tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2769870738847154628.post2859911402549863015..comments2024-03-28T12:21:46.299-07:00Comments on Roads to the Great War: Battlefield Survivor: The "Five of Hearts", U.S. Tank Veteramsnielhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10631473280484584330noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2769870738847154628.post-88362033035035939432023-09-23T11:29:22.350-07:002023-09-23T11:29:22.350-07:00My cousin..Capt Math L. English was the Company C...My cousin..Capt Math L. English was the Company Commander for C Company …(and this tank) during the battle at Exermont that day…..he was KIA providing a ground recon of the area while leading his tanks…he got his 2nd distinquished service cross, posthumously, for that action…<br />Jeff English<br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2769870738847154628.post-89452008672378391382023-01-20T06:32:22.776-08:002023-01-20T06:32:22.776-08:00The original commander of the "Five of Hearts...The original commander of the "Five of Hearts," C/344's Lt. Harlow Wood, and 17-year old driver Cpl. Horatio Rogers were skirting Bois de Montrebeau (4 kilometers or so SE of Fléville) and heading toward Exermont when Wood received metal splinters in his eyes. Rogers, a former ambulance driver who had fibbed about his age to enter service, turned around since Wood (who had blood Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com