Showing posts with label Veterans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Veterans. Show all posts

Thursday, May 1, 2014

Special Presentation May 20th!



All members of the CT Quilters QOV Group are invited
to attend a very special presentation.   

Aston Gardens is a senior living community located on Linebaugh Avenue, just around the corner from the Crafty Threads Quilt Shop, close to where it intersects with Race Track Rd. (see map below).

Our Group has been invited to present a brief program to the Veterans Group at Aston Gardens that will include the following speakers and topics:
  • Pat Neville:  History of how the CT Quilters QOV Group was established and the quilts awarded to date
  • Barb Linares:  Why she wanted her shop to be registered as an “Under Our Wings QOV Shop” and on being a woman Veteran
  • Debbie Wallace:  The new quilt pattern and group direction for 2014
  • Linda Fentriss:  Background on the National Quilts of Valor Foundation and her role as a Regional Representative for the State of Florida

Following the program, we expect to award up to 20 Quilts of Valor to the members of the Veterans Group.  The majority of these men and women are Veterans of WWII with a few being Veterans of the Korean Conflict.  Pat N. has met with the current leader of the group (who was in charge of the Port of Tampa Coast Guard when the Sunshine Skyway Bridge was struck) and she found them to be a very interesting group!

Details:
Date:               Tuesday, May 20th

Time:               Meet at 8:45 in the Ballroom of the Main Bldg at Aston Gardens
                        Or
                        Meet at 8:30 at Crafty Threads to carpool to Aston Gardens
                        [Veterans’ Group meeting usually runs from 9:00-10:00 a.m.]

Where:            Aston Gardens Independent Care Facility
                        12951 W. Linebaugh Ave, Tampa 33626
   
Link to Map:   http://tinyurl.com/lbzw6td

RSVP REQUIRED!
Please send an email to Pat Neville at puffarice@tampabay.rr.com
Let her know: (1) if you will be able attend the presentation;
                        (2) if you would like to carpool from Crafty Threads;
                        (3) and if you would like to go to the Cracker Barrel with the CT                                 Quilters afterwards.


Wear something Red, White and Blue!

Sunday, February 23, 2014

A Salute to WWII Service Personnel


The US Marine Corps War Memorial in Arlington VA, better known as the Iwo Jima Memorial, honors those Marines who have served and died defending the US since the  inception of the Corps in 1775.  The Memorial is modeled after the iconic photograph by Joseph Rosenthal. 
A second photo atop Mt Suribachi, Iwo Jima - Feb 1945 (AP/Joe Rosenthal)
Rosenthal took the photo after a famous battle during World War II on the tiny strategic island of Iwo Jima in the Pacific Ocean about 660 miles south of Tokyo, Japan.   

It was on this date, Feb 23, 1945, after fierce fighting that US Armed Forces endured a tortuous climb and ultimately raised a tiny American Flag at the summit of Mt Suribachi heartening men all over the island.  After the slopes were cleared of enemy resistance that afternoon, a larger flag was raised by 5 Marines and a Navy hospital corpsman and the iconic photo was taken.

Today, we remember and salute our Marine Veterans and those who fought
beside them and express our eternal gratitude for the Freedoms we hold dear.


Sunday, July 7, 2013

Women in Service


Did you know that 15% of those serving in the US Army are women?  And that many of the Quilts of Valor that we make are awarded to women that have been touched by war?
Find out more about the QOVs awarded to these women at:  http://tinyurl.com/mxkmdnc
Let me introduce you to one of those women – a woman who has worked virtually her entire adult life towards integrating women into the military.  She is Evelyn “Pat” Foote, US Army  Brigadier General, Retired.


Yes, you read that right – Brigadier General !!  There had never been a woman to reach the rank of general when Foote first served in Vietnam in 1967/8 and President Lyndon B. Johnson signed a law that made it theoretically possible.


Foote was born in 1930, during an era when girls were automatically funneled into Home Economics classes and discouraged (and often prevented from) taking math and science classes.  But Foote was rebellious and ended up with a BA from Wake Forest in NC, an ES degree from Shippensburg State in PA and was awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Wake Forest.

Foote’s US Army career spanned 1959-1989.  When she first served in Vietnam in 1967, she was shocked to discover that women serving there had received no special training for the location and were not armed.  Since that time, she has worked tirelessly fighting to have women properly equipped and trained.


Subsequently, Foote became the first woman to command a brigade in Europe.  She was awarded the rank of general in 1986.  And, she has received the Distinguished Service Medal, a Legion of Merit and a Bronze Star.


