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Art Imitates Life The Life Of Peter Ortiz By Will Dabbs, MD

Peter Ortiz was a proper war hero long before he went to work in Hollywood. Public domain.

Robert Downey, Jr. is one of the most esteemed actors of his generation. His depiction of Tony Stark as Iron Man across 10 big-budget superhero movies became iconic. I once read a commentary by a British film critic who said that Downey’s English accent in the Sherlock Holmes films was the only example of an American playing a Brit that he felt was in any way believable. What makes that so remarkable is that Downey never took acting lessons. He just got in front of the camera and did his thing. He’s a natural.

There was a time when this was the rule rather than the exception. John Wayne’s natural swagger certainly could not be learned. Back in the Golden Age of Hollywood, actors were not necessarily mushy, fragile prima donnas. They often were drawn from the ranks of truly manly men out in the real world. Principle among them was one Peter Ortiz.

Filmography of a Hero

Peter Ortiz starred in 27 films and two television series. His filmography includes such classics as She Wore a Yellow RibbonRetreat, Hell!The OutcastTwelve O’Clock HighWings of Eagles, and Rio Grande. Ortiz brought a gritty realism to the sundry roles he played on screens both large and small. That’s because he was arguably the baddest man ever to grace the silver screen.

Pierre Julien Ortiz was born in New York in 1913. His mother was of Swiss stock, while his dad was a Spaniard born in France. He was educated at the French University of Grenoble. Ortiz spoke 10 languages. In 193,2 at age 18, he joined the French Foreign Legion.

The Foreign Legion is comprised of some legendarily rough hombres. Peter Ortiz thrived in this space. He earned the Croix de Guerre twice while fighting the Riffian people in Morocco. In 1935, Ortiz turned down a commission as an officer in the Legion to travel to Hollywood and serve as a technical advisor for war films.

Peter Ortiz is shown here second from the left with his team of OSS operators in occupied France during World War 2. Marine Corps photo.

Proper War

We modern Americans often overlook this fact, but World War II burned on for a couple of years before we got involved. As soon as the shooting started, Ortiz left Hollywood and returned to the Legion as a sergeant. He soon earned a battlefield commission and was wounded while destroying a German fuel dump. He was captured soon thereafter but escaped through Portugal, eventually making it back to the United States.

War was a growth industry in the early 1940s, and American citizens with combat experience were invaluable assets. Ortiz enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps in June of 1942 and earned a commission as a Second Lieutenant 40 days later. He made captain by year’s end and was deployed to Tangier, Morocco, assigned to the Office of Strategic Services. The OSS was the predecessor to the CIA. Captain Peter Ortiz was now officially a spy.

Undercover Ops

Ortiz was wounded badly, recovered, and then parachuted into occupied Europe several times. He repatriated downed Allied flyers and helped organize French Underground units. In August 1944, he was captured by the Germans. He survived torture by the Gestapo and somehow avoided execution. In April 1945, Ortiz’s POW camp was liberated. Now a Lieutenant Colonel, he made his way back to Hollywood to pick up where he left off.

In 1954, Southeast Asia was heating up, so Lt. Ortiz volunteered to return to active duty. However, by then, he was more than 40 years old and sort of famous. The Marines turned him down but promoted him to full Colonel in retirement.

Decorations

We’ve glossed over this guy’s amazing career. He was awarded an Order of the British Empire (OBE) by the government of England. He earned both the Navy Cross and the Purple Heart, each twice. The Navy Cross is our second-highest award for valor, right after the Medal of Honor. Here’s an excerpt from his first Navy Cross citation:

“Operating in civilian clothes and aware that he would be subject to execution in the event of his capture, Major Ortiz parachuted from an airplane with two other officers of an Inter-Allied mission to reorganize existing Maquis groups in the region of Rhone.

By his tact, resourcefulness and leadership, he was largely instrumental in affecting the acceptance of the mission by local resistance leaders, and also in organizing parachute operations for the delivery of arms, ammunition and equipment for use by the Maquis in his region.

Although his identity had become known to the Gestapo with the resultant increase in personal hazard, he voluntarily conducted to the Spanish border four Royal Air Force officers who had been shot down in his region, and later returned to resume his duties. Repeatedly leading successful raids during the period of this assignment, Major Ortiz inflicted heavy casualties on enemy forces greatly superior in number, with small losses to his own forces.”

Ruminations

There were two Hollywood films that were based upon his personal adventures. 13 Rue Madeleine came out in 1947. Operation Secret hit theaters in 1952. Ortiz had one son, Pete Junior, who served as a Marine officer himself, retiring as a Lieutenant Colonel.

