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A Series of Albums Commemorating American Engineer's Roles in the Liberation of Europe, Made for a Decorated Colonel
This is a truly outstanding work consisting of three booklets, each showcasing the role of the 1120th Engineer Combat Group, attached to the VII Corps, in the liberation of Europe. The three volumes included many lithographed sketches regarding the 1120th's time in France, Belgium, and Germany. This work was presented to Colonel Mason J. Young, whose name is inscribed on the inside front cover of each work.
The front covers of each of these works are hand-decorated. The artistic style is exemplary in each instance. For the French volume, tricolor ribbons write "Engineers" in marvelous, flowing print. The Belgian volume is more rigid and serious, while the German volume chooses a modern style and a harsher print. The same chateau appears on each cover, and its design varies from the elegant to the imposing. This may have been a symbol of the 1120th Engineer Combat Group, or simply a symbol chosen to represent the soldiers' time in Europe.
The drawings lithographed are, again, of outstanding quality. These were produced by Staff Sergeant Rudy Wedow in August through February of 1944 and 1945 and lithographed in those years by the 663rd Engineer Corps. It is obvious that a talented engineer's hand drew these; many of the sketches capture aspects of a soldier's work that a photograph could never hope to convey. From a set of sketches showing the destruction of a pillbox, to soldiers sweeping a road for mines, these show parts of the war which often escape notice. One work stands perhaps even above the rest, the depiction of engineers planning for the crossing of the Rhine, in German Border, Sketch 1. The relationships between the four soldiers hard at work can be divined, and their youthful attention to their craft is understood by the viewer.
The text accompanying these works provides additional fascinating information regarding the images. The compiler chose to record the exact location of many of the sketches, as well as the company of engineers involved in many constructions or demolitions. The conditions in which the engineers worked and the progress of the campaign are also recorded.
Mason J. Young, to whom this book was undoubtedly presented, graduated from West Point in with the Class of 1944, part of Cadet Company F2. He served as a commanding officer of the VII Corps of Engineers, a distinguished unit that served at Utah Beach, in the Cherbourg campaign, the assault on Aachen, and numerous other places in France. Young would receive the Bronze Star for Valor after being wounded in France, a medal he would again receive for service in Korea and Vietnam.
Contents
2. Engineers In Belgium. Volume I, Number 3
3. Engineers on the German Border. Volume I, Number 3
4. Loose Leaf Lithographs
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