Jackendoff, David, T/5

Deceased
 
 Photo In Uniform   Service Details
85 kb
View Shadow Box View Printable Shadow Box View Time Line
Last Rank
Technician Fifth Grade
Last Service Branch
Infantry
Last Primary MOS
745-Rifleman
Last MOS Group
Infantry
Primary Unit
1943-1945, 745, 101st Airborne Division
Service Years
1942 - 1945
Infantry
Technician Fifth Grade
One Service Stripe
Four Overseas Service Bars

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

183 kb


Home State
Maine
Maine
Year of Birth
1911
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by SFC Edwin Sierra to remember Jackendoff, David, T/5.

If you knew or served with this Soldier and have additional information or photos to support this Page, please leave a message for the Page Administrator(s) HERE.
 
Contact Info
Home Town
Cp Upton Yaphank
Last Address
Howland Cemetery
Penobscot County
Maine, USA
Date of Passing
Feb 22, 1993
 

 Official Badges 

101st Airborne Division Belgian Fourragere Infantry Shoulder Cord Netherlands Orange Lanyard

Honorably Discharged WW II French Fourragere


 Unofficial Badges 

Airborne


 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
Central New York Chapter-490
  1968, Military Order of the Purple Heart, Central New York Chapter-490 (Quartermaster) (Yorkville, New York) - Chap. Page


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

70 years after D-Day, she hears dad's stories anew

NEW YORK (AP) — Every night at dinner when I was young, my dad fought World War II all over again. He'd parachuted into Normandy with the 101st Airborne on D-Day, went on to fight in Holland and Belgium, and he loved to tell war stories.
But as a kid, I didn't care. I grew up in the 1960s and '70s, when anti-war sentiment about Vietnam was strong. It wasn't cool having a dad whose biggest accomplishment was being a soldier.


It was only as an adult that I wished I'd paid more attention to those dinnertime tales.

Fortunately, I have some extraordinary mementoes. Dad, who died in 1993, was interviewed on radio shows in 1944, shortly after D-Day, then in 1945 at a military hospital, and finally on local TV for the 40th anniversary of D-Day. This year I digitized the old-media recordings — 78 RPM records and a 1984 videotape.


When I played them for the first time in years, I heard what I hadn't heard as a kid: how tough he was, how hard it was, how brave these soldiers were.

Here, in his words, is what it was like to jump out of a plane shortly after midnight on June 6, 1944, land behind enemy lines and help launch the offensive that ultimately defeated Adolf Hitler.

"We hit French soil just a little over six hours before the first ship hit the beach," Cpl. David Jackendoff said on a show called "An American Eagle in Britain," taped by the BBC on Aug. 26, 1944. "I was in plane No. 5 that went over to knock out coastal batteries that were trained onto the beach. Our plane was hit by some of that German 20 millimeter flak. We had to bail out as soon as we got into French territory."


Once on the ground, he said, "a group of us got together, nine to be exact." As they headed toward their target, "we were hampered, I'll say, by some German machine-gun nests."


With four men on one side of him and four on the other, "I told them to crawl up as close as we could. And when I whistled, everybody was to throw a grenade," he recalled in 1984 on WNBC-TV. "When we got there, all we saw was a lot of wrecks and dead Germans."


He won a Bronze Star for leading the charge that silenced the nest, without regard to his personal safety. But his account 40 years later hinted at the fear and regret.


"You didn't know what was around you," he said. "You didn't know where you were. You didn't know if the fellow next to you was friend or enemy, all in blackface."


He got back to his command post four days later, but not everyone made it. "A mortar shell landed amongst four of the fellows including our top sergeant and killed them all," he said. "As you go along, you pass bodies, and you just have to keep going."


Dad fought with the 101st for 37 straight days in France. In September 1944, he went to Holland, to Operation Market Garden, a battle depicted in the movie "A Bridge Too Far." In December, they dug in for the siege of Bastogne, Belgium, part of the Battle of the Bulge.


He earned a second Bronze Star, two presidential citations and a Purple Heart. His 1945 interview with WOR was done at Halloran General Hospital, an Army hospital on Staten Island, New York, as he recuperated from a bullet wound that crippled his right arm.


Looking back, he seems to me like a character straight out of a black-and-white World War II movie. He smoked like a chimney, drank like a fish and lived every day like it was his last — which is one way to prepare yourself to jump from a plane into a war zone. For the rest of his life, his war buddies were his best friends; nobody else could understand what they'd been through.


And he loved Calvados, the French apple brandy he first tasted in Normandy.


Listening to the recordings now, I'm struck by his nonchalance. As he described encountering machine-gun fire, he said, "That held us up for a while." When the interviewer asked, "One vital question: Did you get them?" he answered simply, "Yes, sir." And there was this memorable aside: "I love hand grenades."


I have a 16-year-old son now, about the age I was when I didn't want to hear my father's stories. My dad died before this boy was born, and as we listened together to his grandpa's voice, I could see the look of amazement on his face.
"Your dad was cool," he finally said.
Yeah, he was.

Army Serial Number: 32229484
 

   

   1943-1945, 745, 101st Airborne Division

Technician Fifth Grade
From Month/Year
- / 1943
To Month/Year
- / 1945
Unit
101st Airborne Division Unit Page
Rank
Technician Fifth Grade
MOS
745-Rifleman
Base, Fort or City
Normandy-Holland, Belgium
State/Country
United States
 
 
 Patch
 101st Airborne Division Details

101st Airborne Division
"SCREAMING EAGLES"
Type
Airborne Infantry
 
Parent Unit
Infantry Divisions
Strength
Division
Created/Owned By
Not Specified
   

Last Updated: Jul 22, 2018
   
Memories For This Unit

Other Memories
Dad fought with the 101st for 37 straight days in France. In September 1944, he went to Holland, to Operation Market Garden, a battle depicted in the movie "A Bridge Too Far." In December, they dug in for the siege of Bastogne, Belgium, part of the Battle of the Bulge.

