[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 162 (Thursday, December 9, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H8280-H8282]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FRANK BUCKLES--LONE SURVIVOR
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 6, 2009, the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Poe) is recognized for
60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader.
Mr. POE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, they went off to war singing George M.
Cohan's song, ``Over there,'' something to the effect that ``Over
there, over there, send the word to beware that the Yanks are coming,
the Yanks are coming and we won't be back till it's over over there.
Those were the World War I doughboys, as they were called in the great
World War I.
One of those individuals is Frank Buckles. Frank Buckles is an
interesting individual. He was born in 1901, February 1, and he was
born in Kansas. And when he was 16, the great World War I had already
started. And he was at the Kansas State Fair, and he saw a recruiting
poster, ``Uncle Sam Wants You.'' So he went to a local marine
recruiter, wanted to join the United States Army to go fight the war to
end all wars over there in Europe. The marines wouldn't take him.
You're too small and you are not 18 years of age. And he continued to
try to get in to the Marine Corps.
{time} 1420
Finally, he decided he would try the United States Army. He went all
the way to Oklahoma City. Being only 16 as he said later, I decided to
really tell them a whopper and tell them I was 21. The Army recruiter
said, Okay, we will sign you up. And he joined the United States Army
after vigilantly telling people he was 18 when he was only 16, a
volunteer to go fight in that war.
He signed up for the ambulance service, and the reason he signed up
for the
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ambulance service was because he heard that was the quickest way to get
to the battlefield to help other young Americans that were already
fighting that war to end all wars. And so he went overseas. He served
in France. He drove an ambulance. He rescued not only Americans but the
other allies that had been wounded and took them back behind enemy
lines.
After the war was over with in 1918, having joined in 1917, Frank
Buckles continued in Europe until he was discharged, protecting and
guarding German prisoners of war. He came back to the United States,
and before he was discharged, he was given $143.60 plus a bonus for
serving in combat of $60. He came back to America, and of course there
were not benefits in those days. There was no VA. You just went back
home and started your own life.
In the great World War I, over 4 million Americans served; 117,000 of
them died in Europe. Half of those doughboys died from what they
obtained, the Spanish flu. Many of them didn't even know it. They got
back to America and died from the Spanish flu that they had contacted
while serving overseas.
Frank Buckles, being the kind of guy he is, he came back home. He
started a new life. He decided to go to sea. He worked on different
ships. In 1940, he found himself in the Philippine Islands. And as we
all remember from American history, the Philippines were invaded by the
Japanese, and there Frank Buckles was captured by the Japanese. And
during World War II, he spent 3\1/2\ years in a Japanese prisoner of
war camp. Having already served in World War I, he lied about his age
so he could get in as a volunteer. Now in World War II, 3\1/2\ years of
his life stolen from him by our enemies. He served in that prisoner of
war camp.
He was finally released when Americans liberated the Philippines,
came back to the United States and lived in West Virginia until the age
of 102, Mr. Speaker, 102. He worked the farm. You know, he chose
probably the occupation of America's past, the hardworking individual
that works American soil. And that was Frank Buckles. He worked the
soil.
Today, Frank Buckles--and here is his photograph, Mr. Speaker--is 109
years old. It is an honor for me to call Frank Buckles my friend. This
photograph was taken in front of the D.C. memorial to World War I
veterans which I will get to in a minute. So he is 109 years old today.
Besides his remarkable life that continues, Frank Buckles is the lone
survivor, the last doughboy alive that served in the United States Army
and military during World War I.
There are two other survivors. They are both British individuals.
They are 109. But he is older than they are. He will soon be 110 in
February. So he is the last survivor, the last living doughboy that
served our country.
He will soon be 110, Mr. Speaker. You know, 110 is old. To put it in
perspective, it is about half of America's history this one person has
lived through. He is still the great patriot that he was when he raised
his right hand as a 16 year old in 1917 and swore to defend the United
States against all enemies, foreign and domestic, the oath he took to
uphold the Constitution.
Now, I mention Frank Buckles in his own right because he is the last
of this generation, those that lived and fought in World War I. You
have to remember who these were; these were the fathers of the Greatest
Generation, those individuals that we hold up, people like my dad who
is 85 years of age, those who served in the great World War II. Those
were the fathers of the Greatest Generation, people like Frank Buckles.
But you see, he still continues to fight for America and really fight
for people that served in World War I because when I met Frank Buckles
he was here at the Capitol. His mission now is to make sure that we
honor as a Nation those who served and came back home in World War I
and those that served and are still buried in graves only known by God
in Europe, those other doughboys. His goal, and the goal I hope of most
Americans now, is to make sure that they are properly honored.
