Ehlers, who worked with veterans after World War II, moved to Buena Park in 1955. He lived in the same home for more than 50 years.
Ehlers and his older brother, Roland, were Kansas farm boys who joined the Army together during the Depression to help their family. After three years in the peacetime Army, the brothers found themselves headed to Europe after the United States entered the war following the attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941.
The pair fought side-by-side across North Africa and Sicily. Once, in Italy, Walt had to dig Roland out from under a pile of dirt and rocks after an artillery shell exploded near them.
But on the eve of the June 6, 1944, invasion of France, the Army ordered Walt and Roland Ehlers apart.
“They said, ‘There’s a big invasion coming up and we expect a lot of casualties, so you boys shouldn’t be together,’” Ehlers recalled in 1994.
At Omaha Beach, Walt, a 23-year-old staff sergeant, led his squad out of the Higgins boat and into the withering fire of German machine gun nests on the bluffs above.
Laying a barrage of covering fire with their M1 rifles, the squad members enabled Army explosives engineers to clear the route to the German positions.
“I got all 12 of my men off the beach without a casualty, which was the best thing I ever did in my life,” Ehlers said.
He fought his way inland with his unit. When there was a lull in the action, he went looking for Roland.
“I caught up with some guys from his unit,” Ehlers said. “I said, ‘Where’s my brother?’ They said, ‘He’s missing.’ It was a narrow beach. The only people missing were underwater or blown to bits.”
I had the honor to meet Mr. Ehlers at a Memorial Day ceremony. A galant soldier and true gentleman. RIP









