Do you have any American heroes? Who are they?

Gaer

"Angel whisperer"
I'd like to know what famous people you honor and respect the most.
What is it about them that you find most profound?
I guess mine would be (Americans only):

Jack London

Teddy Roosevelt

Jack Dempsey

Ralph Waldo Emerson

Mark Twain

Ernest Hemingway

Remington

James Bama

Ulysses Grant

(I'm sure there are more. Can't think of them right now!)
 

Off the top my head:

Benjamin Franklin
Alexander Hamilton
Ulysses Grant

There are certainly more but I know the story for these 3 and they are just amazing!
 
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George Washington
Davey Crockett
Dolly Madison
Joel Chandler Harris
Johnny Appleseed (John Chapman)
Harriet Tubman
Annie Oakley
Audie Murphy
so many more....
 

Electrical engineering and inventors
Nikola Tesla
Thomas Edison
Charles Proteus Steinmetz

Nucléaire Physics
Edward Teller
Ernest Lawrence
R. Robert Oppenheimer
Richard Feynman

Information, computing and cryptography
Johnny Von Neumann
Claude Shannon
William Friedman

(PS been reading and studying the history of modern technology since 1960s, giving talks and papers since 1994)

From an old retired EE

Jon
 
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Electrical engineering and inventors
Nikola Tesla
Thomas Edison
Charles Proteus Steinmetz

Nucléaire Physics
Edward Teller
Ernest Lawrence
R. Robert Oppenheimer
Richard Feynman

Information, computing and cryptography
Johnny Von Neumann
Claude Shannon
William Friedman

From an old retired EE

Jon

Jon, WOW! Those are some incredible names!
 
Jon, WOW! Those are some incredible names!
Please notice that of these Americans pioneered our modern world in many ways....electrical generation, transmission and distribution, 3 phase AC generators and motors, high voltage, nuclear power, quantum mechanics, computers, cryptography.

Shannon was the Father is information theory, Friedman was the chef of US code making and breaking for many decades (AFSEA, NSA).

YOU are using Von Neumann machines every day (PC, Mac, mobile) constantly.

Many of these were immigrants fleeing Kaisers (1880s) or Hitlers (1930s) Germany, or regimes of East Europe, especially Hungary.

Suggest to get a biographies of any of these héros, you'll will enjoy and learn the foundation of our modern technological world. They all had fascinating life stories.

But, I didn't mention a few more modern, like our friends Dr Whitfield DIFFE and Dr Martin Hellman who invented public key cryptology in 1974 at Stanford University. You use this invention constantly..email, crédit cards, banking, internet, secure payment etc

From an optimist in the nuclear age!

Je vous souhaite un bon soirée.
I wish to you, a good evening
Jon
 
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Abe Lincoln
Audie Murphy (from reading his war chronicles)
Eisenhower
PATTON
Roger Staubach
Chesty Puller (most decorated marine)
Jimmie Johnson
Troy Aikman (Basically the entire team. Three championships in 4 years, not equaled till the Patriots came around.
Micheal Irwin
Robert Frost
Louis L'Amour
D. H. Lawerence
 
My artistic heroin Georgia O'Keeffe from Wisconsin. Not many people liked her paintings (and other major setbacks) but she never gave up, made many contributions, and managed to change the way we look at things like the beauty of flowers super close-up and oversized, and cow skulls and pelvis turned interesting art. She dressed plainly and was her own person living independently.

Mary Cassatt from Pennsylvania, Paris, then back to America. She filled our world with children, mothers, love, and kindness. And she made people realize that it didn't matter if a male or female painted it...art is art. She also chose not to try to please judges in a Museum and instead painted how she wanted.
 
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I guess I will say six men who I was lucky enough to know. My FIL, his brother and my MIL's four brothers who all fought in WWII different services, air, land and sea. May they rest in peace and continue to know what a difference they made.
 
