When asked
by his son Gordon "Hey dad did you kill anybody
when you were in the war?". Albert looked at him,
didn't say one word and only shook his head, yes, slowly.
Albert was a jolly fellow loved to make people laugh.
He also loved to dance, Albert and his wife would go
to the NCO club at Fort Bragg and dance until the very
late hours.
Albert Blithe joined the army in
1942. The reason was he wanted to get out of Philadelphia
for personal reasons and what better way to achieve
that, then joining the army. Albert loved the military
and it became his pride and joy. After his Paratrooper
training and his stay in England Albert headed of
to Normandy. He jumped into France and touched down
on a totally different position then where he was
supposed to land. He landed in a ditch and stayed
there, not sure were he was and overwhelmed by this
new and hazardous sensation which every man felt
that jumped into war that day and eventually feel
asleep.
After an unknown period of time
Albert was found by other paratroopers who had been
scattered all over the countryside, they too had
missed their DropZone (DZ). Albert teamed up to go
to St. Marcouf, where they found the rest of Easy
Company. The famous picture (on the right in the
green bar) of paratroopers holding a captured German
flag, was taken in St. Marcouf, Albert is the paratrooper
on the far right.
After a short rest the company
was ordered to take Carentan. On a night time patrol
Albert came across a dead German paratrooper, Lewis
Nixon explained that the white Edelweiss flower on
the dead man's jacket was found in the Alps above
the tree line and having such a flower was a token
of courage, for he had to have gone up there to get
it.
After fighting off some fierce
resistance in Carentan, things seemed to be settling
down for Easy Company and they took the village.
In the aid station in Carentan, Albert Blithe was
sitting on the ground, his eyes staring out in front
of him. Lieutenant Richard Winters, being treated
their at the same time for wounds to the leg, asked
him what was wrong, talked to him...and somehow touched
Blithe inside. Albert had to find his courage and
overcome his fear, and he did just that, out in the
field moving out of Carentan. Blithe encouraged by
other men in his platoon found his courage, and there
in a moment of silence from the sounds of war Albert
started firing his gun.
One of his bullets struck a German
paratrooper. After the fighting was over, Easy Company
was assisted by the 2d Armored Division to fight
off the German Tanks, Albert walked over to the enemy
lines to find the soldier he had shot. He kneeled
down beside him closed his eyes and took the white
Edelweiss flower from his jacket and put it on his
own. This is were Albert had accepted the place and
the madness he was in. Further down the road in a
field Easy Company came across a suspicious looking
farmhouse and Carson and Nixon asked for volunteers
to check it out. Blithe volunteered as first soldier
and with two other platoon members headed off in
the direction of the farmhouse. At that moment bad
luck struck Albert Blithe and he got hit in the shoulder
by a German sniper. That same day Easy Company was
pulled off the line.
Albert Blithe was never wounded
In the neck, as led to believe in the TV series Band
of Brothers, but was wounded in the shoulder leaving
a nasty scar. The bullet that wounded Albert on his
21st birthday, is on the left in the green picture
bar. He earned the Silver Star 3 Purple Hearts 2
Bronze Stars Army Occupation Medal and a WW2 Victory
Medal and that was just from WW2
Also Albert became Trooper of the
year at Fort Bragg NC while he was with the 82nd
Airborne division. Had he been alive today he would
say.. "I aint no hero by a long shot. I'm just
a paratrooper". Albert received the Purple Heart
for his wounds on June 25th, 1944. Released from
Army Hospitals on: October 8, 1945. He returned to
Philadelphia and started a career with Westinghouse
Electric. He was called back to active duty; served
in the Korean War and achieved the rank of Master
Sergeant. He married and had two children, a son
and daughter; lived in North Carolina with his family.
He passed away on December 17,
1967 on an American Army Base in Germany and was
buried in Arlington with full military honors. Albert's
wife recalls: "That poor man went through hell
during the war and loved the army so much. In time
you see how much he loved the army. No other person
alive loved the army and being a paratrooper more
than Albert did."
Fellow company member Mr.
Don Malarkey recalls: "I remember Alibie
Blithe very well and the most interesting thng
I recall is that he used to like dice games! He
would never never roll the dice but would always
bet against the shooter and always won money!"
This story of Albert Blithe was
conceived from interviews with his son Gordon "Gordie" Blithe. |