Forsaken Heroes of the Pacific War: One Man's True Story
He was the nation’s oldest living survivor of the infamous Bataan Death March and three and a half years in Japanese prison camps during World War II.

As a youth, he was a four letter man and captain of his high school and college teams.

After college, he captained a team that beat the barnstorming Harlem Globetrotters.

In the late 1920’s, he bought two airplanes and began one of the nation’s earliest regional air travel businesses; then got his own pilot’s license after only four hours of training – and flew until he was 95.

In 1937, as a dentist with a ten year old practice, a wife and three children, the 32 year old ROTC lieutenant was called up by the army, as America began to prepare for war.

After Pearl Harbor, Al Brown and some 90,000 sick and starving American and Filipino troops fought valiantly for four months on the Bataan peninsula until they were surrendered to Japanese forces in April of 1942, food, ammunition and weaponry, virtually gone.

After the Death March, four prison camps, a “hell ship” journey to Japan, starvation, torture, a broken back, a broken neck and fifteen major tropical diseases, including blindness, this once strapping, athletic six-footer was down to a starved 95 pounds.

After the Japanese surrender in 1945, and three years stateside in a veteran’s hospital, Al Brown went home for the first time in eleven years.

In 1950, though no longer able to practice dentistry because of his war wounds, he went to Hollywood, California and started a new life…Incidentally, was the godson of Buffalo Bill.
1113143395
Forsaken Heroes of the Pacific War: One Man's True Story
He was the nation’s oldest living survivor of the infamous Bataan Death March and three and a half years in Japanese prison camps during World War II.

As a youth, he was a four letter man and captain of his high school and college teams.

After college, he captained a team that beat the barnstorming Harlem Globetrotters.

In the late 1920’s, he bought two airplanes and began one of the nation’s earliest regional air travel businesses; then got his own pilot’s license after only four hours of training – and flew until he was 95.

In 1937, as a dentist with a ten year old practice, a wife and three children, the 32 year old ROTC lieutenant was called up by the army, as America began to prepare for war.

After Pearl Harbor, Al Brown and some 90,000 sick and starving American and Filipino troops fought valiantly for four months on the Bataan peninsula until they were surrendered to Japanese forces in April of 1942, food, ammunition and weaponry, virtually gone.

After the Death March, four prison camps, a “hell ship” journey to Japan, starvation, torture, a broken back, a broken neck and fifteen major tropical diseases, including blindness, this once strapping, athletic six-footer was down to a starved 95 pounds.

After the Japanese surrender in 1945, and three years stateside in a veteran’s hospital, Al Brown went home for the first time in eleven years.

In 1950, though no longer able to practice dentistry because of his war wounds, he went to Hollywood, California and started a new life…Incidentally, was the godson of Buffalo Bill.
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Forsaken Heroes of the Pacific War: One Man's True Story

Forsaken Heroes of the Pacific War: One Man's True Story

Forsaken Heroes of the Pacific War: One Man's True Story

Forsaken Heroes of the Pacific War: One Man's True Story


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Overview

He was the nation’s oldest living survivor of the infamous Bataan Death March and three and a half years in Japanese prison camps during World War II.

As a youth, he was a four letter man and captain of his high school and college teams.

After college, he captained a team that beat the barnstorming Harlem Globetrotters.

In the late 1920’s, he bought two airplanes and began one of the nation’s earliest regional air travel businesses; then got his own pilot’s license after only four hours of training – and flew until he was 95.

In 1937, as a dentist with a ten year old practice, a wife and three children, the 32 year old ROTC lieutenant was called up by the army, as America began to prepare for war.

After Pearl Harbor, Al Brown and some 90,000 sick and starving American and Filipino troops fought valiantly for four months on the Bataan peninsula until they were surrendered to Japanese forces in April of 1942, food, ammunition and weaponry, virtually gone.

After the Death March, four prison camps, a “hell ship” journey to Japan, starvation, torture, a broken back, a broken neck and fifteen major tropical diseases, including blindness, this once strapping, athletic six-footer was down to a starved 95 pounds.

After the Japanese surrender in 1945, and three years stateside in a veteran’s hospital, Al Brown went home for the first time in eleven years.

In 1950, though no longer able to practice dentistry because of his war wounds, he went to Hollywood, California and started a new life…Incidentally, was the godson of Buffalo Bill.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940015922844
Publisher: The Bedford Group
Publication date: 09/28/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Don Morrow: A World War II veteran and longtime resident of Danbury, CT, Don is a nationally known voice actor with more than 60 years in show business behind the microphone and in front of the camera. He’s been a news announcer, called the “Voice of God,” behind Broadway’s Little Shop of Horrors, performed many of radio and television’s most memorable ads and some of Hollywood’s greatest film trailers, including Saving Private Ryan, Titanic and Clint Eastwood classics. His long-time friendship with Doc Brown began in Hollywood back in the 1980’s. Kevin Moore: A principal at Moore Communications & Associates in Danbury, CT, Kevin is a public relations professional with 20 years in the business, both corporate and consulting. An avid history buff, he is a videographer for the Veterans History Project, a national initiative commissioned by Congress to capture video interviews of U.S. veterans’ wartime experiences. He is a graduate of Georgetown University where he studied Government and American History. Kevin lives in Danbury with his wife and four children.
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