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c02fa0-02 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c02fa0-02">Jackie H. Field (1941-42) — Mission — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_8a5f55-47 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_8a5f55-47">Robert Franklin “Bob” Finn (1953-54) — Taft — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_ee82e9-4a wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_ee82e9-4a">Harold Joe Fischer (1941-42, 44) — Austin — WWII, Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_ceab1e-c9 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_ceab1e-c9">Preston Flanagan (1940-41) — Longview — WWII, Korea and Vietnam; Air Force, retired as a lieutenant colonel</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_7505ab-f9 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_7505ab-f9">Jack Freeman (1939, 41-42) — Mexia — WWII, Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_3f67f0-ed wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_3f67f0-ed">Floyd Garrett (1931) — China Spring — WWII, Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_f13315-86 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_f13315-86">William Covington “W.C.” Gathings, Jr. (1901) — Covington — Spanish-American War</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_ced16e-10 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_ced16e-10">Frank Gerling (1944) — Austin — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_5a5aae-27 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_5a5aae-27">Audrey Lee Gill (1941-42, 46) — Sweetwater — WWII, Army Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_ee73e7-ac wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_ee73e7-ac">John Ellis Gill (1938-40) — Amarillo — WWII, Army Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_99f3fd-a4 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_99f3fd-a4">Byron Gillory (1945-48) — Marshall — Air Force; A career USAF officer who retired as a colonel. He was also a member of the first football coaching staff at the Air Force Academy.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_92c584-e6 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_92c584-e6">William Gohmert (1919) — San Antonio — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_758b19-c6 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_758b19-c6">David Gonzalez (2016) — Chicago, Illinois — Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_91dfc7-69 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_91dfc7-69">James William “Red” Goodwin (1939-40) — Amarillo — WWII, Army Air Corps; killed in action in April 1944.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_bb3a4d-b1 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_bb3a4d-b1">Edwin Ghent Graves (1917-19) — Galveston — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_734ad5-ce wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_734ad5-ce">Archibald Duncan “Archie” Gray (1920-22) — Baileyville — WWI, Army signal corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_631400-11 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_631400-11">Jack Gray (1933-34) — Wills Point — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_6792a2-12 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_6792a2-12">Lewis Gray (1937-39) — Gorman — WWII, Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_014260-59 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_014260-59">Ralph Greear (1932-33) — Clovis, New Mexico — WWII, Army; killed in action in the Battle of Hurtgen Forest on November 29, 1944.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_95a793-8b wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_95a793-8b">Charles Lawless Green (1917) — Cameron — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_66b16a-ed wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_66b16a-ed">George Maverick Green (1919-20) — San Antonio — WWI and WWII</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_5e71c1-43 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_5e71c1-43">John Bachman Greer (1917-19) — Waco — WWI and WWII, Navy; died in a Navy hospital in New York on June 10, 1944.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_8624bc-ef wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_8624bc-ef">Marcel Gres (1943) — San Francisco, California — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_ce8a1b-d5 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_ce8a1b-d5">Harold Griffin (1934-35) — Breckenridge — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_ccdf71-e9 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_ccdf71-e9">James Robert “Jimmie” Grubbs (1939-40) — Houston — WWII</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_6ef4a9-b8 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_6ef4a9-b8">Frank Guess (1946-48) — Wharton — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_9d0862-79 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_9d0862-79">James Robert “Jimmy” Hadlock (1933-35) — Marshall — WWII, Army Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_5b9f01-48 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_5b9f01-48">Halkert Alford Halbert (1914) — Coleman — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_216726-a7 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_216726-a7">Ahmard Hall (2004-05) — Angleton — Marines; Kosovo, Afghanistan</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_679f40-b2 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_679f40-b2">Lawrence Hamilton (1917) — Dallas — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_65fe04-10 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_65fe04-10">Robert Kittrell Hanger (1916) — Fort Worth — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_f5c0de-c1 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_f5c0de-c1">William Penn Hargrove (1928-29) — Beaumont — WWII, Army Air Forces</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_9dd4af-ad wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_9dd4af-ad">Henry Harkins (1941) — Marshall — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_db19c3-7f wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_db19c3-7f">Rube Lee Harkins, Jr. (1939-41) — Marshall — WWII</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_4c2edc-29 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_4c2edc-29">Thomas Harrell (1945) — Norman, Oklahoma — WWII</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_875add-0d wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_875add-0d">Henry “Demp” Harris (1941-42, 46) — Camden, Alabama — WWII</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c4e4d3-cc wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c4e4d3-cc">Richard Coke Harris (1894) — Comanche — Spanish-American War</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_1db862-2a wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_1db862-2a">Thomas Maxey Hart (1916, 19-20) — Austin — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_724668-e7 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_724668-e7">Clyde Harville (1943) — Ballinger — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_5b6ffc-86 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_5b6ffc-86">Samuel Harwell (1916, 19) — Corsicana — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_9af68b-2b wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_9af68b-2b">Charles Fred Hawn (1929, 31) — Athens — WWII, Naval Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c80a52-4a wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c80a52-4a">Jesse Hawthorne (1940) — Port Arthur — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_165c8e-d1 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_165c8e-d1">Ed Heap (1945-46) — Temple — WWII</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_d946ab-0c wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_d946ab-0c">Walter Heap (1941, 46) — Taylor — WWII, Coast Guard</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_733fd8-bd wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_733fd8-bd">Bertram Hedick (1916, 19) — Mineral Wells — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_2fc9e8-83 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_2fc9e8-83">Hans Richard Frantz Helland (1910) — Waxahachie — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_e51c94-fe wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_e51c94-fe">James Higginbotham (1912) — Dublin — Naval reserve flying corps; died after a plane crash near Hicks Field in Fort Worth on February 23, 1918.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_bb2203-6e wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_bb2203-6e">Lewis Holder (1946-48) — Dallas — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_9d7645-26 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_9d7645-26">Henry Lewis Hook (1944) — Houston — WWII, Navy; later a longtime civilian employee of the Department of Defense</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_418398-3e wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_418398-3e">Fred Walter Householder (1904-05) — Charlie — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_7f2f1b-59 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_7f2f1b-59">Kyle Hrncir (2018) — San Antonio — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_538d45-61 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_538d45-61">Billy Hughes (1935-36) — Van Alstyne — WWII</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_58c5ee-99 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_58c5ee-99">Simeon Hardin Hulsey (1920) — Bonham — WWI and WWII; He was a doctor who held the rank of colonel and was commanding officer of the 36th Evacuation Hospital, which operated in the Pacific Theater of World War II.