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By Ted Ellsworth
Biography & Autobiography, Memoir, History
Thunder’s Mouth Press
Trade Paperback, 384 pages, Black & White Photos, Maps, Glossary
April
2006
$16.95
1560258349
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Ted Ellsworth was a young Dartmouth grad
in 1941. In the years before the U.S. joined the Second World
War effort, American men who wished to fight against Hitler
were granted permission from President Roosevelt and the U.S.
Congress to join the British army. In normal circumstance,
fighting for another nation’s army would be an automatic forfeiture
of U.S. citizenship (as noted on U.S. passports).
Yank begins with goodbyes to Ellworth’s
young wife and family. It covers his crossing to Britain,
initial stay in London, assignment to a North African tank
regiment and the campaign there, participation in the invasion
of Italy and the second wave of D-Day, accounts of fierce
battles, being taken prisoner by the Germans and shipped to
a POW camp, the camp deprivations, liberation by the Russians,
and finally, the year Ellsworth spent wandering eastern Europe
with no dog-tags, after the war had ended, trying to reach
a city from which he could ship back home. Ellsworth had been
officially MIA for over two years, and everyone assumed he
was dead.
The final pages detail Ellsworth’s homecoming
when his wife hand-delivers the beautiful and intimate note
that she’d written him when he was first reported missing.
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