Military History Community Loses a Great Restorer of Armor
Posted: Sat Jan 10, 2009 3:00 am
This week the community of military histororians, professional and amature, has lost its greatest and most active restorer of armored vehicles.
Jacques Littlefield passed away on Wednesday at his home. He had been struggling with cancer for some 10 years.
To read a little about him, see: http://lizditz.typepad.com/i_speak_of_d ... 92009.html
I am told that the shop crew put the turret on his Panther for the first time, and roled it out of the shop to the side of the road, so that the hearse carrying him could pass it as it left his house.

The Panther was Jacques' last great restoration project.
I was fortunate enough to travel in a crowd that got access to Littlefield's collection. I first became obsessed with tanks when my oldest brother took me to see the premier of "The Battle of the Bulge" in Hollywood in the late 1960s. After some fourty years of reading, studying, even dreaming about tanks, it was as if I had stumbled into a living fantasy when I was introduced to Jacques and his work in collecting, restoring, and showing his tanks.
To see more of the collection: http://www.milvehtechfound.com/
My last meeting with Jacques, this past summer:

Seated around the table, clockwise, from the bottom left:
- Ken Estes, author of "Marines Under Armor, the Marine Corps and the Armored Fighting Vehicle 1916-2000 ", and many other titles.
- Vladimir Yakubov, author of "Raising the Red Banner, the Pictoral History of Stalin's Fleet 1920-1945"
- Jacques Littlefield
- Colin, former hover craft CO and rescue diver with the Canadian Coast Guard
- Mike Steele, former master gunner in the M60A3 and M1
- C.G. Erickson, industrial welder (worked on the Panther project) and occasional amature researcher in the military archives in D.C.
- Mark 1, who was lucky enough to buy a pitcher from which this august gathering gathered some cheer.
RIP Jacques.

Jacques Littlefield passed away on Wednesday at his home. He had been struggling with cancer for some 10 years.
To read a little about him, see: http://lizditz.typepad.com/i_speak_of_d ... 92009.html
I am told that the shop crew put the turret on his Panther for the first time, and roled it out of the shop to the side of the road, so that the hearse carrying him could pass it as it left his house.

The Panther was Jacques' last great restoration project.
I was fortunate enough to travel in a crowd that got access to Littlefield's collection. I first became obsessed with tanks when my oldest brother took me to see the premier of "The Battle of the Bulge" in Hollywood in the late 1960s. After some fourty years of reading, studying, even dreaming about tanks, it was as if I had stumbled into a living fantasy when I was introduced to Jacques and his work in collecting, restoring, and showing his tanks.
To see more of the collection: http://www.milvehtechfound.com/
My last meeting with Jacques, this past summer:

Seated around the table, clockwise, from the bottom left:
- Ken Estes, author of "Marines Under Armor, the Marine Corps and the Armored Fighting Vehicle 1916-2000 ", and many other titles.
- Vladimir Yakubov, author of "Raising the Red Banner, the Pictoral History of Stalin's Fleet 1920-1945"
- Jacques Littlefield
- Colin, former hover craft CO and rescue diver with the Canadian Coast Guard
- Mike Steele, former master gunner in the M60A3 and M1
- C.G. Erickson, industrial welder (worked on the Panther project) and occasional amature researcher in the military archives in D.C.
- Mark 1, who was lucky enough to buy a pitcher from which this august gathering gathered some cheer.
RIP Jacques.
