GRAPHICS PAGE 2
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WHAT'S NEW THIS MONTH !!
Fishing with Kids
Thanks for being patient while these pages were created or reconstructed.
I have been a member of the Army's SGT Audie Murphy Club since April 1994. I have met some very wonderful people over the years. I am privileged to call most of them friends. Some of them have seen fit to give me pictures/photos/images/stuff over the years. I'd like to repay their generosity by making these available to others...the new generation of Audie Murphy fans.
***Please use these for your personal enjoyment and/or educational purposes...I don't want to see any cheap copies popping up on ebay!
***Please use these for your personal enjoyment and/or educational purposes...I don't want to see any cheap copies popping up on ebay!
Seen this one before?...
The boy who became a soldier, who became a man, who became a hero. It's similar to the one on our homepage. The difference is in this one, he's glancing slightly to the left.
You've seen it before...it's a nice combo.
Created by Lee Gibson of the Graphic Arts Department, Training & Service Center (TASC), here on Fort Sill. In mid-1997, I was tasked to create a multi-media ceremony that showcased Audie's military career. This is one of many images that Lee came up with for the Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) SGT Audie Murphy Club Induction Ceremony.
REMORSEFUL AUDIE
Based on a Universal Studios publicity still for "To Hell and Back", the added background of soldiers against our flag creates a haunting image.
Yup, that's CAPTAIN Murphy, the U.S. Army National Guard Instructor, in 1951, at Camp Mabry, Austin, Texas.
Audie realy enjoyed his stint as a Infantry Squad Combat Tactics Instuctor. It offered him the opportunity to pass along his personal experiences and combat savvy to future leaders.
Mainstreet, Farmersville, Texas.
NOW, I can confirm it, after talking with current barber, Hubert. This is the only barber shop in town...and has been as far back as anyone can remember. This is where Audie got his hair cut before he went off to the Army and after he got home. The old photo on the right is from COL Harold Simpson's book "Audie L. Murphy-American Soldier".
Trouble just waiting to happen.....
These two dashing young men are Audie and his life-long friend Feller Goff. Feller admitted when they got bored, they sometimes had a tendency to "play-practical-jokes" on others.
U.S. Highway 69, Texas.
Early 1998 was the first time I visited Greenville. About 18 miles out, I passed by this sign, realized what it said, slowed down, pulled over onto the shoulder, and backed up until I could take this picture.