HomeMy WebLinkAboutArmstrong, Bob-part 1 of 2--undatedValleā
By Bill Youngkin
Vedal to 1heEagle
First of two parts.
Bob Armstrong's roots in Bryan and the Brazos Valley
go back a long way.
His family lived in Navasota and Bryan and his father
was an attorney in Bryan. He attended Travis Elementary
when it originally opened and Stephen F. Austin High when
it originally opened. His home was across the road from
what is now the Women's Federal Prison, which was then a
cotton field. He has seen a lot of changes since his birth on
December 9,1923, some 85 years ago. Butthe changes that
affected him the most were his experiences during World
War 11.
According to Bob, "I graduated from SFA in 1941 and
enrolled atA &M that fall. I was a 'day duck,' which meant I
lived at home while attending A &M. I had a car and would
pick up other local boys and drive the five miles from Bryan
to the campus each day.
"I remember December 7,1941, very well. I was out
driving in the family car listening to the radio that Sunday
afternoon. I remember that t was about in front of the
Systems Building when the radio announcer came over the
radio with the news of Pearl Harbor. That guy must have
heard Orsen Wells' "War of The Worlds" story, because he
kept repeating 'this is real -this is real: I remember going
home and waking my Dad up from his nap. I remember him
getting mad that I woke him with such foolishness until he
heard It on the radio. It was hard for me to believe myself.
"I was on campus when they filmed the movie We've
Never Been Licked and I remember you could be excused
from class if you wanted to be in the marching scenes. My
second year I got to feeling guilty about still being in school
with so many of my friends already in the service. I drove to
Dallas on New Years Day to enlist with the Marine Corps but
failed their eye test. I dropped out of school, and it wasn't
long before I received my draft notice.
"I was inducted in Houston, sent to Ft. Sam Houston
in San Antonio and then to Ft. Sill, Oklahoma, for basic
training. I applied for OCS but it was full, so the army sent
me to the Army Specialized Training Program, which would
allow me to continue my education in engineering.
'They sent us to Oklahoma State College at Stillwater. I
remember when our trucks pulled onto campus there were
all these women leaning out the windows whistling at us
They were women who had enrolled in the navy and were
there for training. I was to be sent on to Purdue but saw on
some of the paperwork that an opening was also available
at A &M. So I got the derk to change my orders to A &M."
OES
"I was now bade on carn taking courses like
thermodynamics and other engineering courses when I
received a letter from a relative with an APO address. That
made me feel guilty again that I, too, wasn't overseas, so I
asked to be dropped from the program and told the army I
wanted to be sent for training for overseas duty. I got my
wish.
"I was sent for training in the desert at Yuma, Arizona,
for infantry training. I ended up in a'wire section; where
ourjob was to lay phone lines so our command posts could
communicate with each other. When we completed our
training I was going to go home and get married to my
childhood sweetheart but went to Mexicali, Mexico, before
I left. We celebrated completing training, but I was also
able to buy my mother and fiance nylon hose and perfume,
things they could not get at home.
"I was sent to Ft. Dix, where mywifejoined me. We took
a trip into New York City and stayed at the Taft Hotel. The
next morning when I walked out of the hotel, it was almost
likethe city was deserted. Then I noticed the headline in the
paper. We had invaded France. D -Day had occurred while
we slept.
"We soon left for Europe on the Queen Mary, all 18,000
men in our division. I slept on deck one night and the next
night in bunks below deck. We rotated like that until we
reached Glasgow, Scotland. From Glasgow we weretmcked
to outside Manchester, where Patton had assembled his
Third Army. We were now part of this army as the 80th
Infantry Division. It was a division made up mostly of coal
miners from Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
"We went over the Channel and were offloaded into a
LST. As we were going over the side we were each given a
complimentary carton of cigarettes which had printed on
the side that they were the compliments of some funeral
home from Little Hock, Arkansas. I declined my carton.
"The hedgerows had just been cleared when we
arrived. We gathered outside of St. Lo, France, and that is
where Patton broke loose, making it almost to Metz before
running out of gas. We would lay lines every time we
stopped and leave laying when we left. When we stopped
we were just outside Nancy, France. The Germans realized
we were out of gas and weren't going to be moving, so
we were shelled all day and all night. We would remain in
constant combat for the next 10 months"
Next week, Armstrong's memories of the Battle of the
Bulge, and earning the Purple Heart medal.
Bob Am isbong's name isfo and an I he &ws Valley Veterans
Memorial ff you wart to have a name added to the Veterans
Memorial, formorein formanon, tomakeacontrilwbon, orlfyou
bmaWoridWarll veteran whosestoryneeds tube told contact
theBWMatwww .lrvvm.orgorBillYoungkinat (979)260-7030.
One in a series of tributes to members of "The Greatest Generation"