Edward Shames, a World War II veteran who was the last surviving officer of “Easy Company,” which inspired the HBO miniseries and book “Band of Brothers,” has died. He was 99.
An obituary posted by the Holomon-Brown Funeral Home & Crematory said Shames, of Norfolk, Virginia, died peacefully at his home on Friday.
Shames was involved in some of the most important battles of World War II. During the war, he was a member of the renowned Easy Company, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division.
“He made his first combat jump into Normandy on D-Day as part of Operation Overlord. He volunteered for Operation Pegasus and then fought with Easy Company in Operation Market Garden and the Battle of the Bulge in Bastogne,” according to the obituary.
Shames was the first member of the 101st to enter Dachau concentration camp, just days after its liberation.
“When Germany surrendered, Ed and his men of Easy Company entered Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest where Ed managed to acquire a few bottles of cognac, a label indicating they were ‘for the Fuhrer’s use only.’ Later, he would use the cognac to toast his oldest son’s Bar Mitzvah,” the obituary said.
After the war, Shames worked for the National Security Agency as an expert on Middle East affairs. He also served in the U.S. Army Reserve Division and later retired as a colonel.

Lt Edward Shames & Sgt Paul C. Rogers - Easy Company", 506th PIR, 101st Airborne Division.
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Edward Shames in 1945
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Actor Joseph May
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First Lieutenant Robert Amon examines battle damage to his P-38 Lightning.
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The crew of B-29 Superfortress 42-24598 "Waddy's Wagon" (20th Air Force, 73rd Bomb Wing, 497th Bomb Group, 869th Bomb Squadron) posing to duplicate the nose art. All were KIA when the bomber was shot down over Japan in January, 1945
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Nose art on B-29 Superfortress "The Uninvited"—the last B-29 to bomb the Japanese Empire. PT0, 1945
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John Gorman's Sherman tank Ballyragget, and the Tiger II tank of 503rd Heavy Panzer Battalion that it knocked out by ramming, July 1944.
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In this case, both Gorman's crew and the Tiger's crew bailed out after the ram. Both crews were injured and shaken up, both tanks ended up immobile.
It was a battle between several German tanks including the Tiger II vs several Sherman's. Gorman executed a flanking manoeuvre. While the Tiger II was busy engaging other Sherman's, Gorman rolled down a hill at full speed and rammed the side of the Tiger II without the Germans spotting them (and Gorman's gunner also fired a shell at the turret at point blank moment before impact).
Once Gorman exited, still dazed from the impact, he ran to a group of men he thought were his crew. Turns out he accidentally followed the German crew, but was met with no aggression, they just saluted each other and Gorman ran back to his crew.
 
U.S. Marines struggle ashore though 1 metre waves at Cape Gloucester, New Guinea. 26th Dec 1943.
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Patton's Third Army links up with the 101st Airborne at Bastogne. 26 Dec 1944
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P-38 Lightning “Vagrant Virgin” flown by. Lt. L.V. Bellusei of 36th Fighter Squadron/8th Fighter Group
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Lieutenant Commander James H. Flatley's F6F-3 Hellcat fighter warming up on the deck of USS Yorktown, preparing to attack Marcus Island, 31 August 1943.
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A-24B-5-DT Banshee aircraft (serial number 42-54459) of US 531st Fighter Squadron following a Jeep down the runway on Makin Island, Gilbert Islands, 13 Dec 1943; this was the first A-24B to arrive on Makin.
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B-24L Liberator “Flying Ass” of the 451st Bomb Group just prior to bomb release over railroad yards in Vienna, Austria, 15 January 1945.
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Marine Raiders at Cape Totkina, Bougainville, January 1944
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Soldiers of the 2nd Infantry Division, nicknamed “Indianhead“ lie flat in the snow to escape enemy machine-gun fire near Ondenval in Belgium
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B-17 “Lady B Good” after an attack by Me 262 in Berlin raid, March 1945.
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3 July 1944. 1st Battalion, 503rd Parachute Regiment paratroopers landing on the Kamiri aerodrome on Noemfoor Island off New Guinea. A B-17 overhead drops supplies. The 54th Troop Carrier Wing of the 5th Air Force dropped 739 men directly over the airfield.
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