HomeMy WebLinkAboutBarney B. Beran, Brazos Valley HeroesBy Bill Youngkin
Special to The Eagle
If records had been maintained by the World War
II veteran who held the most varied rank and who flew
the most different type planes, then it's a good bet those
records would be held by the same person -Barney B.
Reran of Lyons, Texas.
Beran's story begins on a farm between Deanville
and Caldwell on June 8, 1923. According to Beran: "1
attended school at Hlavaty school through the ninth
grade and attended the last two years in Caldwell. When
I graduated in 1940, I was 16 years old and working as
a farm laborer for other people because my dad had
died three years previous.
"I earned the grand sum of $1 per day but that is
all a kid could earn back then. The day after I turned 18,
June 9,1941, I went to Bryan and joined the Army. I was
sworn in at the induction center in Houston and was
sent to Kelly Field in San Antonio. At Kelly I was trained
to be a member of a ground crew. I wanted to fly but
you had to be 21 and have at least two years of college
to be in the cadet flight program.
"Sometime between June 1941 and the bombing
of Pearl Harbor, the Army established the enlisted pilots
program. You only had to be 18 and hold a high school
degree to qualify. 1 signed up immediately. I did well
in my tests but was disqualified when I went before
the examination board. My problem was that I had
been tongue tied since birth. My tongue was stuck to
the bottom of my mouth and it was, difficult for me
to pronounce words correctly. The board said they
would have to flunk me because I wouldn't be able to
commuhicate over a radio. One of the board examiners
was a major in the medical corps. Before they dismissed
me, he told the board to hold my application for six
months because he was going to operate on my tongue
and I should then be able to talk properly.
"Six months later, talking almost normally, I was
accepted into the enlisted flight program and was in the
last class of the enlisted pilots program. On November
10,1942, I was discharged as an enlisted man and was
recharged as a flight officer. It was a new position but
had no rank. I remember going to a hotel during a period
of time when l was ferrying planes and the hotel clerk
asked my rank. I said, `Flight Officer.' He said: `I can
see you are a flight officer but what is your rank?' On
May 23, 1943, I received my commission as a second
lieutenant. By that time, I had held three different serial
numbers, had two discharges and not lost a day of
service time. That's probably a record of some sort."
Due to Beran's unusual situation, the Army seemed
to have a hard time placing him. According to Reran:
"They didn't seem to know what to do with me so I was
sent to Love Field in Dallas and put on plane ferry duty.
I ferried every type plane the army had, flying them all
over the country and to the Carribean. All together, I flew
"I finally received orders to report to St. Joseph,
Missouri for C-47 training. I was to leave for the war,
out of Miami but at the last minute the orders were
changed and I was sent to Reno, Nevada. On the way to
Reno, I flew over our farm and buzzed it until my mom
came out. I dropped her a note in an envelope. I still
have that envelope and note today. It was the fastest
letter she ever got from me'during the war.
"I was sent to Assam Valley, India, part of the China-
Burma-India theater as a C-47 pilot. Our job was to fly
supplies from India over the Himalaya Mountains to
Kum Ming, China. This was called, `Flying the Hump.'
Before the war was over, t would fly one hundred and
five round trips over'The Hump."'
It would be on one of those trips that Beran
- now an experienced pilot who checked out other
less experienced pilots scheduled to fly The Hump -
thoughtwould be his last flight.
Beran recalled: "I was flying as co-pilot with this
new guy going back over The Hump to our base in India.
We knew the weather was worsening in India and really
knew that by the lack of radio chatter that we were the
last plane being sent back over The Hump. When we got
near our base, the tower guy said it is zero, zero and
to go to Chabou. That meant thbre was zero visibility
and zero ceiling. When we got to Chabou, they told us
the conditions were the same . We would have to crash
land and if that was going to be the case, we needed to
go back to our home base to crash. I will never forget
those instructions.
"By now I had taken over control of the plane. We
headed. back to our base with no ceiling, no visibility
and now no fuel. I was down to one 150 feet when I
saw the rotating beacon on the top of our tower. I slid
over to where I figured the runway would be. At less
than 100 feet we saw the runway lights and landed.
had two guardian angels with me that day. One on my
left shoulder and one on my right."
Reran survived that flight and many more, including
being buzzed by a Japanese fighter plane. Reran was
discharged from the Army as a captain in January 1947.
He went to work at Shell Chemical where he retired in
1983 and returned home to Burleson County.
When asked about his experience in the military,
he said: "The Army did me a lot of good. Because of
the army, I was cured of being tongue-tied. It made me
into a person, far different from that boy that entered
the Army in 1941. I really appreciated my time in the
service."
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 l/ veteran whose story needs
to be told, contact the BWM at www. veferansmemorial.