You know, America has moved on since World War I. Not much was said
after World War I. The American doughboys came home. They didn't have a
whole lot of fanfare. They just merged back into society. Then all of a
sudden came the Roaring 20s, the exciting 20s. Then there was the
Depression for 10 years. Then all of a sudden we were in World War II.
America just sort of moved on and left that generation the way they
were when they returned. And I say that to say this: Because you see in
this great Capitol, the greatest capitol in the world, the center of
democracy, the center of liberty, the center of people who have values
like Frank Buckles, we have in my opinion yet to honor these
individuals. Let me explain.
Here not far from the Capitol on what we call the Mall, where we have
the important memorials to America's past, we have built as a Nation
memorials to three of the great wars of the last century. If you wander
up and down the Mall, you will see the first memorial that was built.
They were built in reverse order of when the wars occurred. The first
one that was built is that black marble granite memorial to those young
men in Vietnam, the 58,000 that went to Vietnam and came home, or
rather did not come home. You remember Vietnam, Mr. Speaker, that was
the war when America, we treated our troopers real bad. As a Nation, we
treated them real bad when they came home. But we did build them a
memorial, and it is not far from here. Today and every day when you go
to the Vietnam Memorial, you will see people who put up flags and write
notes to those great Americans from Vietnam.
And after that was built, then there is the memorial that was built
on the Mall to the Korean war. Some of the politically correct folks
still call that a conflict. Well, Americans died in the Korean war. We
went over and fought somebody else's war again. That memorial shows
that Americans going through a minefield in the snow, a great memorial
to those Korean veterans, those that lived and those that died.
And then the most recent one, the one that many Americans are aware
of because there was so much political fighting whether or not this
memorial should be built, that is the World War II memorial that is
built not far from here, that great memorial that honors the Greatest
Generation, that shows how important it is for us to remember those
individuals. As I mentioned, people like my dad who served as an 18
year old in the United States Army in Europe. Many people didn't want
that memorial built on the Mall. You know, it is built on the Mall.
They didn't want it built there. Anyway, politics got out of the way
and Congress approved that memorial.
But there is no memorial for those who served in the first great war
of the last century, and that is the World War I memorial. It is true
there is a memorial near the Mall for those that served from
Washington, D.C. Here is a photograph of that memorial, and a picture
of Frank Buckles in front of it.
{time} 1430
This photograph was taken a couple of years ago or, really, a year
ago when he was there. This memorial is not even on the D.C. maps. Of
all the things to do and see in Washington, D.C., this memorial is not
even on there. The only reason I ever saw it is I was running by it one
day, and I saw this memorial--or this monument, this structure--over in
the weeds. I went over there and started reading it and realized what
it was. It is not a fitting memorial but a memorial for the D.C.
veterans who lived and died during World War I. You can see that it's
cracked and that the stone is bad. It needs a lot of repairs. Finally,
the repairs are starting to be made for that.
Make no mistake about it: this is a memorial for those from
Washington, D.C. We don't have a memorial on The Mall for those who
served from all over the United States, an appropriate memorial that, I
think, should be built. The plan is and Frank Buckles' goal and mine
and many others is to expand this memorial and to honor all those who
served in that Great War, now almost 100 years ago.
There are really no advocates for this. I mean there are no
lobbyists. There are no veterans left from World War I. No other
veterans' groups have taken this on to encourage our building this
memorial for him. An individual by the name of David DeJonge, who is an
historian and a photographer, started doing research on the
[[Page H8282]]
last survivors of World War I. He has got photographs of all of them,
of recent date, of those who have died--some of them have died--and he
has done research on all of them. As I mentioned, there are only three
from all over the world who fought from all nations, Frank Buckles
being one of those. Some other individuals are encouraging Congress to
give the authority to build this memorial.
In Kingwood, Texas, which is one of the places I represent down in
Texas, there is an educator there by the name of Jan York. Jan York
loves America like educators do. She got her Creekwood Middle School
kids to do research a couple of years ago on World War I and on its
last survivors, and that's when they came up with Frank Buckles. They,
too, are passionate about making sure that a memorial is built on The
Mall for all who served in World War I. Let me mention this:
There are memorials for the World War I veterans in different places
in the United States. There is one in Kansas City. But can we have too
many? Should we not have one on The Mall? I mean this is Washington,
D.C. When you go through Washington, D.C., you see memorials and
monuments for all kinds of people--wonderful people. Some of them
aren't even Americans. The memorials and monuments are appropriate.
