![]() NPS Photo World War II Weekend Speaker ScheduleUPDATE, September 10, 2018: Due to rpoor conditions at the site and the future forecast of additional wet weather, the 2018 WWII Weekend living history camp and USO Dance have been canceled. The speakers, including veterans and authors, have been moved to the Gettysburg Museum and Visitor Center. A new schedule for the speakers will be available on the park Facebook page so please check there for updates.Saturday, September 15 10:00 a.m. – Jared Frederick, an Instructor of History at Penn State Altoona and former National Park Service Ranger, will speak about Gettysburg during the World Wars, focusing on the history of the Gettysburg Battlefield during the 1940s and how it was impacted by World War II. Jared is also the author of several books, including “Images of Gettysburg National Military Park”. 11:00 a.m. – Ed Bearss is a veteran of the United States Marine Corps, a recipient of the Purple Heart, and the Chief Historian Emeritus of the National Park Service. Mr. Bearss is widely renowned as a historian and author who leads tours of battlefields across the United States. During World War II, he served with the First Marine Division on Guadalcanal and New Britain, where he was severely wounded in January 1944. He will be sharing his experiences from the war. Mr. Bearss is also the author of numerous books, including Fields of Honor. 12:00 p.m. – Kenneth H. Fidler is a veteran of the United States Navy during World War II. He was a Sonarman Third Class from 1943 to 1945, and served on the USS Loy DE 160. The Loy served as an escort ship for 6 convoys in the Atlantic before it became an Auxiliary Personnel Destroyer in the Pacific, taking part in the invasion of Okinawa. Ken also served in the Navy during the Korean War, and would later write “Memoirs of a Ping Jockey” on his wartime experiences. 1:00 p.m. – Beverley Eddy is a Professor Emeria of German at Dickinson College, and the author of “Camp Sharpe’s Psycho Boys: From Gettysburg to Germany.” Eddy has a doctorate in Germanic Languages and Literatures, and has taught at Middlebury College and Dickinson College. She will be speaking on the history of Gettysburg’s Camp Sharpe, which was a secret sub-camp of the World War II Military Intelligence Training Center. 2:00 p.m. – John C. McManus, an award-winning professor, author, and military historian, is the Curator’s Distinguished Professor of U.S. Military History at the Missour University of Science and Technology. He is the other of a dozen books on United States Military History, focusing on World War II, and is currently in residence at the U.S. Naval Acadamy as the Leo A. Shiffrin Chair of Naval and Military History. He will be speaking on the subject of his book “September Hope,” discussing the events surrounding Operation Market Garden in September 1944. 3:00 p.m. –Arthur Lentz is a veteran of the United States Army and the recipient of the Purple Heart and the Bronze Star with oak leaf cluster. He fought in Europe with the 119th Infantry, 30th Infantry Division during World War II. He was wounded by a German sniper in January 1945, and recovered from his wound in France. After the war, Lentz played professional basketball in York, PA, where he still resides today. Sunday, September 16 10:00 a.m. – Ben Jenkins served on the crew of a B-29 “Superfortress” during World War II, taking part in bombing runs on Japan. The B-29 “Superfortress” was a four engine heavy bomber, and was one of the most important planes of the war. Ben will be sharing his stories of operating the weapons control on his B-29, as well as recounting a supply drop to American POWs in August 1945 following the Japanese surrender. 11:00 a.m. – Clem Leone is a resident of Gettysburg, PA, and served in the Army Air Force during the Second World War. He was a radio operator and a gunner on a B-24 Bomber, and was shot down on February 24, 1944. After landing, the Dutch Underground assisted Clem, helping him to find his way to Antwerp, Belgium, where he was captured by the Germans. He spent time at Stalag Luft IV, a Luftwaffe POW Camp. He was liberated by the British in May 1945. Clem is the recipient of the Purple Heart and the French Legion of Honor. 12:00 p.m. – Steven Bosan served as an engineer with General George S. Patton’s Third Army during World War II. After training in the United States, he arrived overseas in the fall of 1944, and took part in the push into Germany, building bridges, clearing mines, and repairing roads. He was injured in a vehicle accident in early 1945, but recovered and went on to serve in the Korean and Vietnam wars as well, commanding aviation units in both. He ultimately reached the rank of Colonel. 1:00 p.m. – Ken Weiler is an author and historian who has written and lectured on the Second World War, focusing on the war between Germany and the Soviet Union. He is a member of the Hanover Area Historical Society, the Dwight D. Eisenhower Society, and is a National Park Service volunteer at the Eisenhower National Historic Site. He will be speaking about the War on the Eastern Front from 1941 to 1945, which is the subject of his book “Why Normandy Was Won: Operation Bagration and the War in the East, 1941-1945”. 2:00 p.m. – A two-time national bestselling author, Larry Alexander is a lifelong native of Ephrata, PA. He is a retired reporter and columnist for Lancaster Newspapers, and the author of the New York Times Bestselling “Biggest Brother: The Life of Major Dick Winters, the Man who Led the Band of Brothers”. He is also the author of several other books on the Second World War. Alexander will be speaking on the life of Major Dick Winters, the leader of the famous “Band of Brothers.” 3:00 p.m. – Richard “Dick” Donald is a veteran of the United States Navy. During World War II, he was stationed, among many places, on the USS Melvin R. Nawman, a destroyer escort. He served as a “ping jockey”, using sonar to search out enemy submarines. In February 1945, he witnessed the raising of the American flag on Mount Suribachi at Iwo Jima. He took part in 7 invasions during the war in the Pacific, and he also served on a destroyer during the Korean War. Living History Group InformationEisenhower National Historic Site will be hosting its 22nd annual World War II Weekend September 15 - 16, 2018. We appreciate your living history group's interest in participating! Below are links to two forms you should read. For further information please email us. Dear Living History Volunteer:
