Antig3n Posted July 28, 2010 Share Posted July 28, 2010 A friend of mine found this currency (maybe the pacific version of the French money given to GI's on D-Day? Victory Dollars, IIRC?) mixed in with a rent payment of US cash. Near as I can tell, the written text reads: "2nd Platoon, J Co., 165th, 27th Div. Okinawa Ryukyu Islands 11 June 1945" followed by signatures, assumed to be the men of 2nd platoon. Most of those are pretty tough to make out, the one I can see completely is John J. Walsh. Thats all my friend could see too, looking at it in person. I am trying to get a better picture from him, and a look in person myself. I wonder if anyone has any information about this unit? Google searching, I found very little about the 165th, which seems to be the wartime designation of the 69th New York Regiment, and didn't see a "J" company mentioned anywhere. In fact a website about another regiment said "J" was not used to letter their companies, I'm not sure if that applies force-wide. If so maybe this is just a fake. I think he'd like to deliver this to one of those signatures if they're still alive, or maybe their family, or sell the thing on E-Bay. http://www.battlefront.com/community/attachment.php?attachmentid=538&d=1280340937 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Affentitten Posted July 29, 2010 Share Posted July 29, 2010 J was not generally used as a compnay designator. I'm not sure why unless it was avoid confusion with I. But you never know what this might refer to in the context of the men who signed the note. It may have been a joke between themselves or perhaps a temporary designator of a scratch formation. There is a NY military museum and research project, so that would be the best place for your friend to start. A bigger scan would help too! 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ebitt Posted July 29, 2010 Share Posted July 29, 2010 Looks like it might be a "short snorter". These bills were common in WW II and you might start at the web site devoted to them. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Antig3n Posted July 29, 2010 Author Share Posted July 29, 2010 I think you're right about that. Thanks for the tip. The picture on my HD is far larger, I guess the forum attachment shrunk it automatically. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hoolaman Posted July 29, 2010 Share Posted July 29, 2010 That unit was definitely there, 22nd June was toward the end of that action and was a mop up phase. There's a John J Walsh was company commander of Company K in 1943. http://www.history.army.mil/books/wwii/makin/mak-drive.htm http://www.history.army.mil/brochures/ryukyus/ryukyus.htm 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stalins Organ Posted July 30, 2010 Share Posted July 30, 2010 Looks like it might be a "short snorter". These bills were common in WW II and you might start at the web site devoted to them. There's one already - here 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Affentitten Posted July 30, 2010 Share Posted July 30, 2010 I have a framed collection of banknotes from weird countries that I have been to signed by people I was travelling with. Never knew the custom had a name! 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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