Let me start by congratulating all who served in the US Marine Corp on a Happy 250th Birthday this coming Monday, November 10th. oorah
Next week on the 11th of November, we as a nation celebrate Veterans Day. Last week I put out some facts about Veterans Day. This week I would like to inform you of some other very interesting facts.
As of early 2025, approximately 16.2 million Americans are living veterans who have served in the military. Over the course of the nation's history, more than 41 million Americans have served, with World War II alone accounting for over 16 million service members.
As of June 2025, there were about 1.1 million active-duty troops stationed in the U.S., with the total active military force being 2.86 million worldwide. On Tuesday, thank a veteran.
The Windham Rotary will be holding a penne and meatball dinner at our post building this Friday the 7th, with take out at 4:30 p.m. and dine in at 5 till 7 p.m.. Our post will be holding bingo on Thursday November 20, doors open at 6 p.m..
Veteran information to pass on to all veterans this week from the VFW Washington Office, Executive Director Ryan Gallucci testified before the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs during an oversight hearing on the VA disability system prompted by recent news reports alleging fraudulent practices within the compensation claims process.
Gallucci emphasized the VFW’s challenge to “Honor the Contract” between service members and the government. He asserted, “Our veterans didn’t ask what was in the air they breathed or the water they drank.
“And unlike many other public servants, they couldn’t just walk away if they didn’t want to do it anymore. They served in accordance with the contract they signed.
“Many now live with illnesses that steal their sleep, their breath and their ability to work. Suggesting that they embellish their suffering for money is insulting.” Accordingly, the federal government must fulfill its responsibility to care for those injured or sickened in service.
I would like to highlight a very interesting soldier to you. His name is Finnis D. “Mac” McCleery.
On this Christmas Day in 1927, a hero is born. Finnis D. “Mac” McCleery would go on to serve in World War II, Korea, and Vietnam, but it was an action in Vietnam that earned him the Medal of Honor.
By then, he was a 40-year-old platoon sergeant. Astonishingly, his service in Vietnam was the first time he’d been in combat. Indeed, he’d been nervous about his orders to go, later saying that he had “some doubts about my ability to fight. I’d been in the service for a long time but had never been in combat.”
“I’m just a farm boy,” he concluded. This “farm boy’s” heroism came on May 14, 1968, as Americans attacked the enemy on a hill in Quang Tin Province. Unfortunately, our boys became pinned down by heavy fire.
It made McCleery mad! He remembered that Americans had already taken the hill once. What had happened?
“I was mad at the time,” he later chuckled, remembering these moments. “I thought they should have held their objective. I thought, ‘Hell, I can take that hill by myself, if I have to.’” So that’s just what he did.
His Medal citation would later describe his “one-man assault” as “bullets struck all around him and rockets and grenades literally exploded at his feet.”
McCleery ran across nearly 70 yards of open ground until he reached the first enemy bunker. He was firing from the hip and throwing hand grenades. Naturally, he was wounded by this point, but he didn’t seem to notice as he took out the first bunker.
His citation explains that he then turned and “encouraged” his fellow soldiers to join him, but McCleery remembered it a bit differently.
“You son of a bitch, get up here and fight like a man,” he recalls yelling to other soldiers. Having said that, he also remembers that his fellow soldiers “fought like hell” once they got going. “Those people can’t whip American soldiers if they fight the way they’re trained to fight,” he concluded proudly.
Americans retook the hill, of course—but McCleery is credited with much of the Americans’ success that day. His bravery had inspired everyone around him. Nevertheless, McCleery didn’t understand why he was awarded a Medal. “I didn’t think they gave medals for things like that,” he explained.
“I thought, ‘Well, you fight and you fight as long as you can. You’re a soldier. That’s just what you’re supposed to do.’ I thought they had me mixed up with someone else.’”
Yet this soldier wasn’t just brave: He was shy. In fact, he wanted the Medal shipped to him. “I asked them just to ship the Medal to me,” he told a reporter. “I’ve never been comfortable around crowds of people.”
“I keep pretty quiet,” he said. “I can go anywhere I want and nobody recognizes me. That’s the way I like it. People say I look more like a farmer than a soldier, and I guess I do.”
He’d been a career soldier for decades at that point, but he shrugged that off, too. “Somebody has got to work to keep the country free,” he concluded. In the end, he accepted his Medal in person, but he also retired from the Army and returned to civilian life.
As always, keep our troops still serving in your thoughts and prayers. And I want to thank ALL veterans for their service. God Bless America.
Marc Farmilette, PDC Commander VFW Post 1545
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