   
Yearbook
 
My Photos For This Unit
No Available Photos
128 Members Also There at Same Time
101st Airborne Division

Harris, Meyer, M/SGT, (1942-1945) IN 745 Master Sergeant
Richards, Theodore Stanley, CSM, (1942-1972) IN 745 Master Sergeant
Malarkey, Donald, T/SGT, (1942-1945) IN 745 Technical Sergeant
Clawson, Harry Allen, S/SGT, (1942-1944) IN 745 Staff Sergeant
McClung, Earl, S/SGT, (1943-1954) IN 745 Staff Sergeant
Randleman, Denver, S/SGT, (1942-1945) IN 745 Staff Sergeant
Reese, Benjamin Charles, CW4, (1939-1969) IN 745 Staff Sergeant
Rillera, Melchor T., S/SGT, (1942-1946) IN 745 Staff Sergeant
Aune, Eugene, SGT, (1943-1945) IN 745 Sergeant
Bever, Nelson B., SGT, (1942-1944) IN 745 Sergeant
Guth, Forrest, SGT, (1942-1945) IN 745 Sergeant
Miller, Lester E., SGT, (1942-1945) IN 745 Sergeant
Rice, Thomas M., SGT, (1940-1945) IN 745 Sergeant
Savoie, Lawrence, SGT, (1944-1955) IN 745 Sergeant
Hoobler, Donald, Cpl, (1942-1945) IN 745 Corporal
Ladner, Carmen Spencer, Cpl, (1942-1944) IN 745 Corporal
Lipp, Louis Joseph, Cpl, (1942-1944) IN 745 Corporal
Vander Laan, Jacob, Cpl, (1942-1950) IN 745 Corporal
Atlee, William Henry, T/5, (1942-1944) IN 745 Technician Fifth Grade
Wimer, Ralph Hansel, T/5, (1942-1944) IN 745 Technician Fifth Grade
Armentrout, Forrest W., PFC, (1942-1945) IN 745 Private First Class
Aubin, Gerald A., 1SG, (1939-1964) IN 745 Private First Class
Dueman, Merle Leroy, MSG, (1944-1967) IN 745 Private First Class
Haney, Manning Guy, Cpl, (1942-1944) IN 745 Private First Class
Harding, Forrest, PFC, (1941-1945) IN 745 Private First Class
Joint, Edward, PFC, (1942-1945) IN 745 Private First Class
Lewis, Max Wayne, PFC, (1943-1945) IN 745 Private First Class
Mann, Joe Eugene, PFC, (1942-1944) IN 745 Private First Class
Podraza, Lee, PFC, (1942-1945) IN 745 Private First Class
Snead, Robert Zachariah, PFC, (1941-1944) IN 745 Private First Class
Allen, Robert G., PVT, (1942-1944) IN 745 Private
Cobb, Albert L., PVT, (1940-1944) IN 745 Private
Davis, Stirling G., PVT, (1943-1944) IN 745 Private
O'Daniel, John Wilson, PVT, (1943-1944) IN 745 Private
Whalen, Kenneth James, M/SGT, (1945-1950) IN 605 Master Sergeant
Collier, Garland Woodrow, SGT, (1942-1944) IN 605 Sergeant
Corrington, Floyd, SGT, (1942-1944) IN 521 Sergeant
Hobbs, Andrew J., SGT, (1941-1944) IN 604 Sergeant
Smith, Robert Burr, LTC, (1939-1979) IN 604 Technician Fourth Grade
Evans, Richard L., PFC, (1943-1945) IN 604 Private First Class
Shrout, Clarence L., PFC, (1943-1944) IN 746 Private First Class
Luce, James Joseph, PVT, (1942-1944) IN 521 Private
Chapman, Elbridge, MG, (1917-1946) USA 0002 Brigadier General
Higgins, Gerald, MG, (1927-1955) USA 0002 Brigadier General
Johnson, Howard Ravenscroft, COL, (1923-1944) IN 1542 Colonel
Ewell, Julian J., LTG, (1939-1973) IN 1542 Lieutenant Colonel
Higgins, Gerald, MG, (1927-1955) AG 2162 Lieutenant Colonel
Wolverton, Robert Lee, LTC, (1938-1944) IN 1542 Lieutenant Colonel
Parrott, Marion Arendell, MAJ, (1941-1945) IN 1542 Major
Plitt, Henry, MAJ MI 9301 Major
Fitzpatrick, Lawrence Michael, 1LT, (1943-1945) IN 1542 First Lieutenant
Holstun, James Drayton, 1LT, (1942-1944) AG 2260 First Lieutenant
Ivan, Gabriel A, COL, (1939-1973) IN 1543 First Lieutenant
Lavenson, George, 1LT, (1941-1944) IN 1542 First Lieutenant
Littell, Howard Dayton, 1LT, (1940-1944) IN 1543 First Lieutenant
Machen, Robert Clymer, 1LT, (1941-1944) IN 1543 First Lieutenant
Matheson, Salve H., MG, (1942-1975) IN 1542 First Lieutenant
Meehan, Thomas, 1LT, (1941-1944) IN 1542 First Lieutenant
Peacock, Thomas, 1LT, (1942-1945) AR 000 First Lieutenant

Copyright Togetherweserved.com Inc 2003-2011