HomeMy WebLinkAboutJames J. "Jim' Jochen, Brazos Valley Heroes~-
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By Bill Youngkin
Special to The Eagle
James J. "Jim" Jochen of College Station was a
teenager in Schulenburg, Texas, when Pearl Harbor was
bombed.
"I recall being surprised more than anything else
that such a thing could occur," he said. "Although
our contact with the world was through the radio and
newsprint, I did not realize we were on the doorstep
of war. Such is youth, where your thoughts about your
world were limited to your school and town. And even
though today our young people have so much more
information technology available to them, I don't think
they are more aware of the world around them than I
was at that age."
Life for Jochen began in Schulenburg on October
10, 1925. He was in school when the war began,
graduating in May 1942 at the age of 16 years, seven
months.
As recalled by Jochen: "When I graduated I was
asked by the local bank president to go to work at
the bank. In my hometown and in that date and time,
working at the bank was next to being St. Peter's
personal secretary. l would later learn that the bank
president was afraid he was going to lose his three
employees, who were all draft-eligible. Since I was a
year and a half away from being draft age and because
I had suffered from an asthmatic condition as a child
and might not be physically qualified, I was a likely
candidate as their replacement.
"I enjoyed the job, but seeing my friends who were
in college made me think about what I was missing. So
I enrolled at Southwest Texas State Teachers College in
San Marcos. I enjoyed school and did well, but as my
18th birthday approached I wanted to and did apply for
the Army Air Corps for pilot training. I passed all of the
tests with flying colors but failed my physical because
I did not make the weight limit and because of my
asthmatic condition.
"After that disappointment, (registered for the draft
on my birthday and on December 1,1943, received my
notice to report for a physical exam.. The physical did
not reveal my asthmatic condition and I wasn't asked
anything. I was given papers that were stamped `Army.'
I was sworn in and told to report in 30 days. My great
adventure was about to begin."
period of their life they would never forget, that this `
period had more formative effects on their families, ?
careers, character and their life than anything else they
experienced, including the Depression years. It was "?:
a time when the active focus of everyone's life and !'
activities pointed in only one direction, victory in the
war. All lives and all activities were brought to an abrupf ',',
halt and the direction changed drastically for the next 'i.
four or five years. For many it was changed forever."
~lochen would-enter the army training process, i',
first at Ft. Sam Houston, then Camp Wheeler, Georgia,.
Ft. Meade, Maryland, and finally Camp Butner, North °'.
Carolina.
"When we completed infantry training at Camp `
Wheeler, most everyone was being assigned to Ft. ''.
Meade, Maryland, for overseas duty. I reported to Ft.
Meade and before we were shipped out, we received a
30-day leave to go home. When I arrived home, my folks
could not believe the change in me. I had added 35 lbs.
of muscle in the right places and had no incidence of an
asthmatic seizure. Leave was over quickly and before I
knew it, I was boarding a Greyhound bus again, heading
east once more.
"It was not nearly as easy leaving on this occasion,
as my time in the army made me realize what was really
happening as well as what might happen. When I left
to be inducted it was an adventure into the unknown,
somewhat exhilarating. Now, I had an inkling of what
was in store and what could happen. I didn't want to
think that this might be the last look at the hometown
and all it stood for, yet that morbid feeling could not
be put aside completely. No exhilaration now, just
trepidation." `
When Jochen arrived at Ft. Meade he was placed
on orders along with several young soldiers to go to
Butner, North Carolina, to become part of the 89th
Infantry Division. What was. unknown to him until then
was that Congress had passed a law requiring the
military to hold all individuals not yet 19 years of age in
the continental U.S. until the birthdates were reached.
As a result of the law, soldiers were reassigned and
shipped overseas while 18-year-olds took their place.
When the 89th did ship out on December 28, 1944, it
would be with the youngest personnel the army had
ever assembled and shipped into combat.
Next week, the conclusion of Jochen s experience
in World War II. James J. Joclien's name is found on
Jochen has written his memoirs of his life for his the Brazos Valley Veterans Memorial. If you want to
family. In detailing the World War II era, he had this to have a name added to the Veterans Memorial, for more
say: information, to make a contribution, or if you know
"Most individuals of our generation, those born a World War 11 veteran whose story needs to be told,
between the years 1918 to 1928 or thereabouts, contact the BWM at www.veteransmemoriaLorg or Bill
would probably say that the World War II years was the Youngkin at (979) 260-7030.
