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HomeMy WebLinkAboutJoe L Palermo, Brazos Valley HeroBY it ll Youq Special to The Eagle who served our country For Joe L. Palermo of Bryan, now 93 years of age, his memory of World War II comes in stops and starts. But'dyou take the time for his mind to unfold those experiences, it is time fulfilled. When asked what branch of the he served in, his response was "The Walking Army "which to any veteran means the infantry. Life for Palermo began on March 16,1915, just a couple of blocks off Texas Avenue. He attended high school at Stephen F. Austin in Bryan and worked at his dad's clothing store. After leaving school he entered the bartending business and later, the bar business, a business that he would continue for the rest of his career. According to Palermo, "After Pearl Harbor the draft picked up and I was drafted and sent to Ft Sam Houston in San Antonio for induction. From there to El Paso for training at Ft Bliss.' It was at Ft Bliss that his "walking" began in earnest As recalled by Palermo, "One of the last things we had to do in basic training was to hike 25 miles in full gear. The big boys had a lot of trouble and mostfell out When we stopped the first sergeant said we had walked 27 miles in one day's time" It's a good thing that walking didn't bother Palermo, because he was going to do a lot of it before his time in the army was completed. Palermo would become part of the newly assembled 103rd Infantry Division and the 409th Infantry Regiment, the "Cactus Division" as it was named because of its West Texas roots. The 409th trained in Louisiana and then was set to New York to board ship for the trip to Europe. That day was October 5, 1944. The ship, a converted luxury liner, was no longer luxurious. Instead, it was an overcrowded troop transport ship. Seasickness made the stay below deck pretty miserable. The men were allowed out on deck for limited periods. Some of the prime features of the time on deck were crap games, sometimes conducted right next to chapel services. When the ship passed the Rock of Gibraltar, most everyone figured the destination to be the Port of Marseille in France. They were right Offloading from the ship, the men were marched several miles to their bivouac area. As recalled by Palermo, "I walked from the shores of France, and my walking didn't end until we reached the Alps in Austria' Another thing recalled by Palermo about the first few days in France in early November 1944 was how cold it was. The cold would only get worse. The rumor in the unit had been that the 409th would not be sent overseas or that they were to only be an army of occupation for Germany after the war ended. But when to road, they knew they were headed to combat On November 9,1944, they entered the Vasques Mountains near St Die, France, for their first combat action. When one of the men asked the American troops they found there where the front lines were, the response was "Hell, son, your on the front line now." it would be the day the first man from the unit was killed by German artillery fire. The first battle involved crossing the Faintmx River. As recalled by Palermo, 0 1 had never learned to swim and still don't know how to swim. I was as afraid of drowning as much as anything else." That river could be waded, but it would not be Palermo's last river crossing. It would be his last river crossing of the war that would be his most difficult and the nearest he came to serious injury. By December 1944 Palermo and his unit reached the Siegfried Line. They were now in Germany but would not be there long. The German offensive known as the Battle of the Bulge would begin and Palermo and the 409th were moved back into France. By March, they again attacked the Siegfried line and on into Germany again. It would be another river that would create the most trouble for the non - swimming Palermo. As recalled by Palermo, "We reached the Danube River, which was heavily defended. We dug in along the river, but German snipers were set up across the river and were very accurate. One shot hit my helmet, but fortunately it wasn't on my head at the lime. Our C.O. told us to stay down in our foxholes, but the guy next to me got thirsty and wanted to get some water out of the river. When he left his foxhole to go to the river, a German sniper shot him in the throat, killing him. That kept the rest of us in our foxholes. "When the big guns opened up, we attacked across the river but in boats that had been brought up, which was good because I knew I couldn't swim across. On that trip across the river, it was a constant stream of shells overhead, theirs and ours." The war ended for Palermo and the 409th in the Austrian Alps at Wong 1, Austria. Their walking was not over, however, because they would be required to march in a parade for General Patton. After the war, Palermo came home and back into the business which he ran until he sold out and retired. Looking back on that experience, he recalled "I was glad to see the war over with and glad I made it through it" 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 BWM at www.bvvm.org or Bill Younokin at (979) 260 -7030. One in a series of tributes to members of" The Greatest Generation"