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Easy Company  

Easy Company


 

Easy Co. 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment – In photographs is the history of Easy Company, 506th PIR, 101st Airborne, in an unparalleled limited edition book. Compiled by company historian Jake Powers it features over 400 rare photographs and items of memorabilia – including maps, diary extracts and rosters – together with a 20,000-word text from surviving company veterans.

The ‘Band of Brothers’ that comprised Easy Company (as immortalised in Stephen Ambrose’s bestselling historical book and the celebrated mini-series co-produced by Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks) will forever be remembered for their audacious acts of bravery throughout World War II.

Special Features:

• Contributors Tom Hanks & Steven Spielberg.

• Each copy is personally signed by at least six Easy Company veterans.

• An edition of only 1,000 copies worldwide.

• DVD of interviews with the veterans.

• Facsimile of Richard Winters’ map of Hagenau and ‘Jump Into The Fight’ 1942 recruitment leaflet.

As with all Genesis limited editions, the production quality of this volume is extremely high. Printed on 232 pages of heavy-weight, 200gsm matt art paper, the photographs are reproduced in full-colour using fine screen lithography and full page varnishing. Stitched into the book is a gatefold photograph of Easy Company at full strength, taken just days before they embarked for Europe and D-Day.

The striking binding is inspired by the paratroopers’ uniform. Each copy:

• Is hand-bound by master craftsmen using leather and M1942 jumpsuit material.

• Features a sewn replica ‘Screaming Eagle’ patch inset on the cover. As sourced by the costume and set designers for Band of Brothers, Saving Private Ryan, and Pearl Harbour among others.

• The title is blocked with gold lettering on the spine and every page is gilt-edged to protect the pages within.

• Is enclosed in a black cloth-covered slipcase, silk-screened with golden parachutists.

Reproduced exclusively to accompany every copy in the edition are two rare items:

• A facsimile reproduction of the 1942 ‘Jump into the fight!’ US Army recruitment leaflet.
• An unseen town plan of Hageunau, a map belonging to Major Richard Winters from January 1945, with hand-marked annotations outlining the positions and movements of his men along the Rhine river.
• Also included is an exclusive DVD film of the 2005 Easy Company reunion tour of Europe.

Company E, along with D, F and Headquarters Company, formed the 2nd Battalion of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, United States Army. This was an experimental unit designed to transform civilian volunteers into an elite pedigree of soldier, under the battalion command of Major Robert Strayer, and the regimental command of Colonel Robert Sink.

They volunteered on the basis that they were prepared to jump from an airplane into a combat situation; to take a greater risk of becoming a casualty and to fight with the most proficient outfit in the Allied army.

I wanted to be the best. And when the word came out that they were going to form this super unit, I wanted to be a part of it. Because of the problems that the US had had - Pearl Harbour, Guadalcanal, Wake Island, the loss of nearly our entire navy, 200 of our planes torn up out of 300 that we had - the civilians decided we had to do something. Ed Shames

You find the arsehole of the world, and that was Camp Toccoa. It was a miserable place. It was not made for training. We were really the first ones there, the first ones at Toccoa as a regiment. It was kind of tough in the beginning. Bill Guarnere

Above: Robert 'Burr' Smith on an unusual 'ascent' exercise.

Right: When Colonel Sink heard about a record march carried out by the Japanese and published in Reader's Digest -100 miles in 72 hours - he chose Strayer's 2nd Battalion, the best in the regiment, to succeed the record. The result was 118 miles in 75 hours and 15 minutes on mud-clogged roads, in rain and in freezing temperatures.

Above: Currahee Hill.




Our Price: £225.00




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