Our Heroes are Fading Away

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I waited seventy years, but I finally got the story.

My father is 95. I was born on his birthday, seventy-one years ago. He was a Gunnery Officer in the Pacific. I couldn’t understand what kind of ship he was on, except it was a type of troop transport and landing ship.

He brought home a bunch of souvenirs from the war, mostly Japanese weapons and uniforms. The uniforms fit me when I was a boy and I wore them out. I destroyed the weapons and everything else of value. I was a wild kid. I remember my father watching me as I destroyed his war mementos and shaking his head in disgust and disbelief. The only time he got mad was when I broke the blade of a K-Bar (Marine Knife). I never asked why it meant so much to him and I am not going to ask him now.

He stood straight the summer before, and complained about losing all his basketball teammates to the undertaker. He had no one to play basketball with.

He flew to California to work with me for a couple of weeks. He wasn’t standing straight, and he was using a cane. The airport insists on putting old people in wheelchairs and I was afraid  of an altercation, and waited at the gate, to avoid problems. He is proud and refuses to believe he is getting older. I managed to talk him out of going postal. It was going to be a long walk to the car and he was tired after two flights.

I cooked for us and he was skeptical when I told him I’d be cooking Mexican Cuisine. I told him, I had learned a lot about my vague Spanish heritage, and I had been studying with some old-time Mexican cooks.

He told me, without mincing words, he never minced words, “I don’t eat spicy foods, with onions and peppers. Spicy foods don’t agree with me.”

I encouraged him to give the first meal an honest test; if he didn’t like it, I’d cook him something else.

I served the meal and after the first bite his eyes lit up. “This is damn good.” He ate a few more bites and said, “This is like the food I had onboard ship.”

“That’s a hell of a compliment to a man who just cooked you a nice meal.”

“No, you don’t understand. The cook for the officers was a black from Georgia, named Postel.”

“Was that his first name or last name?”

“It was his only name. He was right out of the slave culture.”

“That’s bizarre.”

“That’s the way it was. He was lucky. They taught him how to cook for the officers. It’s not an equality thing; the officers ate much better food than the enlisted men. Our cooks went through special training, but Postel was the best.

I made him the Captain of a gun crew and after the war, he said that was the nicest thing that happened to him in the Navy. Some of the guys were mean to him, but I liked him. When we secured one of the islands, I invited him up to the bridge to get a good look. He was proud to be on the bridge and the view was magnificent, but some floaters drifted by and he got sick.”

I innocently asked, “What are floaters?”

My dad looked at me as if I was a little boy, “Dead Japanese.”

He finished his plate and wandered into the kitchen and emptied the skillet, of my second serving.

When he sat down to eat my second serving, he said, “Who’d have ever thought you would be a good cook.”

He went with me on various jobs and couldn’t believe the traffic and the speeds we hit on the open highway and in the mountains. He said, “If I was with anyone else, this would scare the crap out of me.”

He has watched me with horses, since I was a boy; so, there were no surprises. He just said, “I still don’t know how you do it. Horses and dogs like you, and they have since you were a boy.”

He said he had a wonderful time and promised to fly out again next summer, but that’s not going to happen; he is deteriorating too fast. I have promised to fly to his place and take him fishing next summer, if he is physically able, but he is in a nursing home, now.

A few nights ago, he called to talk about the Navy, the war, and the various island campaigns. He was at Tarawa, Saipan, Okinawa, Iwo Jima, and a few other minor skirmishes.

He had never really talked about the war, except to say, “The Marines didn’t hit the beach at Tarawa, until the Japs were running low on machine gun ammunition.” He said this, when I told him I had enlisted in the Marines, but the other night he wanted to talk about the war and his sailors.

He used to fly to reunions to drink and talk with the sailors from his ship, but now, he is the only one left. He said, “As the gunnery officer on the bridge, I was the most exposed man on the ship, but they are all dead and I am the only one still alive.”

“I was a freshman in college during the fall of ’41. When the war started, the military told us college boys to stay in school. Soon they had a program for us. We could sign up for the Navy, Army, or Marine Corps. I chose the Navy because I liked the uniform. They shipped us from college to college to learn navigation and many other useful things; until we started learning to drive boats in the Atlantic. I was an eighteen-year-old Naval Officer. We drove a boat through the Panama Canal and were given a new ship south of Los Angeles, (He thought it might have been San Pedro), and headed off to war.”

He was breaking up at this time and I was wishing I had something to say that would make him feel better, but I was at a loss for something intelligent to say.

 

 

 

 

 

If you can get any of these snippets of history from these old warriors, make your move. An era is disappearing.

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That was a good read, Skookum.

Vets are a treasure trove of memories and experiences that are gone for ever once they pass.

What a legacy, what a blessing!

If your go to a big library and get microfilm of NYT ’43 – ’45. You will be able to read dozen of “news: articles telling the world you dad was a bad guy. the NYT said the “Floaters” were the real heroes.

In keeping with a anti America “news” “reporting” style they started 100 years ago and maintain as I type!

