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William G. Dabney

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
U.S. Army veteran granted the Legion of Honour
This article is about the U.S. Army, African American, World War II Legion of Honour recipient. For others named William Dabney, seeWilliam Dabney.
William Garfield Dabney
Born(1924-06-24)June 24, 1924
DiedDecember 12, 2018(2018-12-12) (aged 94)
Allegiance United States
United States Army sealUnited States Army320th Barrage Balloon Battalion
CorporalCorporal
Battles / warsD-Day
AwardsLegion of Honour -Knight (2009)
SpouseBeulah Mae Cardwell(maiden)

William Garfield Dabney (June 24, 1924 – December 12, 2018) was an African-American resident ofRoanoke, Virginia, who served inWorld War II. He was awarded the FrenchLegion of Honor for his actions during theinvasion of Normandy.[1] Notably, Dabney — one of the last known surviving soldier from the320th Barrage Balloon Battalion, the only all-black unit in theD-Day landings — did not receive the honor until the sixty-fifth anniversary of D-Day – 18 days shy of his eighty-fifth birthday.

Early life

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Dabney was born in June 1924 inAltavista, Virginia, the youngest of nine children born to Edgar Stephenson Dabney (1884–1963) and Elinor Helena Whitlock(maiden; 1890–1937). They all lived on the family farm nearAltavista, Virginia. When he was 12, his mother, Elinor, died. His maternal grandparents had died before he was born and his paternal grandparents, Fleming Dabney (1851–1926) and Martha Payne(maiden; 1856–1933) died when he was young. After the loss of his mother, he went to live with his maternal grandmother's sister, Carretta Bailey(née Carretta Augusta Lee; 1875–1970) inRoanoke.

World War II

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Dabney enlisted in the US Army December 9, 1942 – at age 18 years, 5 months – before graduating from high school. He was initially assigned to theU.S. Army Coast Artillery Corps,Mine Planter Service. Dabney's Army serial number began with "1," which indicated he voluntarily enlisted. The other soldiers teased him about enlisting, and every time he complained about something, the other troops said he did not need to be there – he had volunteered.[2]

Dabney was a corporal in the320th Barrage Balloon Battalion, the only all-black unit in the D-Day landings onOmaha andUtah, the two beachheads assigned to American forces.[3] Thebarrage balloons were on long cables that would be caught by the wings or propellers of German airplanes, and if the planes pulled the balloons into contact, explosives on the helium balloons would destroy the aircraft. On D-Day, three German fighters were downed by barrage balloons as they tried to strafe the American soldiers on the beach.[3]

Post-war life

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After the war, Bill Dabney returned to a stillsegregated Roanoke, where he graduated from high school and then earned an electrical engineering degree. But discrimination prevented him from following his trade, so he became a carpet layer and ran his own business for 40 years.[4]

On December 22, 1951, inLynchburg, Virginia, Dabney married Beulah Mae Cardwell(maiden). They had three sons: Vincent Garfield Dabney, Michael Glenn Dabney (1954–2019), and Marlon Dabney.[2]

William G. Dabney sat for an interview and gave an oral history of his life and his experiences toThe National WWII Museum in 2013. His interview was digitally recorded; transcripts and videos are available online.[5]

Death

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Dabney died on December 12, 2018, at the age of 94 inRoanoke, Virginia.[6] He is buried at Williams Memorial Park in theSouth Washington Heights neighborhood ofRoanoke.

Honors

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On 5 June 2009 (the 65th anniversary of D-Day), as the 320th's last known survivor, Dabney was awarded aKnight of the FrenchLegion of Honor inNormandy (France).[7] In recognition of his services during World War II, William Dabney was also given the key to the City ofRoanoke, Virginia.[8]

References

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  1. ^"V-Day for Black Vets – WWII heroes to get long-overdue recognition for their sacrifices in Normandy commemoration" (includes photo of William Dabney), by Linda Hervieux,New York Daily News, June 5, 2009, p. 24 (accessibleviaNewspapers.com; subscription required)
  2. ^abHervieux, Linda.Forgotten: The Untold Story of D-Day's Black Heroes, at Home and at War.HarperCollins (2015);OCLC 927397516;ISBNs9780062313812;0062313819
    1. "Author's Note:" i–ii
    2. pps. 121–123
    3. p. 262
  3. ^abBrian Knowlton (June 5, 2009)."Forgotten Battalion's Last Returns to Beachhead".New York Times.
  4. ^Bamat, Joseph."The Neglected Story of African Americans on D-Day,"France 24 (online), June 4, 2014
  5. ^"William G. Dabney," Oral History Video (2013),The National WWII Museum, Digital Collections
  6. ^William Garfield Dabney obituary
  7. ^"France Honors D-Day Vet from an All Black Unit". 6 June 2009.Archived from the original on 27 July 2021. Retrieved27 July 2019.
  8. ^"William Dabney World War II veteran receives key to the city".Roanoke Free Press. December 2, 2009.

External links

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Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=William_G._Dabney&oldid=1318892488"
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