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| A young Warren Schilling on the front lines. |
"It was a noble thing to talk about, going into combat," said Warren, "but no one was exactly volunteering to go to the front lines. But as it turns out, that's exactly where I ended up."
His division arrived in England and then was moved through France and Belgium into the Ardennes Forest. In November 1944, his combat patrol came under ambush after his platoon sergeant stepped on a landmine. "The bark started flying off the trees," he said, "and all we heard was machine gun fire." They were ordered to withdraw. "Three of my buddies were killed," he remembers. "One of my friends was flat on the ground; he had been shot right through the face. I crawled with him and then helped him walk out of there to the medics. By the middle of January, he was back with us on the front lines."
At the Battle of the Bulge - by which time Warren was a sergeant - much of the 99th was overrun by German forces. They had to survive in the harsh winter with whatever food and supplies were brought to them. Warren battled with pneumonia and nearly lost some toes from frostbite. "Some of our replacements were so quickly trained in the States, they didn't even know how to load an M1 rifle when they joined us," recalls Warren. "But many of them turned out to be great guys."
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| In 1972, Col. Warren Schilling (right) served as one of the personal aides to 5-star General Omar Bradley (left). |
After returning to the States, Warren attended the University of Miami on the GI Bill, staying in the Infantry Reserve and eventually joining the Corps of Engineers. "Then when Korea started, the infantry reserve unit to which I was assigned stayed home, while the engineer reserve unit was called up!" He built airfields and other facilities during the Korean conflict, then switched from the Reserve to the regular Army for the rest of his career, even serving in Vietnam. Warren ended up as a colonel and in later years, was chosen to be an aide to five-star general Omar Bradley. "I think he chose me because I had originally served with him in combat during World War II," says Warren.
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| Col. Warren Schilling does his part to celebrate the great patriotism of Shell Point residents. |
Col. Schilling is just one of the many brave men and women who served our country as part of America's "greatest generation."
Return to 2004 News and Stories.

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