Among the allied troops that came ashore in Normandy on D-Day, June 6, 1944, were thirteen Comanches in the 4th Infantry Division, 4th Signal Company. Under German fire they laid communications lines and began sending messages in a form never before heard in Europe—coded Comanche. For the rest of World War II, the Comanche Code Talkers played a vital role in transmitting orders and messages in a code that was never broken by the Germans. This book tells the full story of the Comanche Code Talkers for the first time. Drawing on interviews with all surviving members of the unit, their original training officer, and fellow soldiers, as well as military records and news accounts, William C. Meadows follows the group from their recruitment and training to their active duty in World War II and on through their postwar lives up to the present. He also provides the first comparison of Native American code talking programs, comparing the Comanche Code Talkers with their better-known Navajo counterparts in the Pacific and with other Native Americans who used their languages, coded or not, for secret communication. Meadows sets this history in a larger discussion of the development of Native American code talking in World Wars I and II, identifying two distinct forms of Native American code talking, examining the attitudes of the American military toward Native American code talkers, and assessing the complex cultural factors that led Comanche and other Native Americans to serve their country in this way.
named Choctaws who were in the company during the Forest Ferme assault (George Davenport, Tobias Frazier, Noel Johnson, Pete Maytubby, Jeff Nelson, Robert Taylor, and Jonas Durant). Although originally in Company E, Benjamin Hampton ...
The Gourd Dance is the ceremony of a traditional Kiowa warrior society. Known as the Tia-piah, the society served as a police force during the annual Sun Dance and the great summer buffalo hunts. In fact, the Gourd Dance usually ...
Their legend of the 'code talker' has been celebrated by Hollywood in films, such as Windtalkers, and this book reveals the real-life story of their extraordinary involvement in World War II.
"Readers who choose the book for the attraction of Navajo code talking and the heat of battle will come away with more than they ever expected to find."—Booklist, starred review Throughout World War II, in the conflict fought against ...
With a personal touch and a deft eye for engaging detail, author Andrea M. Page brings the Lakota story to life.
Navajo Code Talkers tells the story of the special group, who proved themselves to be among the bravest, most valuable, and most loyal of American soldiers during World War II.
The first and only memoir by one of the original Navajo code talkers of WWII. His name wasn’t Chester Nez. That was the English name he was assigned in kindergarten.
R. Scott Sheffield and Noah Riseman examine Indigenous experiences of the Second World War across these four settler societies.
The Navajo Code Talkers
Compelling narrative text and well-chosen historical photographs and primary sources make this book perfect for report writing.