Did he say when it was given? If it was for bravery in the Battle of the Marne it could be legit.originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
I'm amazed they had it on display.
Did he say when it was given? If it was for bravery in the Battle of the Marne it could be legit.originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
I'm amazed they had it on display.
Not by my reckoning. Born around 1970 means father born 1950-1935 means grandfather born 1930-1900 (and you can add a few more years around each). WWI certainly possible, but not necessarily more probable than WWII.originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
ETA: And as far as time-frame, a grandfather of someone 24 in the mid-90s (i.e. born himself in late 60s/early 70s) would probably have been more for WWI than WWII.
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Not by my reckoning. Born around 1970 means father born 1950-1935 means grandfather born 1930-1900 (and you can add a few more years around each). WWI certainly possible, but not necessarily more probable than WWII.originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
ETA: And as far as time-frame, a grandfather of someone 24 in the mid-90s (i.e. born himself in late 60s/early 70s) would probably have been more for WWI than WWII.
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Not by my reckoning. Born around 1970 means father born 1950-1935 means grandfather born 1930-1900 (and you can add a few more years around each). WWI certainly possible, but not necessarily more probable than WWII.originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
ETA: And as far as time-frame, a grandfather of someone 24 in the mid-90s (i.e. born himself in late 60s/early 70s) would probably have been more for WWI than WWII.
Yes, but generation times are shaky ground to build these arguments on. If his father was 40 when he was born, and the father's father 35 when he was born, the grandfather would then be born in 1895 and have been of prime age for WW I. My son's grandfather was born 86 years before him, just as a for instance.
Mark Lipton
Not to mention that, given the casualty rates in WWI, by 1917 they were probably hosing up everyone they could, not just "prime age". Speaking of French demographics, where's Rahsaan when we need him?originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Not by my reckoning. Born around 1970 means father born 1950-1935 means grandfather born 1930-1900 (and you can add a few more years around each). WWI certainly possible, but not necessarily more probable than WWII.originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
ETA: And as far as time-frame, a grandfather of someone 24 in the mid-90s (i.e. born himself in late 60s/early 70s) would probably have been more for WWI than WWII.
Yes, but generation times are shaky ground to build these arguments on. If his father was 40 when he was born, and the father's father 35 when he was born, the grandfather would then be born in 1895 and have been of prime age for WW I. My son's grandfather was born 86 years before him, just as a for instance.
Mark Lipton
I think Texas needs all the socialism it can get. Cab would be good, too.
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
A long time ago, yes.
Céline (at least early Céline) is confoundingly brilliant. Maybe my favorite novelist of the 20th century in France, with Proust (in a completely different vein, of course).
A "conscious, dedicated agent of the Communist Conspiracy," no?originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
Eisenhower
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
I think in rural France at that time, it was more likely to have had children while fairly young, unlike today
OTOH, proudly showing the medal to someone from the US...
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
Not to mention that, given the casualty rates in WWI, by 1917 they were probably hosing up everyone they could, not just "prime age". Speaking of French demographics, where's Rahsaan when we need him?originally posted by MLipton:
Yes, but generation times are shaky ground to build these arguments on. If his father was 40 when he was born, and the father's father 35 when he was born, the grandfather would then be born in 1895 and have been of prime age for WW I. My son's grandfather was born 86 years before him, just as a for instance.
Mark Lipton
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
Eisenhower Republicans would be a big improvement.
originally posted by Cliff: Eisenhower wasn't just a socialist but a full-blown Commie: the top marginal rate in his day was 92%!
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Not by my reckoning. Born around 1970 means father born 1950-1935 means grandfather born 1930-1900 (and you can add a few more years around each). WWI certainly possible, but not necessarily more probable than WWII.originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
ETA: And as far as time-frame, a grandfather of someone 24 in the mid-90s (i.e. born himself in late 60s/early 70s) would probably have been more for WWI than WWII.
Yes, but generation times are shaky ground to build these arguments on. If his father was 40 when he was born, and the father's father 35 when he was born, the grandfather would then be born in 1895 and have been of prime age for WW I. My son's grandfather was born 86 years before him, just as a for instance.
Mark Lipton
Certainly possible, as I said, Mark. But I think in rural France at that time, it was more likely to have had children while fairly young, unlike today (although not certain -- the grandfather could have married relatively late in life, taking advantage of the very favorable female/male ratio after WWI). Historically, generations have usually been counted as 20-30 years in my experience.
OTOH, proudly showing the medal to someone from the US does make one think it was more likely WWI than WWII (but then, see the Alice Kaplan book I referred to above).
I'm with Claude: gramps was awarded the medal, in person, during The Great War and that is still a thing to be proud of. Alas, the giver of the medal went on to be less than honorable, which mars the story but does not destroy it.originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
It seems to me quite likely from Sharon's story that the medal was from WWII.originally posted by Claude Kolm:
OTOH, proudly showing the medal to someone from the US does make one think it was more likely WWI than WWII (but then, see the Alice Kaplan book I referred to above).