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HomeMy WebLinkAboutBill Palmos, Brazos Valley Heroes One in a series of tributes to merribers 0" e rea test Generation" who served our country during World War II Bill Palmos of the Hearne law firm of Palmos, Russ, McCullough and Russ is starting his 67th year as a licensed attorney, but only his 63rd year of practice. That is because of his time of service to his country. "I had graduated from Hearne in 1933 and the University of Texas Law School in 1939 and was practicing law back in Hearne with Mr. John R. Grace. The war was looming and my brothers and I decided that if war was going to break out, we wanted to be able to serve in the Navy. My brothers Demetre, Paul, George, Bobby Charles and I all joined the Navy. "When we entered service, Paul, Demetre and I had our physicals the same day. They passed but I flunked - they said I had a heart murmur. I knew I was healthy so I volunteered for the Navy flight program, where the physical was more complete, and I passed. I was sent for basic training at Dallas and as a cadet to flight school." At the start of the war, the German U-Boats were sinking a good portion of all shipping that left U.S. ports on the eastern seaboard and shipping coming out of the Gulf. "When I graduated from flight school and was commissioned, the Navy wanted me to fly PBYs or PBM's, both seaplanes. That was something I didn't want to do. With the loss of shipping by the German submarines, there was a critical need for dirigible or blimp pilots. I volunteered for blimps and was sent to Lakehurst, N.J., to learn to fly a blimp. "I found out right away that flying a blimp was a lot more difficult than flying a plane. It took me seven hours of flight time in a plane before I soloed but twenty-five hours in a blimp before I soloed. "When I got my wings, I was assigned as a pilot to a blimp and crew for escort duty on shipping coming out of the East Coast shipyards and docks. A blimp has a crew of 10 people - three officers, who all are pilots, and seven enlisted men. "Most of our flight missions would last from 12 to 18 hours. Each blimp had a MAD device which could detect submarines under water. That was our job, to detect and run off the German submarines that were attacking our shipping. I'm proud to say that we never lost any ships on any of the escort missions our blimp and crew were on." Palmos and his crew served as escorts for shipping along both of the U.S. seacoasts, Central America and Latin America until the war ended. "We flew in weather that would ground most planes, but the weather almost grounded us once and for all. We were on the California coast and were attempting to land when the Santa Ana winds started. Our blimp is 250 feet long and must be secured by ground crews grabbing our landing ropes in order to land. "We attempted several passes with no luck. Our crew aboard the blimp and the people on the ground were exhausted by our attempts to land. I finally decided that on the next pass I was going to kill all engines because I didn't think we could make another pass. Fortunately when we made the next pass, they were able to catch us and held on for dear life. It still took over an hour before we were able to disembark." "When the war was over, I returned to Hearne to continue my law practice but my brother Paul didn't make it back. He went down with his ship, the Juno, in the South Pacific. There were 860 men aboard, and only 12 survived. "When I look back on the war, I think about the friends I made and the brother I lost. I also remember that all of us felt that we owed a duty to our country. Either we protect our county then and there or else the Germans were coming here." Bill Palmos, now 90 years of age, goes to the office daily. He has served his community, his clients, his profession and his country well. Bill Palmos' name can be found on the Brazos Valley Veteran's Memorial. For more information, to make a contribution, or if you know a World War" veteran whose story needs to be told, contact the BWM at www.veteransmemorial.org or Bill Youngkin at (979) 260-7030. !!!~)~~~Ie Local World War 1/ veteran Ray Valigura will be the guest on "Veterans of the Valley" Friday at 8:30 p.m. on KAMU- Tv. Veterans of the Valley, hosted by WTAW's Tom Turbiville. can be seen Fridays at 8:30 p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays at 6:30 p.m. ---~. ::----~-~~ --' J - -~';} "-- ......" : .-'.... :,- -' -,--,-,".'- . -, ""-.' OnlFf'O KAMU.tamu.edu Channel 15/cox cabJe4