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_7a1085-fc wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_7a1085-fc">Glenn Jackson (1937-38, 40) — Corpus Christi — WWII, Army Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_230075-e0 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_230075-e0">John Andrew Jackson, Jr. (1902) — Austin — Spanish-American War</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_424b1d-39 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_424b1d-39">Ransom Jackson (1945) — Little Rock, Arkansas — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_a6a491-20 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_a6a491-20">Gillis Johnson (1915-16) — Fort Worth — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_a438b0-b2 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_a438b0-b2">Woody Johnson (1941) — Tyler — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_bc1c0c-ec wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_bc1c0c-ec">James Carroll “T” Jones (1950-52) — Childress — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_8b2e22-2a wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_8b2e22-2a">James Slaughter “Snakey” Jones (1895-96) — Bastrop — WWI, Army captain; later a Judge Advocate in the National Guard who held the rank of lieutenant colonel.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_f6dfd4-0e wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_f6dfd4-0e">Murray Brashear Jones (1908-09) — Houston — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_906773-ef wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_906773-ef">Raymond Jones (1942, 46-47) — Austin — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_e97f1e-a8 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_e97f1e-a8">Louis Jordan (1911-14) — Fredericksburg — WWI, Army; killed in action in March 1918</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_46ce91-13 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_46ce91-13">Charles Herbert Jungmichel (1947) — Austin — WWII, Army Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_4d5c30-e8 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_4d5c30-e8">Harold “Buddy” Jungmichel (1940-41) — Thorndale — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_ded4b0-70 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_ded4b0-70">Hubert “Buster” Jurecka (1933-35) — Robstown — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_8f3bbf-5f wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_8f3bbf-5f">Bothwell Kane (1912) — Fort Worth — WWI, Army; killed in action in July 1918</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_400eb8-c7 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_400eb8-c7">Nathan Kaspar (2001) — Ganado — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_0d20b7-bc wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_0d20b7-bc">Ray Keck (1914) — Cotulla — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c04ca1-b1 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c04ca1-b1">Raymond Keeling (1935-37) — Dallas — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_40dd5c-a3 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_40dd5c-a3">Arthur Kelleher (1910) — Austin — WWI, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_4864ce-19 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_4864ce-19">Raymond Keller (1899) — San Antonio — Spanish-American War</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c0bd11-e7 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c0bd11-e7">Winchester Kelso (1915) — San Antonio — WWI, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_34afb1-29 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_34afb1-29">Thurman August “T.A.” Kinder (1900) — Marble Hill, Missouri — WWI, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_f5bc21-e8 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_f5bc21-e8">George Cyrus Kindley (1904) — Graham — WWI, medical corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_0ea33b-71 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_0ea33b-71">Clarence Waldman King (1896) — San Antonio — Spanish-American War, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_eb95ef-19 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_eb95ef-19">Arnold Kirkpatrick (1909-11) — Brownwood — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_0d5753-38 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_0d5753-38">James Shiro “Jim” Kishi (1943) — Houston — Army, WWII and Korean War; a very experienced pilot and engineer who spent a decade as director of research and development for the Army Aviation Test Board at Fort Rucker, Alabama</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_42385c-53 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_42385c-53">Ernest Koy (1930-32) — Sealy — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_83317d-91 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_83317d-91">Malcolm Kutner (1939-41) — Dallas — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_35c6fd-4b wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_35c6fd-4b">Thomas Wade “Tom” Landry (1947-48) — Mission — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_343618-cd wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_343618-cd">William Allyn “Rip” Lang (1916) — Corsicana — WWI, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_f40c6b-a1 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_f40c6b-a1">Wallace Lawson (1936-38) — Cleburne — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_f236a8-3c wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_f236a8-3c">Pete Layden (1939-41) — Dallas — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_1d9b15-f4 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_1d9b15-f4">Bobby Layne (1944-47) — Dallas — WWII, Merchant Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_59a1b6-25 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_59a1b6-25">Charles Holland Leavell (1896-98) — Georgetown — Spanish-American War</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_8ae56e-cb wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_8ae56e-cb">Bobby Coy Lee (1943, 48-49) — Austin — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_72f621-bf wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_72f621-bf">George Luhn (1923) — Taylor — WWI, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_d8fe5d-9d wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_d8fe5d-9d">Joe Magliolo (1942-43, 47) — Galveston — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_45ff24-8f wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_45ff24-8f">William Main (1943) — Danville, California — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_8bbaaa-d7 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_8bbaaa-d7">Keifer Marshall (1943) — Temple — WWII, Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_06045f-db wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_06045f-db">Vernon Martin (1940-41) — Amarillo — WWII, Army Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_188bb1-77 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_188bb1-77">Martin Luther “Happy” Massingill (1909-10) — Midlothian — WWI, Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_a642c3-74 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_a642c3-74">Julian Mastin (1919) — Fort Worth — WWI, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_fe9b75-b2 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_fe9b75-b2">Kenneth Matthews (1941-42) — Corpus Christi — WWII, Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_78925c-f0 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_78925c-f0">Stanley Mauldin (1940-42) — Amarillo — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_a67387-c9 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_a67387-c9">Frederick John Maurer (1943) — Eureka, California — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_6043a3-35 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_6043a3-35">Lewis Maverick (1896) — San Antonio — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_733f3b-3a wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_733f3b-3a">Ray Mayfield (1944) — Galena Park — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_d06393-12 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_d06393-12">Lewis “Mickey” Mayne (1941-42) — Cuero — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c66d0b-23 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c66d0b-23">Jerry McCauley (1945-46) — Lubbock — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_6dbc70-57 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_6dbc70-57">George Howard “Hook” McCullough (1920-21) — Fayette, Missouri — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_1327d9-03 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_1327d9-03">George Wendell McCullough (1919) — Waco — WWI and WWII, Navy and Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_b9ca40-80 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_b9ca40-80">Ned McDonald (1937-39) — Caldwell — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_a07745-9d wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_a07745-9d">William McGinnis (1943) — Wichita Falls — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_85b1a5-a7 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_85b1a5-a7">Roy Dale McKay (1941-42) — Junction — WWII, Navy Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_7225a1-83 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_7225a1-83">Ray McLane (1893-95) — Laredo — Spanish-American War, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_0b8278-89 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_0b8278-89">William Emmet McMahon (1900-01) — Savoy — WWI, Army; Judge Advocate General’s Office</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_99b35f-7f wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_99b35f-7f">Allen McMurrey (1915-16) — Cuero — WWI, hospital apprentice; WWII, Board of Examining Physicians</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_556f5a-4a wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_556f5a-4a">Claude Meadows (1928-29) — Waco — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_61a5f6-43 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_61a5f6-43">Kenneth Merritt (1944) — Dallas — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_7deedc-3d wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_7deedc-3d">Thomas Milik (1944) — Carteret, New Jersey — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_26b2ab-20 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_26b2ab-20">John Max Minor (1941-42) — Tahoka — Army and Air Force; West Point grad who retired as a colonel in 1975</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_15e8d3-bd wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_15e8d3-bd">Henry Mittermayer (1936-37) — South Bend, Indiana — WWII, Army Air Corps; later as a civilian he spent many years managing businesses on various U.S. military bases</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_f33a12-df wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_f33a12-df">Robert “Bobby” Moers (1938) — Houston — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_9a5602-3e wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_9a5602-3e">Fred West Moore (1916-17) — Austin — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_175eb2-24 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_175eb2-24">Murray Moore (1924-26) — Electra — WWII, Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_06f05c-75 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_06f05c-75">Glen Morries (1942) — Temple — WWII, Army; killed in action on November 27, 1944</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_d50de6-80 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_d50de6-80">William Murray (1911-13) — Floresville — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_2867da-c0 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_2867da-c0">Park Myers (1937-39) — Caldwell, Kansas — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_7744c3-20 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_7744c3-20">Horace Neilson (1914) — Ladonia — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_e52815-1d wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_e52815-1d">Grady Niblo (1911, 13) — Dallas — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_eeb436-d8 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_eeb436-d8">Robert Read Nunn (1917) — Corsicana — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_8468d3-ff wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_8468d3-ff">Guy Nunnelly (1945) — Port Arthur — WWII</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_cde6a9-22 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_cde6a9-22">Richard Ochoa (1950-52) — Laredo — Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_ac7e25-0d wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_ac7e25-0d">Dan O’Connell (1917) — Palestine — WWI, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_6d8b9c-52 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_6d8b9c-52">Jimmy Dan Pace (1951-52) — Kenedy — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_b6468c-af wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_b6468c-af">Jim Pakenham (1949) — Longview — Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_6ce11b-08 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_6ce11b-08">Joe Parker (1941-43) — Wichita Falls — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_aa2a25-53 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_aa2a25-53">Arlis Parkhurst (1956-58) — Colorado City — Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_37c21c-e7 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_37c21c-e7">David Paul Parkinson (1952-54) — Baytown — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_a30f3c-12 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_a30f3c-12">Rasmus Black “R.B.” Patrick, Jr. (1939) — Olney — WWII, Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c544bc-93 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c544bc-93">Robert John Patterson (1942) — Texarkana, Arkansas — WWII, Army Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_7d320a-d3 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_7d320a-d3">Albert William Penn (1916-17, 19) — Austin — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_3fc8b7-a9 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_3fc8b7-a9">Marshall Pennington (1933-34) — Georgetown — WWII</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_cfdab7-bd wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_cfdab7-bd">Rufus Perry (1910-11) — Brownwood — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_44df60-2b wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_44df60-2b">Derwood Pevetto (1939, 41) — Port Arthur — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_9eef8e-64 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_9eef8e-64">Henry Charles Pfannkuche (1924-25) — San Antonio — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_76ae9f-18 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_76ae9f-18">Charles Phillips (1943) — Paducah — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_8c905b-68 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_8c905b-68">Bradley Poronsky (2005) — Air Force Academy, Colorado — Air Force, Judge Advocate General’s Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_256d8d-22 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_256d8d-22">Billy Porter (1950) — Tyler — Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_e8a9c1-e2 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_e8a9c1-e2">Melvin Preibisch (1933) — Sealy — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_04245f-86 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_04245f-86">Joseph Carlyle “Buck” Prejean (1931-33) — Orange — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_8c5eb0-a3 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_8c5eb0-a3">Ed Price (football letterman, 1930-32; head football coach, 1951-56) — Corsicana — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_49c535-83 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_49c535-83">Ben Proctor (1948-50) — Austin — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_d6f804-3d wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_d6f804-3d">Leslie Proctor (1942) — Temple — WWI and Korean War, Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_f09be1-70 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_f09be1-70">Nelson Puett Sr. (1911-12) — Temple — WWI, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_d650eb-16 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_d650eb-16">Nelson Puett Jr. (1938-40) — Luling — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_7341ee-85 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_7341ee-85">William Jackson “Jack” Rhodes (1937-38) — Lexington — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_f425e4-1e wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_f425e4-1e">Walton Roberts (1941-42) — Tyler — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_059639-63 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_059639-63">Darrell Royal (head football coach 1957-1976) — Hollis, Oklahoma — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_69bac5-cc wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_69bac5-cc">Bennie Rundell (1931-33) — Austin — WWII, Army Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_7e1c1e-83 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_7e1c1e-83">Clarence Rundell (1926) — Austin — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_3ed344-b6 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_3ed344-b6">Jack Sachse (1941-42, 44) — Electra — Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_d861f0-c7 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_d861f0-c7">Perry Samuels (1948-49) — San Antonio — Army, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_fa1315-fb wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_fa1315-fb">Orban “Spec” Sanders (1940-41) — Temple, Oklahoma — WWII</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_3d75f1-2e wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_3d75f1-2e">Philip Sanger (1933-34) — Waco — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_eae0f4-83 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_eae0f4-83">Mack Saxon (1925-26) — Temple — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_462ddc-6f wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_462ddc-6f">Richard Schulte (1957-59) — Hondo — Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_5dfee0-36 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_5dfee0-36">Joe Schwarting (1941-42) — Waco — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_5ad157-c8 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_5ad157-c8">Dale Schwartzkopf (1945-48) — La Crosse, Kansas — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_4f7d14-1a wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_4f7d14-1a">Wallace Scott (1941-42) — Tyler — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_9d646a-0b wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_9d646a-0b">Charles Lee Sens (1916, 21) — Cameron — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_3af6f9-36 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_3af6f9-36">Hilliard Judge “Bubba” Shands Jr. (1947-50) — Lufkin — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c46be5-88 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c46be5-88">Robert Pendexter “Dexter” Shelley (1931-33) — San Antonio — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_748608-b8 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_748608-b8">Ney “Red” Sheridan (1934-36) — Sweetwater — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_ddc6a7-75 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_ddc6a7-75">Sylvan Simpson (1915) — Llano — WWI and WWII; Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_2bcb97-41 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_2bcb97-41">Joe Brevard Smartt (1933-35) — Austin — WWII</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c96719-5a wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c96719-5a">Pete Smith (1917) — Austin — WWI, Army Air Force; WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_a0ce84-93 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_a0ce84-93">Pablo David Soliz (1986) — Falfurrias — Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_b2ec6a-46 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_b2ec6a-46">Charles “Sonny” Sowell (1951) — San Antonio — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_171b36-32 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_171b36-32">Mortimer “Bud” Sprague (1923-24) — Dallas — WWII, Army; graduated as a cadet from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in 1929, but resigned his commission shortly afterward. Volunteered for service in the Army in May of 1941 and was a colonel by the end of WWII.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_ef68bc-88 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_ef68bc-88">Franklin Stacy (1922) — Austin — WWI, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_79803a-82 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_79803a-82">Tom Stolhandske (1950-52) — Baytown — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_ea0d57-24 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_ea0d57-24">James Michael “Mike” Sweeney (1938, 40-41) — Amarillo — WWII, Army Air Force, killed in a plane crash in August 1944.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_f96878-65 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_f96878-65">David Thayer (1939-40) — Houston — WWII, Army Air Corps; flew over 50 combat missions and attained the rank of lieutenant colonel.</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_f26736-d1 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_f26736-d1">Algernon Thweatt (1899) — Austin — Spanish-American War</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_1a1ccd-1c wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_1a1ccd-1c">Herbert Tigner (1926-28) — Houston — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_6ce3ce-0d wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_6ce3ce-0d">James Wade “Jim” Tolbert (1933, 35) — Farmersville — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_705716-96 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_705716-96">Mike Trant (1954-56) — Tyler — Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_11b339-12 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_11b339-12">Charles Edward Turner (1913-15) — Roswell, New Mexico — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_2364db-1e wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_2364db-1e">Conrad Eugene Van Ghent (head football coach 1916) — Ottumwa, Iowa — WWI, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_fc48cb-be wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_fc48cb-be">Victor Fredrick “Vic” Vasicek (1946-48) — El Campo — Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_c76ffa-e9 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_c76ffa-e9">Jake Verde (1934) — Beaumont — Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_e1ddad-28 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_e1ddad-28">Morgan Vining (1910) — Austin — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_24903a-88 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_24903a-88">Homer Waits (1916-17) — San Antonio — Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_6bf5a1-65 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_6bf5a1-65">Frank Bert Walker (1914-15) — Azle — WWI</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_4f19aa-63 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_4f19aa-63">Jack Carpenter Wallace, Sr. (1945) — Edinburg — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_b8ccc5-3b wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_b8ccc5-3b">George Watkins (1941-42) — San Saba — WWII, Marines</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_157c81-0d wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_157c81-0d">Jimmie Watson (1944) — Midland — WWII, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_207129-d8 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_207129-d8">Don Weedon (1939, 46) — Bryan — WWII, Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_e6b354-47 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_e6b354-47">Woodrow Weir (1933-35) — Georgetown — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_ff70ce-4d wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_ff70ce-4d">Jack West (1941-42) — Waco — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_a3388d-14 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_a3388d-14">Harlan Wetz (1943-46) — New Braunfels — longtime National Guard officer, retired as a major</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_1ad4ab-14 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_1ad4ab-14">Tom Wetzel (1933) — Comanche — WWII, Navy</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_6c97ae-46 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_6c97ae-46">Berry Whitaker (head football coach 1920-22) — Anderson, Indiana — WWI, Army</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_26481f-e6 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_26481f-e6">Theron Wilbanks (1928) — Greenville — Army Air Corps</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_92a5b7-a5 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_92a5b7-a5">Don Williams (1938-40) — Amarillo — WWII, Korea; Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_906db4-f0 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_906db4-f0">Hugh Wolfe (1934, 36-37) — Stephenville — WWII, Army Air Force</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_1e8e0e-b3 wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_1e8e0e-b3">Stuart Wright (1924-25) — Dallas — WWII, Korean War; Air Force, retired as a major general</h5>



<h5 class="kt-adv-heading948_1a2c8d-ff wp-block-kadence-advancedheading" data-kb-block="kb-adv-heading948_1a2c8d-ff">We owe all of these men above a debt of gratitude for their service. Here’s a “Thank you” to all of them, and Happy Veterans Day to any vets who happen read this post, regardless of your collegiate affiliation or fandom.</h5>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/survivors-and-those-lost-in-american-wars/">Survivors and those Lost in  American wars</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
					<wfw:commentRss>https://texaslsn.org/survivors-and-those-lost-in-american-wars/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
			<slash:comments>1</slash:comments>
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Ray Dulak baseball- Vietnam war</title>
		<link>https://texaslsn.org/ray-dulak-baseball-vietnam-war/</link>
					<comments>https://texaslsn.org/ray-dulak-baseball-vietnam-war/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Billy Dale]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 07 Jul 2024 08:47:25 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[LOST AT WAR - Horns Up]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[baseball]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dulak]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://texaslsn.org/ray-dulak-baseball-vietnam-war/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>&#160;Celebrating Longhorn baseball player Ray Dulak’s life- killed in Vietnam at the age of 26 &#160; Rey Moreno, a past manager of Track and Field for the Longhorns, sent TLSN a story about Whataburger sponsoring young athletes dreaming of future greatness in the late 1950s. In those years, the Whataburger promotion stated: “It’s Not Whether...</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/ray-dulak-baseball-vietnam-war/">Ray Dulak baseball- Vietnam war</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="sqs-html-content">
