
A Sailor's Song: Lost Love Letters of World War II - Lawrence Schnell
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Vezi oferta la libris.roA Sailor's Song: Lost Love Letters of World War II is the story of the Coast Guard's Manhattan Beach Training Station bands and its musicians as told through military records and letters. Throughout much of the war, the Manhattan Beach Coast Guard musicians played in multiple bands-full military bands, marching bands for bond rallies, dance bands, and smaller ensembles for officers' balls, sick bay, and special events. During the last year of the war, most Manhattan Beach musicians were abruptly assigned to the U.S.S. General A.W. Greely, a new troop transport ship that would carry troops between the homeland and the Pacific war. Commander George W. Stedman Jr. recognized the value of musical entertainment on board. Under his direction, the Greely was equipped with two organs and a piano, a musical instrument room, special quarters for musicians, and a sound system throughout the ship that broadcast music of the Greely Grenadiers, as the Manhattan Beach band was named. With the Grenadiers playing for the ship's commissioning and continuing beyond the war's end, the Greely earned the reputation as the only ship in the war that had its own band from the start of service. Bands rehearsed and performed daily on deck throughout the Indian and Pacific oceans on three voyages, one a circumnavigation, as well as a transatlantic voyage. On return from her second Pacific voyage, the Greely brought home from the Pacific Theater the most war-weary troops-Merrill's Marauders, the Flying T











