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HomeMy WebLinkAboutAlfred E. Hanson, Brazos Valley HeroesTaliey One in a series of tributes to members of "The Gr`eatesl Generation" who served our country during world War II First of Two Parts By Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle Alfred E. "Al" Hanson is a man who enjoys Irfe and the people in his life. I don't think I've ever smiled as much as I did while conducting his interview for this article. Whenever the phone would ring, which it did often, he would say "that's probably President Bush calling." He never did say which one. AI was bom in 1924 in San Antonio but moved with his parents in 1926 to Baytown, where he attended and graduated from Goose Creek School in 1942. "My parents were deaf - what people called deaf and dumb back then, having met at the Austin School for the Deaf. My dad was a lino type operator and a proofreader for the Baytown Sun. There were four of us boys and I remember my Dad telling us as far back as 1938 or 1939 that all four of us would have to go to war with Germany some day. He never mentioned Japan. But when the war came, all four of us did serve. My older brother Herbert in the Army, me in the Army Air Corps, my brother Halbert in the Navy and my baby brother Jack in the Army Air Corps. "War broke out my senior year and I remember Life magazine predicting that the war would last only six weeks. Were they ever wrong. I played football at school and remember everyone wanting to join up. We had the best season we ever had our senior year. We all decided to wad until after the football banquet to join. "My fiend Leonard Thibodeaux wanted to double - date with me to the banquet since I had a car. I told him O.K., but he would have to pay for the gas, which cost 15 cents a gallon. He filled up the car, paying with a $10 bill. I asked him where he got that kind of money and he told me he got it from lasting two minutes in the ring with a bear at a carnival. He said that was the fastest he ever moved in his fife... Leonard was awarded our outstanding player award. After the banquet Leonard volunteered for the Marines. Leonard was killed on Guadacanal. "The rest of the seniors on the team waited until after graduation before we volunteered as a team, all 15 of us. They told us to go home until they called. In eady 1943 they called us all in for induction. When we got to Houston there were recruiters from all of the branches and before long our football team was headed to all of the branches of the service. I ended up in the Army Air Corps and was sent to Ft. Sam and then Sheppard Field in Wichita Falls for basic training. "While I was at basic, we were all out on the drill field doing calisthenics. I was talking to a fellow behind me when the instructor stopped everyone and asked me to come up on the stand. He told me that since he didn't seem to be able to hold my interest he wanted to see if I could do a better job in leading everyone. I looked out at everyone and told them to take a five - minute break. Fortunately he laughed and told me to get back in line." While at Sheppard Feld, AI became involved in the camp boxing competition, making it all the way to the championship bout for the middleweight division. "I fought a guy named Blacky Schwartz from Louisiana who had some semi -pro experience. We had to go three rounds and I had him beat after the first two rounds but in the third round, he knocked me out cold. After the match my base commander asked me if I wanted a rematch and I said yes. I really trained for that re- match, but at 4 a.m. on the day of the re -match a guy Game around waking some of us up. He said,'Get your things; you're leaving.' As I left on the troop train that day, I remember thinking that Blacky Schwartz was one lucky S.O.B." AI was sent to Sioux Falls, S.D., for radio school. "They had such a need for radio operators, the school was conducted on three eight -hour shifts. We studied code, mechanics on how to repair the radios and practiced on sending and receiving messages. You had to be able to send and receive 14 words in a minute. I was able to do 18. "Before they would give you your wings you had to send and receive a message while flying. They took me out to the air strip, where I climbed in a Piper Cub behind the pilot. They had a pad and key there and I was able to send and receive with no problem. After I did that, the pilot went higher and asked me it I saw any other planes. I said 'No, Sir,' and he asked if my safety bed was fastened and I said 'Yes, sir.' He then did a complete flip and when he finally straightened up, my fingers were almost bleeding from holding on so tight. That's when I wished I had stayed on the farm." Out of the 30 to 35 men in the class when radio school started, only seven graduated. Al was sent to Denver and then Sad Lake City, Utah, where he almost froze to death before being shipped to Del Valle Feld outside Austin. "I got some leave and went home and married Ruby Novasoad, my high school sweetheart, who remained my sweetheart until the day she died. We were stationed at Bergstrom and one day we went out shopping. You always went out in uniform so no one would question why you weren't serving your country. I noticed a deaf couple and went over to talk to them, using sign language. Ruby overheard a couple of ladies behind her comment that 'The war must be getting really bad because they were now taking deaf and dumb boys in the service.' AI was chosen to be a member of C -47 crew being sent to Pathfinder School in Indiana, which enabled the planes to fly at night with radar. It was there that he would become part of a crew that would fly many, many missions in the Pacif ic. Next week, the war in the Pacific for At and his crew mates. Alfred E. "Al" Hanson's name can be found on the Brazos Valley Veterans Memorial For more information, to make a contribution, or if you know a Wodd War 11 Veteran whose storyneeds to be told, contact the BWM at www veteransmemodal.org or Bill Youngkin at (979) 260 -7030. t 1nt in a series of tributes to inenoers of "The. c,r<'riI I c wiwration" who scrr'r our country during world war II E I Second of Two Parts "When we were gone on missions, which sometimes would last a week, they would put your mail on your bunk. By Bill Youngkin Whenever we took off I made, the sign of the cross