HomeMy WebLinkAboutCommemorative Program Booklet
S COUNTY CELEBRATION
COMMEMORATING
THE
60TH ANNIVERSARY
OF THE
END OF WORLD WAR II
SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 3, 2005
10 AM - 2 PM
GEORGE BUSH PRESIDENTIAL
LIB & MUSEUM
XAS
September 3, 2005
We gather today, the day after the 60th anniversary of
the end of World War II, not to celebrate war, but to
commemorate the accomplishments and sacrifices of an
entire generation. This generation of war veterans and
home front supporters united to carry the United States
of America and countries around the world to liberty
and freedom from oppressive forces.
The Texas in WWII Planning Team has labored
throughout the summer with the generous support of
our community's institutions, organizations, and busi-
nesses to prepare an event that gives us pause to reflect
on the experiences of World War II.
Throughout the day you will hear stories of the victory
and sorrow of battle, of the trials and triumphs of
women in the military, of the determination and disap-
pointment of the African American soldiers as they
fought for "Double Victory," and of the sacrifice and
resourcefulness of adults and youth on the home front.
Even as our armed forces trained and fought for victory
on the battle front, communities on the home front ral-
lied to victory by participating in defense work, ration-
ing, victory gardens, canning, paper drives, collecting
scrap metal, knitting sweaters, rolling bandages, saving
bacon grease, and limiting travel.
In this keepsake program is a sample of our commu-
nity's World War II stories. I challenge you in t
ahead to document the WWII stories of your
and community members.
Warmest Regards,
Katie Elrod
Event Coordinator
Texas in WWII
Agenda at a Glance
10:00 a.m.
Qpenin2: Ceremony
10:15 a.m.
Scope of Events
10:30 a.m.
Simultaneous Inter retive Ac
Gallery Talks - A
Veteran Panel - Group A
Meet wwn Authors
1940's Movie
Educational Film
11 :30 a.m.
Complimentary Lunch
1940's Style Show
1940's Music - Victory Piano
Meet WWII Authors
1940's Film
E
12:30 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
Texas in
2
10:00 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
I A.M. PrograDl
Openin2 Ceremony - Rotunda
Welcome Charles Schultz
Posting of the Colors T AMU Color Corps
Pledge Victoria Schaller
National Anthem Ben Welch
Prayer Neal Nutall
Honoring the "Greatest Generation" Katie Elrod
"Taps" Bugler, T AMU Corps of Cadets
Retiring of the Colors T AMU Color Guard
Scope of Event Tom Taylor
"America" Rita Underwood
Simultaneous Interactive Events
Gallery Talks - Group A - Museum
Military
Mike Blair, Avenger
Mark Collins, African Americans in the Military
Russell Howerton, Battle of Midway
Ascencion M. Munoz, Anny, Pacific Theater
Al Postelwait, Chichi-jima, Bonin Islands
Bill Ravey, Battle of Burma
Victoria Schaller, W A YES
Brenda White, African American Women
Family
Yolanda & Edward Kozlowski, Sweethearts
Mary & Bill Lancaster, High School Memories
Mike McKaughan, Father trained WASPS
Joanna L. Yeager, Brothers in Service
Home Front
Marland Clemens, Child on the Home Front
Frances Henry, Defense Dietician
Perry Stephney, African American War Effort
Nancy Ross, War Effort
Archaeology
Bob Warden & Team, Pointe du Hoc
Ranie Arnold, Camp Hearne
Veterans' Panel- Group A - Theater
Moderator: Tom Taylor CS Historic Preservation Committee
Bill Adams - Anny Field Artillery, Europe
Bill Harper - Home Front
Louis Hudson - Paratrooper, Europe
Jim Newman - Submariner, Pacific
Foster Thompson - Marine Pilot, Pacific
Meet wwn Authors - Rotunda
Educational wwn Film - The Overlook in the Museum
Tuskegee Airmen
Vintage Film - Rotunda, South Wall
Wake Island
Texas in WWII P.M. PrograDl
11:00~a.m. - 1:00 p.m. - Rotunda Activities
Complimentary Lunch
1940's Style Show
1940's Music - Pianist Jo Ann Cremin on the Victory Piano
Meet WWII Authors
1940's Vintage Film: Memphis Belle - on the South Wall
11:30 a.m.
Educational WWII Film - The Overlook in the Museum
Fly Girls
12:'30 p.m.
Simultaneous Interactive Events
Gallery Talks - Group B - Museum
Military
Bill Adams, From Cadet to Officer
James Boone, Philippines
John Conkling, India
Mike Cornelius, Red Ball Express
Emilio Hernandez, Military Experience
Al Postelwait, Chichi-jima, Bonin Islands
James Wade, Battle of the Bulge
Family
Marguerite Anthony, Father in CIC
Pat & Rodger Koppa, Youth & Family Memories
Colleen Risinger, Military Eamily
Kitty & Will Worley, Sweethearts
Home Front
Kathleen Heaton, Rosie the Riveter
Eleanor Conkling, Riveter
Peggy Hope, Ration Commission
Claudine Hunting, Memories from France
Archaeology
Bob Warden & Team, Pointe du Hoc
Ranie Arnold, Camp Hearne
Veterans' Panel- Group B - Theater
Moderator: Calvin C. Boykin, Jr., Tank Destroyers, Europe
Eddie Harrison, Buffalo Soldiers in WWII
Joe L. Hedrick, Marine, Pacific
Edward Kozlowski, Air Corps Navigator, Europe
Yolanda Kozlowski, Anny Nurse, Europe
Gerald McCaskill, USS Tennessee
Meet the WWII Authors - Rotunda
Educational WWII Film - The
WWII Memorial: A Testame
Museum
1940's Vintage Film -
The Best Years of Our Lives
2:00 p.m.
Close of Event
3
Lt. JG Geor e H. W. Bush
Above: President George H W Bush
Directly below: Lt. JG Bush in an Avenger, Barbara III
Below: His Flying Cross Medal
Right: As a Naval Aviator Cadet in early 1943
Below right: USS San Jacinto
4
[
GEORGE H. W. BUSH
u.s. Navy Reserves
Pacific Theater
On June 12, 1942, George H. W. Bush graduated from Phillips Academy and
went directly to Boston to enlist in the United States Navy Reserves. At
Corpus Christi, he was commissioned an ensign and received his Gold
Wings on June 9, 1943, when he was 18 years, 11 months, and 27 days old,
the youngest commissioned naval aviator at the time.
