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HomeMy WebLinkAboutGlenn G. Morgan, Brazos Valley Heroes One in a series of tributes to members of "The Greatest' Generation" who served our country ,during World War II up the ramp, sal~ted those colors and went aboard. It WQuld be my home for the next two years of my life." Morgan woulq serve on the Indianapolis for all the operations it was involved in during the re-taking of the South Pacific. The Indianapolis was the flagship of Admiral Spruance because of the quarters available to Ask anyone who served in the military if they've . him there. and because of its speed. ever heard of the sinking of the USS Iildianapolis and , they will probably tell you yes. It's a story told to every "Whenever we had general. quarters, I was on the '. boot or basic trainee to emphasize the need to learn to bridge and was able to see all the action from that swim. It was the one story from my Dad, who served viewpoint, from Peleliu to Iwo Jima. We were .hit by , in the Navy in the SOl-lth Pacific during World Warn, . fire on more than one occasion, but nothing serious. that convinced me I did not want to be in the Navy. At Iwo Jima, I stood 30 hours of general quarters as we fired starburst or projectiles the whole time, . " Last week I heard the story from beginning to end from one who lived it - the co-chairman of the USS "The day before D"day on Okinawa we \lVere near " Indianapolis Survivors Group, Glenn C. Morgan of Kamaretto Island, just west of Okinawa. I had' just Camp Creek in Robertson County. been relievf;ld from the watch and was still Stahdinq Morgan, now 83, was bor~ in 1923 in Oklahoma but on the bridge when I saw a kamikaze, plime coming grew up in severaflocations because his dad worked ' right for the bridge. As it came toward the bridge, it . in the oil fields of Oklahoma, Kansas and Illinois. leveled off and then dove straight into the ship, just "I graduated from Salem tligh in Salem, Illinois, but screaming in. had registered for the draft while we lived in Kansas," "It hittowfird the fantail and the bomb went hf;l recalled. "After I graduated I, too, went to work in' ,through al,l the decks and came out the bottom. It ) the, oil field. I went to work for Texaco and reallY liKed ,didn't explode until it hit the screw rafts. We closed off , working for them, butsoon got my draft notice for all the watertight doors and held a mustefof the crew. ' the Army. A short time before, I had notified t~e draft . We had 23 people in my section and we ended up six board in Kansasthat.1 'now lived in Illinois. I gotmy short, including my bugler friend who hadboarded the draft notice within clays. '. ' . Indianapolis with me. We held a service for them and " "We reported' to Chicago's jnduction center and buried them at sea. I saw a naval officer. there. I decided to see if there "We limped in. to Kamaretto Island to get repaired . were any' opportunities other than the Army. Texaco, enough to get backto the States. We were surrounded had given me a resume and a report on, my training by light boats to try to stop the Japanese from and skills. When I gave that to him,hetook me to see. swimming out with charges.at night from .the Island. the Navy, Marine and Seabee guys. I chose the Navy. Needless to say, we were all pretty tense. As we were "I underwent boot camp at Great Lakes Naval in the bay getting repairs, a twin-engine Japanese Station outs,ide of' Chicago. .lllad taken my cornet to Betty came over the mountain and headf;ld down the training with, me and one night I was playing 'Stardust' bay, where it flew into an LST loaded with ammo. It in the head when a guy popped hiS head in and said,. was the biggest explosion I had ever seen. You, could 'You need to join the drum and bugle corps.' That was feel the concussion all the way up the bay. ' the beginnin,gof my career as a Navy bugler. ,lAs soon ,as we could make the necessary repairs, "After boot camp I married my wife, Mertie, and we we hightailed it.back to the U.S. for an overhaul." were stationed at Great Lakes, as part oUhe training cadre. My commandElf liked me and the job I had But the most significant involvement of the done and volunteered to help stop my transfer orders Indianapolis hi the war and its place in military lore " that cam.e in ordering' me to report to San Francisco. I was yet to come. decided to go and ended up on Mare Island as part of, Glenn Morgans name can be found on the Brazos . a crew they were making up. 'Valley' Veterans, Memorial. For mote information, to "One day I was told to get my gear, as I was being make a contribution, or if you know a WorldWar II transferred. They took rne and llootherbugler biJddy Veteran whose story needs to betold,contact the , of mine to the pier to board the USS, Jndianapolis, a BWM at www.'veteransmemorial.org, or Bill Youngkin heavy cruiser. It looked really ominous to me. I walked at (979) 260-7030. Th~dE~le First of two parts By Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle One in a series of tributes to members of "'l Greatest Generation" who served our country durin.; world \Var II Second of Three Parts By Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle Glen G. Morgan is the co- chairman of the LISS Indianapolis Survivors Group. Today he continues the story of the Indianapolis after the kamikaze