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WAR DOG INFO LINKS

To Learn more about WAR DOGS and all they have done for our Country go to these links and stories below!

 

Subject: K-9 -Congressional Medal of Honor (you aren't going to believe this)



Brutus is a military K9 (Boxer and Bull Mastiff) tops the scales at 200 lbs.  
 
Brutus is running toward me because he knows I have some Milk Bone treats, so he's slobbering away! I had to duck around a tree in case he couldn't stop, but he did. 
 
 Brutus won the Congressional Medal of Honor last year from his tour in Iraq.  His handler and four other soldier's were taken hostage by insurgents.  Brutus and his handler communicate by sign language and he gave Brutus the signal that meant 'go away but come back and find me'.  The Iraqi's paid no attention to Brutus.  He came back later and quietly tore the throat out of one guard at one door and another guard at another door.  He then jumped against one of the doors repeatedly (the guys were being held in an old warehouse) until it opened.  He went in and untied his handler and they all escaped.  
He's the first K9 to receive this Honor.  If he knows you're ok, he's a big old lug and wants to sit in your lap. We need more dogs like this in U.S.
 
 
 
 
A Popular History of the Pit Bull in America

History of the Pit Bull in America

Stubby in World War I

World War 1 had just ended on the day that Stubby marched proudly at the head of the 102nd infantry as they passed in review before President Woodrow Wilson. Stubby was an American hero. He was also a brown-and-white American pit bull terrier. Mascot and member of the 102nd, the young dog had served his men and his country in 17 battles in France. He had saved hundreds of lives, and his loyalty and courage had inspired thousands of soldiers. Now he delighted the president with his customary salute, a paw raised ceremoniously to his face.
Stubby was destined to become the most decorated war dog in U.S. history.

He was just a scrawny stray puppy when Private John Conroy picked him up on the campus of Yale University in 1917. The lonely young private was at Yale for training before being sent to the European front. Soon he and the pup were inseparable. When deployment orders came, Conroy managed to smuggle the patchy pup aboard the troop ship bound for France. Once aboard, Stubby quickly won the hearts of all the men of the 102nd. They even taught him to perform his trademark salute by raising his right paw to his face. When finally discovered by Conroy’s commander, the little stray was so beloved by the troops, he was allowed to stay to keep up morale.

But once in Europe, Stubby had to grow up fast. Within weeks of their arrival in the European theatre, the 102nd was under fire on the front lines in France. And it was there that the young pit bull began to really prove his mettle.

Stubby reached the trenches of the front line in February 1918, in the midst of a horrific battle. Although the dog was never trained to cope with such nightmarish conditions, he calmly endured a mounting barrage of shelling for the first 30 days. In fact, Stubby’s caretakers were amazed by his cool under fire, and absolutely stunned when he voluntarily ventured out into the battle zone to seek out and comfort wounded soldiers caught in the crossfire. News of the little dog’s heroism and fidelity reached the French village of Domremy, and after the fighting subsided the women of the town presented him with a hand-sewn chamois coat, decorated with Allied flags and his name stitched in gold thread.(1)

During the next 18 months Stubby carried messages under fire, stood sentry duty, and helped paramedics find the wounded in “no man’s land”. He gave early warning of deadly gas attacks and was credited many times with saving his entire regiment. When Stubby found and helped capture a German spy who was mapping a layout of the Allied trenches, he was awarded the honorary rank of Sergeant. When seriously wounded by shrapnel, he was sent to the Red Cross hospital for surgery just like any other soldier. Once recovered, the gutsy pit bull returned to his regiment and continued to serve until November 11, 1918, the day the war ended.

Upon his return to the U.S. after the Armistice, Stubby was greeted by a wildly cheering American public. Recognition of his valor came from all directions. Named a life member of the Red Cross and the American Legion, he was awarded many medals including one by General John J. Pershing. Called to the White House several times to meet Presidents Harding and Coolidge, he led more regimental parades than any other dog in history.
Stubby spent his final years with John Conroy, the beloved soldier who had rescued him so many years ago, until dieing of old age in 1926.

Civil War Dogs
Stubby was not the first American pit bull terrier to help America’s fighting men. During the Civil War, Sallie—intrepid pit bull mascot and comrade in battle of the 11th Regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteers—had already made her mark.

Sallie was a lady; she was a soldier too—
She marched beside the colors, our own red white and blue
It was in the days of our civil war that she lived her life so true
(2)

During the fiercest fighting of the war—Cedar Mountain, Pope’s Retreat, Bull Run, Chantilly—the little brindle dog stood bravely under fire. Her refusal to leave the wounded of her regiment during the three-day stand at Gettysburg became a legend among the battle-hardened veterans. When Sallie was killed by a bullet to the brain on the front line at Hatcher’s Run, her “boys” risked their lives under fierce enemy fire to bury her where she fell. Today Sallie lies, immortalized in bronze, at the foot of the 11th Regiment’s Monument at Gettysburg National Military Park.

The 102nd Pennsylvania Infantry, a unit of volunteer firemen, claimed that their beloved Civil War mascot—a brown-and-white pit bull named Jack—understood bugle calls and obeyed only the men of his regiment. Jack participated in nearly all of the regiment’s battles in Virginia and Maryland, fearlessly seeking out the dead and wounded. Once severely wounded in battle, he recovered only to be captured by the South on two separate occasions. The second time he was exchanged for a Confederate soldier at Belle Isle.

