Thursday, February 21, 2019

Thursday 21st February 2019.....birthday!!

I won’t bore you with the.....great tennis this morning under incredible skies and warm sunshine.....instead....


Jump forward to my English class tonight.....


First of all I had printed copies of this article..





The most decorated US WWI veteran from Texas was actually a Mexican immigrant.


On April 26, 1896, in Chihuahua, Mexico, Marcelino Serna was born into a very poor family.  He left home at the age of twenty, and crossed the border into the United States, traveling to El Paso, Texas to find a job and improve his life.


Since he didn’t speak English, he had to take low-paying jobs and was soon working in Denver, Colorado on a sugar beet farm.

When the United States declared war on Germany in April 1917, Serna was in Denver working with a group of men who were picked up by federal officers checking the draft status of potential soldiers.  To prevent his deportation to Mexico, Serna volunteered to join the Army.

Once he completed his basic training, he was sent overseas.  He was posted to the 355th Infantry of the 89th Division Company B.  Eventually the military discovered that not only could he not speak English, but he wasn’t a US citizen.


He declined the discharge he was offered and continued to fight for the United States.

During the war, he fought in battles such as the Lucey Sector and the Meuse-Argonne Offensive.  In the battle of Saint-Michael, his unit came under heavy fire from a machine gun.  Twelve of his unit died, so he volunteered to scout ahead before they lost anyone else.


He was able to advance by himself until he got close enough to the machine gun position to toss four grenades inside.  The blast killed six of the fourteen soldiers, and Serna captured the rest.


Two weeks later, during the Meuse-Argonne offensive, he once again volunteered to scout alone.  He spotted a German sniper and was able to follow him back to a German trench.  He was armed with an Enfield rifle, grenades, and a pistol.  He was able to convince the German soldiers, they were being attacked by a large force and they soon surrendered.

He had killed twenty-six enemy soldiers in the short battle, and he took twenty-four prisoners.

Just four days before the armistice agreement, Marcelino Serna was hit by sniper fire in both his legs and ended up in a French army hospital. For his outstanding service, he received the Distinguished Service Cross, which is the second highest American combat medal.  He also received many other American, French, and Italian medals for his service and bravery.   He was one of the most highly-decorated soldiers in Texas history.


He returned to El Paso in May of 1919 after his discharge; eventually, he landed a job with Fort Bliss.   He married, and in 1924 he finally became a US citizen.


We all took turns to read a paragraph and talk about it and then we talked about the current situation with migrants...most of my students have at least one family member living in the US.


To finish the class I had ordered and brought a small birthday cake for Adal......only problem he did not show for class tonight!!






Strangely enough someone had decorated the class room they must have had a special meeting during the day...






Anyway what were we supposed to do with the cake???






Yes we ate it!!!!! And it was really good a 🥕 cake...and can you believe the cost.....70 pesos!!


It was another great class!!!


Hard to believe this time next Thursday I shall be at the beach again!!!


Yashi Kochi!!!

2 comments:

Dee Tillotson said...

Just love to read your stories. The students must have loved your story, too because they easily could relate to it and have at least one member of their family in the US. As regards to World War I, I found my maternal grandfather's draft card issued in 1917. He never fought in that war as the next year 1918 he died in the flu epidemic when Mom was 8 weeks old (no antibiotics back then). Since I never met him, I cherish the little things I have found (like his draft card and a photo of him holding my Mom not long after she was born). However, it was a happy ending for our US soldier of Mexican descent in your story who came home, probably married, and had lots of babies.

mexicokid said...

I know what you mean I have some things of my Grandmother...it does say at the end he marries and becomes a citizen..a great story..have a wonderful weekend best wishes les

Thursday 5 th January 2023…it was a great run!!!

 This was my first ever blog post back in November of 2006!!! With just a couple of days off I have written a blog every day since and I hav...