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George Ainsworth

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Ribbons & Awards

Service Record

Active Duty records

Cromwell-B

Background Information

Physical description

 

George Ainsworth is a tall, toned, male, of Australian descent. He has sea-green eyes that hide what he has seen. His once short brown hair has grown long from years in a cryo-chamber.


Family
Spouse: Although George Ainsworth was not married, he was engaged with a young American woman named Susan Grace, whom he planned to marry after the war ended.
Children: George intended to have children, but was never able to.
Father: Georges father was a veteran of the first world war and a bitter alcoholic, named George Ainsworth Sr.
Mother: George is a bastard, as a result of an affair his Father had before his marriage to Joan Smith.
Brother(s): George has an older brother who is currently serving at last missive as a Lieutenant on the HMS Repulse, en route to provide support to the besieged army at Singapore.
Sisters: George has one sister who left Australia to serve as a Red Cross volunteer in Warsaw on June 23, 1939.
 Other Family: George has no other family to speak of.

History
George Ainsworth Jr. was born at Saint Mary’s Royal Hospital on 22 of June 1904. His childhood was turbulent. His father was an alcoholic and he never knew his real mother. His mother, in a dramatic fashion, dropped baby George on the steps of his father’s house. George Ainsworth Sr. Being a self-centred and arrogant man named the child after himself. The depression hit the family harder than most. They were unable to purchase medication for Joan, who had typhus fever. She died a few dollars short of the money needed to purchase the medication. She was buried in the Family plot.
George and his brother fought all the time. Although they were never physical in their encounters, they subjected each other to verbal abuse. During one of these altercations, George shoved his brother into a tree, breaking his arm. George was a studious student, never very physically active, he did see the importance of staying in shape. When he received word that the war broke out, and having just completed a degree in economics, he was drafted and put through OCS. He was an excellent soldier and soon received a promotion to Sergeant. In December of 1940 and deployed to Singapore under the Command of General Arthur Percival.
George thought Percival an inept commander, but he was still his commanding officer. Two years passed in relative peace when suddenly the Japanese attacked. George bore witness to the evil and horrid crimes of the Japanese. He watched the Japanese shoot his Lieutenant who had ordered the platoon’s surrender. He returned fire and assumed command. However, it takes more than a superior rank to assume command of panicked and fearful men. The men under his command, Routed. He was forced to retreat as well. During the rout he was shot in the head, He awoke once on an operating table of unknown origin, unfamiliar and strange alien species were working to save his life. He went under again. When he awoke he was turned over to DFA officials. The DFA informed him of his circumstances and brought him up to speed on current events. He attended the DFA Academy and based on previous experience, was assigned the rank of Sergeant in the Marine Corp. He was assigned to the DFA Cromwell.

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