With
gratitude to all who serve and have served in the United States military, especially in 1941-1945, we continue our annual series of conferences
on World War II – to better understand and further appreciate the epic struggle
of the 20th century
Our 2008 conference in Sarasota will feature celebrated historians whose topics will cover battles, personalities, organization, logistics and
perspectives pertaining to both the Pacifc and European theaters.
Three of our historians saw combat experience in the War and will share
with us their war-time experiences:
· Harold Baumgarten, 116th Regiment, 29th Infantry Division, who was wounded five times on
Omaha Beach;
· Charles P. Roland, 394th Regiment, 99th Infantry
Division, who fought in the Battle of the Bulge and was wounded at Remagen;
· Edwin C. Bearss, 3rd Marine Raider Battalion, who was
severely wounded at “Suicide Creek” (Cape Gloucester, New Britain);
Hal
Baumgarten will present a talk on Omaha Beach. Ed Bearss and Charlie Roland have described their
experiences in formal presentations during the past two annual Sarasota conferences
and so, this time, they will be interviewed, in two sessions, by Robert K. Krick. The
interviews will focus on specific aspects of their World War II service, both
in combat and between battles. Bob will ask for their reactions to a wide
array of questions. Between the Friday session and the Saturday session,
audience participants will have a chance to submit topics of interest for
possible inclusion in the second interview.
The
conference will again be headquartered at the Helmsley Sandcastle Hotel,
1540 Ben Franklin Drive (on Lido Beach) Sarasota, Florida 34236, where we have
reserved a limited block of sleeping rooms at the special nightly rates, single
and double, of $110 (Northside or Courtyard), $130 (Poolside) and $155 (Gulfside).
The Helmsley Sandcastle offers 600 feet of private beach, two outdoor pools and
a host of other amenities. Call 800-225-2181 Monday thru Friday, 9:00AM-5:00PM and
identify yourself as a registrant for the World War II Conference.
Now,
we invite you to enroll and be assured of a space. Time is of the essence as we
again expect a full house. We advise you to register early because seating and
hotel rooms are limited. We hope you’ll join us on Lido Beach for the
Sarasota World War II Conference!
* FACULTY *
ROBERT
J. DALESSANDRO is Director of the
United States Army Heritage and Education
Center, United States Army War College
at Carlisle, Pennsylvania. He is the author of The Organization and Insignia
of the American Expeditionary Force, 1917-1923 and serves as an advisor to
the American Battle Monuments Commission for the Normandy American Interpretive Center at Colleville-sur-Mer, France.
JOSEPH
H. ALEXANDER is the leading living
historian of the United States Marine Corps. His books include Utmost
Savagery (1995), Storm Landings (1997), and Edson’s Raiders (2000). His 1997 publication, A Fellowship of Valor: The Battle History of
the United States Marines, has been acclaimed as the best popular history
of the Corps.
HAROLD
BAUMGARTEN is the author of D-Day
Survivor: An Autobiography. A riflemen in Company B, 116th Regiment, 29th Infantry Division, he was wounded five times on Omaha Beach during the Normandy invasion. He will serve as a co-leader of the
September, 2007 Normandy Campaign tour sponsored by American History Forum.
EDWIN
C BEARSS, historian emeritus of the
National Park Service, is the most known battlefield guide in America and is
acclaimed as one of the stars of Ken Burns's award-winning PBS series, The
Civil War. While working for the NPS at Vicksburg in 1956, he helped locate and raise the ironclad
gunboat Cairo, one of the most significant artifacts of the Civil
War. As a Marine in World War II, his life changed forever at a place in the
Pacific dubbed "Suicide Creek" (Cape Gloucester, New Britain) where he was severely wounded by Japanese machine
gun fire.
CARLO
W. D’ESTE is the author of many books
including Decision in Normandy); Bitter Victory: The Battle for Sicily, 1943; World
War II in the Mediterranean, and Fatal Decision: Anzio and the Battle
for Rome; and two best-selling biographies: Patton: A Genius For War,
and Eisenhower: A Soldier’s Life. He is presently writing Warlord,
the military life of Sir Winston Churchill, which will be published in June
2008 in the USA by HarperCollins and in UK by Penguin.
