DePrimo, Bernard (Interview outline and video), 2015
Smither, James (Interviewer)
Bernard DePrimo was born in 1924 in Jefferson County, Pennsylvania. He grew up in Detroit, Michigan and in early 1943 he was drafted. In March 1943 he began training at Camp Davis, North Carolina with the 430th Anti Aircraft Artillery Battalion. He received communication training and artillery training at Camp Davis and Fort Fisher until it was time to go overseas. He left the United States on October 22, 1943 bound for England and stayed there with the 430th until June 8, 1944. Over the course of 1944 and into 1945 he and the 430th advanced across France protecting Allied ground forces from the German Luftwaffe. He was also attached to the 110th Field Artillery Battalion driving trucks as part of the Red Ball Express, transporting supplies and later German and Allied prisoners of war and displaced persons. After the war ended on May 8, 1945 he was reassigned to the 203rd (or 207th) Field Artillery Battalion and stayed with them for the rest of his time in Europe. On October 12, 1945 he left Europe and on October 31, 1945 he was discharged from the Army at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania.
2015-05-20
Grand Valley State University Libraries. Allendale, Michigan
Veterans History Project (U.S.)
RHC-27_DePrimoB1768V
application/pdf
video/mp4
Moving Image
Text
eng
DePrimo, Bernard, “DePrimo, Bernard (Interview outline and video), 2015,” Digital Collections, accessed December 22, 2024, https://digitalcollections.library.gvsu.edu/document/41227.