<h1 style="text-align:center;white-space:pre-wrap;">&nbsp;<strong>Celebrating Longhorn baseball player Ray Dulak’s life- killed in Vietnam at the age of 26 </strong></h1>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong>Rey Moreno, a past manager of Track and Field for the Longhorns, sent TLSN a story about Whataburger sponsoring young athletes dreaming of future greatness in the late 1950s.</strong></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong>In those years, the Whataburger promotion stated:</strong></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong>“It’s Not Whether You Win or Lose, It’s Where You Eat After the Game That’s Important.”</strong></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong>Future Longhorn baseball player #11 was on the Whataburger team.</strong></p>
</div>
<div
        class="
          image-block-outer-wrapper
          layout-caption-below
          design-layout-inline
          combination-animation-none
          individual-animation-none
          individual-text-animation-none
        "
        data-test="image-block-inline-outer-wrapper"
    ></p>
<figure
            class="
              sqs-block-image-figure
              intrinsic
            "
            style="max-width:960px;"
        ></p>
<div
              class="image-block-wrapper"
              data-animation-role="image"
          ></p>
<div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element
              has-aspect-ratio
            " style="
                position: relative;
                 
                overflow: hidden;-webkit-mask-image: -webkit-radial-gradient(white, black);
              "
              >                <img loading="lazy" data-stretch="false" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/Whataburger.jpg" data-image="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/Whataburger.jpg" data-image-dimensions="960x540" data-image-focal-point="0.5,0.5" alt="" data-load="false" elementtiming="system-image-block" src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/54abf074e4b0b6dc3e24eebb/f6c42641-f196-488a-bce0-25da0b583f6d/Whataburger.jpg" width="960" height="540" alt="" sizes="auto, (max-width: 640px) 100vw, (max-width: 767px) 100vw, 100vw" style="display:block;object-fit: cover; width: 100%; height: 100%; object-position: 50% 50%" onload="this.classList.add(&quot;loaded&quot;)" loading="lazy" decoding="async" data-loader="sqs">
            </div>
</p></div>
</figure></div>
<div class="sqs-html-content">
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong>As a Longhorn Texas Coach, Bibb Falk moved him from pitcher to first base and sometimes to the outfield so that Falk could exploit Ray’s hitting skills at the plate.</strong></p>
</div>
<div
        class="
          image-block-outer-wrapper
          layout-caption-below
          design-layout-inline
          combination-animation-none
          individual-animation-none
          individual-text-animation-none
        "
        data-test="image-block-inline-outer-wrapper"
    ></p>
<figure
            class="
              sqs-block-image-figure
              intrinsic
            "
            style="max-width:750px;"
        ></p>
<div
              class="image-block-wrapper"
              data-animation-role="image"
          ></p>
<div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element
              has-aspect-ratio
            " style="
                position: relative;
                 
                overflow: hidden;-webkit-mask-image: -webkit-radial-gradient(white, black);
              "
              >                <img loading="lazy" data-stretch="false" src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/54abf074e4b0b6dc3e24eebb/3cbd856e-4314-4113-9164-fa7928ccaf98/1964%2B%2BRay%2BDulak.jfif" data-image="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/54abf074e4b0b6dc3e24eebb/3cbd856e-4314-4113-9164-fa7928ccaf98/1964%2B%2BRay%2BDulak.jfif" data-image-dimensions="750x422" data-image-focal-point="0.5,0.5" alt="" data-load="false" elementtiming="system-image-block" src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/54abf074e4b0b6dc3e24eebb/3cbd856e-4314-4113-9164-fa7928ccaf98/1964%2B%2BRay%2BDulak.jfif" width="750" height="422" alt="" sizes="auto, (max-width: 640px) 100vw, (max-width: 767px) 100vw, 100vw" style="display:block;object-fit: cover; width: 100%; height: 100%; object-position: 50% 50%" onload="this.classList.add(&quot;loaded&quot;)" loading="lazy" decoding="async" data-loader="sqs">
            </div>
</p></div><figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
<div class="image-caption">
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">Ray Dulak top row third from the right. </p>
</div>
</figcaption></figure>
</p></div>
<div
        class="
          image-block-outer-wrapper
          layout-caption-below
          design-layout-inline
          combination-animation-none
          individual-animation-none
          individual-text-animation-none
        "
        data-test="image-block-inline-outer-wrapper"
    ></p>
<figure
            class="
              sqs-block-image-figure
              intrinsic
            "
            style="max-width:100%;"
        ></p>
<div
              class="image-block-wrapper"
              data-animation-role="image"
          ></p>
<div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element
              has-aspect-ratio
            " style="
                position: relative;
                 
                overflow: hidden;-webkit-mask-image: -webkit-radial-gradient(white, black);
              "
              >                <img loading="lazy" data-stretch="true" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/19632B2Bbaseball2Bray2BDulac.jpg" data-image="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/19632B2Bbaseball2Bray2BDulac.jpg" data-image-dimensions="248x310" data-image-focal-point="0.5,0.5" alt="" data-load="false" elementtiming="system-image-block" src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/54abf074e4b0b6dc3e24eebb/6345996e-9d3e-48dd-a804-fc3315fe2f42/1963%2B%2Bbaseball%2Bray%2BDulac.jpg" width="248" height="310" alt="" sizes="auto, (max-width: 640px) 100vw, (max-width: 767px) 100vw, 100vw" style="display:block;object-fit: cover; width: 100%; height: 100%; object-position: 50% 50%" onload="this.classList.add(&quot;loaded&quot;)" loading="lazy" decoding="async" data-loader="sqs">
            </div>
</p></div><figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
<div class="image-caption">
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong>But Dulak’s passions included more than just baseball. He loved his country and chose to put his professional baseball career hopes on hold to fight in the Vietnam War.    Captain Ray Dulak was deployed to Vietnam in March 1969 as a helicopter pilot. It was in Vietnam at age 26 that Ray lost his life. </strong></p>
</div>
</figcaption></figure>
</p></div>
<div class="sqs-html-content">
<p style="text-align:center;white-space:pre-wrap;" class=""><strong>Horns ????</strong></p>
<p style="text-align:center;white-space:pre-wrap;" class=""><strong>Jim Raup shares his memories of Ray Dulak</strong></p>
</div>
<div class="
  sqs-gallery-container
  sqs-gallery-block-grid
  sqs-gallery-aspect-ratio-square
  sqs-gallery-thumbnails-per-row-2
  sqs-gallery-block-show-meta
  sqs-gallery-block-meta-only-title
  block-animation-none
  clear"
></p>
<div class="sqs-gallery">
<div class="slide" data-type="image" data-animation-role="image">
<div class="margin-wrapper">
                <a
                      role="presentation"
                  class="
                    image-slide-anchor
                    content-fit
                  "
                ><br />
                  <noscript><img decoding="async" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1966JimRaup-1.jpg" alt="1966 Jim Raup.jpg" /></noscript><img decoding="async" class="thumb-image" elementtiming="system-gallery-block-grid" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1966JimRaup-1.jpg" data-image="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1966JimRaup-1.jpg" data-image-dimensions="1599x1967" data-image-focal-point="0.5,0.5" alt="1966 Jim Raup.jpg" data-load="false" data-image-id="6492edb4f25791372da6409f" data-type="image" /><br />
                </a></p>
<div class="image-slide-title"></div>
</p></div>
</p></div>
<div class="slide" data-type="image" data-animation-role="image">
<div class="margin-wrapper">
                <a
                      role="presentation"
                  class="
                    image-slide-anchor
                    content-fit
                  "
                ><br />
                  <noscript><img decoding="async" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1966JimmyRaupbaseball-1.jpg" alt="1966 Jimmy Raup baseball.jpg" /></noscript><img decoding="async" class="thumb-image" elementtiming="system-gallery-block-grid" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1966JimmyRaupbaseball-1.jpg" data-image="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1966JimmyRaupbaseball-1.jpg" data-image-dimensions="1304x1087" data-image-focal-point="0.5,0.5" alt="1966 Jimmy Raup baseball.jpg" data-load="false" data-image-id="6492edb4af7f653d8055e404" data-type="image" /><br />
                </a></p>
<div class="image-slide-title"></div>
</p></div>
</p></div>
</p></div>
</div>
<style type="text/css" id="design-grid-css">