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By Bill Youngkin
Special to The Eagle `
refreshed and resumed my run even faster than before
and didn't feel the need for any other rest stops.
"We got behind a building that gave us protection '
rest of the company. We had had our baptism of fire .
Second of Two Parts that was filled with bags of fertilizer. We got on the roof
James J. "Jim" Jochen of College Station had just with our machine gun and began firing. Between that
turned 19 years of age when he and the men of the and our 81 mm mortars we used on the target, the `"-
89th Infantry Division boarded ship for Europe and the enemy soon left for better places. When things quieted
battle about to begin, the Battle of the Bulge. down, we made our way back to town and rejoined the
Jochen recalled: "When we arrived at Le Havre, and had survived.-
France, we were loaded aboard trucks with open-air
trailers. It was at night, in sub-zero weather with ice
and snow everywhere. The trip was brutal, with wind
tearing at our soul. We spent almost five hours in a
rolling deep freeze and when we finally arrived, it was
difficult to walk, as everyone was just about frozen.
Our destination was Camp Lucky Strike."
At the Camp Lucky Strike replacement center, the
89th unloaded and set up operations in the almost
knee-deep mud and removed the cosmoline from
their weapons and equipment. It was also where they
received their first casualties of the war when two
men were killed by German mines that had not been
removed.
The 89th would be loaded aboard boxcars referred
to as 40x8's to Luxembourg. As Jochen recalled:
"Because of my German heritage and limited language
skills, I was sent out to barter food from the locals. I
had limited success, but it was enough that it became
my permanent job with my squad. We were now part
of Patton's Third Army and we headed to the Sauer
River. As we got closer to the front lines, we began
to see lots of dead animals, destroyed vehicles; there
was destruction everywhere one looked.
"Our initial objective was the town of Ernst on
the Mosel River, and our orders were to take and
clear the town. As we neared Ernst you began to hear
the 'trump' sound of artillery fire. Reality was really
beginning to set in. As we entered the town, we began
to receive sniper and machine-gun fire from across
the river from a village on the other side.
"Our officers put a plarrtogether to silence the fire.
' The plan sounded practical to me until our machine-
gun crew was designated for that assignment. Very
quickly some very troubling questions occurred to
me, like how far we hatl to go, how much cover, was
there an ambush waiting for us. We didn't have time
to hash out those unknowns and suddenly we were
on our way.
"With our guys firing to distract the Germans on th
'' other side of the river, we headed across a grape arbor
About halfway across I came to a spot where the vine
were particularly thick. I stopped, crouching dow
trying to catch my breath. Very quickly I got a shower
"This event made a lasting impression in my ;;
memory. Many years later, in casual conversations ''-
with others who had similar wartime experiences, it
seemed true that the most vivid memories of all were ;,
that first day. Subsequent activities, frantic though .
they were, are not etched into the memory as firmly
as that very first encounter."
The war soon settled into a routine of taking one
objective and then moving on to the next, to include
crossing the Rhine and into and across Germany. As
recalled by Jochen:
"On Easter Sunday we had a brief pause and ="
we were able to attend a hastily conducted religious
service before we moved out. We loaded on trucks '.
to catch up with our tanks. We came to a barricade
in the road that a hole had been blown through. We
were on high alert and I was out of my seat with one
leg over the sideboards. I felt the truck lurch and felt
an impact of something hitting me and then nothing.
I was out cold. I didn't know it, of course, but my war
was over."
Jochen would be hospitalized and delivered back
to the U.S. to heal and recover.
"I had a cast on my leg and then crutches. I was
transferred to Ft. Sam Houston, now on a cane, until
I was discharged on January 29, i 946. My great
adventure had ended where it had begun."
For his service, Jochen would be awarded the
Bronze Star and the Purple Heart. Jochen would
marry, become employed with Shell Oil Inc. and ANR
Production Inc., raise a family and retire in College
Station in 1985. He is proud of his family, proud of his
career and proud of his service to his country. As he '
said, "World War II was a period of my life that I will ,
never forget." '
e If you want to have a name added to the
Veterans Memorial, for more information, to make
s a contribution, or if you know a World War II veteran
n whose story needs to be told, contact the BWM at
www.veteransmemorial.org or Bill Youngkin at (979)