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1st Lt. Benjamin Morin, the first U.S. tank commander to engage enemy forces in World War II and the last surviving officer of the National Guard's famed 192nd Tank Battalion, has died at a retirement home for Catholic priests in Michigan. "Here's a gentleman that endured unspeakable horrors at the hands of others, but he wouldn't speak a bad word about anyone," one Soldier said. "The most he would say about his Japanese captors was 'They were not the nicest people.'"
150428-A-YG824-002.JPG Photo By: Illinois National Guard

Clarkston, MI - 1st Lt. Benjamin Morin, the first U.S. tank commander to engage enemy forces in World War II and the last surviving officer of the National Guard's famed 192nd Tank Battalion, has died at a retirement home for Catholic priests in Michigan. "Here's a gentleman that endured unspeakable horrors at the hands of others, but he wouldn't speak a bad word about anyone," one Soldier said. "The most he would say about his Japanese captors was 'They were not the nicest people.'"


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