Pre-flight check, 1942-1945.
After twenty months of training, Bush and his fellow pilots reported to the
USS San Jacinto on February 6, 1944. They took their first cruise to the
Gulf of Pari a in Trinidad. The ship departed for San Diego on March 25,
1944, passed through the Panama Canal, docked briefly in San Diego, and
then headed on to Hawaii, reaching port on April 20, 1944.
Bush flew his first combat mission on May 21, 1944 in an attack on enemy ground installations and the
harbor at Wake Island. Bush flew numerous missions from the USS San Jacinto, bombing land and sea
targets with his Avenger. On August 1, 1944, he was commissioned a Lieutenant Junior Grade.
On September 2, 1944 during a bombing run over Chichi-jima in the Bonin Islands, Bush's plane was
hit by enemy fire and crashed off the coast ofthe island. Bush parachuted to safety, but his crew was
unable to escape, perhaps killed by the enemy fire, and perished. Bush was rescued after a few hours in
an inflatable life raft by the submarine Finback and remained on the submarine for over a month while it
patrolled off the Japanese coast.
Lt. JG Bush returned to the USS San Jacinto in the fall of 1944 to fly additional combat missions before
his squadron was relieved of duty after eight months of service. He flew his last combat mission on No-
vember 29, 1944. After he arrived back in San Diego with his squadron on December 22, 1944, Bush
returned home to Greenwich, Connecticut on Christmas Eve. Following the end of his leave, during
which time he married Barbara Pierce, Bush returned to Norfolk, Virginia and became part ofVT-153, a
new squadron of Navy torpedo bombers forming for the invasion of Japan. He was then sent to Florida,
Michigan, Maine, and again to Virginia. When he was in Auburn, Maine, he learned of the death of
President Roosevelt, and was in Virginia Beach, at the Oceana Naval Air Station, on V -J Day. On Sep-
tember 18, 1945, Bush was discharged from the United States Navy Reserves, having completing 58
missions, 126 carrier landings, and logging 1228 hours of flight time. He earned the rank of lieutenant
in the navy reserves on April 1, 1946 and remained in the reserves until his resignation on
October 24, 1955.
George Bush Presidential Library Foundation
Pr
Read the rest ofth
n Project n
ibrary Database
at http://holdcstx.gov.
5
Texas Contribution
TEXAS ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
36th Infantry Division - the "Texas" Division
"The 36th became the first American combat division to land in Europe.
Fourteen of its members were awarded the Medal of Honor. "
The 36th spent 400 days in combat, accepted the surrender ofField Marshal Hermann Goering, won seven
campaign streamers for its colors, and took part in two assault landings. The Division had the ninth highest
casualty rate of any AnnyDivision in World War ll.
Organized at Camp Bowie (Fort Worth), Texas on 18 July 1917, the 36th Infantry Division drew from units of
the Texas and Oklahoma National Guard. When World War I was over in 1919, the Division adopted a shoul-
der -patch of an Infantry Blue Arrowhead with a green "T" superimposed over it. The arrowhead stood for
Oklahoma and the "T," for Texas. After the war, the 36th was reorganized and became an "all Texas" division.
The Oklahoma units became part of the 45th Infantry Division.
On 25 November 1940, the Division was mobilized for World War ll, with active duty station at Camp Bowie,
in Brownwood. It took part in training maneuvers and in April 1943 began its move overseas. It landed in
North Africa, conducted amphibious training and on 9 September 1943, landed in Italy at Paestum in the Gulf
of Salerno. The Division fought in the Italian Campaign in such notable actions as Mt. Lungo, San Pietro and
the Rapido River. In the Rapido River action, the Division lost the better part of two of its three regiments -
141st and 143d - in unsuccessful attempts to cross the river. The attempted crossing was made to divert Ger-
man troops from the landing of allied troops at Anzio. On 25 May 1944, the Division landed at Anzio and led
the breakout toward Rome. The Division captured Velletri on 1 June 1944, and opened the gates of Rome for
the 5th Anny. The Division was then pulled out of Italy and landed on the beaches of Southern France on 15
August. Driving up through Southern France, the 36th was attacking and breaking the Siegftied Line when the
war in Europe ended.
. . . and Texans thank the 36th today, in 2005, for still looking after us . . .
Barbara Donalson Althaus
Bryan, Texas
6
The 36th Division troops arrive on the beaches near
Paestum, Italy on September 9, 1943.
March your story into HOLD!
Project HOLD: IDstoric Online Library Database
Read more 36th Infantry Division at htt1J://hold.cstx.gov.
Brazos County Contribu
on
BRYAN AIR FORCE BASE
and
Colonel Joe "the Duck" Duckworth
"Although saving many from death by their joint efforts at the only instrument training school
of its kind, they are remembered as the first to fly into the eye of a hurricane. "
Both the Bryan Air Force Base in Brazos County, Texas, and Colonel Joe Duckworth's system of instrument
training are credited with being m~or contributors to the wwn aviation effort and the Berlin airlift in 1948.
"For God's sake, get all the instrument flying you can," an English pilot wrote to his friend training in Texas.
"It's the difference between life and death over here."
The-head instructor at Bryan AFB, Col. Duckworth, regarded as the "father" of modern day instrument flying,
never saw combat and did not fly fighters, bombers, or helicopters. His standardized system of instrument fly-
ing, developed at the Brazos County base, was one of the most significant contributions made to pilot training,
greatly reducing weather-related accidents. His Link trainer system continued in use throughout the USAAF.
In the end, however, these accomplishments are widely forgotten. What is remembered is their feat of being
first to fly into a hurricane!
The story is told that on the morning of27 July 1943, British pilots training on instruments at Bryan were sur-
prised by news of a hurricane because of shutdown of weather-related information after Pearl Harbor. The
Brits really started gigging lead instructor Duckworth about the frailty of their trainer when they heard the
planes may have to be flown away from the storm. The problem was that few, if any, European flyers had ever
experienced a true hurricane and thought it was just another big thunderstorm.
