Thursday, April 23, 2015

Dorchester Native Mildred Freeouf Brodt, 96, To Speak In Omaha


As we've reported recently, Dorchester has a unique place in the annuls of World War II due to the service and sacrifice of many area men in that tragic event of the early and mid-1940s.  The most notable, of course, is the death of Private Charley Havlat, the last confirmed U.S. battlefield casualty in the European Theater.

Now, Dorchester's WWII history becomes even more distinguished.

A Dorchester native who served in the Women’s Army Corps in the Pacific during World War II will give a free public lecture later today at the University of Nebraska at Omaha.

Mildred Freeouf Brodt, 96, grew up in Dorchester.  She enlisted in 1943 and served in New Guinea and the Philippines during the war. 

She was on General Douglas MacArthur’s staff during the postwar occupation of Japan.

Brodt attended the Japanese war crimes tribunal and was among the first Americans to view the destruction from the atomic bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. 

She graduated from University of Nebraska-Lincoln after the war and today lives in Fairmont, Minnesota.

Brodt’s talk, hosted by the UNO history department, will be at 1 p.m. today in Room 201 of the Barbara Weitz Community Engagement Center. 

Dorchester area residents are encouraged to attend, if possible.

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