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HomeMy WebLinkAbout Ivo D. Junek, Brazos Valley HeroesBy Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle No D. Junek of Bryan, formerly of Snook, was an artillery gunner during World War II, but his only experience as a pilot almost cost him and several others flying with him their lives. As told by Junek, "I was born on June 6, 1923, on a farm near Snook. I attended the Snook schools, graduating in 1940. Jobs were difficult to come by, so I joined the CCC or what we called the "Tree Army." I thought I would get to go to someplace exotic like New Mexico or Arizona. Instead, I was sent to Madisonville. Later, I worked on the Longhorn Cavern Park at Burnett. "I also helped my family with the farm but finally managed to get a job with a company constructing the Texaco refinery in Port Arthur.`The war was now on, and on a trip home, I learned that the eight other boys in my class at Snook were all in the service. I stopped by my draft board in Somerville to check my status because I hadn't received my draft notice. I was informed that my employer had requested a deferment for me without telling me. I told them I didn'# want a deferment. That was on Monday, and by Friday of that same week, I received my draft notice. It was the quickest I've ever known the government to take action. "I was sent to Fort Knox, Kentucky, to the armored force replacement training center for basic training. From there, I was sent to Camp Hamilton, Kentucky, to be part of the 26th Armor. In May of 1944, they canceled all schools and training and we were all sent to Camp Kilmer, New Jersey. "We boarded a converted English luxury liner named the "Aquitania." We thought we would be ridding in class until we went down, down, down into the area we were to sleep. They had taken all of the "luxury" out of that area of the ship. We traveled without an escort and it took eight days to cross the Atlantic. We would change directions every eight minutes to avoid being sunk by German submarines. You can imagine what all that swaying back and forth caused. "We landed in Scotland, and on my 21st birthday, June 6,1944, the D-Day invasion started. We landed in Normandy in August, but it was decided that we were needed to replace troops in Italy instead of France. We flew out of Cherbrough, France to Pisa, Italy, stopping in Lyons, France for the night. "On the flight to Italy, the pilot came back to fix himself a meal and asked me if I would like to sit in his seat. I said sure and was sitting next to the co-pilot with him showing me how they flew the plane. We were and I pulled back as hard as we could, just missing that mountain. He told me after, 'You will never come this close to death again without dying than you did a few seconds ago.' Years later I went back to the Swiss Alps on vacation. The mountain we almost flew into that day was the Matterhorn. "When we got to Italy, I was assigned to a 155 gun battery on a gun crew. It was rainy, wet and muddy. So muddy that we had to hand carry the howitzer shells. On November 11, 1944, it started snowing and then freezing, which made the conditions better. At least we were on solid footing and not in knee-deep mud anymore. From the time I got there until the war was over, we had our guns pointed north. We shelled the German positions and they shelled and strafed us. They were dug in at a place called Livonia and the fighting there was pretty fierce. Livonia changed hands between us and the Germans three times in one day before•we finally took control. "I remember taking the bodies out in mattress covers. They were mostly frozen and they were stacked onto trucks like cordwood. When we left Livonia, there were no walls in that town left standing over eight feet high. "We fought through the Po Valley, always fighting uphill. I remember it being pretty scary taking a 155 over the Po River on a pontoon bridge. We ended up near Tieste on the Yugoslav border. I didn't know the war in Italy was over until my brother Ralph, who was in the Pacific, wrote me a letter telling me the war was over. On our way home, it was announced on board the ship that Japan had also surrendered. That made us a happy bunch of guys." Junek returned from the war to Snook as did his brothers Ralph, Fred and Joe. Junek worked at Shell Chemical in Houston until retiring after 38 years and returning to the Brazos Valley. As recalled by Junek, "Guys get close in combat. Most of my buddies I had lost track of, but several years ago they started having outfit reunions and I have re- established ties with some. I did go the World War II Memorial with my family last year, and I recommend that trip to every World War II veteran. After the war, -tended to forget that period of my life and went on with my life. I wouldn't want to go back to that time in my life but I wouldn't trade for it. It made me a better man." No Junek's name is on the Brazos Valley Veterans Memorial. If you want to have a name added to the Veterans Memorial, for more information, to make a contribution, or if you know a World War 11 veteran