Sponsored
Send a HeroBox Care Package Today!In a heartwarming tribute to a genuine hero, Academy Award-nominated actor Gary Sinise celebrated the life of Lawrence Brooks, a World War II veteran who died at the age of 112 on Wednesday. (RELATED: Read the Manliest Christmas Card Ever, Courtesy of General Patton)
An American hero passed away this morning. Lawrence Brooks, the oldest living WWII vet at 112 years old.
— Gary Sinise (@GarySinise) January 5, 2022
Here we are at National WWII Museum in New Orleans when he was 106 years old. He certainly had an incredible long life.
God bless you sir. An honor to know you.
Rest In Peace pic.twitter.com/8mfbGuNmxG
Fox News reports:
Born in Norwood, La., in 1909, Brooks lived in New Orleans since 1929. Drafted in 1940, he was a private in the Army’s mostly Black 91st Engineer Battalion, a unit that was stationed in New Guinea and the Philippines and built infrastructure such as bridges, roads and airstrips.
SEE ALSO: 5 Little Known Facts About the Battle of the Bulge
Brooks celebrated his 112th birthday in September with a drive-by party at his New Orleans home hosted by the National World War II Museum, The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate reported. He also received greetings from Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards, who tweeted, “Mr. Brooks, the entire state of Louisiana thanks you for your service and we all wish you a joyous birthday.”
WATCH:
Happy birthday Lawrence Brooks! The National WWII Museum in NOLA holding a drive-by bday celebration for him outside of his home. He’s the nation’s oldest veteran … turning 112 years old today!
— Carmen Chau (@OnyxCarmen) September 12, 2021
Thank you for your service, Mr. Brooks 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/cGe0pvzRoJ
The museum has previously hosted parties for Brooks, although the coronavirus pandemic caused those events to shift to drive-by celebrations for the past two years.
Sinise, an actor whose credits include “Forrest Gump” and “Apollo 13” is now equally known for his service to America’s heroes.
In a recent Fox News interview, Sinise talked about what he finds most rewarding about helping veterans.
Life can be very, very challenging for somebody in a wheelchair, somebody missing a limb, somebody with severe burns or traumatic brain injury, or blindness or whatever their particular challenges are. It can be very, very difficult just trying to function in an apartment or a small house that’s not built for somebody with physical challenges like that. So what we try to do is provide everything that you could possibly think of that would help to make the life of the veteran and the family be more independent; to have the service member be more independent,” he shared at the time.
Sponsored
Send a HeroBox Care Package Today!ALN Staff is a dedicated group of liberty-minded professionals available 24/7 to keep you informed on the news that matters.
- ALN Staffhttps://americanliberty.news/profile/alnstaff/
- ALN Staffhttps://americanliberty.news/profile/alnstaff/April 30, 2026
- ALN Staffhttps://americanliberty.news/profile/alnstaff/
- ALN Staffhttps://americanliberty.news/profile/alnstaff/









