| Bio: I was born on Long
Island, New York, on July 4, 1924, attended public schools in Freeport,
NY, and graduated from Freeport High School in 1942. I enlisted in
the Army Reserve on November 13, 1942 while a freshman at Hobart College,
Geneva, NY, and was called to active duty June 9, 1943. I received
Infantry Basic Training at For McClellan, Anniston, Alabama, during the
summer of 1943 and in September of that year began ASTP (Army Specialized
Training Program) at Auburn University, then known as the Alabama
Polytechnic Institute.
At the end of March, 1944, the army closed down the ASTP
programs throughout the country, and most of us at Auburn were
shipped to Camp Atterbury, Indiana, where we joined the 106th Infantry
Division and received training for combat during the following months.
My 423rd Infantry Regiment was shipped to Europe aboard the Queen
Elizabeth I, sailing from New York on October 17, 1944. We were
housed in Britain for several weeks just outside Cheltenham,
Gloucestershire, until shipped to France at the end of November. We
arrived at the front, in the Siegfried Line just inside Germany, on
Monday, December 11, 1944, five days before the Germans launched the
Battle of the Bulge against us. Ordered to evacuate our position and
go to a rendezvous point near Schonberg, Belgium, we reached our
destination but were not "rescued" as planned. Our Regimental
Commander surrendered the remnant of his regiment on Tuesday afternoon,
December 19, 1944, to save us from death by German artillery fire.
Processed as a POW by the Germans at Stalag IVB,
Muhlberg, I was sent as part of an Arbeitskommando of 150 men to
Dresden on January 12, 1945 where we were billeted in Building Number Five
of the Dresden Slaughter-House Compound, later made famous by Kurt
Vonnegut's classic novel which was based on our common experiences.
After the firebombing of Dresden, we were moved by our guards to the
suburb of Gorbitz, and in mid-April, our guards marched us to the hamlet
of Hellendorf on the Czech border, some 35 miles or so SE of Dresden.
There we awaited the end of the war and the arrival of the Russians in
whose zone of occupation we found ourselves. I returned to the US
Army control on Mother's Day, May 13, 1945, and was given an honorable
discharge from the army at Fort Bragg, NC, on November 25, 1945.
After the war I returned to college, graduated from
Cornell in 1948, and then began graduate study in the history of modern
Europe at Harvard. I received the M.A. degree in 1949 and the Ph.D.
in 1966, having in the interim taught for three years at The American
University of Beirut, Lebanon, 1952-1955, and subsequently at Ohio
University, beginning in 1958.
I married Mary Letitia Cowan, a faculty colleague at
Ohio U. on June 9, 1964, and we both continued our teaching careers at
Ohio in the city of Athens. Mary had done a year of post-graduate
study in textiles at Leeds University, Yorkshire, England, and her field
of specialization thereafter was textiles in the Ohio University School of
Home Economics. She retired officially in 1982 but continued
teaching part time until 1989. I took early retirement in 1993 and
retired fully one year later. The University honored Mary at her
retirement by naming the assemblage of textiles and clothing the "Mary C.
Doxsee Costume Collection."
My service to Ohio University included chairing the
Energy Conservation Committee in the 1970's and directing the graduate
program in African Studies from 1983 to 1991. Our travels included
numerous trips to Europe as well as professional travel to the Middle East
and North Africa, the focus of my later teaching. Since retiring, I
have served as adjutant/treasurer of the Mid-Ohio Valley Chapter, American
Ex-Prisoners of War since 1996, as as JVC of the Department of Ohio since
1998.
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