Ww2 Generals Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Ww2 Generals. Here they are! All 10 of them:

Sturm, Swung, Wucht
Erwin Rommel
Live for something rather than die for nothing.
George S. Patton Jr.
Gentlemen, this is a story that you shall tell your grandchildren, and mightily bored they'll be.
Lt General Brian Horrocks
After months of rumors, inference, and horrible miscalculations, the impossible had happened. The U.S. Pacific fleet lay twisted anad burning at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean in Honolulu. Had he been wrong about Japan not taking an offensive right now? God, he had thousands of men and women to think of, and he feared in his heart that it might not turn out the way he had seen it. He felt doomed, almost paralyzed by his gross miscalculation. He determined, however, that he would not let the word out about Pearl Harbor until he could meet with his American strategists and Philippine President Manuel Quezon.
Joyce Shaughnessy (Blessed Are the Merciful)
As I approached the field, I called the tower, identified myself, and said I would like to land and pay my respects to General Patton if that was agreeable and convenient. I was cleared to land. When I parked, there was Georgie in his famous Jeep with the three-star flags flying, his helmet reflecting the sun gloriously and his ivory-handled revolvers at his side. He rushed forward, threw his arms around me, and with great tears streaming down his face, said, "Jimmy, I'm glad to see you. I didn't think anyone would ever call on a mean old son of a bitch like me.
James H. Doolittle (I Could Never Be So Lucky Again)
But the public did not know the truth about what happened to the people in the trucks; they believed the stories from the government, who said that these people, known as Untermensch (non-people or ‘lower people’), were simply moved to open spaces in the east and settled on farms, away from Germany, so as not to ‘contaminate’ the German race. This is an example of people not wishing to know the facts behind the rumours in which were whispered between trusted friends. The general belief was that the rumours were rubbish anyway, for how could a civilized country do such things? Our leaders would never allow anything bad to happen to these people; after all, we were not barbarians! And so nothing was said, or done, and the public developed a collective blindness to the truth.
Alfred Nestor (Uncle Hitler: A Child's Traumatic Journey Through Nazi Hell to the Safety of Britain)
Monday, September 17, 1945 We all drove to the airfield in the morning to see Gay and Murnane off in the C-47 /belonging to the Army. Then General Eisenhower and I drove to Munich where we inspected in conjunction with Colonel Dalferes a Baltic displaced persons camp. The Baltic people are the best of the displaced persons and the camp was extremely clean in all respects. Many of the people were in costume and did some folk dances and athletic contest for our benefit. We were both, I think, very much pleased with conditions here. The camp was situated in an old German regular army barracks and they were using German field kitchens for cooking. From the Baltic camp, we drove for about 45 minutes to a Jewish camp in the area of the XX Corps. This camp was established in what had been a German hospital. The buildings were therefore in a good state of repair when the Jews arrived but were in a bad state of repair when we arrived, because these Jewish DP's, or at least a majority of them, have no sense of human relationships. They decline, when practicable, to use latrines, preferring to relive themselves on the floor. The hospital which we investigated was fairly good. They also had a number of sewing machines and cobbler instruments which they had collected, but since they had not collected the necessary parts, they had least fifty sewing machines they could not use, and which could not be used by anyone else because they were holding them. This happened to be the feast of Yom Kippur, so they were all collected in a large wooden building which they called a synagogue. It behooved General Eisenhower to make a speech to them. We entered the synagogue, which was packed with the greatest stinking bunch of humanity I have ever seen. When we got about half way up, the head rabbi, who was dressed in a fur hat similar to that worn by Henry VIII of England, and in a surplice heavily embroidered and very filthy, came down and met the General. A copy of Talmud, I think it is called, written on a sheet and rolled around a stick, was carried by one of the attending physicians. First, a Jewish civilian made a very long speech which nobody seemed inclined to translate. Then General Eisenhower mounted the platform and I went up behind him and he made a short and excellent speech, which was translated paragraph by paragraph. The smell was so terrible that I almost fainted, and actually about three hours later, lost my lunch as the result of remembering it. From here we went to the Headquarters of the XX Corps, where General Craig gave us an excellent lunch which I, however, was unable to partake of, owing to my nausea.
George S. Patton Jr. (The Patton Papers: 1940-1945)
That General Freidenburg don’t know whether to scratch his watch or wind his ass.
William Peter Grasso (Operation Fishwrapper (Jock Miles WW2 Adventure, #5))
Hatred towards the Jews was not new in Poland. Already, in 1938, with the rise of Polish militarism, antisemitism was growing stronger. It was known that here and there, windows of Jewish shops were smashed and Polish gangs would beat up Jews. Hateful signs ridiculing us appeared in the streets, claiming that “the Jew is a cheater and a thief, do not do business with him,” and the like. Many Jews were afraid to go out into the streets after dark, and you would not find a Jew in the late show at the cinema. But all of this was within the scope of general unpleasantness, not actual danger.
Moshe Bomberg (The Last Boy in Auschwitz: A WW2 Jewish Holocaust Survival True Story (Heroic Children of World War II))
The intelligentsia, the politicians, the rabbis, and the Jewish leadership, in general, ignored this book at the time. It seemed to them hollow and eccentric. “They ignored in Hitler’s book what was written clearly for all to see: “No one should be surprised if the guise of Satan lives among us, the very embodiment of evil, in the image of the flesh and blood Jew….” “These exact words were published in 1925, fourteen years before their realization. Hitler did not hesitate to declare repeatedly his intensions, including during his address to the German Parliament in 1938, one year before beginning their actualization
Amos Blas (Boys of Courage: A WW2 Historical Novel, Based on a True Story of a Jewish Holocaust Survivor (Gripping World War 2 Resistance Stories Book 7))