Manchester, William, Sgt

Deceased
 
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 Service Details
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Last Rank
Sergeant
Last Primary MOS
0311-Rifleman
Last MOSGroup
Infantry
Primary Unit
1944-1945, 0311, H&HS Co, 1st Bn, 29th Marines (1/29)
Service Years
1942 - 1945
Enlisted Collar Insignia
Sergeant

 Last Photo 
 Personal Details 

16 kb


Home State
Massachusetts
Massachusetts
Year of Birth
1922
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by Navy SA Diane (TWS Admin) Short to remember Marine Sgt William Manchester.

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Contact Info
Home Town
Attleboro
Last Address
Attleboro
Date of Passing
Jun 01, 2004
 
Location of Interment
Indian Hill Cemetery - Middletown, Massachusetts

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 Ribbon Bar
Rifle Expert (Pre 1959)USMC Basic Qualification Badge

 
 Enlisted/Officer Basic Training
  1943, Boot Camp (Parris Island, SC)
 Unit Assignments
1st Bn, 29th Marines (1/29)
  1944-1945, 0311, H&HS Co, 1st Bn, 29th Marines (1/29)
 Combat and Non-Combat Operations
  1942-1942 Guadalcanal Campaign (1942-43)/Battle of Tulagi (including First Savo)
  1945-1945 Ryukyus Campaign (1945)/Battle for Okinawa
  1945-1945 Ryukyus Campaign (1945)/Battle for Okinawa/Battle for Sugar Loaf Hill
 Colleges Attended
University of Massachusetts at BostonUniversity of Missouri-Saint Louis
  1940-1946, University of Massachusetts at Boston
  1946-1947, University of Missouri-Saint Louis
 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

William Manchester
(April 01, 1922 - June 01, 2004)

Historian & Biographer
Purple Heart Recipient

Manchester was the son of a WWI Marine, and grew up in Attleboro, Massachusetts. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, he enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps. Although he expected to serve in Europe, Manchester ultimately found himself in the Pacific. He served on Guadalcanal after the Japanese defeat there, and experienced combat in the last major battle of the Pacific War, on Okinawa.
Source: Wikipedia

He served in the Marine Corps, attaining the rank of sergeant. He was shot in the kneecap on Okinawa's Sugar Loaf Hill but left the military hospital when he heard his regiment was moving on to Oruku peninsula. Wounded by mortar fire, he also was shot by a Japanese soldier near his heart. He was a recipient of the Purple Heart. 
Source: The Washington Post

   
Other Comments:

Early Years

William Raymond Manchester Jr. was born on April 1, 1922, in Attleboro, Massachusetts. Manchester spent the early part of his childhood battling health issues that forced him to spend considerable time indoors. As a result, he became an avid reader and eventually a prolific writer. Manchester penned his first poems at the age of 7, and by 11 was churning out short stories.

Following his father's death, the family moved to Springfield, Massachusetts, where Manchester graduated from Classical High School in 1940. That fall, he enrolled at the University of Massachusetts, where he joined the swim team and majored in English. He interrupted his studies in 1942 to follow a family tradition and join the Marines. Manchester fought in the Pacific War, where he was nearly mortally wounded, and earned a Purple Heart.

It was during his recovery that Manchester met another injured American military man: John F. Kennedy. It was the start of a friendship what would span the next two decades, until the president's assassination in Dallas, Texas, on November 22, 1963.

Following his discharge, Manchester returned to the University of Massachusetts, where he completed his English degree and graduated first in his class in 1946. A master's from the University of Missouri followed, as well as his marriage to Julia Marshall in 1948.

Manchester then spent several years working as a newspaper reporter before he took a job as a secretary for writer, H. L. Mencken, who was the subject of Manchester's master's thesis. With his mentor's encouragement, Manchester tried his hand at writing books, and over the next decade he churned out a series of fiction titles. In 1959, he published his first nonfiction book, A Rockefeller Family Portrait.

 
 

Kennedy Connection

Maintaining his close ties to Kennedy, Manchester became a frequent visitor to the Kennedy family compound in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts. In 1962, he published Portrait of a President: John F. Kennedy in Profile, which was panned by some critics for its overly adoring tone.

In the wake of Kennedy's assassination, Manchester was the obvious choice of the former First Lady, Jacqueline Kennedy, to write about the tragedy. However, the easy relationship between the writer and the Kennedy family quickly soured when Jackie started fearing that Manchester would write too honestly about her contempt for President Lyndon B. Johnson. The animosity intensified when Look magazine offered Manchester approximately $650,000 to serialize the book, prompting JFK's widow to publicly decry the writer's commercial motives.

Manchester ended up working with the Kennedy family to make some minor edits of the book. In the end, the tension surrounding the project proved publishing gold, with Death of a President going on to sell more than 1.3 million hardcover copies after its publication in the spring of 1967. Despite being dismissed by some critics as hagiography, the book earned Manchester the coveted Dag Hammarskjold International Literary Prize. It was considered a landmark in reportage on the world-famous assassination, but has subsequently been superseded as new evidence has emerged.


Later Years

A tireless writer and researcher, Manchester's post-Kennedy career proved incredibly fruitful. His later books included The Arms of Krupp, 1587-1958 (1968); American Caesar: Douglas MacArthur 1880-1964 (1978); and the first two volumes of The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill biography: Visions of Glory, 1874-1932 (1983) and Alone, 1932-1940 (1988). In addition, he authored the 1,400-page The Glory and the Dream: A Narrative History of America1932-1972, which was published in 1974.

For Manchester, the interest in his subjects was born out of his own interest and fascination with power.

"Power is the one thing that has fascinated me ever since I was a kid in Springfield, Mass.," he once said. "What exactly is power? Where are its roots? How do some people get it and others miss it entirely? How do they hold it or lose it?"

A series of debilitating strokes eventually diminished Manchester's ability to work, and he was forced to pass the incomplete third volume of Churchill's biography, Defender of the Realm, 1940-1965, to another writer. Manchester died at his home in Middletown, Connecticut, on June 1, 2004.

Source: Biography.com

   
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