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MILLER Kermit

Date of birth : October 4, 1912, New York.

Date of death : October 17, 2003, Southbury, Connecticut.

 

Address  78 Barnyard Lane. Roslyn Heights, New York. Mayfair 1-4255.

Elder brother of Arthur Miller.

In 1929, he attended the James Madison High School in Brooklyn.

In June 1930 he graduated from the Madison High School and was admitted at the New York University.

During Summer 1930, Arthur and Kermit were committed in the fight to save their father's company, the "Miltex Coat and Suit Company".

During Fall 1931, Kermit did not do his second year at the university, but worked full-time at the Miltex.

In 1942, he married Frances Resnick (born in 1924, Brooklyn), a young intellectual woman, Jewish, native to Coney Island, Brooklyn. They had a son, Ross Lincoln (born February 12, 1946).

Spring 1942, Kermit and Frances had just married when Kermit joined the Army. He was sent to the Officer's Candidate School, (because he had attended junior high school), was named first lieutenant and assigned to lead an infantry branch.

In 1944 Kermit, was in the middle of the struggle. 7 months earlier, in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, he had landed at Omaha Beach, Normandy. While Arthur arrived in Broadway, Kermit led his infantry men branch through the Ardennes woods, towards the German-Belgium border.
There were 19 000 American killed and 81 000 injured, including Kermit. Held down by the enemy fires, and unable to escape from his small hole, he was trapped by the snow for a week. Thus, his feet were frost-bitten with the gangrene risk, a condition which raged within the troops. Because of the possibility of an amputation, he was carried from the trench to a war hospital. 


Around the end of 1945 Kermit joined the civil life. He had escaped the gangrene and his feet were intact. But he kept on suffering from what was called the "battle fatigue".

After having been treated, he was released from a veteran hospital, but at that time, there were few informations about this trouble which affected the soldiers. He was treated with electroshock therapy before being sent home, where he went back to work, as a salesman in a carpet company. When selling became uncomfortable to him, he went directly to work at the wholesale company, where he worked until the end. Kermit Miller had changed a lot, and until the end of his life, he suffered from nervous breakdown periods and occasional losses of memory. 

with his parents ,;         


with Arthur and Joan   


July 1st, 1956, Arthur and Marilyn's Jewish wedding ,,,

,,,


with his wife Frances  




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