I would say my father is a true American Hero. Born into poverty as a first generation American, worked hard to give his family a middle class life. Devoted to his family, always wanting better for us. Industrious, curious, always wanting to learn more, do more, be more and have more fun doing it. Loved the United States of America--called it the first country to make Jews safe and welcome, and he was grateful for that. Such fun to be with, making even going out for coffee an all day fun event. A good man who just wanted to do his best and enjoy life. My American Hero.
 
I would say my father is a true American Hero. Born into poverty as a first generation American, worked hard to give his family a middle class life. Devoted to his family, always wanting better for us. Industrious, curious, always wanting to learn more, do more, be more and have more fun doing it. Loved the United States of America--called it the first country to make Jews safe and welcome, and he was grateful for that. Such fun to be with, making even going out for coffee an all day fun event. A good man who just wanted to do his best and enjoy life. My American Hero.
That's who I chose last time someone here asked.

But not your dad...mine.
 

Do you have any American heroes? Who are they?​


Easy one for me

My Grandad

grampa.jpg

Wrote something about him a few years back;

Grampa

He was a quiet man.
Work was his vocation and recreation.
I spent a lot of time at their place in my early years, his latter years.
Seems Grampa always had chores that filled his waking hours.
I was his shadow.
He wore coveralls most days, and always sported an old grey fedora.
His high cut oxfords made a shuffling sound as he walked. Parkinson’s was having it’s way with his system.
We’d dine on a bowl of hominy together in the country kitchen.
As the midday sun danced on the table through the window from between the limbs of the giant firs, I’d watch his massive hand struggle to keep his corn on the shaking spoon.

In between chores, and my naps, he’d sit in the old padded rocker and thumb through a photo album while I stood at his side.
‘The dapple was Molly and the grey was Dixie’, pointing to the work horse team he knew so well.
Seemed Grampa had a couple soft balls tucked in his upper shirt sleeves. He was a compact man at five nine, but stout, bull neck, thick arms.

I knew him in his lesser years, keeping his meaning to life by doing small jobs.
Things like sharpening the hoes with rasps, feeding the chickens, gathering eggs, or lubing the tractor.
He cut down a hoe to my size, and all three of us hoed acres of strawberries.

I saw him laugh once.

He was a proud man, brought down and humbled by an untreatable disease, but keeping his misery within.
Dad says he was hard boiled in his younger years, and short on patience. Proud.
I knew him as a much different man.

One time I peered through a cracked door to his study. He was on his hands and knees, talking to his Lord, no longer able to just kneel.
His bible was quite worn.
Dad gave to it me a few years ago.
I leant it to him at Christmas.
I’ll get it back pretty soon.
I think of times then and times now.
What a difference in pace, in conviction, in the shear enjoyment of endurance in simple living.
I see my grandkids give me an occasional glance of admiration, but nothing like the revered awe I had of him.

He died when I was ten.

I can still hear the shuffle of his feet, but it’s mine that echo his stride now.

To add to that;
He was a man of substance
Not things
Character
Few words
But
when he did talk, people listened
didn't argue

He prayed much
for his family
Those have been answered
....still being answered

Yeah, he was...is my hero
 
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my favorite American is Jimmy Carter, a former president who is well into his nineties, but still works building homes for the underprivileged.
Jimmy Carter came to mind for me also.
Also, all the skilled blue collar workers that keep electricity and water flowing. And garbage collectors. And those that come to our aid when we are in trouble.
 
For me, it's George Washington. If not for him, what we call the US would be totally different. If the US followed the usual path after a revolution, we should have had a military dictatorship. Almost every revolution ends up that way. And for the first 8 years of the US, it was Washington's prestige, and personal integrity, which kept the nation together. No other person could have done that the 1800s. I knew the school book stuff-"father of the country", war general, but he gave us the government we have. He could have been the first Emperor of the US, instead of the first President. We owe him so much.
 

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