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Or NBC News. I'm Tom Rokoff. We hope to see you back here. I'm Lester Holt. It's carried forward.
Tom Yamitz is there for. Firefighters are still working around the clock. As the world changes, we look for what endures. We are coming on the air with breaking news right now. We look for a constant.
and from one era to the next. Trust is the anchor. For NBC Nightly News, I'm Tom Yamas. A new chapter begins. NBC Nightly News with Tom Yamas, evenings on NBC.
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Hello, hello. Malcolm Glaubel here from Revisionist History. Did you know T-Mobile for Business has an award show specifically for their customers? It's happening October 20th in sunny Orlando, Florida, and I'm encouraging you, yes, you, to enter. This event honors outside-the-box thinking that changes industries, communities, and even the world.
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Pay for by Public Investing Inc., member FINRA, and SIPC. Full disclosures at public.com/slash disclosures. Yeah. This is Lee Habib and this is Our American Stories. And we tell stories about everything here on this show, including your story send them.
to ouramericanstories.com. They're some of our favorites. Up next, a story from Robert Froelich. Robert is the author of Aimless Life, Awesome God. and a regular contributor to this show.
Today Robert shares with us the story of a man who impacted him profoundly. Take it away, Robert. Uh Mm. In World War I, Wilhelm Bissner was in the German army. His assignment was to care for the horses that pulled the cannons to fight against the Russians.
During a gas attack in that war, Wilhelm suffered the loss of his sense of smell. After the war, He was awarded a small disability annuity for his injury. The monthly payments continued until he died in Florida. in 1977. Wilhelm was born in 1892, the son of a tavern owner in Berlin, Germany.
He learned his trade as a tool and die maker and married Elspeth Schultz. In 1927, they came by ship to America with their daughter, Ursula. Wilhelm Bissner became William Bertner. His German friends called him Willie, and everybody else called him Bill. When he first came to the United States, Bill worked as a mason's helper while he learned the English language.
Then he went to work at his trade. Long Island, New York was a hotbed in the early days of aviation and he saw it all. He knew many of the pioneers in that field. He worked for Sverski. and for Sikorsky, the early developers of the helicopter.
He also worked for Republic Aircraft. and chance vought aircraft. In 1933, Bill went to work for Edo Aircraft in College Point, New York. Bill was involved in the design and fabrication of floats for various aircraft. including some for Charles Lindbergh and Admiral Burr.
I remember he had two model airplanes proudly displayed on the mantle in his College Point home. One was a solid aluminum model of Lindbergh's plane. the Spirit of St. Louis. and the other was a chance vaugh.
F for U. the iconic gull-winged Navy warplane. Yeah. World War II created a huge demand for military aircraft floats. As Assistant Division Superintendent, Bill headed up a fabrication shop.
According to one College Point residence, he hired, quote, every German toolmaker and machinist he could find. including my father's, and as a result put food on the table for my family. Unquote. Bill put all his skills to work, revamping tool designs and manufacturing processes. to make the production faster and more safe.
In 1943, he won a National Safety Ace Award. for one of his designs. After the war, Bill retired to his 100-acre retreat. in the Catskill Mountains of upstate New York. living in a house he had built himself.
He and Elspeth took me with them in 1947. He had a small machine shop there and planned to do some contract work from time to time. That only lasted a year. They moved back to the city, gave me back to my mother, and Bill started work at Sperry Gyroscope Corporation. The company manufactured guidance systems for ships, aircraft, and missiles.
Bill always took great pride in his work, immersing himself in the tiny details of his craft, and he loved the shaping of hard steel or soft aluminum into useful objects. Once he showed me a rectangular aluminum box about one and a half inches wide and high. and about two inches long. It had a hinged lid. At Sperry, Bill had designed the tool that made this box.
which was an electrical junction box. for the instrument panel of the Boeing 707 aircraft. He explained to me the intricacies of bending allowances and the tiny tolerances that went into this simple object. Bill retired again in 1961. But when I returned home for military service in 1964, I found him working every day in a small local machine shop.
still making tools to shape metal to his will. Bill's German-born love for precision and order. carried over to his off-duty life. He owned just three cars during my lifetime. Plymouths.
in a 1968 They were all base models with manual transmissions. and apart from her radio, no amenities. Every Saturday Bill would check under the hood. Reflecting on my grandfather's life, it amazes me the advances he was part of. Young Wilhelm taking care of horses in the muddy battlefields of World War I.
Bill, the tool and die maker, acquainted with the pioneers in aviation. Bill, the superintendent, helping to win World War II by making water landings possible for military aircraft. and Bill the Toolmaker. seeing parts he helped create flying high in the sky. and even into space.
Bill Bertner loved this country, and he made the most of the opportunities it gave him. and he returned the favor by giving his best to America. He never lost that German love for precision and ordinum. nor did that distinctly German accent ever leave him. He was my grandpa.
And I loved it. And what a gem we just heard. I mean, what a time to have grown up. I mean from horses to flight, and there he is right in the middle of flight, using his God-given skills to help America. Defeat the Nazi menace.
Our arsenal of democracy, folks. We couldn't have done it without it. And men like Bill. on the front lines. William Bertner's life story is told.
By his grandson Robert Frolich, here. on our American stories. Folks, if you love the great American stories we tell and love America like we do, We're asking you to become a part of the Our American Stories family. If you agree that America is a good and great country, please. Make a donation.
A monthly gift of $17.76 is fast becoming a favorite option for supporters. Go to ouramericanstories.com now and go to the donate button and help us keep the great American stories coming. That's our American Stories. dot com Your dream getaway starts at the airport. With Amex Platinum, you get access to the Centurion Lounge where you can find space to send off that last work email, fill up on premium dining.
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Paid for by Public Investing Inc., member Finron, at SIPC. Full disclosures at public.com/slash disclosures. Um There's an efficient way to get caught up on a lot of news. It's called The Seven from The Washington Post. It's a newsletter and podcast.
Whether you're reading or hit play, you get seven stories you need to know, and you can consume it all in just a few minutes. The Seven is out every weekday morning by 7 a.m. Eastern. I'm Hannah Jewell. I'm one of the writers, and I host the show.
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