Finally, Colonel Duckworth had enough ribbing and bet the Brits that he could fly the AT-6 "Texan" single
engine trainer into the storm and back, showing that both the plane and his instrument flying technique was
sound. Well, the bet was on. A highball to the winner! Colonel Duckworth then looked across the breakfast
table at Lieutenant Ralph 0' Hair, the only navigator at the field that morning, and asked him to fly with him.
The rain was very heavy as they flew through the darkness and, by accident, suddenly broke into the eye of the
storm. That night the bet was paid and no more comments were made on the "Texan" trainer or the value of
instrument flying.
After that flight, Bryan AFB became a Mecca for Allied pilots wanting to learn the fine art of "instrument fly-
ing" -- saving countless lives.
oject HOLD!
ry Database
at http://holdcstx.gov.
Barbara Donalson Althaus
Bryan, Texas
7
AEIM Coil
e of Texas
CORPS OF CADETS
"Texas A&M is, of course, one of the oldest military schools in the country. They have about
asfine a reputation in the field as anyone." Maj. Gen. Wood Kyle, '36
Texas A&M was an integral part of World War II from the visit of President Roosevelt in 1937 to the address of
General Dwight D. Eisenhower at muster ceremony in 1946 -- both respected men visiting the A&M campus. Fol-
lowing President Roosevelt's visit, $2 million was spent at A&M to expand facilities to yearly house, train and feed
7,000 cadets.
In all, more Aggies were on active duty than the combined total of VMI (Virginia Military Institute), Clemson, and
the Citadel. Aggies served in every theater of the war furnishing more officers than West Point: 29 in the rank of
general. Seven former cadets received the nation's highest decoration for valor, the Medal of Honor. Ten Aggies
were confirmed air aces. But the toll was great. Some 953 former cadets were killed.
"The military contribution of A&M during World War II was the most important single accomplishment of the
college. The military service of 20,000 Aggies, 14,000 of them commissioned officers, overshadows all else,"
declared Edwin Kyle, former Dean of Agriculture, in 1950.
Barbara Donalson Althaus
Bryan, Texas
8
AGGIES IN THE MARINES
"Aggiesfrom the classes of 1935 and 1936 provided remarkable leadership roles in the Marine Corps," says Al
Kyle, son of General Wood Kyle '36. "Out of the eight people from those two classes, five made general, and two
of them - Hollis Mustain and Ed Hamilton - never had an opportunity to come up. "
"You might be interested to know about some of the people who graduated from Texas A&M. It is a kind of a
remarkable record for a school," says Major General Wood Kyle '36 in an oral interview in 1969.
Back in the days of the Depression, the Anny had a program taking in about a thousand ROTC students a year.
Starting in 1935, the Marine Corps began to build up officer strength anticipating World War IT and got permission
from the Anny to get some officers out of their ROTC units. So, in '35 we had roughly 100 from the ROTC units
who came into the Marine Corps: Bruno Hochmuth, Ray Murray, Odell "Tex" Conley, and Wood Kyle attained
the rank of general.
Regarding General Hochmuth, Wood Kyle took over from him as Commanding General of the 3rd Marine Divi-
sion, following Hochmuth's death. General Murray attended Wood's funeral. They remained good friends to the
end.
Albert S. Kyle, BSEE Duke, MBA, MPA Harvard
Andover, Massachusetts
Guadalcanal, Dec. 1942. Maj. W.B. Kyle,
A&M Class '36, (p.l 0) :ßattalion Com-
mander & Maj. Wendell Andrews, Battery
Executive Officer, 1 st En 2nd Marines
Project HOLD- be "First In!"
Project HOLD: IDstoric Online Library Database
Read the rest of the story at http://hold.cstx.gov.
9
AGGIES
WOOD BARBEE KYLE
u.s. Marine Corps (Retired)
2nd Lt. - Maj. Gen., Pacific Theater, Viet Nam
At Tarawa we "simply picked up anybody we couldfind--
and we joined them up and carried on the fight. "
Wood B. Kyle, my Dad, accepted appointment as a Marine Second
Lieutenant on July 11, 1936 after graduating with honors ITom
Texas A&M. Following a tradition started during the Civil War
when his grandfather served as Captain of Company D in Terry's
Texas Rangers; Wood, his father, and brother were Captains of
Company D in the Corps of Cadets at A&M.
Kyle served with the 2nd Marine Brigade at Shanghai, China Octo-
ber 1937 to April 1938, on the USS Lexington in 1939 - 1940, and
in the Pacific during Wodd War II.
When his battalion commander was seriously wounded at Guadalca-
nal, Major Kyle assumed command, refusing evacuation for his own
wounds. Already a decorated combat leader with responsibility for
1000 Marines, he was 27 years old and was awarded the Silver Star
Medal for heroism during this campaign.
At Tarawa my Dad earned his second Silver Star Medal for courageous leadership when he personally led his men
in an attack on the heavily defended central sector of the island. The assault on Tarawa was one of most violent
amphibious assaults by the Marines in the Pacific, averaging 50 percent casualties, nearly all of which were suf-
fered in three days. It was a miracle that Dad survived.
After participating in campaigns at Saipan and Tinian, Lieutenant Colonel Kyle returned to the U.S. in October
1944. Some will remember the SaipanlTinian operation as securing the airfield for the Enola Gay. Marine history
describes "one of the most sickening stories of the war has come out of the Saipan campaign, namely the account of
hundreds of Japanese suicides in the Marpi Point area. The interviewer described some of the Marines crying as
they watched."
Major General Kyle subsequently retired from active duty after 32 years of service August 31, 1968. His account
only hints at the high stakes of those battles, given the routine tone of the veteran. It was a desperate struggle, won
by acts of individual courage within an extraordinary military organization: the U.S. Marines. My Dad, Wood Kyle
represents the best of them.
10
Al S. Kyle, BSEE Duke, MBA, MPA Harvard
Andover, Massachusetts
Online Library Database
at http://hold.cstx.gov.
BILLY JOE ADAMS
United States Army (Retired)
2nd Lt. - Major, European Theatre
'That day - the bombing of Pearl Harbor - was 'changing day' in my life.
My whole attitude changed."
As a student at the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, I was
fortunate to enroll in the advanced ROTC program that would lead to being
commissioned a Reserve Officer in the Anny. I would receive $21 per
month for those times when I was enrolled in ROTC or attending summer
camp. This added income had its enticements for me.