RICHARD
B. FRANK is the author of Guadalcanal:
The Definitive Account of the Landmark Battle and Downfall:
The End of the Imperial Japanese Empire that was a main selection of the
History Book Club and won the New York Military Affairs Symposium Book award. His
latest book, MacArthur, is scheduled for release this summer (2007).
ROBERT
K. KRICK is the author of A
Virginia Marine on Iowa Jima and 15 Civil War books. He served as a
Marine Corps contract historian for the National Museum of the Marine Corps at Quantico which opened in 2006.
CHARLES
P. ROLAND is a leading military
historian and the author of many books including An American Iliad: The
Story of the Civil War; Albert Sidney Johnston: Soldier of Three
Republics, and most recently, My Odyssey Through History: Memoirs of War
and Academe. During World War II, he served in the 394th regiment of the 99th U.S. Infantry Division and fought in the Battle of the
Bulge and at Remagen where he was wounded.
MARK
A. STOLER is Professor of History at
the University of Vermont and the author of many books including Allies and Adversaries: The Joint Chiefs of Staff, The Grand Alliance,
and U. S. Strategy in World Was II; The Politics of the Second Front: American
Military Planning and Diplomacy in Coalition Warfare, 1941-1943 and George C. Marshall: Soldier-Statesman of the
American Century.
CRAIG
L. SYMONDS recently retired as Professor of History at the U. S. Naval Academy, Annapolis. Maryland. He
is the Chief Historian of the USS Monitor Center at the
Mariners’ Museum in Newport News, Virginia and the author of many books including Confederate
Admiral: The Life and Times of Franklin Buchanan. His latest book is Decision
at Sea: Five Naval Battles That Shaped American History.
3rd Annual Sarasota World War II Conference
Wednesday,
January 30
7:00 PM - 9:00 PM Welcome Reception & Cash Bar
7:00 PM thru Sat 12:00 N Book Display
& Sale
Thursday,
January 31
8:30 AM - 9:30 AM Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz:
Pacific Fleet Commander-in-Chief - Joseph Alexander
9:45 AM -10:45AM General Douglas MacArthur in the Pacific:
Image and Reality - Richard B. Frank
11:00AM -12:00 N The
Ghost of Mahan: Spruance, Halsey, and the Primary Objective - Craig L. Symonds
12:00 N – 1:00 PM Group Lunch in Dining Room.
(Those not enrolled for the group lunch can dine in
the Hotel Coffee Shop).
1:15 PM - 2:15 PM The Limits of Compromise: Strategy and Command
for the Invasion of Japan – a panel discussion with
Richard B. Frank and Craig L. Symonds,
moderated by Joseph A. Alexander
5:00 PM - 6:30 PM Reception in honor
of Hal Baumgarten, Ed Bearss, Charles Roland and all other World War II veterans
in attendance
Friday,
February 1
8:30 AM - 9:30 AM D-Day:
A Remembrance – Carlo W. D’Este
9:45 AM -10:45AM The
Invasion of Normandy on June 6, 1944 -- D-Day.
- Harold Baumgarten
11:00AM - 12:00 N The
81st Mortar Battalion on Omaha Beach
– Robert J. Dalessandro
12:00 N - 1:00 PM Group Lunch in Dining Room
(Those not enrolled for the group lunch can dine in
the Hotel Coffee Shop).
1:15 PM - 2:15 PM Interview,
Part I - Eyewitnesses to World War II
Combat Cpl. Edwin C. Bearss,
7th Marines, and Capt. Charles P. Roland, battalion operations officer, 99th
Infantry Division, interviewed by Robert K. Krick
Saturday, February 2
8:30 AM - 9:30 AM The
"Second Front" (OVERLORD) Controversy
–
Mark A. Stoler
9:45 AM - 10:45AM Patton: Genius
for War – Carlo W. D’Este
11:00AM -12:00 N Interview” Part II - Jungle Juice, Dear John Letters, and
V-Mail: Military Life in Europe and the Pacific, 1942-1945
– Edwin C. Bearss and Charles P.
Roland,
interviewed by Robert K. Krick.