and I Special to The Eagle made it again when we landed. Then I hoped and prayed Alfred E. "AI" Hanson was the radio operator on a C -47 I would have mail waiting on my bunk. I always had mall, crew that had just completed its training and was to be thanks to my sweet Ruby. Some of her letters I would read sent for duty in the Pacific Theatre In 1944, three and four times. "After we completed the Pathfinder school our crew, "Of all the places we flew into, Okinawa was one of the instead of flying out to California, was boarded on a troop toughest. We lost a lot of ships, equipment and men on train to Hamilton Field. When we finally arrived we were Okinawa. It was a sample of what the invasion of Japan assigned temporary barracks. I decided I would go to the was going to be like. movie show that night. "We were always busy flying food, medicine, ammo to "As I was standing in line I noticed a guy behind me who the troops in the field. With the invasion of the Philippines was looking really bad. He was yellow - tinted, wrinkled and we had one emergency mission. Some of our guys skinny. He asked if I was headed overseas and I said yes and he said he had just returned. I asked him where he were fighting in the hills and were in desperate need of had been serving and he said Biak Island, New Guinea, and everything. We received parachutes of different colors he said he was suffering from jungle rot he had contacted attached to what we were to drop. White for water, red for there. ammo, blue for food and green for medical supplies. "He showed me his fingernails, which were black, and "A lieutenant came along from the Army with a said that his feet looked worse. He then told me that on walkie - talkie. Our guys couldn't use flares because of the Biak Island'If the Japs don't get you, then the malaria will. Japanese, so we had to locate them through the walkie- And, if the malaria don't get you, then the jungle rot will.' I talkies. The heat from the ground caused significant said to myself that 91 ever ended up looking like that guy, I updrafts and downdratts. We flew real low, almost at stall wasn't going to come home. I didn't stay for the movie. speed, making pass attar pass. When we finally made radio "That night we experienced an earthquake. If you have contact had pinpoint their location, so I would run never been in one, it will scare the hell out of you and I was from the A lieutenant to our pilots relaying info, like A rmy lie scared enough already." move 200 yards left or right. At and his crew left the next day on a C -54 to Hawaii, stopping on Johnson Island, Tarawa and then Guadalcanal. "If we didn't drop right on them, the Japs would get the From there they were shipped to their duty station, Biak food, water, etc. and our guys would be in worse shape. Island, New Guinea. We managed to get it all to them and managed to get back "All I could think of when we landed on Biak Island was without getting shot down by the Japs on the ground. I felt hoping I didn't get the jungle rot like that guy at Hamilton like we made a difference for those guys that day." Field. At Biak we flew a C-47 to wherever we had American When the war ended, Al was stationed in the Philippines, troops in the area. We hauled supplies, troops, armor and but he and his crew were to became part of the occupation one time a bunch of nurses. You always tried to land and forces in Japan. unload whatever you were carrying so you could get back. Although most of the landing stops were called secure, "We ended up flying Japanese officials to places they there were Japanese troops in the hills and jungles on needed to go to, including MacArthur's headquarters in almost all of those islands. If you didn't fly out before dark, Manila. The Japanese were very nice and respectful to us. it meant spending the night in some water - filled foxhole. Everyone bowed when they met you. Whenever we were "Whenever we left to go on a mission, I made sure I back at headquarters in Japan, we went to the board on had my .45- caliber pistol, my pocketknife, a cigarette the wall to see if your name was on the list to go home. lighter and the St. Christopher medal my wife had given When I saw my name I got tears in my eyes." me always hung around my neck. The other thing that was essential to a radio man was my code book. It had the At returned to Seattle on December 20,1945, but wasn't codes of all the areas we flew to, which was just about able to be discharged and make it home before Christmas. every island there was in the Pacif ic Theatre. I also had the After the war, he attended the Luling Foundation, where he frequency of Tokyo Rose, who played the best music. I still Teamed the meat business. He opened a processing plant have that code book today. in Hearne and eventually owned and operated Readfield "Flying in the Pacific was always an adventure. Lots of Meats in Bryan until he sold it to the Ruffin family. times you had to fly over a lot of open water. If you went All the Hanson boys survived the war, but several of down you hoped they would be able to find you, so I made it a habit of reporting our position every few hours. One his football teammates didn't. When asked about his day we had our right engine go out. An engine going out experience in the war, Al responded, "I did what I was was fairy common, but this one day the other engine was asked to do." also having problems. Our pilot told us to prepare to bail Alfred E. 'AI" Hanson's name can be found on the out. I opened the side door and had our fife raft ready to Brazos Valley Veterans Memorial For more information, throw out. The raft would inflate when it I realized that if I threw the raft out and hit the water. But jumped, I would be to make a contribution, or If you know a World War It along way from the raft and would probably drown trying Veteran whose story needs to be told, contact the BWM to swim to it - if I could find fl. I decided I would take my at www.veteransmemorial.org or Bill Youngkin at (979) chances and stay with the plane. We made it back. 260 -7030. The E gle Viet Nam vet Bob Spoede will be the guest on "Veterans of the Valley" this week on KAMU -N Veterans of the Valley, hosted by WTAW's Tom Turbfville, can be seen Fridays at - 8:30 p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays at 6:30 p.m. of Hnrnu.omu.ed" cbanne1151c ... ablen