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Sunday, May 25, 2008
George Will :: Townhall.com Columnist
When "Ordinary" Just Isn't Appropriate
by George Will
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CHARLES TOWN, W.Va. -- Numbers come precisely from the agile mind and nimble tongue of Frank Buckles, who seems bemused to say that 4,734,991 Americans served in the military during America's involvement in the First World War and 4,734,990 are gone. He is feeling fine, thank you for asking.

The eyes of the last doughboy are still sharp enough for him to be a keen reader, and his voice is still deep and strong at age 107. He must have been a fine broth of a boy when, at 16, persistence paid off and he found, in Oklahoma City, an Army recruiter who believed, or pretended to, the fibs he had unavailingly told to Marine and Navy recruiters in Kansas about being 18. He grew up on a Missouri farm, not far from where two eminent generals were born -- John "Black Jack" Pershing and Omar Bradley.

"Boys in the country," says Buckles, "read the papers," so he was eager to get into the fight over there. He was told that the quickest way was to train for casualty retrieval and ambulance operations. Soon he was headed for England aboard the passenger ship Carpathia, which was celebrated for having, five years earlier, rescued survivors from the Titanic.

Buckles never saw combat but "I saw the results." He seems vague about only one thing: What was the First World War about?

Before leaving England for France, he was stationed near Winchester College, where he noticed "Buckles" among the names that boys had carved in their desks. This ignited his interest in genealogy, which led him to discover that his ancestor Robert Buckles, born in Yorkshire on May 15, 1702, arrived at age 30 in what is now West Virginia.

After Corporal Buckles was mustered out of the Army in 1920 with $143.90 in his pocket, he went to business school in Oklahoma City for five months, then rented a typewriter for $3 a month and sent out job applications. One landed him work in the steamship business, which took him around the world -- Latin America, China, Manchuria. And Germany, where, he says, in 1928 "two impressive gentlemen" told him, "We are preparing for another war."

Behind glass in a cabinet in his small sitting room are mementos from his eventful life: a German army belt with a buckle bearing words all nations believe, "Gott Mit Uns (God Is With Us)." The tin cup from which he ate all his meals, such as they were, during the 39 months he was a prisoner of the Japanese -- because he was working for a shipping company in Manila on Dec. 7, 1941.

Widowed in 1999, this man who was born during the administration of the 25th president recently voted in West Virginia's primary to select a candidate to be the 44th. His favorite president of his lifetime? The oldest, Ronald Reagan. Continued...

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About The Author
George F. Will is a 1976 Pulitzer Prize winner whose columns are syndicated in more than 400 magazines and newspapers worldwide.
 
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Subject: nice to meet you mr.buckles
im 12 years old from california and i just want to thank you for all you've done for me and our country. i miss my great grandpa who was in world war 2 and i try to learn as much about our country as i can.

It's not how - buy what if not how.
I'm often baffled by those who spend their time talking about "how" we got into WWI, yet say nothing about what would have happened in Europe, if we had not done so. 80% of all French men who graduated from what we call high school between 1914 and 1918 were killed - not injured - killed. Most of the rest were injured and maimed. An entire generation was wiped out - which is why Hemmingway and other writers called them the "Lost Generation". The war was in stalemate - but there was no end to it, and if the Germans had prevailed, the Europe we have today would not exist as we know it. And, unless the Germans were thoroughly defeated, it is very likely that there would have been another war, regardless of what Wilson did or didn't do. WWI was, after all, the beginning of the end of the Age of Empires, the Age of Kings, and the age of Colonization. A system that had dominated for centuries was being swept away. The Austro-Hungarian Empire, the Ottoman Empire, the British Empire, the German Empire and the Kaiser, and the like were crumbling. WWI was the great War, but neither stalemate, nor that War, would end it. And Wilson, however he is viewed, could never over-come these historical forces that were tearing Europe apart - and advance it directly into a stable continent. Lord Callahan, the British Foreign Secretary commented at the time that the War began, " that the lights were going out all over Europe, and they would not be lit again in our lifetime." He knew it would take several generations before that War - and WWII was simply an extension of it, would end. And that had nothing to do with Wilson.
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