#block-yui_3_17_2_1_1687349817432_11540 .sqs-gallery-block-grid .sqs-gallery-design-grid { margin-right: -20px; }
#block-yui_3_17_2_1_1687349817432_11540 .sqs-gallery-block-grid .sqs-gallery-design-grid-slide .margin-wrapper { margin-right: 20px; margin-bottom: 20px; }
</style>
<div class="sqs-html-content">
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong>Jim wrote an award-winning recollection of his last game as a pitcher for the Longhorns, and the link to his article is at </strong><a href="https://www.texaslsn.org/jim-raup-by-horns-sports"><strong>https://www.texaslsn.org/jim-raup-by-horns-sports</strong></a></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong>Jim says, “I played with Ray for two years if he graduated in 1966. He was a solid player and a good guy. He definitely could hit college pitching.”</strong></p>
</div>
<div
        class="
          image-block-outer-wrapper
          layout-caption-below
          design-layout-inline
          combination-animation-none
          individual-animation-none
          individual-text-animation-none
        "
        data-test="image-block-inline-outer-wrapper"
    ></p>
<figure
            class="
              sqs-block-image-figure
              intrinsic
            "
            style="max-width:750px;"
        ></p>
<div
              class="image-block-wrapper"
              data-animation-role="image"
          ></p>
<div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element
              has-aspect-ratio
            " style="
                position: relative;
                 
                overflow: hidden;-webkit-mask-image: -webkit-radial-gradient(white, black);
              "
              >                <img loading="lazy" data-stretch="false" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/Ray2BDulak.jpg" data-image="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/Ray2BDulak.jpg" data-image-dimensions="750x501" data-image-focal-point="0.5,0.5" alt="" data-load="false" elementtiming="system-image-block" src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/54abf074e4b0b6dc3e24eebb/8d4ff205-ab41-40b5-9bed-8b5af8853f12/Ray%2BDulak.jpg" width="750" height="501" alt="" sizes="auto, (max-width: 640px) 100vw, (max-width: 767px) 100vw, 100vw" style="display:block;object-fit: cover; width: 100%; height: 100%; object-position: 50% 50%" onload="this.classList.add(&quot;loaded&quot;)" loading="lazy" decoding="async" data-loader="sqs">
            </div>
</p></div>
</figure></div>
<div class="sqs-html-content">
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong>“I heard about his death when it happened, and I recently found Ray and Terry Hale, our student trainer, on the Viet Nam Wall at this site </strong><a href="https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.vvmf.org%2FWall-of-Faces%2F&amp;data=05%7C01%7C%7Ce821d01bf8584c8d3d0c08db69a4aa6f%7C84df9e7fe9f640afb435aaaaaaaaaaaa%7C1%7C0%7C638219928174253796%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&amp;sdata=Ka5tA8LOTPq6RZyJL6FLm535tBB0NcXBJPmrDHGs06Q%3D&amp;reserved=0" title="Protected by Outlook: https://www.vvmf.org/Wall-of-Faces/. Click or tap to follow the link." target="_blank" rel="noopener"><strong>https://www.vvmf.org/Wall-of-Faces/</strong></a></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong>Jim remembers, “he was a very good LH hitter, and my memory says Dulak won an aTm game with a late-inning home run.” The photo is Ray.</strong></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong>Jim continues, “The Viet Nam part of that account is, sadly, true.” “The story being told back then was Ray’s job as a helicopter pilot was to fly Generals and other big brass around after battles to survey battlefields after the fighting was over. He was thought to have a relatively safe job.”</strong></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong>“That is what he was doing on the day he died; small arms fire crashed his helicopter and killed him and his passengers. At the time of his death, someone told me that the flight was his last mission before leaving Viet Nam for home. I do not know if that part of his story is true.”</strong></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong>Jim Raup</strong></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="" data-rte-preserve-empty="true" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">
<p class="" data-rte-preserve-empty="true" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">
</div>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/ray-dulak-baseball-vietnam-war/">Ray Dulak baseball- Vietnam war</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
					<wfw:commentRss>https://texaslsn.org/ray-dulak-baseball-vietnam-war/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
			<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Jack  Chevigny</title>
		<link>https://texaslsn.org/jack-chevigny/</link>
					<comments>https://texaslsn.org/jack-chevigny/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Billy Dale]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 28 May 2024 11:46:10 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[LOST AT WAR - Horns Up]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chevigny]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Coach]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jack]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://texaslsn.org/jack-chevigny/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>&#160;CHEVIGNY IS KILLED ON IWO JIMA IN WWII. HORNS UP! ﻿Another legend surrounding Chevigny is that, after the 1934 football victory, he had been presented a fountain pen with the inscription, &#8220;To Jack Chevigny, a Notre Dame boy who beat Notre Dame&#8221; and that on September 2, 1945, this pen was discovered in the hands...</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/jack-chevigny/">Jack  Chevigny</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="sqs-html-content">
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">&nbsp;<strong><em>CHEVIGNY IS KILLED ON IWO JIMA IN WWII. HORNS UP!</em></strong></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>﻿Another legend surrounding Chevigny is that, after the 1934 football victory, he had been presented a fountain pen with the inscription, &#8220;To Jack Chevigny, a Notre Dame boy who beat Notre Dame&#8221; and that on September 2, 1945, this pen was discovered in the hands of one of the Japanese officer envoys at the surrender of Japan on the battleship USS</em></strong><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Missouri_(BB-63)" title="USS Missouri (BB-63)"><strong><em> </em></strong></a><strong><em>Missouri. The pen was sent back home, and the inscription was changed to read, &#8220;To Jack Chevigny, a Notre Dame boy who gave his life for his country in the spirit of old Notre Dame&#8221; The legend, which surfaced in 1945 in conjunction with the anniversary of the November 10, 1928 football game, has been a part of Notre Dame lore ever since. However, no one in the Chevigny family has seen or confirmed the existence of the pen or that the inscription was changed.</em></strong></p>
<h3 style="text-align:center;white-space:pre-wrap;" data-rte-preserve-empty="true"></h3>
<h3 style="text-align:center;white-space:pre-wrap;" data-rte-preserve-empty="true"></h3>
<h3 style="text-align:center;white-space:pre-wrap;" data-rte-preserve-empty="true"></h3>
<p class="" data-rte-preserve-empty="true" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">
<h3 style="text-align:center;white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>RED GOODWIN</em></strong></h3>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>Red Goodwin in 1941 enlisted in the Air Force and was killed over Germany.</em></strong></p>
<h3 style="text-align:center;white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em><br />RALPH GREEAR</em></strong></h3>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>Ralph Greear 1932 team was a first lieutenant when he was killed in Germany. </em></strong></p>
<h3 style="text-align:center;white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>SHELBY  BUCK</em></strong></h3>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>Shelby Buck 1938 team was a flight officer when he was killed over Europe</em></strong></p>
<p class="" data-rte-preserve-empty="true" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">
<h3 style="text-align:center;white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>GLENN MORRIES 1942  WAS A SERGEANT KILLED IN FRANCE.  NO PHOTO STORY STILL PENDING </em></strong></h3>
<p class="" data-rte-preserve-empty="true" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>Jack Seale </em></strong></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>1940 was killed while flying over Paris. </em></strong></p>
<h3 style="text-align:center;white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>BAHMAN GREER </em></strong></h3>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>Bahman Greer 1917 died of illness while serving as a lieutenant in the Navy. </em></strong></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>1940  Texas relays Conradt Coleman Pack KIA in the Navy WWII</em></strong></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>When I Get to Where I am Going   </em></strong><a href="https://youtu.be/yYHT-TF4KO4"><strong><em>https://youtu.be/yYHT-TF4KO4</em></strong></a></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>Songwriters: Teren George G., and Rutherford Melvern Rivers</em></strong></p>
