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[ultimate_heading main_heading=”Our Story” el_class=”accent-border-color” main_heading_style=”font-weight:bold;” main_heading_font_size=”desktop:40px;” main_heading_line_height=”desktop:36px;” sub_heading_style=”font-weight:bold;”][/ultimate_heading]

When my only brother, SSG Mark “Doc” Wells, 74th EOD, was serving in Afghanistan and killed by an IED, leaving behind a wife and two young children, I truly understood loss and the depth of the needs of others who have lost someone they love.

My brother and I always had friendly cooking competitions and were both bakers at heart. My chicken pot pie was his favorite and he’d call me countless times for the recipe.

Although my brother wasn’t able to return home, I had the desire to help the soldiers who did.

So in 2012, I started a small meal planning company with the idea that the heart of everything we did, we would be supporting veterans, and widows and orphans of veterans!

That little startup has grown up to become Victory Pie Company

Just as the “Victory Gardens” of World War II were a community-inspired effort to help support our troops, Victory Pie Company gives a portion of all profits to supporting various veteran organizations including EOD Warrior’s Foundation, Snowball Express, and Camp Hope.

Each pie is crafted by hand, from scratch with love for our cause.

Thank you for supporting the men and women who serve our country and for supporting small business by sharing a table with us.

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We are so excited to introduce our newest adventure: Victory PodCast, a podcast where well be discussing all things life, small business, and of course… pie! 
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Tune into this weeks episode where we give a little background to how Victory Pie Company got its start, where we are as of today, and where we’re headed. 

https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/victory-pod-cast/episodes/Victory-Pod-Cast--Episode-1-Our-Story-e2a4ctd
VPC’s WALL OF HONOR
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On September 4, 1967, while providing comfort and aid to the 3rd Battalion, 5th Marines, an already wounded Father Capodanno rushed forward to comfort a wounded corpsman.  While administering last rites, he was shot more than 27 times. This act of heroism would earn him the Medal of Honor posthumously.

His service to his country was as great as to the Roman Catholic Church – and for that he is currently being beatified.  That process, known as canonization, is when the church will prove that he lived and died in such an exemplary way that he deserves to be recognized as a saint.
Our Vintage Stack pies are the perfect party planning solution! Give us a call to book your event today.
VPCs WALL OF HONOR
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1st Lt. David Ragin was my brother-in-law and my hero. He was killed in action (KIA) on Aug. 20, 1964 in a bloody battle along with three other brave American advisors serving with the Vietnamese 41st Ranger Battalion in Kien Hoa Province, 45 miles southwest of Saigon. The Rangers suffered more than 200 casualties during this violent ambush.

All four received the Distinguished Service Cross, the nation’s second-highest award for valor. In addition to Dave, the advisors included Capt. Byron Clark Stone, Capt. James Michael Coyle and Sgt. 1st Class Tom Ward.

Dave received the Distinguished Service Cross for his actions during this terrible one-hour and 40-minute battle, in which the Viet Cong conducted four major assaults on the Ranger positions. With aggressive courage during the firefight, he killed more than 30 enemy soldiers. He was last seen alive firing a machine gun while covering the withdrawal of his unit. Dave was 25 when he died in the service of his country. He was promoted to captain after his death.

No one was surprised at Dave’s courageous death. He was a senior-ranking cadet at The Citadel, class of 1961. He graduated from Palatka (Florida) High School in 1957 as a very popular and respected student who was a superb athlete and the captain of the football team. The National Guard Armory was named in his honor after his death.

Shortly before Dave deployed, he and I spent half the night talking. I was a cadet at West Point and had enormous respect for this dedicated and confident young officer. Dave was filled with enthusiasm and spirit. His dad had fought in World War II, and he wanted to join the long line of American patriots who had served to keep us free. His promising life was cut so short. All of us who knew and served with him are better because of his example of integrity, service and courage.

The caption under David Ragin’s picture in his high school yearbook is his enduring epitaph: “He is so good that no one can be a better man.”
Our pies are homemade, from scratch with love for our cause- to support US Veterans and their families!
Happy Anniversary, Sheila & Nate! 
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