In the springtime of my senior year, those of us enrolled in Advanced
ROTC were informed that the Anny would very likely call us to active duty
for one year of training some time within the 12 months after we received
our commissions, but it happened sooner than that. We had Commissioning
and Final Review on Saturday, June 7, 1941 and I was ordered to report to
Fort Sam Houston, Texas on Sunday June 8, 1941.
After completing 3 months of schooling at the Field Artillery School, Fort Sill, Oklahoma in October 1941, I was
assigned to A Battery, 26th Field Artillery Battalion, 9th Infantry Division, Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
On Sunday, December 7, 1941, I took my car to the battery motor pool to wash it. With the radio on, I then heard
the initial broadcast of the bombing of Pearl Harbor by the Japanese. That day was "changing day" in my life. I
soon realized the impact of that attack not only upon our nation but also upon me as an individual. My whole
attitude changed. I began to want to do whatever I could to help my country thoroughly defeat Germany, Italy
and Japan as soon as possible. It honestly was with regret that I was reassigned back to Fort Sill, Oklahoma, as an
Instructor rather than remaining with the 9th Infantry Division as they were preparing for combat somewhere in
the European area.
Now, fast forward to January 1945, I was a member of the 20th Annored Division and we were deployed to the
European Theater, finally. Our division had some 20 days or so of combat. Very soon after the cessation ofhos-
tilities in Europe, we were ordered back to the States, for training to prepare for the invasion of Japan. We were
well aware that the war was not completed and were glad to contribute our part. Being aware of the difficulties
and casualties of the invasion of Normandy, we did envision a high casualty rate.
Consequently, when Hiroshima and Nagasaki were attacked with atomic bombs on August 6 and August 9, I was
relieved and very happy. This service provided me with valuable experience in my subsequent careers in the
Regular Anny and for my position on the faculty and staff at Texas A&M University.
B. 1. Adams
College Station, TX
Below: Sight seen disem-
barkingfrom transport
troop ship in Le Havre har-
bor, France. First glimpse
of destruction. (For more
pictures see p. 6.)
Disembark your memories onto Project HOLD!
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11
AGGIES
ED WARD M. BAR Y, JR.
U. S. Navy - Submarine Service
Torpedo Man I/C, Pacific Theatre
"Would I make the same decision today
if I were corifYonted with the war situation we faced in 1941?
You 'betcha' I would. I was glad to serve my country. "
On December 7, 1941, I was attending Texas A&M College on a
football scholarship. My roommate and I were on our way to break-
fast when we. heard that the Japanese were bombing Pearl Harbor
and that President Roosevelt would declare war on Japan. I knew
immediately that I would leave school to enlist in the U. S. Navy.
I stayed in boot camp just long enough to get all the necessary shots
and was.transferred to Balboa Park (Worlds Fair grounds). Eventu-
ally, I "volunteered" for submarine service. In order to qualify for
sub service in peace time, you had to be physically sound, have good
eyesight, normal hearing, and all of your front teeth. I qualified my
first six weeks during my first patrol run which was on the USS Ca..
chalot, (SS 170).
Our primary duty was to observe the Japanese activities, go out to sea at night and report to our bases in Alask:(i.
They would send planes into the area to hinder enemy activities. Of course we were given the directive to destroy
any enemy naval vessels we might encounter. We had only one direct contact with the enemy when we sighted<:J
troop-transport pulling into port. We CITed two torpedoes at the ship. Immediately one of the lookouts on ourSIJJ;,..
marine, a young man.whom we suspected ofþeing much too young to be in the armed services, and who had a
definite lisp, reported to the Captain llwiddle boat tumming upatem, sIJr." The Captain asked another lookout
what he said, and when the Captain looked back there were two torpedo.esapproaching from our rear. Luckily o.ne
missed by ten yards and the other by a hundred yards. We had to dive to two hundred feet to avoid the enemy,
thinking that it might be a destroyer. Since there were no depth charges dropped, it was assumed that it was an
enemy submarine. This was just about all the activity to note except that we were caught in a hurricane for five
days with winds up to eighty miles per hour and a temperature of twenty below zero.
After my discharge from the U. S. Navy, lenro.lled in Texas A & M College again and received my B.S. degreein
1949. Then I worked at several enterprises but ultimately ended up working for Foundation Seed Section of the
Agricultural Experiment Station, ÇollegeStatio.n,Texas. Sinceretiring in 1982, we have. continued to live in
Bryan, Texas, and feel blessed tohave>sharedalmost 62 years of marriage with my wife, Ruth, and a large family.
Our three youngest grandchildren areallenro.lledin Texas A & M University for the fall 2005 semester.
Edward M. Hary, Jr.
Bryan, Texas
12
GERALD McCASKILL
U. S. Navy - USS Tennessee
Pacific Theatre
"In nine months aboard ship I had been in five major battles and
hadjust turned 19. The war and the Navy changed my life.
The GI Bill enabled me to go to A&M "
Even though Gerald McCaskill did not join the war effort until
1944, he was in three major battles within less than three months
from the time he left home and Mother.
It all started when I was inducted into the Navy March IS, 1944,
left for training and ultimately joined our ship, the USS Tennessee,
in Hawaii. My job during a battle was damage control. In other
words, if a water or electric line should be hit, our duty was to stop
the flow of water as best we could until a repairman could get
through. When we were engaged in the invasion of Saipan and
Tinian in the Pacific, we were hit by three shells from a Japanese
shore battery on Tinian. We had quite a bit of damage in our sta-
tion, mainly broken water lines and structural damage. We had a
strange kind of funny thing. It happened that the deck above us
was a vegetable locker and a lot of potatoes came down on us.
Usually, we would shell for 3-5 days before the invasion, then our
smp would "layoff' and stand by for "calls for fire" from our
troops after our forces landed. The USS Tennessee fought in
Guam, Iwo Jima, Okinawa, and the Philippines twice. We were
hit by seven Kamikaze suicide planes on April 12 -- the same day
President Roosevelt died. It came over the P.A. system right way.
We were real sad that day with 110 injured and the 26 burials at
sea. Yet when we had to go back to the Philippines I didn't think
too much about it. That was where my ship went. That was
where I was going to be.