<p class="" data-rte-preserve-empty="true" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>  </em></strong></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em></p>
<p></em></strong></p>
</div>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/jack-chevigny/">Jack  Chevigny</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
					<wfw:commentRss>https://texaslsn.org/jack-chevigny/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
			<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Conradt Coleman</title>
		<link>https://texaslsn.org/conradt-coleman/</link>
					<comments>https://texaslsn.org/conradt-coleman/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Billy Dale]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Jun 2023 13:22:52 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[LOST AT WAR - Horns Up]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://texaslsn.org/conradt-coleman/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>  1940 Texas relays Conradt Coleman KIA in the Navy WWII  </p>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/conradt-coleman/">Conradt Coleman</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="
          image-block-outer-wrapper
          layout-caption-below
          design-layout-inline
          combination-animation-none
          individual-animation-none
          individual-text-animation-none
        " data-test="image-block-inline-outer-wrapper">
<figure class="
              sqs-block-image-figure
              intrinsic
            " style="max-width: 309px;">
<div class="image-block-wrapper" data-animation-role="image">
<div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element
              has-aspect-ratio
            " style="position: relative; overflow: hidden; -webkit-mask-image: -webkit-radial-gradient(white, black);"> </div>
</div>
<figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
<div class="image-caption">
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">1940 Texas relays Conradt Coleman KIA in the Navy WWII</p>
</div>
</figcaption>
</figure>
</div>
<div class="sqs-html-content">
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;"> </p>
</div>


<figure class="wp-block-image size-full"><img data-dominant-color="86837b" data-has-transparency="false" style="--dominant-color: #86837b;" loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="309" height="1009" src="https://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/1940-Texas-relays-Conrad-Coleman-Pack-KIA-in-the-Navy-WWII.avif" alt="" class="wp-image-39486 not-transparent" srcset="https://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/1940-Texas-relays-Conrad-Coleman-Pack-KIA-in-the-Navy-WWII.avif 309w, https://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/1940-Texas-relays-Conrad-Coleman-Pack-KIA-in-the-Navy-WWII-92x300.avif 92w" sizes="(max-width: 309px) 100vw, 309px" /><figcaption class="wp-element-caption">1940 Texas relays Conrad Coleman Pack KIA in the Navy WWII</figcaption></figure>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/conradt-coleman/">Conradt Coleman</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
					<wfw:commentRss>https://texaslsn.org/conradt-coleman/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
			<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Bahmar Greer &#8211; 1917</title>
		<link>https://texaslsn.org/bahmar-greer-1917/</link>
					<comments>https://texaslsn.org/bahmar-greer-1917/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Billy Dale]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Jun 2023 12:19:48 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[LOST AT WAR - Horns Up]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://texaslsn.org/bahmar-greer-1917/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Bahman Greer 1917 died of illness while serving as a lieutenant in the Navy. &#160;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/bahmar-greer-1917/">Bahmar Greer &#8211; 1917</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div
        class="
          image-block-outer-wrapper
          layout-caption-below
          design-layout-inline
          combination-animation-none
          individual-animation-none
          individual-text-animation-none
        "
        data-test="image-block-inline-outer-wrapper"
    ></p>
<figure
            class="
              sqs-block-image-figure
              intrinsic
            "
            style="max-width:557px;"
        ></p>
<div
              class="image-block-wrapper"
              data-animation-role="image"
          ></p>
<div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element
              has-aspect-ratio
            " style="
                position: relative;
                 
                overflow: hidden;-webkit-mask-image: -webkit-radial-gradient(white, black);
              "
              >                <img loading="lazy" data-stretch="false" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1917BachmanGreerfootball.jpg" data-image="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1917BachmanGreerfootball.jpg" data-image-dimensions="557x631" data-image-focal-point="0.5,0.5" alt="" data-load="false" elementtiming="system-image-block" src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/54abf074e4b0b6dc3e24eebb/a6339d22-d897-4806-8b3f-35976f0f5919/1917+Bachman+Greer+football.jpg" width="557" height="631" alt="" sizes="auto, (max-width: 640px) 100vw, (max-width: 767px) 100vw, 100vw" style="display:block;object-fit: cover; width: 100%; height: 100%; object-position: 50% 50%" onload="this.classList.add(&quot;loaded&quot;)" loading="lazy" decoding="async" data-loader="sqs">
            </div>
</p></div><figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
<div class="image-caption">
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">Bahman Greer 1917 died of illness while serving as a lieutenant in the Navy. </p>
</div>
</figcaption></figure>
</p></div>
<div class="sqs-html-content">
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">&nbsp;</p>
</div>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/bahmar-greer-1917/">Bahmar Greer &#8211; 1917</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
					<wfw:commentRss>https://texaslsn.org/bahmar-greer-1917/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
			<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Jack Seale</title>
		<link>https://texaslsn.org/jack-seale/</link>
					<comments>https://texaslsn.org/jack-seale/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Billy Dale]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Jun 2023 12:12:58 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[LOST AT WAR - Horns Up]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://texaslsn.org/jack-seale/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Jack Seale 1941 track Jack Seale &#160;1940 was killed while flying over Paris.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/jack-seale/">Jack Seale</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="sqs-html-content">
<h3 style="text-align:center;white-space:pre-wrap;">Jack Seale </h3>
</div>
<div
        class="
          image-block-outer-wrapper
          layout-caption-below
          design-layout-inline
          combination-animation-none
          individual-animation-none
          individual-text-animation-none
        "
        data-test="image-block-inline-outer-wrapper"
    ></p>
<figure
            class="
              sqs-block-image-figure
              intrinsic
            "
            style="max-width:117px;"
        ></p>
<div
              class="image-block-wrapper"
              data-animation-role="image"
          ></p>
<div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element
              has-aspect-ratio
            " style="
                position: relative;
                 
                overflow: hidden;-webkit-mask-image: -webkit-radial-gradient(white, black);
              "
              >                <img loading="lazy" data-stretch="false" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1941trackJackSeale28229.jpg" data-image="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1941trackJackSeale28229.jpg" data-image-dimensions="117x239" data-image-focal-point="0.5,0.5" alt="" data-load="false" elementtiming="system-image-block" src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/54abf074e4b0b6dc3e24eebb/bb158b72-a68a-4d38-b578-7d79aeb83667/1941+track+Jack+Seale+%282%29.jpg" width="117" height="239" alt="" sizes="auto, (max-width: 640px) 100vw, (max-width: 767px) 100vw, 100vw" style="display:block;object-fit: cover; width: 100%; height: 100%; object-position: 50% 50%" onload="this.classList.add(&quot;loaded&quot;)" loading="lazy" decoding="async" data-loader="sqs">
            </div>
</p></div><figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
<div class="image-caption">
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">1941 track Jack Seale </p>
</div>
</figcaption></figure>
</p></div>
<div class="sqs-html-content">
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">&nbsp;1940 was killed while flying over Paris. </p>
</div>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/jack-seale/">Jack Seale</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
					<wfw:commentRss>https://texaslsn.org/jack-seale/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
			<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Glenn Morris</title>
		<link>https://texaslsn.org/glenn-morris/</link>