It was no surprise then, that even before Stubby (and America) went to war, the American pit bull terrier had been chosen as America’s World War I poster dog. Wrapped in the American flag and flanked by the dogs of England, Germany, France and Russia, the pit bull made America’s statement to the world. “I’m neutral, but not afraid.” It was a fiercely patriotic time and the American pit bull terrier symbolized loyalty, courage, and America's steadfastness.

 
 
For more info and more true stories hit the links below. View War Dogs and their handlers serving their country NOW! Learn of the need of important items these 4 legged heroes and their handlers need while in combat and at rest. View the War Dog memorial and another one in the making!  So much info on War Dogs and their history and why we feel they need to be honored, respected and rewarded!

http://www.uswardogs.org

http://www.nationalwardogs.org

http://www.qmfound.com/War_Dogs.htm

http://www.dogsofwarusa.com/

http://animalfarmfoundation.org/item.php?item=68

http://vdha.us/

http://community-2.webtv.net/Hahn-50thAP-K9/K9History3/

http://www.qmfound.com/War_Dogs_Bibliography.htm

http://www.nationalwardogsmonument.org/

http://worldwar2history.info/Marines/dogs.html

http://www.vetmed.ucdavis.edu/CCAB/war.html

http://www.vetmed.ucdavis.edu/CCAB/war.html

 

Iraq war dog loses his handler but gains a family

  • Story Highlights
  • Dog survived when Cpl. Dustin Lee was killed in a mortar attack
  • His injured dog, Lex, had to be pulled away from Lee's body
  • Lee's family struggled through military red tape to adopt Lex
  • The bomb-sniffing German shepherd will join the Lee family Friday
  • (CNN) -- Lex attended the funeral of his best friend in March, playing with the 20-year-old Marine's younger brother away from the crowd. He was beside Cpl. Dustin Lee when Lee was killed in a mortar attack in Falluja.
art.marines.dog.family.jpg

Cpl. Dustin Lee, slain in Iraq in March, with his dog, Lex, who is going to live with Lee's family.

 

 Wounded himself, Lex didn't want to leave Lee's side after the attack -- fellow Marines had to pull him away from the young man's body so medics could do their work.

Although some shrapnel remains in his body, Lex recovered from his wounds and returned to duty at the Marines' Logistics Base in Albany, Georgia, to await a new assignment.

On Friday, Lex gets that new assignment -- retirement to Lee's family home in Quitman, Mississippi, where the 8-year-old bomb-sniffing German Shepherd will live out the rest of his life.

Jerome Lee, the young Marine's father, lobbied the Marines hard for months to adopt the dog. Marine officials initially told Lee that it would be no problem to get the dog. But persuading the service to give up Lex before the dog's mandatory retirement at age 10 proved to be a challenge. Video Watch Dustin's father describe how the family struggled to adopt their son's dog »

"Since Dustin's death we've been trying to get his dog, Lex, from the Marine Corps, and needless to say we've had some difficulty there," said Lee, a Mississippi Highway Patrol officer. "This thing went from colonels to generals all the way up to the commandant of the Marine Corps, and it almost went to the secretary of defense."

One of the issues was making sure the dog was not "overly aggressive." His behavior with the Lee youngsters -- Lex played tug-o-war with 13-year-old Camryn at Dustin's funeral -- seemed to assure that wouldn't be a problem. Marine officials also said the request had to go through the Air Force, which is the approving authority for all military dogs.

Finally, on December 13, the Marines agreed to let Lex live with Lee's family. It was the first time the Marines have released a dog before its retirement to a former handler's family.

"Lex has had two tours in Iraq," said Jerome Lee. "He's been through a lot, and we just want to get Lex home to our family, and let him have a happy life."

Well before joining the Marines, Dustin Lee was known by all for his devotion to his country. A member of Quitman High School's cross-country track team, Lee and three teammates participated in the Americans United: Flag Across America Run after the September 11, 2001, terror attacks on New York and Washington.

So it was no surprise when the young man joined the Marines out of high school in 2004, nor was it a surprise when he went to Albany to train military police dogs, inspired by his mother's work with the county's search and rescue team dogs when he was a boy.

Dustin, an animal lover who also rode horses, played hide and seek with his mother's canine companion as a child, Jerome Lee said.

"He would let the dog get a sniff of his clothing and then go hide to see if the dog could find him," the elder Lee said.

At the logistics base in Albany, Lee said, Dustin "worked with all the dogs and became the kennel master."

Dustin and Lex had been stationed in Falluja for nearly five months before the fatal attack. When the Marine's body was returned to Quitman in late March, hundreds lined the streets waving American flags to say a tearful goodbye. And Lex was there.

In Albany on Thursday, current kennel master Mike Reynolds led Lex through his paces for the last time in his military career. Now it's time for the old pro to learn some new civilian tricks. In a ceremony on Friday, Lex will join the family of his best friend.

 

Jerome Lee hopes his other two children will feel closer to their missing older brother.

"There's always going to be that missing link with Dusty gone," he said. "But part of Dusty is here with Lex." E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

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