HomeMy WebLinkAbout R.P. Stevens, Sr., Brazos Valley Heroes
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One in a series of tributes to merfibers of "The Greatest
Generation" who served our country during World War II
R.P. Stevens Sr. of Bryan was hoping the war was
going to pass him by, but it didn't.
"I had to leave school early in my life to help my family
because back then, times were real bad. I started to
work at Coca Cola in Bryan at one dollar per day. We
worked six days a week and at the end of the week my
check totaled $5.94.
"When the war started, I was married and had a baby
boy and thought I might not be drafted, but in October
1944 I got my draft notice to report to Camp Hood."
Stevens received his infantry basic training at Fort
Hood and was immediately shipped to Fort Ord, Calif.,
and then to the San Francisco docks to ship out for
the South Pacific.
"We had 5,500 men aboard the USS Gen. John Pope
for 31 days before we landed at New Guinea for one
night and then on to Manila in the Philippines.
"When we landed at Manila we were trucked halfway
across the island to the Layte Pass area, where the
fighting had been real heavy. After we unloaded the
trucks, they had us wait by the road. About that time
they brought three dead Gis down to carry back to the
rear and laid them down in front of us. I confess that it
scared the hell out of me.
"Me and another guy were taken to the front lines,
where we joined Company K of the 35th Regiment,
25th Infantry Division. When we got there, they only
had about 45 to 50 men left. My commanding officer,
Captain Fox, told us we wouldn't have time to dig a
foxhole and instructed us to join someone else in their
foxholes.
"I noticed one guy with a red, bushy beard who
motioned for me to join him. We were shelled by the
Japanese all night long. Our foxhole was right under
a tree and I asked the red-bearded guy what would
happen if a shell hit the tree. He said, 'You won't know
nothing about it.'
"I recall that we were on a hilltop above a valley that
had a river and Highway Five running through it. There
were caves above the river that were full of Japanese
that would come out at night for food and water. The
only way you could get them was with a flame-thrower.
It was my job to accompany the flame-thrower to the
caves. If some of them were to run out, I was supposed
to shoot them. None ever made it out.
"We were in constant combat for the first 165 days I
was in the Philippines and most of the time we were in
heavy jungle. I remember one night taking a bucket to
a river to get water. I was walking back down this trail
with my bucket of water when I came nose to nose
with a Japanese soldier going to the river to do the
same thing. I don't know if I scared him but he sure
scared me."
When the war ended, Stevens was sent to Japan as
part of the occupation forces for 10 months.
"When we first got there, you never saw any of the
Japanese. Then the kids started coming out and we
would give them candy. Then the women started
coming out and finally the men."
Stevens was discharg~d in November 1946 and came
home to Bryan, to the family he had to leave behind
and to his old job.
"Myoid boss at Bryan Automatic Gas had a new truck
with my name painted on the door. I worked there for
the next 20 years, then several years at Bryan Air Base
as a fireman and finally at Texas A&M as a custodial
supervisor for 12 years until I retired.
"Last year I went to the World War II memorial
in Washington D.C. and would recommend it to
all the veterans. It made me think about what we
accomplished, the people I met, the places I saw and
the friends I made. But the thing I remember most is
when I entered the Army I was told that war was hell
- and it was."
R.P. Stevens Sr.'s name can be found on the Brazos
Valley Veterans Memorial. For more information, to
make a contribution, or if you know a World War II
veteran whose story needs to be told, contact the
BWM at www.veteransmemorial.org or Bill Youngkin
at (979) 260-7030.
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KAMU.tamu.edu
Channel 15/cox cable4
Local Vietnam Veteran, Alton Meyer will be the guest on
~'Veterans of the Valley" Friday at 8:30 p.m. on KAMU-lV.
Veterans of the Valley, hosted by WTAW's Tom Turbiville, can be seen
Fridays at 8:30 p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays at 6:30 p.m.