attack on the eve of the invasion of Okinawa. "After getting what repairs we could at Kamaretto Isiand for the damage we received, we limped back to the U.S. for an overhaul. We were stationed at Mare Island for the overhall and before we were to go on a shakedown cruise, we were told we would be heading to San Diego. This was the first time the Navy ever told the crew where we were headed, which we thought was rather strange. "Before heading to San Diego we went to Hunters Point, where they loaded a big wooden box on board. What was unusual about the box - other than it being the size of a van - the box was polished wood with all the countersunk screw holes covered with wax. In addition, a detachment of Marines was assigned to guard it day and night. "We .lew it was su.l lething more thanjust a big box and the rumors started. Some of the guys said it was filled with .._ ^ote l toilet paper for General MacArthur and his staff. Someone said the captain had been told that whatever was in the box had the capability cf ° e ending the war. "The Indianapolis was a very fast ship, capable of 33 knots. We headed out at full speed, not to San Diego but to Hawaii. I am told that our travel time to Hawaii is still a record in the Navy. When we reached Hawaii, we refueled and were underway immediately to Tinian Island. There the box was offloaded and it was soon ashore. "Later we were to realize that what we had delivered did shorten the war it was the atomic bomb first dropped on Hiroshima. "From Tinian Island we headed to Guam and then on to the Philippines to meet up with some battleships. We had no escort and did not have sonar gear to detect submarines. Our second night out we were hit by two torpedoes from a Japanese submarine. "The two torpedoes hit in the bay area and the ship began to list immediately. I bunked in an area beneath the bridge and was asleep at the time. The time was 10 minutes after midnight, July 30,1945. My bunk mate, Ralph, and I decided to stick together and see if we could get to the bridge to get a lifejacket. It was hard to climb the ladder because of the slant of the ship. We made it to the bridge, but there were no lifejackets. "The order to abandon ship had already been sounded. On the bridge was Lt. Orr and one of my bugle buddies, Donald Mack. Lt. Orr said we all needed to get out of there, so I said "See you later, sir," saluted and went over the side. The banister was now at a 45- degree angle and I had to crawl over it to get down to the next deck. I assumed Ralph was following but when I got down, no Ralph. I hollered for him but no answer. "I crawled over another banister and then down the superstructure. By the whole nose of the ship was underwater pushed me up under one of our guns wRt ;ticking straight up. As I held onto the bars tell like I was going up when in reality, the gun was going down because the ship was sinking. "I swam away as fast as I could and then watched my home forthe lasttwo years disappear into the South Pacif ic. The ship by now had the hind end sticking out with the screws still turning. I had heard that a sinking ship could suck you under with it, so 1 swam farther away. "When it disappeared, there were tons of white bubbles, bubbling up out of the water. The water had so much phosphorus in it, the bubbles just glowed. Then, after awhile, everything was quiet. There was no one around me. I was by myself floating in the ocean. I remember not being too concerned because I was a good swimmer and I thought I would be picked up after daylight. "As I floated in the ocean and as I topped a swale, I noticed a dark object several hundred feet away. I decided to see what it was. As I swam toward the object, I didn't realize I was swimming through a lot of fuel. As I got closer, I could see that it was one of our planes that had fallen off the catapult. I could see that it was beginning to sink, but underneath the plane was a life raft. I watched the plane sink and then crawled into the fife raft. During the whole time I was in the water, I never once thought of sharks. That life raft would be the barrier between me and those sharks." That Ile raft was to be the difference between life and death for Morgan. Next week, the rescue. Glen G. Morgan 's name can be found on the Brazos Valley Veterans Memorial For more information; to make a contribution, or if you know a World War 11 Veteran whose story needs lobe told, contact the BVIMI at www veteransmemodal.org or Bill Youngkin at (979) 260 -7030. The E gle Here when you need us. WW II vet Dick Davidson will be the guest on "Veterans of the Valley" this week on KAMU -N veterans of A 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. NAMLLuamuedu Cnannel l5 /cox ruble One in a series of tributes to members of ° "I he Greatest Generation" who served our country during World War 11 Vi u oY�l`llo 1fi77':'U7t - By Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle Just after midnight on July 30, 1945, the U.S.S. Indianapolis was sunk by a Japanese submarine. Glenn G. Morgan of Camp Creek was aboard. The photo above, taken of him in uniform, was cropped from a picture with six of his buddies from the Indianapolis. Of the seven sailors in the photo, only Morgan and one other were to survive. Morgan was lucky. He was able to find a raft that had been stuck under one of the ship's planes that