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HomeMy WebLinkAboutJoseph R. "Joe" Clark, Brazos Valley Heroes^ By Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle We have all seen a lot of Aggie rings, but you will never see one smoother than the one worn by Joseph R. "Joe" Clark, class of '44 and now of Bryan. It still has some identifying marks, but you have to look close. As Clark recalls, "I got word that we were being allowed our senior ring even though we had not graduated, as most of us were in the service. I picked mine up in the Fall of 1944 while I was on leave before going to England. I wore it on all 32 of the missions I flew and I have worn it every day since I picked it up." Clark started life on a dairy farm in Handley, Texas, between Fort Worth and Dallas, in October 1922: His family moved to Stephenville, where he graduated from Stephenville High in 1940. "After I graduated, I enrolled at John Tarleton Agricultural College for one semester. My father had died in 1932 and my mother got a job at midterm of my first semester at Tarleton as the head of the American Legion Project House at A&M, so I left for A&M with her and helped her while I was in school. "I remember Sunday, December 7, 1941, because I was walking the `Bull Ring.' I had accumulated a few too many demerits and was walking them off that afternoon. I remember the second lieutenant in charge of Bull Ring coming out and halting our marching. He announced we were now at war because Japan had bombed Pearl Harbor. I thought he would dismiss us from Bull Ring, but he told us to go back to marching. "On September 19, 1942, I hitchhiked to Dallas to volunteer for the Army Air Corps flight cadet program. After a lot of tests I was accepted but told to return to school. They would call us back when they were ready for us. In January 1943 I was called to active duty at Shepherd Field, Wichita Falls, Texas. "I was sent to several sites, to include one school at Iowa State Teachers College in Cedar Falls, Iowa. There were also 500 WAVES in training there. We had a lot of companionship for a few months at that school." Clark received his pilot training in Visalia, California, and Marana Field in Arizona and his advanced flight training in Marfa, Texas, where he receive_ d his commission as a second lieutenant. "After I was commissioned I was sent to Roswell, N.M., to train as a B-17 pilot. We assembled our crews at Hunter Field in Savannah, Georgia, and after a little bit of training together, we headed to England over the northern route on January 6, 1945. Our first stop was Bangor, Maine. We got off the plane in shirt sleeves and ran to the PX to buy all the warm clothing we could find. At Goose Bay, Labrador, the weather was anywhere from 30 to 50 degrees below zero. We had to take the batteries out of the plane to keep them from freezing. before we could start the engines. We slid instead of rolling over the ice for take-off. "We took off at 2 a.m. in a blowing snowstorm and were flying almost blind all the way to Iceland. That's when you hoped your navigator really knew what he was doing. We lost two planes on that leg but we finally managed to land and completed the last leg, landing at Valley, Wales. "Our plane was taken away for refitting and we were assigned to the 306th Bomber Group at Thurleigh, England. That is where I spent the rest of the war. I flew four missions as the co-pilot on other crews until our crew flew its first mission on February 23, 1945, over Dresden, Germany. It was ourfirst mission, but Dresden was almost our last mission near the end of the war. "That last mission over Dresden involved 800 planes. We were in clouds and had to change altitude, and several planes collided. On our bombing run, we had bombs falling out of the sky in front of us, which meant there were planes above bombing through our group. At one point, I had to turn so steep to avoid a collision that we lost power and dropped 2,000 feet before we could get our speed back and get back information. "Shortly after that mission, we were conducting a bombing run on a German airtield at 11,000 feet when we had a bomb hang up in the bomb door. A couple of the crew took some tools and got into the open bomb door to try to dislodge it. That was when I saw a flak burst at eye level directly ahead of me antl then another 100 yards closer. I knew the Germans had us zeroed in and I pulled back to gain altitude as quickly as I could and was able to just get above the flak level. My radio operator called and asked me what the hell I was doing as I had almost dumped them out of the plane. But we avoided the flak and the bomb was now gone." Clark flew 32 missions before the war ended and was discharged. He returned to A&M, where he got his degree in accounting in 1947. Upon his return, he and his mother purchased the A&M Grill across from the post office at Northgate. He sold that after graduation and spent several years in Saudi Arabia before returning home to farm, ranch and own several properties and businesses around the state and country, to include several banks. His last bank was in Granbury, Texas, which he helped form in 1984 and sold last year. He is now retired in Bryan. "In 1996 all our crew, including wives, except one crew member who had passed away, met in Las Vegas, Nevada. It was the first time since the war that we had all gotten together. Thirty-two missions made us close. We found we were still close almost 50 years later." Joe Clarks 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 to be told, contact the BWM at www.