T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas
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T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas
Summary
T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas is a news article[1].
Key Facts
- T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's image is recorded as Raymond Cleo Gill (1919-2003) in the Argus-Leader of Sioux Falls, South Dakota on 9 September 1945.jpg[2].
- T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's instance of is recorded as news article[3].
- T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's publication date is recorded as +1945-09-09T00:00:00Z[4].
- T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's main subject is recorded as Raymond Cleo Gill[5].
- T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's main subject is recorded as Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal[6].
- T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's main subject is recorded as Italian campaign[7].
- T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's main subject is recorded as Sicily Campaign[8].
- T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's main subject is recorded as Tunisia Campaign[9].
- T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's main subject is recorded as technical sergeant[10].
- T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's document file on Wikimedia Commons is recorded as Raymond Cleo Gill (1919-2003) in the Argus-Leader of Sioux Falls, South Dakota on 9 September 1945.jpg[11].
- T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's published in is recorded as Argus Leader[12].
- T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's title is recorded as T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas. Former Argus-Leader Employee in Foreign Service 2½ Years.[13].
- T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's copyright status is recorded as public domain[14].
- T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's quotation or excerpt is recorded as T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas. Former Argus-Leader Employee in Foreign Service 2½ Years. After two and one-half years of overseas service which took him around the world, T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill, former Argus-Leader employee, is home for the first time in three years on a 21-day furlough. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Gill, 715 West Third St. Sgt. Gill, in personnel work with a headquarters office, left New York in July, 1942, and landed in Egypt the following month, three months previous to the African invasion and arrived at a California port this month. "The reception that we got upon arriving in this country is the greatest ovation a serviceman could be given," Sgt. Gill said. "I never appreciated the good old U.S.A. like I do now - just took it for granted before." Gill wears ribbons crediting him with participation in the Egyptian-Libyan, Tunisian, Sicilian, and Italian campaigns; Distinguished Unit Citation; and the Asiatic-Pacific and pre-Pearl Harbor ribbons. He has been stationed in India since February, 1944. He entered the service in June, 1941.[15].
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Designation and Status
T-Sgt. Ray C. Gill Back From Overseas's instance of is recorded as news article[3].