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SFC Timothy Torey (Speedie)
to remember
Torey, Roy, BG.
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Contact Info
Last Address Poulsbo Washington
Date of Passing Jan 18, 1998
Location of Interment Cherry Grove Memorial Park - POULSBO, Washington
Roy F. Torey, 71, of Poulsbo died Jan. 18, 1998, at his home.
He was born May 5, 1926, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
On Feb. 10, 1960, he married Laura Smith in Poulsbo.
Mr. Torey served in the Armed Forces spending two years in the South Pacific before being seriously wounded. He received the Bronze Star and three Purple Hearts, among others. After the war, he was an active member of the Army Reserve, retiring in 1982 with the rank of colonel. Mr. Torey worked at Bangor for Strategic Weapons Facility Pacific as a supervisor in the Missile Handling Division until retiring in 1977.
Survivors include his wife; two sons, Larry and Lonnie, both of Port Angeles; one daughter, Roni McKenzie of Silverdale; six grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
Other Comments:
My Grandfather had a Tattoo on his Left Forearm. Him and the members of his platoon all had received this tattoo before Okinawa. It is a Skull with a sword going through the top and a snake wrapped around both if anyone has seen this tattoo or know anyone who might have please contact me. Like I posted him and his platoon all got the same one.
Thank you
Description (India-Burma Campaign 2 April 1942 to 28 January 1945) China Burma India Theater (CBI) was an umbrella term, used by the United States military during World War II for the China and Southeast Asian or India-Burma (IBT) theaters. Operational command of Allied forces (including US forces) in the CBI was officially the responsibility of the Supreme Commanders for South East Asia or China. However: US forces in practice were usually overseen by General Joseph Stilwell, the Deputy Allied Commander in China; the term "CBI" was significant in logistical, material and personnel matters; it was and is commonly used within the US for these theaters.
Well-known US (or joint Allied) units in the CBI included the Chinese Expeditionary Force, the Flying Tigers, transport and bomber units flying the Hump, the 1st Air Commando Group, the engineers who built Ledo Road, and the 5307th Composite Unit (Provisional), popularly known as "Merrill's Marauders".
"We got a hell of a beating," Lt. Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell told the crowd of reporters in the Indian capital of New Delhi. It was May 1942, and the American general, who had only recently arrived in the Far East to assume the position of chief of staff to Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek, was chafing at failure in his first command in the field. Following the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor the previous December, the Japanese had won victory after victory, extending their empire from Wake Island in the Pacific to Malaya and Singapore in Southeast Asia. When Stilwell had arrived in the embattled Chinese capital of Chungking in March, the Japanese were already driving into Burma, capturing the capital of Rangoon on 6 March. The American general took command of two Chinese divisions and, in cooperation with the British and Indians, tried to stem the Japanese onslaught. Defeated, he and his staff endured a rugged, 140-mile hike over jungle-covered mountains to India. By occupying Burma, the Japanese had not only gained access to vast resources of teak and rubber, but they had dosed the Burma Road, 700 miles of dirt highway that represented China's last overland link with the outside world. The reopening of an overland route to China would be the major American goal, indeed obsession, in the theater throughout the campaign.
Strategic Setting
The objective of restoring a land route to China originated in part in hard strategic considerations, specifically the need to keep China in the war to tie down Japanese troops and serve as a base for future operations against the Japanese home islands. But it also reflected an idealistic American view of China as a great power, capable of a major contribution, and the romantic image held by many Americans of China's heroic struggle against superior Japanese equipment and arms. For nearly three years the United States would thus push for a major effort to break the Japanese blockade, forward large quantities of lend-lease materials, and train the fledgling Chinese Army and Air Force.