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HomeMy WebLinkAboutHenri F. Frank, Brazos Valley HeroesBy Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle Henri F. Frank has a dual citizenship because his parents are Dutch and because he was born in America. To be exact, he was born in Mount Vernon, New York, on December 3, 1919. But the citizenship he has always claimed is that of being a red- blooded American. According to Frank, "My brother and I were born in the U.S. When I was a young boy, my parents moved back to Holland for about 10 years before returning to the U.S. I remember the whole time we were in Holland, I told everyone I was an American and that I wanted to be a soldier when I grew up. "When my family moved back to the U.S., we lived on Long Island, New York. About the time I was graduating from high school, my principal asked me where I wanted to go to school and I told him West Point. He explained that if my parents didn't have a relationship with a congressman, I needed to think about going somewhere else. "He knew that my parents were Dutch and my chances of getting into the U.S. Military Academy were limited. With his guidance, I enrolled at Cornell University. At Cornell, I also enrolled in their ROTC program. I graduated from Cornell in 1941 and received my commission as second lieutenant. "I was assigned to Pine Camp, New York, nearWatertown, New York, with the 4th Armored Division. I was visiting my parents on Long Island the weekend of Pearl Harbor. I had gone horseback riding with my dad. When we returned to the stable the stable hand, who had a habit of drinking too much on occasion, informed us of the attack by the Japanese on Pearl Harbor. We thought he might have been drinking again that day until we confirmed his news. I told my dad and mother I must return to duty immediately, which I did. My dad gave me his pistol to take with me on my return; I guess he thought the Japanese were to be landing in New York. "We trained in seriousness now. No one left the base except the train. We went on maneuvers in Tullahoma, Tennessee, and then to the deserts of California. For some reason, the army sent me for training to be part of a language team, I guess because of my background. I finally managed to return to my unit before we were shipped overseas on September 4,1944. "We trained in England and then went to France to be part of Patton's Third Army. We ended up on the southern end of the Siegfried Line at Bitche, Germany. It was here that I was wounded and received the Purple Heart. "We were an artillery unit, and as an artillery officer you were trained to prepare a shell report of enemy artillery impacts. From the impact of the shell you could tell what direction the shell came from and by the fragments, what type of shell it was and therefore its range. This helped to locate their artillery positions and helped to neutralize them. "While near Bitche, we had an artillery barrage hit about 50 yards away. I was the junior officer present, so I went to conduct the shell report. That was when they started shelling again and in the same location. There was a tank track depression about four inches deep. I tried to compress my body into that track depression but couldn't quite make it. I was hit in my hand, which I had on my helmet. It wasn't serious, but was enough of a wound to earn me a Purple Heart." Frank and his unit would be involved with the rescue of the 101 st Airborne Division thafwas encircled by the Germans at Bastogne during the Battle of the Bulge. According to Frank, "After we relieved Bastogne, we waited a few days and then started the breakout. We started shelling the Germans with every piece of artillery we had. We started at 3 a.m. on the day of the breakout and didn't lift the firing until 6 a.m. When we advanced, there was nothing but devastation, with dead Germans lying like logs everywhere' Frank, now a major, would command Task Force Frank into and across Germany. As related by Frank, "Our task force was two companies, one tank company and one infantry company. Our job was to go as fast and as far as we could, pushing the Germans in front of us. If we couldn't break through, we went around. We ended up at Adorf, Yugoslavia, when the war was over." Frank came home to prepare to fight the Japanese, but the atomic bomb ended that. Frank entered civilian life for about six months and then went back into what he loved, the army. It would be a career that would end after serving in three wars -World War II, Korea and Vietnam. He retired a full colonel in 1964. After retirement, he became involved in the insurance business in Jackson, Mississippi, before moving to Waldenbrook in Bryan a year ago. As related by Frank, "I did what I did because it was expected. We did what we were told, did it to the best of our ability and we did it well" 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 whose story needs to be told, contact the BV11M at www.bvvm.org or Bill Youngkin at (979) 260-7030. The deadline for adding names to the memorial wall for this year's Veteran's Day observance is August 15, 2008.