The Eisenhower National Historic Site at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, will be hosting a World War II living history encampment on September 15-16, 2018. THIS YEAR THERE WILL BE MANDATORY UNIT REGISTRATION CUT OFF DATE ON AUGUST 16. If your unit fails to register by then it will not be allowed to participate. This program will primarily portray an Allied camp in 1944 ETO. However, German and Soviet forces will be allowed as well. We do prohibit groups that portray Nazi political units such as the SS from participation. This is non-negotiable and any volunteers found with SS items will be asked to immediately leave the site. The main focus will be on interpreting Army life in General Eisenhower’s theater of operations. We also welcome groups which represent the other theaters of the war such as the Navy, the Marines and the Home Front. We are interested in having knowledgeable living history volunteers who can tell the story of the common soldier in World War II. We would like to have your organization participate in this event. The Eisenhower World War II Weekend is the weekend with the highest visitation to our site annually. Last year we had well over 600 living history participants. We also had several distinguished WWII veterans and historian authors as special guest speakers. If your living history organization plans on attending, please fill an Agreement for Organization / Group Voluntary Services Form, one per unit. Please email e-mail us to receive a digital copy of the form. This year there will be a deadline for group registration! Your unit must register before August 16! Participating units should arrive Friday, September 14, any time after 8 a.m. and on into the night, in order to set up their camp. Or they can do so early Saturday morning before 9 a.m. when the camp opens to the public. Someone from your unit must be in your camp the entire time we are open to the public both Saturday and Sunday. This is an authentic impressions only program, so bring only appropriate camp gear. The camp will be set up in a large level field east of the Eisenhower Home. Participant parking is available on site. Water as well as portable toilets will be provided and public restrooms will be available in the lower level of the site’s barn. Arrangements will be made for shower facilities in town to be available for Saturday evening of the event. Lunchtime food service will be available on site both days courtesy of a local volunteer fire department. We will also sponsor a WWII USO style dance (free to those signed in as participants) featuring the Gettysburg Big Band will be held Saturday night at the Gettysburg National Military Park Visitor Center. A cash bar will be available at the dance. No consumption of alcohol is allowed in the camp. Unless authorized by National Park Service staff, no firing of ammunition including blanks, or detonation of explosives devices, are to be done at this event. Our event coincides on Saturday with the battle re-enactment at New Oxford which is a totally separate event. If you participate in the New Oxford event be sure to secure any leftover blanks when coming into our site. Edged weapons such as bayonets must remain in their scabbards except when being used for demonstrations at a safe distance of at least seven paces from the next person. Re-enactors will be expected to conduct themselves as professional historians and follow safety guidelines. If your unit is interested in attending this event, please contact us as soon as possible to let us know the approximate numbers we can expect and the type of demonstration or talks you plan to present. If you have questions contact us at (717) 338-9114. Sincerely, Alyce Evans Park Guide Eisenhower National Historic Site As a participant in the Eisenhower National Historic Site World War II Weekend, you represent the National Park Service as an interpretive volunteer. You are expected to conduct yourself in a professional and courteous manner when dealing with the public. You are expected to act in a courteous and serious manner at all times, fitting with the period that your unit portrays. Know your material well and be just as inquisitive toward the visitors as they are toward you. Ask them questions. Draw the visitor into your demonstration by comparing their lives today with the experiences of Americans during the 1940's. We also request that you respect your fellow volunteers, their equipment, and camps.
Personal Behavior and Code of Conduct
*There will be a cash bar Saturday night at the USO-style dance held at the Gettysburg National Military Park Visitor Center. Please have designated drivers for your groups. Camp Sites
Weapons Safety
Vehicles
Ammunition No live ammunition with projectiles should be in the camp. While some participants might still have left over blank rounds from the New Oxford Event, NO BLANK ROUNDS ARE TO BE FIRED WHILE ON THIS SITE! The public is absolutely forbidden to handle or hold any blank ammunition at any time. Fires
Medical Emergency Guidelines for World War II Weekend
Guidelines for German/Axis Impressions This World War II event will also feature a German Army encampment. To many visitors, this is still very recent, painful history. Care must be given in portrayal of the “enemy.” We recognize that while Germany was under the control of an evil political system opposed to freedom and human rights, the average German soldier of the Wehrmacht or Luftwaffe was not a fanatical Nazi. Many were men who, like our own draftees, were thrust into World War II to serve their government and defend their country. Many Germans served honorably, and though there were atrocities committed by German military units, it is the average German combat soldier who did not, that we want to have represented in our event. Our living history volunteers will be able to tell the German side of the story without giving the appearance of supporting Nazism. The National Park Service will not tolerate any offenses to World War II veterans and holocaust survivors. Any unit that breaks this rule faces expulsion from the event. Re-enactors that represent German soldiers should follow these guidelines:
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Last updated: September 12, 2018