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HomeMy WebLinkAboutErnest E. Bradley, Brazos Valley HeroesOne in a series of tributes to members of "The Greatest Generation" By Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle One of the significant events of World War II that has not appeared in these stories is the role of the Merchant Marine and the men who served in h. Hopefully, that changes with the story of Ernest E. Bradley of Bryan. With the beginning ofWorld War 11, commercial ships of U.S. registry became part of what was collectively ca [led the Merchant Marine. Without those ships and the men and materials they delivered to the war, both in Europe and in the Pacific, the war might have been lost or the result dramatically different. What is largely unknown by the general public, then and now, is the terrible losses suffered by the Merchant Marine. One in every 26 men who served as a Merchant Marine was killed, lost at sea or died in captivity during World War I. — a higher percentage of lossthan any other branch ofthe military. The story of Ernest Bradley began in Nashville, Indiana, on June 7,1918. His parents moved to Kansas shortly thereafter. His father owned a farm, a farmthat would became part ofthe "Dust Bowl "of America during the Great Depression. As recalled by Bradley, "My family moved to DeRidder, Louisiana. After I completed school I got a job at the local lumber mill for $12 a week. My sister worked at the local laundry for same salary. With what we both brought home, we managed to support our family. Our next -door neighbor had a brother who was a mate on a merchant ship. When he came to visit I asked him that if they ever needed any help, to please consider me. I knew they paid $50 a month and fed you, so that would be a big help for my family. "Several months later I got a call and went to work for Texaco aboard one of their ships as an ordinary seaman. I found out real quick that I was not on a cruise ship but was living in a workhouse. I was in New York harbor when Germany invaded Poland. We were instructed to paint an American Rag on both sides of our hull and fly the flag around the clock with a light on the flag at night. This was done so that the German submarines that were sinking every British ship they could find wouldn't mistakenly sink us. We were also told to not venture into the'war zone; which was becoming any place in the world. "Iwas now an assistant engineer, having worked my way up, and was assigned to another ship that was registered to Panama. We were soon on our way to the Persian Gulf and into the war zone. It was in Bombay, India, that I ran into a British officer who stopped me and asked if I had heard about the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor. I had married Ella, my wife of 68 years, the year before and we had a son born two weeks after I left Texas. I remember thinking that here I was, two hostile oceans away and wandering it I would ever get to see my son. "We managed to make it back to America, zig- zagging all the way. It was then that we started making trips across the Atlantic to supply our forces and allies, first to North Africa and then Bristol, England. Bristol was the first city that I eversaw that was almost completely laid down or destroyed by the bombings. "The most perilous trips were across the North Atlantic, especially near Iceland and Greenland. If the German subs who were now hunting our shipping in'wolf packs' didn't get you, the icebergs could. If you were hit and sunk in those waters and If you weren't rescued immediately, you would die from the cold. I have literally seen the ship next to us explode and disappear right before my eyes, with all aboard lost. All you could do on those trips was do yourjob and then hope and pray. "I was now the first assistant engineer and soon to be the chief engineer on a ship headed to the Pacific. We were loaded with flak shells with detonators in them, 200 -pound bombs, 500 -pound bombs and some gliders we carried on deck. The pilot that was to take us through the Panama Canal became so nervous when he discovered what we were carrying, he had to be taken off the ship and replaced. Fifty -six days later, with no aerial cover and no escort, we arrived at Bougainville and then Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands. "We were present for the invasion of the Philippines, where we were bombed by the Japanese planes. Fortunately they missed each time. At Manila Bay you could see masts and smokestacks sticking up all overthe place from the ships that had been sunk. Manila was the second city I saw that had also been laid down and destroyed by war. "A fellow crew member had a brother captured at Clark field when the Japanese invaded the Philippines. I went ashore with him to see if anyone had any information on him. Bodies were everywhere, as wasthe stench. It is a smell I will neverforget.The headquarters that MacArthur had set up had no record or idea about his brothers status. On our way back to our ship, by pure luck, we located his brother. I was a witness to their reunion, an event I will never forget. "After we unloaded, we headed home and back to my family in Texas. The bombs were dropped on Japan while I was home and the war ended. I didn't have to go back to the war, but I did go back to sea for the rest of my career, some 44 years." The total of Merchant Marines lost during World War II is estimated to be 9,300 men on 1,554 ships. During 1942, an average of 33 Allied ships were sunk each week. But not until 1988 did President Reagan sign legislation making the Merchant Marines of World War II eligible for Veterans' Administration benefits. Ernest Bradley has been a member ofthe VFW and the American Legion since that date. Ernest Bradley's name is found 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 whose story needs to be told, contact the BVVM at www.bvvm.org or Bill Youngkin at (979) 260 -7030. The Eagle See more stories of Brazos Valley veterans on 7 101, "Veterans of the Valley", with host Tom Turbiville, 4 on KAMU -TV each Saturday t 6:30 m and Sunda at 5:30 m. 07_A .1 oa .e Y P Y P Ch.- 115/1. ­ whn carved our cnuntry during World War II