He was awarded distinguished flying medal for his service during the.
Did attics in world war two have boxes.
With world war ii veterans dying at an estimated rate of 1 000 a day nationwide more than one in 10 of them in california the potential for tragedy is mounting as relatives clean out their homes.
Day who died in 1996 wasn t a veteran but wigdor s family has a history of military service dating to the revolutionary war.
In 2016 a builder discovered a world war ii fire bomb hidden inside a house s attic.
Jewish lessons have stopped for the time being frank writes in one 1941 letter.
Every once in a while you hear stories about people finding treasures of all kinds in the dust filled cobwebbed upper regions of their homes.
But he and bride olga who wed just weeks before he was called up exchanged near daily.
Cyril mowforth served with a tank regiment in el alamein north africa and germany during world war ii.
When volunteers working at national trust property scotney castle in kent first chanced upon an old steel box in the attic little did they know they had stumbled upon a treasure trove of social history and military memorabilia that would generate an entire exhibition about one man s experience of the great war.
Surprisingly surviving bombs seem to be found quite often in attics.
Ah but one man s junk can be another man s treasure.
During world war i relatives served in the u s.
Given the fact that the box contains all of its wrappings but no candy the team suggests that someone may have.
The c ration for combat troops and the k ration less bulky and initially developed for.
Her experiences as a jewish girl in world war ii europe also come through in the documents.
7 a monarch s head.
Some timbers did already show some burned edges but for some lucky reason the bomb did not detonate.
Signal corps balloon group no.
Finding the posters when he did was poignant wigdor said.
Other attic finds most prominently a box of chocolates date to world war ii.
It seems like most people have old christmas ornaments and boxes upon boxes of nondescript worthless junk in their attics.