They're needed. But should we not build a memorial on The Mall for all
of those who served in World War I--the war that was supposed to end
all wars? I think that we should.
Anyway, Jan York has helped her school get involved in this, and the
Creekwood Middle School folks and other schools in the country are
encouraging Congress to help build a memorial. This memorial is not
going to be funded by taxpayer money. Don't get me wrong. This is not
something the taxpayers are going to be required to contribute to. All
Congress has to do is authorize its being built and there being a
commission, and then private funds will be collected from groups like
the Creekwood Middle School.
I want to thank Senator Rockefeller, who is down the hall in the
Senate. He is helping to promote legislation that will allow us to move
forward and have congressional approval to build this memorial on The
Mall--this appropriate memorial for people like Frank Buckles, who is
the lone survivor.
Mr. Speaker, I think it is imperative that we as a Nation understand
our history. Many of us don't think about the past. We only think about
the future. We think, unfortunately, many times: What can America give
us? What can America do for us? as opposed to: What can we do for
America? What can we do for people who have served our great country in
the military, and what should we do as a Nation to honor those
individuals?
America has always had to defend who we are as a Nation. I carry in
my pocket, like maybe most Members of Congress, this little book, the
Constitution of the United States, which has not only the Constitution
but the Declaration of Independence in it as well.
If we just remember a little bit of history, just a little bit, back
in the colonial days, in 1776, there were these Americans who did not
like being treated a certain way by the most powerful empire that had
ever existed in the history of the world--the British Empire. It was
the most powerful empire at the time, and it was led by the most
powerful king, King George. They got together, and they said, You know,
we are going to liberate ourselves from this type of tyranny, which is
how they looked at it. So they came up with this Declaration of
Independence.
Now, in legal terms, what that meant was they indicted the King of
England for crimes against the United States. Their remedy, the
punishment for the King and for England, was to separate. They
concluded their Declaration of Independence, that important document
that later led to the Constitution, with this phrase:
``And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on
the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other
our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.''
Then they had to fight for what they believed in--7, 8 years of long
war to get this country free. Then it was the War of 1812, the Spanish-
American War, the war with Mexico, World War I, World War II, Korea,
Vietnam, and we are still engaged in two great wars today.
In all of those wars, Mr. Speaker, it has been America's youth who
has gone to war to protect the rest of us. Unlike other countries, it
has been said that America goes to war not to conquer but to liberate.
That is true. We've got troops fighting right now, not to conquer but
to liberate. America goes to battle so that others will live in
freedom. Our enemies go to battle so that others will die in tyranny.
That is what is happening in Afghanistan and Iraq. It has always been
the American warrior who has had to protect this document--people like
Frank Buckles.
Today, occasionally, we get to see those great warriors from the
current wars. They come back to this Capitol, and we see them. Many
Members go visit the wounded warriors. I have had the honor to be in
Iraq and Afghanistan and see our military in action. The finest
military that has ever existed in the history of the world represents
us today.
Yet, to some extent, at home, America is disengaged. We are more
interested, unfortunately it seems, in what is in it for us as opposed
to what is in it for America. Frank Buckles and the generations before
him and after him have always asked: What is in it for America? What
can we do for America?--not what America can do for us.
So it seems to me we owe it to Frank Buckles and we owe it to those
doughboys who have all died, who have all passed away except him, to
build and honor them for what they did for the rest of us--for without
them, we certainly would not be here. Without each generation that has
been called upon to bear arms to protect our Nation, we would not be
here. Many of them died at young ages, including those 600,000
Americans who died in the Civil War, which is when our country went to
war within itself.
It would be appropriate that we honor these individuals by approving
this memorial on The Mall. It would be equally as important that we
remember Frank Buckles, his being the lone survivor. I hope he lives a
long time. He told David DeJonge not too long ago, I'm headed to 115.
Well, the way he is, he may get it. He's just that way.
Yet, when he passes away, we should honor him as the last doughboy.
He should lie in state here in the Capitol rotunda. He should be buried
with full military honors. Our Nation should remember him, as it is
important we should remember all those who served throughout the United
States, by building and approving the memorial here on The Mall.
{time} 1440
You know, when they went overseas, they said they weren't coming back
until it was over over there. They did not come back until it was over
over there, and they came back victorious. We over here have the
obligation and the opportunity to get it right over here. And the way
we get it right is to honor Frank Buckles and honor all of those who
served in the great World War I, those that served and did not come
home and those that served and did come home, to continue the American
way of life and preserving this little document called the Constitution
of the United States of America.
And that's just the way it is.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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