When the USS Tennessee entered the Surigao Straits, it played an important part in the last battle between huge
fighting ships. Admiral Ohlendorf had his six old battleships position themselves across the Straits so that all
14" turrets could fire simultaneously where the Japanese could only fire their forward turrets. The battle, begun
at a distance of 10-12 miles, was over in some 20 minutes.
We assumed that next we would be going to Japan and had started reloading for invasion when word came they
dropped the bomb at Hiroshima. I was glad. The dropping of the atomic bombs and the final surrender of Japan
was good news to our crew and I know for the guys in the Anny and Marines.
"I told my kids that I hoped they never had to go serve but if they did I hope they would go and serve with honor.
I cannot abide that anybody would not go serve with honor."
Gerald McCaskill
College Station, Texas
Barbara Donalson Althaus
Bryan, Texas
Sail on to Project HOLD!
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13
Early Aviation Volunteer
ERNEST WARNER SPRAD LE Y
US Army Air Force (Retired), R.A.F., R.C.A.F
2nd Lt. - Lt. Col, Northern African Theatre
"At Malta we went up in four's. There were usually 150 to 175 of them
and we were always sadly outnumbered, so the job we had to do was
cripple them up as much as we could when we got the chance. "
E. W. Spradley, our Dad, was just 22 and one of the first 50 Americans
to join the RCAF in the summer of 1940. Six months later he was sent
to duty in England. Throughout 1941, he flew Spitfires in France,
Belgium and Holland and the RAP raids on Brest. In January 1942, his
assignment in the Mediterranean shifted from ferrying supplies to the
British at Malta to protecting Malta. Spradley flew off the HMS Eagle
where he was to spend three months during the siege of Malta as a
member of the 249th Squadron RAP.
After the Malta campaign, E. W. was sent to the Gold Coast of Africa to
ferry Spitftres across the dangerous Congo jungles to Cairo, Egypt. His
pilot record book with the RAP indicates that he had extensive night
training and instrument flying experience.
In February 1943, E.W. transferred from the RAP to the United States
Anny Air Corps and flew cargo and supplies on DC-3's with the 9th
Squadron. His transfer to the USAAF was preparatory to his marriage 9
March 1943 in Cairo to Josephine "Josie" Martin, a nurse also stationed
in Cairo -- the first wedding of American forces in the Middle East
during WWII.
By 1944 E.W. had been transferred stateside as an Instrument Pilot to
train pilots for six weeks at Bryan Air Field -- the only instrument-
training school of its kind in the United States Anny Air Force. The
unique school selected only the most experienced pilots such as
Spradley who had flown over 120 combat missions and had 210 combat
hours as a Spitfire pilot.
Among the honors E. W. "Bill" Spradley received with the British were the Cross of Malta, the Canadian Overseas
Ribbons and the African Star. While in the US Air Force, Spradley shot down four enemy aircraft and was a
Command Pilot with more than 3500 flying hours in his career. Bill Spradley stared death in the eyes, not once but
many times, making split-second decisions. Never bragging about his flight prowess, refusing to talk about his
decorations and the war, Bill would probably say "others don't have to know what I have done, I know."
Lt. Col. E. W. Spradley died at age 54 in 1973 - on his wife's birthday. They are buried together at Ft. Sam
Houston National Cemetery in San Antonio.
Jane Spradley Haley
Missouri City, Texas
14
Janice Spradley McCarthy
Katy, Texas
Susan Spradley Bell
Houston, Texas
Women in the M-
JOSEPHINE MARTIN SPRADLEY, R.N.
United States Army Nurses Corps
Second Lieutenant, North African Theater
"Our mother signed up along with her closest friends from
nursing school before Pearl Harbor, probably because they
knew a war was coming. "
After graduation from nursing school on May 17, 1940, Josie stayed on
at Santa Rosa Hospital in San Antonio, Texas for six months. During
that time, she joined the army reserves and trained at Camp Bowie in
Brownwood, Texas.
On February 15, 1941, Josephine Martin was assigned to active duty as
a registered nurse in the US Anny Nurses Corps and commissioned a
Second Lieutenant. Before being sent overseas, she also trained at
Camp Polk, Louisiana and at Ft. Sam Houston, Texas where she treated
many burn patients.
Josie was assigned to Cairo, Egypt arriving on November 1, 1942
shortly after Rommers defeat at EI Alamein and was stationed at the
newly opened 1,000-bed 38th General Hospital, Delta Service Com-
mand -- where she nursed many soldiers wounded on the battlefield.
Then romance bloomed for Josie amid the chaos of war. She met and
later married Flight Lieutenant E. W. Spradley of the Royal Air Force
in March 1943. But they were soon to be separated as her husband
resumed flying duties in North Africa. Josephine Martin, now Mrs. E.
W. Spradley, stayed at the 38th General treating the wounded and those
sick from the extreme heat and an appalling list of diseases --- typhus,
smallpox, dysentery, venereal diseases. Sanitation, clean water and fa-
cilities became top priority for the hospital.
In January of 1944 Spradley and his wife were both transferred to duty stateside. "Daddy had told her not to
leave Egypt by convoy but to fly out because ships were being torpedoed in the Mediterranean. The next thing
he knew Mother turned up in Italy in a convoy torpedoed in the Mediterranean and rescued from the sinking
ship!" When Josie finally arrived stateside in March, she was assigned to Baxter General Hospital treating tho-
racic (chest) injuries in Spokane, Washington in December 1944. Although she had requested a transfer to
Ephrata, Washington where husband Bill was training pilots, the closest she came was Spokane -- 100 miles
away. Still, the two were not close for long. Josie left the Anny in May to become a mother and returned to
Texas to give birth to identical twin daughters.
Josie later refused her veteran's benefit, probably thinking
Spradley is buried at Fort Sam Houston National
Spradley. Both died premature deaths, she at age 49 and he at age 54.
." Josephine Martin
. Col. Ernest Warner
Susan Spradley Bell
Houston, Texas
Jane Spradley Haley
Missouri City, Texas
McCarthy
Hold on to your
Project HOLD: Historic Online Library Da
Read more about Josephine Spradley at at htt :/fholde.
