HomeMy WebLinkAbout2009 Memorial Day
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bove: Zachery Lyerly, 6, holds the Medal of Valor awarded to his late father, Captain Sean E. Lyerly, after he and his mother
right) accepted it during a Memorial Day ceremony at the Brazos Valley Elks Lodge No. 859 in Bryan on Monday. Right: Henry
ill of The National Sojourners plants one of hundreds of American flags placed near the graves of U.S. veterans Monday
orning at College Station City Cemetery. To see more photos in a slideshow, go to www.theeagle.com.
Ve.ts share
stories of war
By MICHELLE CASADY Brazos Valley residents
michelle.casady@theeagle.com attended the Memorial Day
ceremony at Veterans of
Faces weathered and Foreign Wars Post 4692 in
worn from years of Bryan.
work and service to One of those present was
their country were wet with Sonny Franze, 92, a World
tears Monday as veterans War II veteran who was
and private citizens gath- born in Brazos County.
ered to honor those who Franze saw a lot during
have died during military his three years with the
service. United States Army Air
From young veterans of Corps, the predecessor of
the conflicts in Iraq and the U.S. Air Force.
Afghanistan to those who " I was drafted right off
were present at the Battle of the farm in October of
the Bulge and the Battle at
Normandy, hundreds of See VETERAN, Page A7
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Tuesday, May 26, 2009 The Eagle . theeagle.com
Region/ Obituaries
VETERAN: Recalls a visit to a concentration camp
Continued from Al
Normandy just 10 days after
D-Day.
1942," he said. "They had to They were still shelling
make a soldier out of a farm the harbor at that time," he
boy and didn't have much said. "Mines were exploding
time to do it, they needed sol a all over the place. However,
diers so badly." s f a the bodies had all been picked
For his service, Franze was ~t r
up, but there were still
awarded five bronze stars, crashed gliders and debris all
and was present at some of „ over the beach."
the bloodiest and most infa Not all of his service memo-
mous battles of the war. But ries are so somber.
one event in particular stands "I do remember that Bob
out in his mind. ' Hope came over for a USO
"The most important part show out in a pasture for us
of my term over there was my in Belgium," he said.
entry into the Buchenwald Was he a fan of Bob Hope?
Concentratfon Camp," he : • "Well, I guess so. I'd have
said. probably been a fan of just
A sergeant at the time, about anybody at that time."
Franze was sent with about 20 Franze also recalls follow
men to take the camp, which ing General George S. Patton
was about two miles from
` into Paris.
their position in Weimar.. "That welcome we got on
"We had no idea what to the way into Paris was really
expect," he said. "We had something,"
combat training and were he said. "All the
prepared to fight the Germans pretty girls were there wait
and take the camp." ing for us."
Almost more important
On the trip there, he
noticed several dead, emaciat s than the pretty girls was the
bath he got to take upon
~f 3 ~lti G~
ed bodies littering the road arrival his first in nearly
way. When they arrived, it
four months.
took seconds to realize After seeing so much car-
weapons weren't needed to (I nage during his service,
overtake the camp. Franze said, he'll always have
The Germans had fled days a special place in his heart for
earlier to keep the Russians mss'.'" veterans of other conflicts
from taking Berlin, and the
prisoners were all dead or and those men and women
currently serving their coun-
near death. The bodies on the try.
roadway were those of prison-
John Velasquez, a Vietnam
ers who had tried to flee; but veteran and senior vice com
were so weak they had died in mander of the Veterans of
toe process. Eagle photo by Dave McDermand Foreign Wars Outpost 4692,
"The ovens were still hot Ruth Waller wipes away tears as she listens to a speech during Memorial Day said he was honored to see
from the hundreds of thou- services at VFW Post 4692 in Bryan on Monday morning. Waller's father, moth- Franze among hundreds of
sands of bodies that they had er and uncle were veterans in the U.S. armed forces. others in attendance to honor
burned," he said. "There were fallen soldiers.
hundreds more piled up like have anything else to give. He Franze, then 25, was nearly "Their memories are still
hardwood that they didn't was the only one strong deployed to the Pacific after here," he said. "That's what's
have time to burn before they enough to still stand and his tour in Europe, but the important to remember.
left." talk." atomic bombs were dropped Many Americans take advan-
One prisoner was able to He has pictures taken that while he was awaiting trans- tage of the three-day weekend
tell him what the Germans day at the camp, but he does- port. to go to the lake or barbecue,
had done, n't look at them often. He "I probably just missed but what I appreciate is those
. "He gave me his meal tick- keeps them to show others being deployed by a few men and women and children
et, too," Franze said. "It's the capacity humans have to days," he said. who come here in observance
very valuable to me. He didn't be inhumane to each other. He was on the beaches of of Memorial Day."