Biased am I? Yes I had 4 relatives who fought the Japs! ALL GOOD MEN

Each generation has had and will have its heros, we must honor and remember all of them https://rwnofficial.com/braves-fan-stands/
https://twitter.com/Braves/status/1001172294767702017/photo/1

My good friend’s father was a soldier in the 36th Infantry, the Texas Division. He actually wrote a book about his experiences, unpublished, while in the National Guard and then deployment to Italy. While he was no Clancy, he described his experiences. He later developed writer’s block, so we aren’t even sure he finished it. I would, however, love to find a way to make it more available and, if any money come from it, find some veteran’s cause to donate in his name, Harold Horning.

At his memorial service, people were invited to speak. A random guy, a computer tech who repaired computers was at the independent living facility where he and his wife lived. He recounted how he was leaving one day and met an old man in the elevator wearing a cap with the 36th Arrowhead emblem on it. He was on his way to another appointment and turned down the opposite direction down the hall from Harold to leave, then decided he could not leave without talking to this old fellow wearing a cap he recognized.

He told Harold his uncle was in the 36th and was killed in combat. Little was known about how he died. Harold KNEW THE GUY, and HIS brother that was also in the same unit. Harold was able to fill in some blanks in the story of his lost relative (Harold was 82 at the time, I think) and for this, he came to the memorial service of a guy he didn’t even know to tell this story.

I can’t even write this without choking up.

Anyway, with his son’s permission, I would love to provide his stories to someone that could distribute them to anyone that would be interested in a small sliver of this nation’s great and honorable history. I know it would make Harold happy.

@Deplorable me:

Permission granted, old friend.

@Deplorable me: #6
Please share them.
Or start a Kickstarter to publish them.
Or both.

@Skook: It’s hard to imagine that the WWII Vets, and the Korean War Vets for that matter, are almost all gone. It was only a short time ago we were saying the same about the WWI Vets. Hit your dad up for as much insight as you can. I often wish I had hit mine up for more, not just on Korea, but other topics as well. I once remember my grandma telling me that she was more scared of WWI than WWII. Something I found interesting because I figured it would have been the other way around.

@Deplorable me: Get me the material, and I will polish and dress it up. It would cost approximately $315 to get it looking like my book. I can get the price lowered about $50 dollars by using a cheaper artist. I am not the best but I can make it readable. If there’s a small amount of material, we can get several accounts from FA to get up to 60,000 words. I can do everything for nothing, but I can’t pay the cost. I am walking on thin financial ice, and I have two more books that need to be finished. Like I said, my time is free and I don’t want any royalties. The cost is approximately $125 fo the formatter in Australia and $200 for the artist, she lays out the cover buys the photo and calculates the size of the spine by the type of paper and page count. Now you know more about publishing than you eve wanted to know. It could be a FA project for those who went before us.I am not the best, but I am the best you have, and the price is damn good.

@Skookum: Thank you very much. It is a Word document and is in two parts. How can I get it to you?

Maybe you can read it and let me know what should be done. I’m sure David, his son and Sandra, his daughter, would be proud to have their dad’s story out there.

Do you have access to my email address?

Excellent, always good to hear from you Skook.

Skook,
Love this piece. You are very fortunate that your Dad is still around to share.

“. . . . they are all dead and I am the only one still alive.”

This line struck me as it was almost exactly my own Dad’s words, though he was referring specifically to returning home at the end of WWII, and each and every one of the men he had gone with to fight the Germans, had been killed in battle.

He was still a kid and had done the “Italian Campaign” all the way up the boot, and then been shipped to the beaches of St.Tropez to continue repelling the enemy out of France, all the way to Paris and Armistice Day.

I’ve known few human beings with more positive outlooks. Even after the hell he had experienced, including starvation, not once did I ever hear a complaint. He rarely talked of the war, and only when I prodded.

In contrast, I can’t believe the amount of whining we witness every day.

I also relate to your story as a kid not fully grasping the value of your Dad’s artifacts. One of the dumbest things I’ve ever done, I was 8 years old, was to trade his War Medal of Honour for a toy — without telling him, of course.

He, as your own Dad and so many others, gifted us Liberty, a treasure I am each day infinitely Grateful for. You and I are of the exact same “vintage” – here’s trusting that some of this Gratitude can pass on to our grand children.

@Skookum: #10
How can we contribute money for this project?
Perhaps you can answer with another post on FA?
I’ll be glad to publicize it in my webcomic.
A bunch of vets read it.

Hollywood airhead Richard Greer once said WAR HAS NEVER SOLVES ANYTHING all ecsept making the USA independent nation how quickly these Hollywood liberals forget but what can we ever expect from someone who is probibly a democrat voters and supporter

@Petercat: I’ve been working on the road, in the mountains, with no cellular service; after I see the manuscript, I will know how to proceed. I am exhausted right now. I will hopefully start tomorrow

I will help any vets with memoirs, but I draw the line at me and my buddy on the DMZ, if you know what I mean. I am looking for the historical, unvarnished truth.

Great read, Skook. Took me back to my father’s stories of fighting in WWII in Europe. That video is heart wrenching and uplifting at the same time.