The Star Malaysia

Finding the men in the portraits

Navy vet on a quest to identify WWII soldiers drawn by his dad

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SARATOGA SPRINGS ( New York): Before the Army’s 27th Infantry Division was decimated in a bloody World War

II battle, Stan Dube (pic) sketched portraits of his fellow soldiers.

The 17 drawings were forgotten after the war and stashed in an attic for decades before being found a year ago by his son.

Now, Ira Dube is on a mission to identify the men in his late father’s 75-year-old artwork.

So far he has definitive­ly identified two of the soldiers, both New Yorkers who served in the 27th Division’s 105th Infantry Regiment, which suffered heavy casualties in the Battle of Saipan in the Pacific. One was killed on Saipan; the other died in the 1970s.

Because the 27th was a former New York National Guard unit, Dube believes most or all of the other 15 men also were New Yorkers.

He recently donated the original sketches to the New York State Military Museum and Veterans Research Center in hopes its artefacts and records could be used to help identify more of the soldiers.

It’s not known whether any of the men depicted in the artwork are still alive.

“These people need to be remembered,” said Ira, 61, a retired Navy veteran living in Woodland Park, Colorado.

“I look at these sketches and I see a hero.”

Ira found the signed sketches in the attic of his sister’s home in Mississipp­i early last year while they were going through their father’s belongings.

Stan, who died in 2009, was drafted into the Army while studying architectu­re at Syracuse University, and he put his drawing skills to use by sketching pencil- and charcoal-on-paper portraits of his fellow soldiers while the 27th Division was stationed in Hawaii in 1943.

The sure- handed sketches mostly show young men looking pensively into the distance, though a few crack a smile.

Stan drew no background­s and barely sketched out his subjects’ shoulders, but he took care to capture his subjects’ eyes and faces.

On all the drawings, Stan put the month, year and his signature in the lower right corner.

Three of the soldiers signed their names next to Stan’s: Kenneth Reid, Joseph Joner Kratky and Joe Orbe, who added his nickname, “Solid Jackson”.

Using informatio­n he found online, Ira was able to track down Kratky and Orbe’s relatives in upstate New York.

Kratky was killed on Saipan in 1944.

Orbe, a New York City native, survived the war and died in 1974. Ira hasn’t definitive­ly identified the soldier in the Reid sketch.

The unidentifi­ed drawings were delivered to the military museum on Dec 1.

Director Courtney Burns said the sketches will be posted on the museum’s website and likely will be displayed in an exhibit this year.

“We may never know who any of them are,” Burns said.

“But I think that’s part of the mystery and part of the intrigue of them.” —

 ?? AP ?? War heroes: Some sketches of soldiers from the US Army’s 27th Infantry Division which Stan drew during World War II. —
AP War heroes: Some sketches of soldiers from the US Army’s 27th Infantry Division which Stan drew during World War II. —
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