"Shifty" Powers won't be down for chow...

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Band Of Brothers Hero, Darrell ‘Shifty’ Powers Dies
ShiftyPowers.jpg


Published: June 20, 2009

BY ROGER BROWN
BRISTOL HERALD COURIER

“The world depended on them. They depended on each other.”

That was the tagline for “Band of Brothers” – an award-winning 2001 HBO mini-series drama on the World War II experiences of Easy Company, a U.S. Army unit that fought bravely and fiercely across Europe.

But for Bristol’s Margo Johnson – daughter of Darrell “Shifty” Powers, one of the soldiers depicted in “Band of Brothers” – two more lines could be added to describe her heroic father: “The world truly admired Darrell Powers. I absolutely adored him.”

“I loved everything about my daddy,” Johnson said. “He never bragged about what he did in the war. And for a lot of years, he never even talked much about what he did – unless someone asked him about it.

“But he truly was a hero to me,” Johnson said. “Just like he’d been to the people who know him as a soldier in a [mini-series].”

Powers, a Dickenson County native, died earlier this week at age 86 following a battle with cancer. His funeral service will be held today in Clintwood.

“He was a brave man, even to the end of his life,” Johnson said of her father. “He’s helping me be brave now, too.”

Bravery – and dignity – was a constant, running thread in the life of “Shifty” Powers, both during and after his life as an Army sharpshooter in the actual “Band of Brothers.”

During the war, he fought brutal battles against the German army across France and Belgium.

After the war, Powers served as an eloquent representative for the men he fought with: At one point during the “Band of Brothers” mini-series, he appeared on camera to talk in moving, humane fashion about his grim but necessary task during the war – killing the enemy.

And, too, Powers served as a loyal, steadfast representative for the country he fought for: from graciously meeting with a former enemy German soldier to eagerly accepting any chance to speak with modern-day members of the U.S. military.

Ivan Schwarz, a producer on the “Band of Brothers” HBO series, remembers Powers as a “kind, generous soul with a great sense of humor.”

“Shifty was an incredibly humble human being,” said Schwarz, now executive director of the Greater Cleveland Film Commission in Cleveland, Ohio.

“He was like most of the other [Easy Company] soldiers we met for the series. They were good guys who were kind of shocked that, 50 years later, people were making a big deal over them for just doing their duty.

“That’s exactly how [Powers] was, too,” Schwarz said.

Attempts were unsuccessful to reach Peter Youngblood Hills – the English actor who portrayed Powers in the “Band of Brothers” miniseries, through both HBO and his former publicity firm, Hamilton Hodell in London, England.
 
"Men were made different in those days"

-Mike Wheelock, owner, Tite Group Sporting, when he and I were discussing his father storming Normandy.

Godspeed, Mr. Powers. You were made differently, too.

We are in your debt for your service, both within and without the military.
 
RIP, Shifty, and Godspeed![halfmast] [iwojima]

BTW, was watching the "Carentan" episode of Band of Brothers, recently.

Do any of our resident tacticians understand/know why the SGT ordered him to quote "Hammer those windows"? (he does so with his garand)
 
[halfmast]

We're losing the WWII generation at such a rapid pace. The interviews of the Easy Company soldiers on Band of Brothers is incredibly moving.
 
RIP[halfmast]

P.S. is it just me, or does the term "won't be down for chow" just a little disrespectful to a good man such as Sgt. Powers?
 
American hero Darrell "Shifty" Powers
March 1923 - June 2009
Rest in peace soldier.
We are in great debt for your service.
 
[halfmast]


RIP Sgt. Powers. You certainly earned it. Thank you for your service. It is only because of you and others like you that I can sit here in a free country and write this.
 
[halfmast]

Thank you SSgt Powers for your courage and sacrifice when the nation and the world needed you.

You will not be forgotten.
 
ShiftyPowers.jpg


+1 thank you for your service and for showing us what America's Best of the Best is and was.

PS-- is it just me, or is that "old man" in that pic above just so bad ass you wouldn't want to face him down at that age, let alone 65 years ago?

Bet even EddieCoyle wouldn't prank him!
 
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One of the interviews on Band of Brothers had him saying something like:

The enemy were regular men just like us. Like me, he might have liked to fish, he might have liked to hunt. Under different circumstances, we might have been good friends...

Something to that effect. He seems to have been a very humble, yet noble man. That was quite an insight for him to empathize with an enemy that had such a brutal reputation.

R.I.P. soldier

[halfmast]
 
Do any of our resident tacticians understand/know why the SGT ordered him to quote "Hammer those windows"? (he does so with his garand)

The reason they issued that order was that German snipers were often in the buildings firing on troops, by taking them out first they had a more even field of battle.

It's not easy to try and fight the enemy in front when they're also shooting at your back.

RIP Shifty, you were truly one of "The Greatest Generation", and it's truly sad that the majority of our generation hasn't learned the lessons you tried to pass on.
 
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