					<comments>https://texaslsn.org/glenn-morris/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Billy Dale]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Jun 2023 12:07:17 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[LOST AT WAR - Horns Up]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://texaslsn.org/glenn-morris/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>&#160;Glenn Morries 1942 was a sergeant killed in France. NO PHOTO story still pending</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/glenn-morris/">Glenn Morris</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="sqs-html-content">
<h3 style="white-space:pre-wrap;">&nbsp;Glenn Morries 1942  was a sergeant killed in France.  NO PHOTO story still pending </h3>
</div>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/glenn-morris/">Glenn Morris</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
					<wfw:commentRss>https://texaslsn.org/glenn-morris/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
			<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Shelby Buck 1938</title>
		<link>https://texaslsn.org/shelby-buck-1938/</link>
					<comments>https://texaslsn.org/shelby-buck-1938/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Billy Dale]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Jun 2023 14:07:23 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[LOST AT WAR - Horns Up]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://texaslsn.org/shelby-buck-1938/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Shelby Buck 1938 team was a flight officer when he was killed over Europe</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/shelby-buck-1938/">Shelby Buck 1938</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="
          image-block-outer-wrapper
          layout-caption-below
          design-layout-inline
          combination-animation-none
          individual-animation-none
          individual-text-animation-none
        " data-test="image-block-inline-outer-wrapper"></p>
<figure class="
              sqs-block-image-figure
              intrinsic
            " style="max-width: 398px;"></p>
<div class="image-block-wrapper" data-animation-role="image">
<div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element
              has-aspect-ratio
            " style="position: relative; overflow: hidden; -webkit-mask-image: -webkit-radial-gradient(white, black);"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" style="display: block; object-fit: cover; width: 100%; height: 100%; object-position: 50% 50%;" src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/54abf074e4b0b6dc3e24eebb/b3d5c2d1-909c-4348-b030-e5a3c6b0fbd3/1938+Shelby+Buck++football+%282%29.jpg" sizes="(max-width: 640px) 100vw, (max-width: 767px) 100vw, 100vw" alt="" width="398" height="451" data-stretch="false" data-image="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1938ShelbyBuckfootball28229.jpg" data-image-dimensions="398x451" data-image-focal-point="0.5,0.5" data-load="false" data-loader="sqs" /></div>
</div><figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
<div class="image-caption">
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;"><strong><em>Shelby Buck 1938 team was a flight officer when he was killed over Europe</em></strong></p>
</div>
</figcaption></figure>
</div>
<div class="sqs-html-content">
<p class="" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">
</div>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/shelby-buck-1938/">Shelby Buck 1938</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
					<wfw:commentRss>https://texaslsn.org/shelby-buck-1938/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
			<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Ralph Greear- 1932</title>
		<link>https://texaslsn.org/ralph-greear-1932/</link>
					<comments>https://texaslsn.org/ralph-greear-1932/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Billy Dale]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Jun 2023 13:49:35 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[LOST AT WAR - Horns Up]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://texaslsn.org/ralph-greear-1932/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>&#160;RALPH GREEAR Ralph Greear 1932 team was a first lieutenant when he was killed in Germany.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/ralph-greear-1932/">Ralph Greear- 1932</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="
  sqs-gallery-container
  sqs-gallery-block-grid
  sqs-gallery-aspect-ratio-square
  sqs-gallery-thumbnails-per-row-3
  sqs-gallery-block-show-meta
  sqs-gallery-block-meta-only-title
  block-animation-none
  clear"
></p>
<div class="sqs-gallery">
<div class="slide" data-type="image" data-animation-role="image">
<div class="margin-wrapper">
                <a
                      role="presentation"
                  class="
                    image-slide-anchor
                    content-fit
                  "
                ><br />
                  <noscript><img decoding="async" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1932footballRalphGreear.jpg" alt="1932 football Ralph Greear.jpg" /></noscript><img decoding="async" class="thumb-image" elementtiming="system-gallery-block-grid" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1932footballRalphGreear.jpg" data-image="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1932footballRalphGreear.jpg" data-image-dimensions="382x485" data-image-focal-point="0.5,0.5" alt="1932 football Ralph Greear.jpg" data-load="false" data-image-id="6488720d1682fe575908dbd4" data-type="image" /><br />
                </a></p>
<div class="image-slide-title"></div>
</p></div>
</p></div>
<div class="slide" data-type="image" data-animation-role="image">
<div class="margin-wrapper">
                <a
                      role="presentation"
                  class="
                    image-slide-anchor
                    content-fit
                  "
                ><br />
                  <noscript><img decoding="async" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1932-1933Hilliard252C2BEarl2BGreear252C2BPrejean.pg_.jpg" alt="1932-1933Hilliard%2C+Earl+Greear%2C+Prejean.pg.jpg" /></noscript><img decoding="async" class="thumb-image" elementtiming="system-gallery-block-grid" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1932-1933Hilliard252C2BEarl2BGreear252C2BPrejean.pg_.jpg" data-image="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1932-1933Hilliard252C2BEarl2BGreear252C2BPrejean.pg_.jpg" data-image-dimensions="603x909" data-image-focal-point="0.5,0.5" alt="1932-1933Hilliard%2C+Earl+Greear%2C+Prejean.pg.jpg" data-load="false" data-image-id="6488720d5de4ef79cfe7bdc9" data-type="image" /><br />
                </a></p>
<div class="image-slide-title"></div>
</p></div>
</p></div>
<div class="slide" data-type="image" data-animation-role="image">
<div class="margin-wrapper">
                <a
                      role="presentation"
                  class="
                    image-slide-anchor
                    content-fit
                  "
                ><br />
                  <noscript><img decoding="async" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1933-19342Bfootball2BHubbell252C2BPennington252C2BPhillips252C2BGreear252C2BTolbert.jpg" alt="1933-1934+football+Hubbell%2C+Pennington%2C+Phillips%2C+Greear%2C+Tolbert.jpg" /></noscript><img decoding="async" class="thumb-image" elementtiming="system-gallery-block-grid" src="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1933-19342Bfootball2BHubbell252C2BPennington252C2BPhillips252C2BGreear252C2BTolbert.jpg" data-image="http://texaslsn.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/1933-19342Bfootball2BHubbell252C2BPennington252C2BPhillips252C2BGreear252C2BTolbert.jpg" data-image-dimensions="468x986" data-image-focal-point="0.5,0.5" alt="1933-1934+football+Hubbell%2C+Pennington%2C+Phillips%2C+Greear%2C+Tolbert.jpg" data-load="false" data-image-id="6488720f320523737e1ebc21" data-type="image" /><br />
                </a></p>
<div class="image-slide-title"></div>
</p></div>
</p></div>
</p></div>
</div>
<style type="text/css" id="design-grid-css">
#block-yui_3_17_2_1_1686663448530_2986 .sqs-gallery-block-grid .sqs-gallery-design-grid { margin-right: -3px; }
#block-yui_3_17_2_1_1686663448530_2986 .sqs-gallery-block-grid .sqs-gallery-design-grid-slide .margin-wrapper { margin-right: 3px; margin-bottom: 3px; }
</style>
<div class="sqs-html-content">
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;">&nbsp;<strong><em>RALPH GREEAR</em></strong></p>
<p class="" style="white-space:pre-wrap;"><strong><em>Ralph Greear 1932 team was a first lieutenant when he was killed in Germany. </em></strong></p>
</div>
<p>The post <a href="https://texaslsn.org/ralph-greear-1932/">Ralph Greear- 1932</a> appeared first on <a href="https://texaslsn.org">Texas Legacy Support Network</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
					<wfw:commentRss>https://texaslsn.org/ralph-greear-1932/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
			<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		
		
			</item>
	</channel>
</rss>

<!--
Performance optimized by W3 Total Cache. Learn more: https://www.boldgrid.com/w3-total-cache/?utm_source=w3tc&utm_medium=footer_comment&utm_campaign=free_plugin

Object Caching 53/133 objects using Disk
Page Caching using Disk: Enhanced 
Minified using Disk
Database Caching 3/46 queries in 0.011 seconds using Disk (Request-wide modification query)

Served from: texaslsn.org @ 2026-04-21 09:51:50 by W3 Total Cache
-->