Monday, April 5, 2021

MarketWatch.com Remembers Dorchester's Charley Havlat


Nebraska knows well the story of Dorchester's Charley Havlat and his ultimate sacrifice for his nation.

Now New York City knows the story as well.

In an article published by MarketWatch.com -- the financial site owned by The Wall Street Journal -- reporter Ellis Henican recounts the sacrifice of Private Havlat, who was killed by a German soldier in the spring of 1945 while helping to free a monastery in Czechoslovakia. PFC Havlat was the last American killed in the European Theater of World War II. He a bullet in the head from German soldiers who were unaware that a ceasefire had been declared. 

In the April 4 MarketWatch article, the author wrote: "Nine minutes after a cease fire was negotiated and a few hours before Germany’s unconditional surrender, Private First Class Havlat of the 803rd Tank Destroyer Battalion, the oldest of six children, a son of Czech immigrants in Dorchester, Nebraska, who bragged to the guys in his unit about the sweet, round kolaches his mother liked to bake, was shot by a sniper on a dirt road in his parents’ native Czechoslovakia. He was 34 years old."

The author then asks: "So who will be the last New Yorker lost in the city’s pitched battle with COVID-19? And when will that be?"

The article concludes with the following: "Any death in any war is a tragedy. But the senselessness is undeniably magnified when peace is so close at hand. So who will be the last to die in this one? 

"Like Charley Havlat’s battalion in the Czech countryside, we’ve made enormous progress already. But danger could still be lurking behind the next tree."

1 comment:

  1. Charley's generation wouldn't have blinked an eye in the face of the China virus because they were too concerned about survival, freedom and taking out dictators, unlike today's woke, obese, brainwashed activists in government and society who are working overtime to create a new crisis to justify more socialism and government control.

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