was sinking and crawled into it. "After I got into the raft I could see some other heads in the water and some other rafts," he recalled. "We eventually ended up that night with four rafts and twenty guys in the rafts. We tied the rafts together so that we were floating in a rectangular shape. We knew we had been sunk by a submarine and we didn't want to show a light. We waited for daylight and what we hoped would be our immediate rescue. "At daylight, the waves started to whitecap. Someone in one of the other rafts lost a canister overboard. It was a canister containing some flares, so I said I would swim out and get it before it drifted away. That was when the guy next to me, J.J. Moran, said,'Take a look out there!' When I did, I noticed for the first time sharks in the water. "The water was real clear where we were and you could see a good ways down into the water. Looking down, you could see sharks everywhere. There were hundreds of them. I remember being surprised that sharks would be out here in the middle of the ocean and not near a shore somewhere. "About 9 a.m. that first day we began to wonder why we hadn't seen any rescue effort. There was nothing. No ships, no planes, nothing. We thought we were the only survivors. The rafts had canisters of water and some containers of food, Spam. We would learn later that our buddies who didn't find rafts would be in the water for four days with no food, no water and all those sharks. "About mid - moming the first day, I got sick and started to vomit up the black oil I had swallowed swimming in the water the night before. I and most of the others were the same way most of the day. My eyes were also affected by the oil and I couldn't wash them with the seawater, so I would spit in my hands and rub my eyes until finally they Geared. "In one of the rafts was one of our officers, Lt. Freeze, who had been burned. He looked like he had a real bad sunburn. That afternoon he wanted to shoot flares even though nothing was on the horizon. By late that afternoon he just shared, with his eyes starting to glaze over. We kept watch over him, but by 2:30 in the morning we couldn't find a pulse. That morning, we held a prayer service over him and slid him over the side. We didn't watch the body sink because that was something none of us wanted to do. "During the second, third and fourth days, we watched the sharks watching us. One of the sharks was a really large one that we named Charlie. About the third day, I was sitting on a comer of the raft. You couldn't sit on the side of the raft without coordination. As I was sitting there I noticed Charlie approaching. He didn't circle, he came right on in. I scooted the guy next to me over as Charlie came right up on the raft. He didn't open his mouth, he just looked at us and then slid back into the water. We figured he was just curious but he was with us the whole time we were in the water. "About the third day, one of the guys suggested that we begin paddling toward the nearest land, at least do something besides float. Then someone said, 'Which direction and how far is that?' and I replied, 'About a mile and a hag' and pointed straight down. No one thought my comment was very funny. I found out later I was wrong. It was about four miles to the bottom. "We rationed the water and food, but we were also able to fish to supplement the Spam. It was my first experience with sushi. On the evening of the fourth night, we knew we were going to be rescued because we could see search lights off in the distance. "On the morning of the fifth day, we saw a dot over the horizon and recognized it as a plane. We pulled our mirrors out and flashed the sunlight back toward A. It soon flew right toward and over us. it was a Catalina, a plane that could land on the water. It didn't land because it was being used to pick up the floaters. We learned later that most of the guys who could only float were over 50 miles from our location. Most of them had been rescued the day before. "Over the horizon came the APO Ringness with 39 guys they had picked up from other rafts. We were taken to the hospital in Peleliu and then on to Guam. While at Guam, I was awarded the Purple Heart. I came back to the states on an aircraft carrier. I was given leave, and before my leave was up I was told I had enough points to be discharged. Texaco offered me my old job back and they let me keep ". my seniority. I stayed with Texaco for the next 37 years." Of the 1,197 men aboard the U.S.S. Indianapolis when it sank, only 317 survived. It is estimated that 300 men went down with the ship. The rest died of wounds they had received, drowned or were Wiled by the sharks. Of the 317 survivors, B4 are still alive today. The governor of Indiana recently offered space for a memorial in a museum in Indianapolis for the men and the memory of the U.S.S. Indianapolis. That memorial is being assembled today. Glenn G. Morgan 's name can be found on the Brazos Valley Veterans Memorial. For more information, to make a conMbution, or if you know a World War 9 Veteran whose story needs to be told, contact the BWM at www veleransmemonalorg or Bill Youngkin at (979) 260 -7030. The Eagle Here when yW need us. WW 11 vet Dick Davidson will be the guest on "Veterans of the Valley" this week on KAMU -N. 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. ®�xnnlu, "m „ea„