[Marcio Disney]
1918: A young Walt Disney  forges his parents' signatures to enlist in the American Ambulance  Corps (part of the Red Cross). He changes his birth from 1901 to 1900.  See the details above!
Walt Disney in the American Ambulance Corps
The summer of 1918 was the best that  Walt had known. His hours for the post office were long, but there was  no drudgery to the work, and he was outdoors most of the time. At night  he took girls from McKinley High School to movies and vaudeville shows. 
For the first time in his life,  Walt had enough money to indulge himself, and he contemplated buying a  movie camera or a canoe. A girl friend urged him to buy a canoe, but he  decided on the camera. He mounted it on a tripod in an alley and  photographed himself in imitations of Charlie Chaplin. To please his  friend, he joined another boy in buying an inexpensive canoe; it was so  small and unwieldy that he and the girl were swept out into the lake on a  windy Sunday. 
By late summer, the Allies had  stopped the Germans in the second battle of the Marne, and Marshal Foch  bad ordered a counterattack. Walt grew more impatient to get in uniform,  telling his parents, "I don't want my grandchildren asking me, 'Why  weren't you in the war? Were you a slacker?' " The Navy had transferred  Roy to Charleston, South Carolina, then assigned him to voyages between  New York and France. Ray Disney had joined the Army. Walt wanted to take  part in the same adventure; he couldn't conceive of returning to high  school for another year. A friend at the post office, Russell Maas,  shared his feelings. They decided to cross the border and enlist in the  Canadian Army, which accepted younger recruits. Their plot was thwarted  when Russell's mother discovered his packed suitcase; her son admitted  the plan and she warned Flora Disney. One day Russell arrived at the  post office and told Walt excitedly. "There' s something forming here  that you and I can get into. It's a volunteer group called the American  Ambulance Corps, part of the Red Cross. They need drivers, and they're  not fussy about how old you are." 
At noon, the two young men  hurried to the headquarters of the American Red Cross. They learned the  age limit for ambulance unit volunteers was seventeen. Both were  sixteen, but they falsified their ages and applied as the St. John  brothers, Russell and Walter. The ruse succeeded until the applications  for passports which required their parents' signatures. Walt was forced  to disclose his plan to his parents. "I will not sign any permission"  Elias Disney declared. "It's signing a death warrant for my son." 
Flora Disney argued that three  of their sons had left the family home by stealth and she didn't want  Walter to go the same way. "The boy is determined," she said "I would  rather sign this and know where he is than have him run off." 
"Well, you can sign it for me---I won't!" Elias replied, and he stalked from the room. Flora forged his name on the passport application, and Walt altered his birth date to read "1900."  He and Russell Maas returned to the Red Cross, and their applications  were accepted. The two boys received uniforms and reported to a tent  encampment at a burned-down amusement park near the University of  Chicago. Mechanics from the Yellow Cab Company taught them how to repair  motors and drive cars over rough terrain.
Click here to read the complete story or visit: http://tinyurl.com/2vouzaj
ºoº

Hi to all, it's really a pleasant for me to go to see this site, it consists of important Information.
ReplyDeleteMy blog post very cool article