Was that career enough for Foote?  Not nearly enough, she now serves on the Advisory Council of the Business and Professional Women’s Foundation.  She continues to champion for women’s advancement in the armed forces and transforming all workplaces for women to those where they can find diversity, equity and work-life balance.

The US Army has since had 55 women generals.  Learn more about Pat Foote and her accomplishments, plus other groundbreaking women’s stories, at this PBS site:

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Mother’s Day - Honoring Women Who Served

We have several members within the CT Quilters Quilts of Valor Group with close ties to the military or wartime service.  And some of our members are also Veterans themselves.  We thought it would be fitting on this day that is designated to honor women and mothers that we let you know of some of the accomplishments of these remarkable women.


First we offer a brief introduction to Barb L, owner of the Crafty Threads Quilt Shop.  Barb is an US Air Force Veteran and was stationed in both Denver, CO (where she learned to ski !!) and Sacramento, CA (where she honed her technical skills).  She was once sent on a temporary assignment north of the Arctic Circle (BRRR!).  Of course, we aren’t privy to why she went there, but suffice to say that the polar bears all know Barb …  just kidding, Barb – don’t send the bears after us!!
 

Barb offered her shop as an Under Our Wings location with the Quilts of Valor Foundation and volunteered to do QOV longarm quilting for the group.  The CT Quilters meet there once a month and are very grateful for the contributions Barb makes to our group’s efforts.
Our second introduction is to Linda F, one of our own CT Quilters and a Veteran of the US Navy.   Linda was an air traffic controllman and served as part of the flight crew on C-118 and C-131 where she met her husband on her check ride for qualifying as an air crewman.   Linda earned her wings in July 1968.  Way to go, Linda!
 

The women in Linda’s family have a proud tradition of service.  Both Linda’s daughter, Allison, and her mother-in-law Beatrice, are Navy Veterans.  Allison is a disabled Navy Veteran, having served in 1993.  And Beatrice served as a Photographers Mate during WWII.  There is plenty more to tell about Linda’s family tree-of-service, but that will have to wait until Father’s Day!
Next up are our own CT Quilters, Suzanne and Diana.  Suzanne’s mother served as a military nurse (what a caring profession if there ever was one…) and Diana’s mother was a genuine Rosie the Riveter, representing women who worked in factories to further the war effort in WWII (how cool is that?).
 
Norman Rockwell's Saturday
Evening Post Cover of Rosie
And last, but not least, our leader of the CT Quilters, Pat N, wrote this touching tribute to her mother, Essie, a US Army Veteran.


A Mothers Day Remembrance
by Pat N

My mother PFC Essie J from Tabor City, NC enlisted in the Army of the United States in 1944.  She was always an adventurous soul and decided to leave family in NC and head to Detroit where she began a career in Sales but soon heeded the call of the Military.  Like her there were about 150,000 other women who served in the WAAC and WAC.  These women were counted above those who served as nurses.  It has been said that General Mac Arthur felt that the WAC’s contributions in efficiency, skill, spirit and determination were immeasurable to the war effort.

My Mother served in the American Theater of Operation at Selfridge Field in Michigan.  Selfridge began operations in 1917 as a training base.  It was named for Lt. Thomas E. Selfridge the Nation’s first military pilot.  While my mother served there it was designated as a WW II Army Airfield of the First Air Force.

Upon her discharge in 1946 she received the American Theatre of Operation WW II Victory Medal, which was created on November 6, 1942 by Executive Order of the President to recognize those service members who performed duties stateside.  The medal was awarded to all military personnel for service between 12/7/41 and 12/31/46.  She also received the ASC Score (2Sept45) 11 Lapel button which was (made of brass) of an Eagle with outstretched wings.  It was meant to be worn by an ex-solider pleased to be a civilian again.

My Mother settled in Detroit where she met my Father (a WW II veteran Air Traffic Controller who served in India and Burma) at a U.S.O. Club.  They raised two children.  My brother was a 25-year veteran of the Air Force.  My Mother spent her life in trying new things from being an Interior Designer in Michigan to working for Walt Disney and then managing a large department store in California to moving with her family to Florida in the 1960’s for fun and sun.  She settled in South Florida and began a career in Clothing and Accessories having her own clothing line, her accessories sold in gift shops including “The Outrigger” in Jensen Beach to changing to bridal dresses and accessories in Fort Lauderdale.

She passed away in 1998 and resides in Bushnell VA Cemetery in close proximity to her son. 
Mom (upper right) with unit friends

We applaud all of the women who chose to serve and recognize that they often made sacrifices to do so.  We send our heartfelt “Thank You” on this special day of celebration.
 
Quote of the Day:
We often take for granted the very things that most deserve our gratitude.
Cynthia Ozick, American Essayist