15
Youth ..Me_ories./of
I
WILLIAM J. JOHNSON
us Army, 755 Tank Battalion
Purple Heart
I asked my Dad, on the 5(jh anniversary of WW/L where he was 50 years ago
and his reply came quickly, "I was in a foxhole in Italy. "
On that mid-August day in 1945, I can still feel the cold, wet washcloth on my face as my grandmother "cleaned
me up." She changed my clothes so we could go to the Methodist church three blocks away to give thanks to God
for the ending of the war.
Only four years earlier on March 15, 1941, my father, William J. "Bill" Johnson, answered the call of duty to his
country. Tears still fill my eyes even today. Bill, still struggling with his wife's death when he was drafted, had to
leave his 18-month-old daughter in the care of his sister -- for as long as he was to be gone. What a sad day in the
Johnson household.
My Dad went to Fort Sam Houston and then on to Fort Knox, Kentucky and was shipped out to the European
Theater. He fought in four major båttles. Dad was seriously injured in April of 1945, just four months before Ja-
pan surrendered. Although he spent time in the hospital and received the Purple Heart, he was back on the battle-
field as the war came to an end.
But expectancy turned to misery when Daddy was supposed to return
home. We got all dressed up and went down to meet his train but he
was not on it. We waited for hours before giving up and going home--
a terrible experience for me as a six year
old. Then a knock on our door woke us up
in the night. It was my Dad!
He rarely talked about the war and his ex-
periences, but I know he had deep emo-
tions even though they were never ex-
pressed. Years went by and Dad rebuilt
life. As his daughter, I would like to honor
him for his heroic service and personal
sacrifices to his country. It is hard to find
the right words to thank him for being a
courageous soldier. William J. Johnson
died in 200 I at the age of 82.
Doris Johnson Emshoff
Bryan, Texas
Pictured:
William J. Johnson, Co B
755th TankBnM, APO306
NY NY, USARMY, letter
written to his sister. and his
Purple Heart~
16
EDDIE EARL HARRISON
An Aggie Remembers Buffalo Soldiers & Home Front
Captain - Colonel, Korean War
Eddie reminds us that all those who served, on whatever front,
are part of what Tom Brokaw called "The Greatest Generation."
When Judge Eddie Harrison speaks of the heritage of the "Buffalo
Soldiers," given that name as a mark of respect by the Native
Americans who fought them, his unique understanding of what it
means to fight a two-front war (for victory in combat and for civil
rights at home) is evident.
Like veterans of previous wars, the "Buffalo Soldiers" returned
home with high expectations of respect and a better life but found
little had changed. Unlike veterans of earlier wars, the African
Americans of World War II were not willing to accept what they
found. They brought a sure knowledge that they could fight great
odds, endure tremendous sacrifice and continue through to victory.
As a veteran of the "home front," Eddie Harrison went on after
World War II to serve as one of the first generation of African
American officers to command integrated units. His sense of civic
duty that led him to collect scrap along the fence rows, propelled
him to a career as municipal court judge.
Harrison's career began in the US Army just after
WWII He served during the Korean War and retired
Although three of his brothers served during World War II in the segregated military
units (the "Buffalo Soldiers") that were part of every war America fought through
World War II, Eddie Harrison's memories of wartime service are those of a man too
young to serve in the military but old enough to be a veteran of the often forgotten
"home front." For Eddie and the other young brother left on the home farm, war time
meant years of hard work doing their part to support the older brothers.
For Eddie and other home front veterans, the war years were a time of victory gardens,
scrap drives; war bond sales and the daily challenge . g life to the needs of an
economy and society at war. Eddie remembers gat all kinds of metal from fence
rows and fields. When the scrap truck came along, the boys would flag down the truck
and help load the scrap.
Everyone raised victory gardens to help ide basic food items and to free resources for the war effort. Things
we take for granted required re endous spirit of community cooperation. From the mili-
tary discipline and experiences of from the experiences of those at home, a discipline and sense of
community action grew that had a direct impact on the future of America.
Judge Harrison remembers World War II as a time when a united e
combined for the victory that has defined our world: (1) the military,
facturing and war production, and (3) the "home front."
Eddie Harrison, BS Prairie View, MS TAMU
US Anny, 1st AD (retired)
Captain - Colonel, Korean War
Greatest Generation! Greatest HOLD Contributors!
Project HOLD: Historic Online Library Database
Read more about Eddie Earl Harrison at http://hold.cstx.gov.
17
WoOlen~Worki
on the HoOle Front
VIRGINIA KELLEY FORD
Home Front - Firestone Factory
"My Mother seemed satisfied doing her job, no matter what, because it would
help bring my brother and the others home. "
I was four years old when the world changed on December 7,
1941. My brother, Edwin Verne "Beany" Ford, Jr. who would
turn 18 on the 21 st, was a senior in high school. Because he was
in ROTC, he signed an agreement that he would graduate and
then go to San Antonio for a two-month radio and electronics
course, after which he would enter the Anny and serve in the
Signal Corps. We lived in Dallas, with our mother, Virginia
Kèlley Ford; her brother, Oliver Sims Kelley (who was too old
for the draft); their sister, Exa Kelley Williams; and the sister's
19-year-old son, Ivy Albert Williams, Jr., who enlisted Monday,
December 8th.
My mother, who was employed full time, suddenly changed jobs
and went to work at the Firestone Plant in Dallas. Right before
Pearl Harbor, her sister, who had recently become a widow, had
moved in with us. She became the homemaker and stayed home
with me while Mother went to work at a defense plant lining
fuselages of airplanes. I learned later that both she and my aunt
had applied for work at defense plants, but they decided
Mother's job was the better one for our family.
The main difference for me was that Mother now worked the
midnight shift. She would be home when I got home from
school until I went to bed. She then left to be at workbymid-
night. She did not get home until after I left for school.
She would occasionally bring home leftover
rolls used to help line the fuselage. They would be
bathtub and covered with water. After several
take them out of the tub and the blacking would
leaving white cloth. These remnants, too short
fuselages, would make dish towels and aprons
could save it for lining homemade quilts.
Kelley Ford
Ford (Koppa), in 1940~
Dana
Her job would continue until the war ended. I think Mother received a significant increase in pay and I never
really heard her complain. Mother never talked about feeling patriotic, but she never complained about her job
like she had other jobs.
My brother
headed
to the Pacific war
Patricia Ford Koppa
College Station, Texas
18
at http://hold.cstx.gov~
OLA PAULINE ADAMS STRICKLAND
Home Front - Link Training Instructor
"Sis had never evenjlown in a plane, much less ever had any training injlight."
