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Sgt Stubby
poppalee
Member Posts: 1,239 ✭✭✭✭✭
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New animated movie on him, supposed to be a true story.
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/history/2014/05/dogs_of_war_sergeant_stubby_the_u_s_army_s_original_and_still_most_highly.html
You need to check the link full of the true story.
America's first war dog, Stubby, served 18 months 'over there' and participated in seventeen battles on the Western Front. He saved his regiment from surprise mustard gas attacks, located and comforted the wounded, and even once caught a German spy by the seat of his pants. Back home his exploits were front page news of every major newspaper.
Stubby's breed was unknown, as no one ever discovered where he hailed from originally. One day he appeared at Yale Field in New Haven, Connecticut; while a group of soldiers were training, stopping to make friends with soldiers as they drilled. One soldier, Corporal Robert Conroy, developed a fondness for the dog. When it became time for the outfit to ship out, Conroy hid Stubby on board the troop ship.
Stubby served with the 102nd Infantry, 26th (Yankee) Division in the trenches in France for 18 months and participated in four offensives and 17 battles. He entered combat on February 5, 1918 at Chemin des Dames, north of Soissons, and was under constant fire, day and night for over a month. In April 1918, during a raid to take Schieprey, Stubby was wounded in the foreleg by the retreating Germans throwing hand grenades. He was sent to the rear for convalescence, and as he had done on the front was able to improve morale. When he recovered from his wounds, Stubby returned to the trenches.
After being gassed himself, Stubby learned to warn his unit of poison gas attacks, located wounded soldiers in no man's land, and - since he could hear the whine of incoming artillery shells before humans could - became very adept at letting his unit know when to duck for cover. He was solely responsible for capturing a German spy in the Argonne. Following the retaking of Ch?teau-Thierry by the US, the thankful women of the town made Stubby a chamois coat on which were pinned his many medals. There is also a legend that while in Paris with Corporal Conroy, Stubby saved a young girl from being hit by a car. At the end of the war, Conroy smuggled Stubby home.
The only known photograph of Sallie.
"Sallie, the regimental dog, is represented on the front of the statue. She was given to the regiment as a puppy and took part in all their battles, taking position at the end of the firing line and barking furiously at the enemy. Sallie was separated from the regiment at Gettysburg during the retreat through the town. After the battle when the men returned to the scene of the first day's fighting they found Sallie weak but alive, maintaining a vigil over the dead and dying. Sallie was killed at the Battle of Hatcher's Run in February of 1865, and in spite of heavy Confederate fire several men stopped to bury her. When the monument was designed the regiment's survivors unanimously decided to include a tribute to their smallest comrade."
i think not