World War II Veteran Asking for Valentine s Day Cards

World War II Veteran Asking for Valentine s Day Cards

World War II Veteran Asking for Valentine's Day Cards Veterans, Active Duty, and Military Families

WWII Vet 104 Asks for Valentine' s Day Cards — and Receives Thousands

Flood of mail leaves Marine Bill White in disbelief

Mary Huston A 104-year-old World War II veteran is on a new mission, and he's asking for the public's help. Dubbed “Operation Valentine,” Bill White is soliciting holiday cards from friends and strangers alike to create a Valentine's Day scrapbook. The retired Marine Corps major and Purple Heart recipient first got hooked on scrapbooking in 1934, when he started boot camp and began saving everything he could get his hands on. "I just had a desire to keep a record of the things I had done,” White says. “My mother also saved papers, letters and other records, so I guess I took after her."

Valentine s Day cards can be mailed to

Operation Valentine ATTN: Hold for Maj. Bill White, USMC (Ret.) The Oaks at Inglewood 6725 Inglewood Ave. Stockton, CA 95207 A fellow resident at his assisted living home in Stockton, California, suggested it would be fun for White to receive Valentine's Day cards from the public to put in a scrapbook. “So, I put the word out, thinking we might get about 100 of them. Boy did we — and more,” he says. To White's surprise a resident's social media post garnered widespread attention online and spread to local and national news outlets. So far, White has received about 50,000 Valentine's Day cards — and they keep pouring in. He expects the total to reach close to 100,000 by Feb. 14. "It's indescribable,” he says of the flood of mail. “I never imagined people would send me so many cards, in my wildest imagination.” White's daughter, Mary Huston, says her father constantly shakes his head in disbelief whenever they talk about how many cards have been delivered to him.

Iwo Jima left a lasting impression on White

The veteran recounts how, in 1945, , a Pacific island that was the scene of fierce fighting between U.S. and Japanese forces, and was told to relieve another Marine upon his arrival. Once he tapped his fellow service member on the shoulder to switch positions, he realized the man was his lone brother-in-law. They only had the opportunity to say hello and then goodbye. Weeks later, White led his men in the direction of the Japanese front line. Under fire, a Japanese grenade hit close to White, slamming him against a wall. He was listed as a “GSW,” meaning gunshot wound, and was sent back to the U.S. despite his protests. What happened in Iwo Jima still resonates with White to this day. He says of all the Valentine's Day cards he has received so far, his favorite is one showing the iconic image of the American flag being raised on Mount Suribachi. After returning from the war, White worked 12 years with the Huntington Beach California Police Department in California and volunteered for 30 years with the Huntington Beach Search and Rescue Explorer Post 563. These days, he says, “I like to make myself available for anything anyone wants me to do. I don't like to sit and twiddle my thumbs. I like to stay busy." When asked what his secret to longevity is, he answered, “Just keep breathing."

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