. In spring of 2007, Shay along with
Harald E. L. Prins and his wife
Bunny McBride, both of Kansas State University, planned a trip back to Europe so Shay could visit past battle sites and comment on his experiences. The group was awarded grants to fund the journey from both the Maine Humanities Council and the
First Division Museum in Wheaton, Illinois. Prins, McBride, and Shay visited
Normandy,
Mons,
Aachen,
Hurtgen Forest,
the Ardennes, and
Auel. The trip was documented and filmed for future reference and in order to shed light on the experiences of American Indian soldiers in World War II. In the 2012 book
Project Omaha Beach: The Life and Military Service of a Penobscot Native American Elder, Shay narrates the journey in the form of letters to his deceased wife Lilli as part of his autobiography. Soon after returning to his home at
Panawahpskek (
Natives Island), Maine, Shay was personally inducted into the
Legion of Honour as a Chevalier by President
Nicolas Sarkozy at the French Embassy in Washington, DC. A year later, in 2008, Shay was inducted as a Distinguished Member of the
16th Infantry Regiment in a special ceremony at
Fort Riley, Kansas, home base of the
1st Infantry Division. In 2009, he spearheaded the official establishment of June 21 as Native American Veterans Day in Maine, the first state in the US to do so. Eight years later, he was invited to ceremonially inaugurate a large granite turtle sculpture at the "Charles Shay Indian Memorial," a small park in the dunes overlooking Omaha Beach. ==Notes==