Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutJames K.Presnal, Brazos Valley Heroes~~ By Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle James K. "Jim" Presnal of the Tabor Community has had a life of service. Service to country, service to state and community and service to his profession. It all began where he now resides, the Tabor Community in Brazos County. As related by Presnal, "I was born in downtown Tabor July 27, 1925. My Dad farmed and ranched in the area but also ran the Tabor Store from 1912 to the mid 1960's where he also served as the Postmaster. My Mother's family has been in the area since Austin's Colony days and was a teacher at Tabor School, which I attended through grade nine. I then attended Stephen F. Austin High School in Bryan where I graduated in 1942." "The war was on before I graduated and just before I turned eighteen, I volunteered for and was accepted into the cadet flight program in the Army Air Corps. I remember after Pearl Harbor thinking that I probably wouldn't get to help fight because we all thought it would be over with in six month's time. We had no idea how well prepared for war that they were or how ill prepared for were we were." "After graduation I kept waiting to hear from the Army. Time dragged on and I finally got a job with Brazos Valley Cotton Growers Association located on the 4th floor of the Howell Building in downtown Bryan. I also worked at General Fire and Hughes Tool before I was requested to report to active duty in October 1943." "I was sent to Wichita Falls, Texas for basic and then the cadet flight program. When I arrived the guy in charge of my barracks was another Bryan boy, Emmitt Wallace, whose parents owned Wallace printing. Having Emmitt there gave me some comfort. I completed basic but when I started the- cadet flight program, the Army physically disqualified me because I fainted during a blood test." "I was then sent to Buckley Field near Denver for armament school and then to Las Vegas for gunnery school. I couldn't figure out why I was physically disqualified to be a pilot on a plane but not a gunner so I told the Army that I didn't want to be a gunner. They took me out of gunnery school and I pulled a lot of KP until I got orders for overseas." "We shipped out of Norfolk, Virginia and headed to Italy. We landed in Naples and I was sent to San Serbo, Italy where I was assigned as an armorer on the planes in the 308th Fighter Group of the 5th Air Force. We were France, Northern France, Rhineland and Balkans '_ campaigns. "When the war was over our planes didn't fly very often so there wasn't much for us to do except play poker. My tent mate and I volunteered for guard duty so we would have something to do. Before I came home !' the 5th Air Force held a track meet for all the units in `' the Fifth. I was representing the 308th in the hundred- '' yard dash. The problem was that the 'Tuskegee Airmen' :' were also in the Fifth and most of those guys had been !' college athletes before entering the service. They pretty '? much swept all the dashes. If you weren't running in a distance race you had no chance. The Tuskegee Airmen !': had earned a very good reputation in the Fifth Air Force and their track team was just as good." Presnal finally received orders to head home arriving back iri Norfolk, Virginia on December 7,1945. He returned to Ft. Sam Houston and was discharged. "After I came home I enrolled at A&M in January 1946 under the G.I. Bill, which was the best legislation that Congress ever passed for servicemen. I graduated from A&M in January 1949 but while I was at A&M I ran for and was elected to the Texas Legislature in 1948 as the representative for Brazos and Grimes Counties and I remained in the Texas Legislature until 1952. My brother, Bill Presnal, would later serve Brazos County in the Legislature for several terms. In 1952 I enrolled at Law School at the University of Texas and graduated in 1955. I practiced legislative and administrative law in Austin before returning home to the Tabor Community in 1995. In 2005, I received my fifty year plaque from the State Bar of Texas and have continued to represent organizations before the legislature until recently." "Looking back on my life and career, I always felt that serving in_ the military was very beneficial to me. I have always advocated some sort of compulsory service, military or other type service if you don't choose to serve in the military. A structured environment for a young person is beneficial. Serving not only benefits our country, it benefits those who serve." "I also hate to see the changes that have taken place in government and legislative activities. Everything is now adversarial, complicated and expe{~sive. It's a shame you can't do things by a verbal agreement anymore." Jim Presnal's name is found on the Brazos Valley Veterans Memorial. If you want to have a name addBd fo the Veterans Memorial, for more information, to make a contribution, or if you know a World War 11