Of his dad, the younger Marine said, “My father was an awful actor, but he had great fun appearing in movies.” Colonel Peter Ortiz might not have been the greatest actor of all time, but he was an amazing warrior.

United States

United Kingdom

France

Morocco

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Ghosts of Heroes Past By Will Dabbs, MD

The End Of The Greatest Generation

The suffering and deprivation those awesome old guys endured so we could live as free men and women simply defies reason. Photo: U.S. Navy

 

Most of them are all gone now. Our world used to be dirty with WWII veterans. In my own little Southern town, the local car salesman served on PT boats in the South Pacific, the banker flew B-24 Liberators, my geometry teacher humped a Browning Automatic Rifle all the way across Europe and the owner of the local shoe store jumped into Normandy with the 82nd.

They all dressed like the Blues Brothers and gathered out in front of the church at the last amen to smoke cigarettes. They all smoked. Did you ever wonder why that was?

In war, young people see and experience things no one ever should.
These are Japanese dead on Guadalcanal. Photo: U.S. Marine Corps

A Day In The Life

A reader recently sent me a copy of an article taken from The Harlan Daily Enterprise dated 1 November 1944. It concerned his dad, PFC Robert Winebarger. Here is the prose:

“SOMEWHERE IN THE PACIFIC — Using a Tommy gun, a right to the jaw, a Jap sword and plenty of nerve, PFC Robert L. Winebarger of Harlan, Ky., killed five Jap soldiers in about as many seconds and softened up a sixth for a buddy to polish off during the battle for Guam. Winebarger was leading a patrol in the hills of Barrigada when he came across the six Jap stragglers bivouacked in a clearing. He immediately moved in, opened up with his Tommy gun and killed three of them. As the third one went down, his gun spat out its last shell — the other three Japs were just five yards away. One of them, an officer, ran for his Samurai sword, which was hanging on a nearby banana tree. A race for the sword. It was a tie.

But Winebarger smashed his enemy in the face with his elbow, knocked him down and wrested the sword from his hands. “I ripped the scabbard off and was going to cleave him when one of the other Japs came out of his daze and went for a grenade,” Winebarger said. “I dug the sword in his back, and the end of the blade broke off. The third Jap was crawling toward a whole bag of grenades when I swiped him a pretty one, smack on top of the head. He let out a squawk, so I chopped him again to make sure he was done for.”

Winebarger then turned to finish off the Jap officer he had stunned with the scabbard, but another member of the Marine patrol had got there first.

The 21-year-old Marine has been overseas 18 months and is a veteran of the Guam and Bougainville campaigns.

This fighting Marine is the son of W.S. Winebarger and a brother of Raymond Winebarger, manager of Lloyd’s Café, where Robert formerly was employed.”

Let’s ponder the particulars of this exchange for a moment. This 21-year-old kid killed five enemy soldiers at bad-breath range and brained a third. He blew three of them away with a Thompson submachine gun and took the next two at contact range with a sword. The sordid details were splashed all over his local newspaper. What must the experience do to a person?

My buddy tells me his dad seldom spoke of the war after he came home. Most of them didn’t. Soak in the details of the above narrative and then juxtapose that against a normal life with a job, a mortgage and a family. It’s like oil and water. Those two worlds just don’t mix.

Here’s a quote from my friend regarding what it was like growing up with a man like that, “I still remember as a youngster being awakened by his screaming from nightmares in the middle of the night and our Mother coming in our room telling us, ‘Daddy is just having a bad dream.’ He had a lot of bad dreams!” Is it any wonder?

Nothing about freedom is free: Graves on Guadalcanal. Photo: U.S. Army

Broken People

Of course they all smoked. Nicotine is a superb anxiety drug and their world was unimaginably anxiety-provoking. Uncle Sam put cigarettes in their K-rations. I hate cigarettes more than Nancy Pelosi hates guys like me, and I would have very likely picked up the habit myself had I been there.

Some might take umbrage with the wanton use of a certain antiquated racial epithet in the previous narrative. You’ll just have to get over that. Be offended by the fact a 21-year-old kid had to chop a man’s head in half in order to live to see another dawn, not that he used some particularly harsh language.

We so seldom see what the world was really like. It was horrible, unimaginably thus, but this is what it took to buy us our liberty. Those incredible kids willingly gave up their innocence and their lives so we could be free. We owe it to them as modern-day Americans to live like we know it.

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The M1 Garand & the Cold War by Tom Laemlein

World War II may have ended with the birth of atomic weapons, but despite the emergence of nuclear war-making ability it had taken John Garand’s legendary invention to bear the brunt of keeping the world safe from tyranny.