Even before the United States formally entered World War II, Terrell, Texas was involved with the Lend-Lease
Agreement with Great Britain. A British Flight Training School was set up in Terrell and began training cadets
for the British Air Force, the RAP, in August 1941. There is an RAP section in the cemetery in Terrell for those
students who were killed while in training. As one can tell, this was a few months before Pearl Harbor and the
formal entrance of the United States into wwII.
Pauline Adams Strickland was hired, probably about 1943, as a Link Training instructor. To the best of my
knowledge, she had never even flown in a plane, much less ever had any training in flight. Her son states that she
did go up in an airplane every once in while and that the instructor pilot would let her "take the stick and fly
some."
After the boys graduated and left to return to England and combat duty, she would try to keep up with her stu-
dents as much as possible. I remember that she kept a list of all her students and would go over it from time to
time and silently, or in a low tone, wonder about her boys.
While still in training, one of her students did have to bailout at night somewhere around Greenville, just north
of Terrell. He parachuted out safely but got caught in a tree. In the darkness and not knowing how high he might
be dangling, he remained in his parachute all night. As it was getting light, he found that he was about 2 feet off
the ground.
By any definition, my sister,
Pauline, was an active partici-
pant in supporting Wodd War
II on the home front. And she
too was a member of "The
Greatest Generation" as de-
scribed in the book by Tom
Brokaw.
Billy Joe Adams
US Anny (retired)
College Station, Texas
Above: Working women wore slacks.
Upper right: Pauline is on back row
secondfrom right in Link Trainer
photo in Terrell, Texas.
Right: Pauline with son, Bob.
19
Reference Note s
LT. JG GEORGE BUSH
George Bush Ubrary Museum Foundation
A&M COLLEGE of TEXAS, CORPS OF CADETS
"Wars," The Eagle, 22 September 2001, AlO
Barbara Donalson Althaus, Kyle Tough, Story of Edwin J. Kyle ~ 2003
John M. Moore, "Mr~ A&M Retired, But in Name Only," Houston Post, 20 December 1950;
Henry C. Dethloff, "Texas A&M University," HOTOnline at tsha.utexas.edulhandbook; "Hìstory," The Eagle, 4 October 2001, A3~
BRYAN AIR FORCE BASE
"Bryan Air Force Base," Handbook of Texas Online, HOTOnline; Texas Transportation Institute, Vol. 40, No~ 3 online at tti~tamu.edu;
Bill Page: www.hurricaneconsulting.net.
WOOD BARBEE KYLE
1967 Oral Hìstory Transcript excerpts, Benis M Frank, Hìstory and Museums Division,
HDQ u.S. Marine Corps, Washington, D.C. Published 23 Feb 1977 by Director of Marine Corps Hìstory and Museums,
HDQ USMC, Washington, DC 20380.
"Campaign for the Marianas, Hìstorical Division, U.S~ Marine Corps, 3 March 1947.
TEXÀS ARMY NATIONAL GUARD, 36TH Infantry Division - the "Texas Division"
Texas Military Forces Museum, Camp Mabry, Austin, Texas online at
www.kwanah,comltxmilmus/texas.htm.
361h Infantry Division, "Hìstory of Texas National Guard," online at
www.agd. state ~ tx. us/36 i dlhistory Itxamghi story ~htm~
WORLD WAR II
"World War, Second," Compton's Encyclopedia~ F~E~ Compton & Company: Chicago, 1952,15:245.
Project H
: Historic OuUne Library Database
What is Project HOLD?
Project HOLD is an Historic Online Library Database pro-
vided by the City of College Station through the guidance of
the Historic Preservation Committee to digitally record our
history. Community members are encouraged to rummage
through their closets and attics to find scrapbooks, letters,
receipts, photographs, bulletins, family histories, articles,
postcards, memoirs... (well, you get the idea!) to share with
Project HOLD. Heritage writers are encouraged to deposit
work into Project HOLD for all to benefit.
Who scans these documents?
The City of College Station Neighborhood Services staff and
volunteers. We are always looking for volunteers to help with
the collecting, cataloging, and scanning. Computer knowl-
edge is not a requirement. We will train you.
What will happen to the documents I loan to HOLD?
Your documents will be placed in archival (acid-free) contain-
ers and handled with the greatest of care. You will receive a
receipt for the items and their condition will be noted. The
scanning process does not harm them in any way. If you like,
we will come to your house and help you choose and gather the
documents.
Go to Project HOLD!
HOLD staff at
photos top to bottom: WAVE ie Bennett Alsmeyer (Donated by same); President Truman's Thank you letter (Donated by Marguerite
Road to Baguio: She drop, foot tmops protect tanks on road (Donated by James L. Boone, Jr.); and World War II
ok. (Donated by Mary Ellen e.j
Charles Schultz, Chair
TAMlJ Cushing Library
Steerine Committee
Katie Elrod, Event Coordinator
City of College Station, Neighborhood Services
Shirley Hammond
George Bush Presidential Library &. Museum
Tom Taylor
City of College Station Historic Preservation Committee
Veterans' Panel
Calvin C. Boykin, Jr, Chair
Moderator: Tom Taylor
Bill Adams
Bill T. Harper
Eddie E. Harrison
Joe L. Hedrick
Louis Hudson
Yolanda &. Edward Kozlowski
Gerald McCaskill
Charles "Jim" Newman
Foster L. Thompson
Veterans' Panel Consultants
Bill Youngkin
Tom Turbeville
Ceremony
Jake Betty
James F. Cooper
T AMU Corps of Cadets
Shady Groves
Daniel House
Lisa Kalmus
Neal Nutal)
Charles Opersteny
Tom Taylor
Graohie Artist
Anne Boykin
Barbara n Althaus, Chair
Billy Joe Adams
Jim Boone
Milked Collett
Doris Jobnson Emshoff
Carol &. Robert L. Lyons
Proeram Lavout
Katie Elrod
Rotunda Activities
Chair, Fran Lamb
JoAnn Cermin
Grace Calbert-Vrooman
Joanna Yeager
PR Committee
Brian Blake
Patti Jett
Becky Nugent
Carrie Pierce
Rita Portales
Jay SGcol
Steering Committee Assistants
Arya Chavan
Jennifer Gledhill
Gallm Talks
AI Postelwait, Chair
Bill Adams
Ranie Arnold
Marguerite Anthony
Mike Blair
James Boone
Marland Clemens
Mark Collins
Eleanor &. Johi) Conkling
Mike Cornelius
Kathleen Heaton
Frances Henry
Emilio Hernandez
Peggy Hope
Russell Howerton
Claudine Hunting
Pat &. Rodger Koppa
Yolanda &. Edward Kozlowski
Mary &. Bill Lancaster
Mike McKaughan
Ascencion M. Munoz
Bill Ravey
Colleen Risinger
Nancy Ross
Victoria Schaller
Perry Stephney
James Wade
Bob Warden &. Team
Brenda White
Kitty &. Will Worley
Joanna L. Yeager
Rotunda Table Exhibitors
Marie Bennett &. Henry Alsmeyer
Henry Dethloff
Doris Emsboff
Arnold Kramer
Memorial Funeral Chapel
Leanna Pate
Lou Shafer
TAMU Press
Rita Underwood
Mike Waters
&vIe Show
Jan Bricldey
Host Volunteers
Ryan Adams
Ashley Beste
Mike Blair
Sherri Brice
Will Brice
Bryan High School RoO. T. C.
