STORIES 250

From the Editor

 

In 2009, Fred Bahlau of Onsted, Michigan holds the boots he wore as a paratrooper with the 101st Airborne on D-Day, the Battle of the Bulge and throughout his service overseas during World War II. Fred passed away in 2014. It was an honor to meet and interview him. He was funny and deeply devoted to his fellow soldiers. WWII veterans will tell you they are not the heroes. The real heroes are their brothers who did not come home. (Photo: © 2009 Redwood Educational Technologies)

As the nation approaches her 250th birthday, it’s natural to begin planning the anniversary. I can honestly say I have been planning it for many years as I have been deeply committed to telling the story of America by attending historic events, interviewing key people with a link to or expertise in that history, writing about the event’s history and sometimes, producing multimedia to enhance the storytelling experience.

To the right is a picture of Fred Bahlau, a paratrooper with the 101st Airborne who jumped into Normandy on D-Day and participated in the Battle of the Bulge as part of his WWII service. He is holding his boots he wore throughout the war. I listened to him tell his story on Omaha Beach in 2009 during the 65th anniversary of D-Day and then interviewed him at his home in Michigan that fall. He is one of many incredibly powerful stories in the Stories250 WWII section.

Stories250 is divided into centuries. Did you know one of the first ships built for the U.S. Navy in the late 1700s, the USS Constitution, is docked in Boston Harbor and is the oldest, still operable ship in the world?

In 2014 during the Bicentennial of the War of 1812, I was aboard a tall ship during a reenactment of the Battle of Lake Erie during which Commodore Oliver Perry defeated a squadron of British ships, the first time a British squadron had been defeated.

Finally, in 2019, I was aboard a WWII C-47 flying in formation with other D-Day Squadron “Gooneybirds” over Connecticut just before the planes left for Normandy to celebrate the 75th anniversary of D-Day.

These are just a couple of examples of the front row seats I have had to honor American history. It’s been thrilling but not an easy ride though. I thought the natural audience for our original content, which promotes literacy as well, would be K-12 schools but after years of outreach to schools, it was an incorrect assumption. We are persistent though as we seek to find an audience who cares about: 1) keeping this history alive and 2) supporting old fashioned but never out-of-date primary source journalism.

Please join us on this journey!

Judy Stanford Miller, M.Ed., M.A.

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