The M1 rifle had outfought and outshot the Axis on every battlefront, and by the time the peace had been won, nearly 5.4 million M1 rifles had been made. The Garand had beaten the full gamut of enemy rifles, from the classic bolt action Mauser and Arisaka types, to the semi-automatic Gewehr 43 and the newfangled selective-fire Sturmgewehr.

ARVN forces near Saigon with M1 Garand in Vietnam War
The M1 rifle with South Vietnamese (ARVN) troops in October 1963 during the Vietnam War. Image: NARA

In the early post WWII-era, many M1 rifles were returned to the United States for the extensive arsenal rebuild program for U.S. rifles (this included both the M1 Garand and the M1 Carbine). Worn and broken parts were updated and replaced from stocks to sights, and many rifles were re-barreled. War-weary M1 rifles were made new again, quietly waiting for the next conflict that was sure to come.

Planning for the Long Term

At the end of World War II, the mission of U.S. arsenals changed dramatically — shifting from high-volume weapons production to repairs, rebuilds, and either storage or re-issue of those weapons. The M1 rifle was at the top of that list. While several new research and development projects for a new selective-fire rifle that featured a detachable box magazine were taking place, the lion’s share of standard M1 rifles were brought back to factory-issued condition, and many were placed in long-term storage.

Storing M1 Garand rifles for future service
Preparing for the long winter of the Cold War: “Canning” M1 rifles after World War II. Image: SANHS

Beginning in 1950, a new method of preserving rifles for storage was introduced that eliminated the use of the heavy (and much despised) cosmoline grease. The new method was called a “Volatile Corrosion Inhibitor” that leveraged a specially treated foil bag that created a corrosion fighting gas compound once the rifle was sealed inside. Once removed from the bag, the M1 rifle was ready for action with no tedious cleaning required.

M1 long term storage
M1 rifles were placed in long-term storage for use in a national emergency, delivery to the National Guard or shipment to allies. Image: SANHS

Also developed were special hermetically sealed metal cannisters for “M1 Canning”. These drums used several pounds of desiccant to keep 10 lightly oiled M1 rifles “fresh” for up to fifty years. Other small arms like the M1911 pistol, the M1 Carbine, the Browning Automatic Rifle and the M3A1 SMG were also canned using this same technique.

Back to Asia…

On June 25, 1950, the North Korean communist invasion of South Korea caught the United States by surprise. In August, Congress appropriated $12 billion for America’s armed response to communist aggression. Military budget cuts had been extensive, and the focus of the U.S. military had quickly changed to jet aircraft and atomic weapons. There was little in the form of conventional forces and weapons to deploy to Korea. Even so, the M1 Garand was ready to fight for freedom once again. (Don’t miss my article about the BAR in the Korean War.)

Korean War USMC soldier on hillside with M1 Garand
A Marine and his rifle are a dominating force. Here Marines are shown during the Korean War with M1 rifles during 1952. Image: NARA

In many ways, the M1 rifle faced some of its greatest combat challenges during the Korean War. The rifle’s reliable performance in the rugged Korean landscape, and particularly during the intensely cold winter of 1950-51, earned the Garand the respect of friend and foe alike. (Check out my article discussing the M1C and M1D sniper rifles in the Korean War.)

To keep their M1s from freezing shut, the G.I.s opted to remove all lubricating oil and grease during the winter months.

Columbian troops in the Korean War with the M1 Garand rifle
The M1 equipped most of the United Nations infantry units in the Korean War. These men are from the Columbian Battalion. Image: NARA

Despite the stress on the weapon, the M1 kept working, kept firing, and this saved lives in the struggle to turn back communist attacks. Even without a detachable box magazine, or selective fire capability, U.S. and other United Nations infantrymen were able to maintain a high volume of aimed fire, which was critical when facing Chinese “human wave” assaults.

Marines in Helicopter with M1 Garand rifle in Korean War
During the Korean War, these U.S. Marines rode with their M1 rifles into battle in a Sikorsky H-19 Chickasaw helicopter. Image: NARA

S.L.A. Marshall’s comprehensive report: Commentary on Infantry Operations and Weapons Usage in Korea, Winter of 1950-51 was considered damning to some U.S. firearms, but certainly not to the M1 rifle. This is his succinct appraisal of the M1’s performance in the frozen hell of Korea:

The issue rifle (M1) has performed adequately in Korea and is regarded by troops with a liking amounting to affection. They have found that it stands up ruggedly against the most extreme tests by terrain, weather, and rough handling. The rifle is sufficiently accurate for the purpose intended. Its record of high serviceability remained unimpaired during the worst storms of the winter. Of all weapons carried by the infantry, the M1 appeared to be least sensitive to heavy frost, extreme cold, and icing. Its “durability” is the great reason why it stands in such high favor with the men. They no longer mind the weight of the piece because of its consistent performance.