Alison Chabannes
City of College Station Staff
CS Historic Preservation Committee
Elvira Cole
Clay Cole
Mark Collins
Concerned Black Men of Brazos Valley
Mike Cornelius
Nijuma Cunningham
Lacey Floerke
Diana Gallagber
Janis Gibbons
Kristen Griffes
Alice &. Charles Hall
Rick Heaney
C.S. Historic Preservation Committee
Marie &. Jules Jacquin
Hillary Jessup
Dawn Jourdan
Lindsay Kirk
Joe L. LeCour
Rachael Masco
Michelle McCellan
Jon Minor
Tike
Sharon Pendergraff
Pearl &. Samra Robertson
Jason Scblacter
Jessica Sullivan
TAMU Corps of Cadets
Doreen Todd
Valerie Varner
Nancy &. Alan Waldie
Ernie Wright
Marolyn Wyatt
Lucile Young
Vehicle Committee
Brazos Valley Model A Car Club
Peter Lamont
Leisha &. Brent Mullins
Charles Schultz, Chair
T AMU Cushing Library
Steering Committee
Katie Elrod, Event Coordinator
City of College Station, Neighborhood Services
Shirley Hammond
George Bush Presidential Library & Museum
Veterans' Panel
Calvin C. Boykin, Jr, Chair
Moderator: Tom Taylor
Bill Adams
Bill T. Harper
Eddie E. Harrison
Joe L. Hedrick
Louis Hudson
Yolanda & Edward Kozlowski
Gerald McCaskill
Charles "Jim" Newman
Foster L. Thompson
Veterans' Panel Consultants
Bill Youngkin
Tom Turbeville
Ceremonv
Jake Betty
James F. Cooper
TAMU Corps of Cadets
Shady Groves
Daniel House
Lisa Kalmus
Neal Nutall
Charles Opersteny
Tom Taylor
Gral1hic Artist
Anne Boykin
Program Committee
Barbara Donalson Althaus, Chair
Billy Joe Adams
Jim Boone
Millred Collett
Doris Johnson Emshoff
Carol & Robert L. Lyons
Prof/ram Lavout
Katie Elrod
Rotunda Activities
Chair, Fran Lamb
JoAnn Cermin
Grace Calbert-Vrooman
Joanna Yeager
PR Committee
Brian Blake
Patti Jett
Becky Nugent
Carrie Pierce
Rita Portales
Jay Socol
Steering Committee Assistants
Arya Chavan
Jennifer GledhiU
Tom Taylor
City of College Station Historic Preservation Committee
Gallerv Talks
AI Postelwait, Chair
Bill Adams
Ranie Arnold
Marguerite Anthony
Mike Blair
James Boone
Marland Clemens
Mark Collins
Eleanor & John Conkling
Mike Corneliùs
Kathleen Heaton
Frances Henry
Emilio Hernandez
Peggy Hope
Russell Howerton
Claudine Hunting
Pat & Rodger Koppa
Yolanda & Edward Kozlowski
Mary & BiU Lancaster
Mike McKaughan
Ascencion M. Munoz
Bill Ravey
Colleen Risinger
Nancy Ross
Victoria Schaller
Perry Stephney
James Wade
Bob Warden & Team
Brenda White
Kitty~WiII Worley
JoannaL. Yeager
RotuntlaTable Exhibitors
Marie'Bej)nett & Henry Alsmeyer
Henry Dethl.off
Doris Emshoff
Arnold Kramer
Mem.,ri¡J.lFuneral Chapel
LeannaPate
Lou Shafer
Host Volunteers
Ryan Adams
Ashley Beste
Mike Blair
Sherri Brice
Will Brice
Bryan High School RoO. T. C.
Alison Chabannes
City of College Station Staff
CS Historic Preservation Committee
Elvira Cole
Clay Cole
Mark Collins
Concerned Black Men of Brazos Valley
Mike Cornelius
Nijuma Cunningham
Lacey Floerke
Diana Gallagher
Janis Gibbons
Kristen Griffes
Alice & Charles Hall
Rick Heaney
c.S. Historic Preservation Committee
Marie ~ Jules Jacquin
Hillary Jessup
Dawn Jourdan
LindsaY Kirk
Joe L. LeCour
Doreen
Valerie Varner
Nancy & Alan Waldie
Ernie Wright
Marolyn Wyatt
Lucile Young
Vehicle Committee
Brazos Valley Model A Car Club
Peter Lamont
Leisha & Brent Mullins
,
I>
Presidential
ry and Museum
The
e
Gear e Bush
Crn OF COLLEGE STATION
ANCOInsurance Managers, Ltd. Copy Comer
Brazos Heritage Society Judge Randy Sims
Century 21 Beal, Inc. Newman Printing
Texas Research Ramblers Genealogical Society
Klechka Piano & Organ Company
Mary Ellen Bell
Memorial Funeral Chapel
Physicians Home Medical Rental
Reddy Ice
Lona Reese
Slovacek Sausage
Unity Theater