RIP Sir Frank Williams. Dude made the most of what ought to have been a much shorter life.
Legit hero.
Wasn't he one of the longest-surviving quadriplegics in medical history after his accident in 1986?
I remember Alan Jones winning the Championship on white/green Williams-Saudia in 1980 (one of the Czech magazine for kids had a paper model of that car - and I was eternally disappointed when that issue was sold out before it hit newspaper stands...)RIP Sir Frank Williams. Dude made the most of what ought to have been a much shorter life.
To that point:Wasn't he one of the longest-surviving quadriplegics in medical history after his accident in 1986?
A good American, imo.Bob Dole's gone to the great senate chamber in the sky.
https://www.hollomon-brown.com/obituari ... d=23292641Edward Shames, a World War II veteran who was the last surviving officer of “Easy Company,” which inspired the HBO miniseries and book “Band of Brothers,” has died. He was 99.
An obituary posted by the Holomon-Brown Funeral Home & Crematory said Shames, of Norfolk, Virginia, died peacefully at his home on Friday.
Shames was involved in some of the most important battles of World War II. During the war, he was a member of the renowned Easy Company, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division.
“He made his first combat jump into Normandy on D-Day as part of Operation Overlord. He volunteered for Operation Pegasus and then fought with Easy Company in Operation Market Garden and the Battle of the Bulge in Bastogne,” according to the obituary.
Shames was the first member of the 101st to enter Dachau concentration camp, just days after its liberation.
“When Germany surrendered, Ed and his men of Easy Company entered Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest where Ed managed to acquire a few bottles of cognac, a label indicating they were ‘for the Fuhrer’s use only.’ Later, he would use the cognac to toast his oldest son’s bar mitzvah,” the obituary said.
Corrected. Last officer and previously oldest member.Last officer? Or last officer or enlisted?