Commentary on Infantry Operations and Weapons Usage in Korea, Winter of 1950-51, S.L.A. Marshall

Filipino soldier with M1 Garand in Korean War
One of the approximately 7,500 soldiers of the “Philippine Expeditionary Forces to Korea”. Image: SANHS

Time after time, round after round, in one war after another, the M1 rifle proved the battlefield value of John Garand’s incredibly sturdy design.

Equipping Friends and Allies

The Cold War was a global conflict, and the M1 rifle helped hold the line against communism all around the world. For many of America’s United Nations, NATO and SEATO allies, the M1 was either a prime or otherwise significant battle rifle throughout the 1950s and well into the 1960s.

Japanese Self-Defense Forces armed with M1 Garand rifles
Men of the Japanese Ground Self-Defense Force armed with M1 rifles during 1958. Image: NARA

In his amazingly detailed study of the M1, “The M1 Garand Rifle”, noted author and firearms researcher Bruce N. Canfield provides a complete list of the nations that received the M1 rifle: Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Columbia, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Uruguay, Venezuela, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, Israel, Iran, Turkey, Austria, Great Britain, Greece, France, Italy, Netherlands, Belgium, West Germany, Denmark, Norway, Ethiopia, Taiwan, Indonesia, South Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Philippines, South Korea, and Japan.

Italy even developed its most significant post-war infantry rifle, the BM 59, from the American M1 Garand. Make sure you read our article “Sibling Rivalry? The Italian BM 59” about this fascinating rifle.

Prior to the end of WWII, the Japanese tried to copy the M1 Garand rifle. Ultimately, they got the real things post-war.

Greek soldier with M1 in Korean War
A soldier of the Greek Expeditionary Force in Korea. Hellenic troops fought bravely throughout the war and received two U.S. Presidential Unit Citations for bravery. Image: SANHS

Even as new selective fire “assault rifles” became popular, the M1 rifle was still effective on a modern battlefield. This was particularly true in the many small “brushfire” conflicts that marked the Cold War period. For cash-strapped developing nations, the M1 was also an economical choice, particularly if their ideology aligned with U.S. foreign policy. In many situations during the first twenty years of the Cold War, U.S. foreign aid was labeled: “U.S. Rifle, Caliber .30, M1”

At War Again in Vietnam

Even though the M14 rifle had been adopted by the U.S. military in 1959, millions of M1 rifles remained in U.S. service as well as with Allied nations around the world. By the early 1960s, the M1 rifle was at war again, this time in South Vietnam. A group of 400 U.S. Special Forces advisors went to Vietnam in May 1961. By the end of 1963, that number had grown to 16,000 U.S. troops in country.

U.S. Ranger trains ARVN troops in Vietnam with M1
In Vietnam, a U.S. advisor of the 77th Ranger Detachment demonstrates off-hand firing to ARVN troops, October 1962. Image: NARA

With more than 220,000 M1s sent to South Vietnam, many South Vietnamese troops, ranging from conventional ARVN units to Vietnamese Popular and Regional Forces, carried the M1 rifle. The Garand also found its way into the hands of the Viet Cong, and U.S. forces captured many M1s from the VC before 1968.

ARVN troops continued to use the M1 rifle on a limited basis right up until the time that Saigon fell in 1975. The big M1 was always considered a little too much rifle for the slight frame of the average Vietnamese, but the size of the rifleman did not change the effectiveness of the rifle. By the 1960s, the times and the troops had changed, but the battle honors for the M1 remained the same for a new generation of fighting men.

Random Shots Around the World

The M1 rifle remained in the American arsenal even as the M14 was standardized, and then the M16 a few years later. The Garand was present at major events, like the ill-fated Bay of Pigs invasion in April 1961 (on both sides), with the U.S. Army’s Berlin Brigade during the construction of the Berlin Wall (beginning in August 1961), and with the Ohio National Guard during the Kent State tragedy in May 1970.

Soldiers with M1 rifle at Berlin wall construction
U.S. troops of the Berlin Brigade observe East German construction of the Berlin Wall in August 1961. Image: NARA

In the past 25 years, the M1 has been spotted in use during the Somali Civil War, the Iraq War, the Afghan Wars, and the Syrian Civil War. A full 85 years after it was standardized, the M1 Garand soldiers on — an American firearms icon and a legendary warrior around the world. Who knows what the future holds for “the greatest battle implement ever devised”?

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