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HomeMy WebLinkAbout Bill J. Ravey, Brazos Valley HeroesBy Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle Bill J. Ravey of Bryan had a goal of becoming an electrical engineer, but World War II changed that goal and the direction his life would take. He became a P-51 pilot. in the China-Burma-India theater during the war and would continue with a career in the military for 32 years, retiring as a full colonel. As Ravey recalled, "I was born in FortWorth in 1923 and grew up there. I attended Northside High, graduating in February 1941 atthe age of 17. I enrolled at Arlington A&M, studying electrical engineering. I would take 17 to 18 hours each semester while working full-time at Armour aAd Co. packing house hauling beef carcasses for 45 cents per hour. I was trying to get my degree as quickly as I could because the war had started and I knew that was where I was headed. "In the early part of 1943 all of our class at A&M Arlington, Tarleton and Texas A&M were called into the military. The guys at Texas A&M were commissioned and we were given the option of OCS or the cadet flight program. I chose the cadet flight program. I was sent to Shepherd Field for basic training, but we knew more than most of the instructors because of our military training in college. "From there I was sentto San Antonio for qualification testing. Your scores would indicate what you were best qualified for - a pilot, navigator or bombardier. I scored the exact same score on all three tests, so they let me choose. I chose the flight program. I was then sent to Mission, Texas, for cadet advanced flight training. "When we graduated, we were commissioned. The day I was commissioned, I received a month's pay as a second lieutenant, money for my officer's uniform and a month's flight pay, all in cash. I remember fanning all that money out in my hand and thinking I had never seen so much money in my life, and it was all mine. "The most dangerous period of my military career was next, advanced flight training in P-40s in Waycross, Georgia. Those planes were pieces of junk, and every time you went up your life was at risk. Several of us had to do a dead-stick landing because of engine failure. When those who survived the P-40s were sent to Sarasota, Florida, we were given brand-new P-51 s. It was the exact opposite of training in P-40s . We had no accident as a class because the P-51 was such a better plane. When we completed that training we were sent on priority A-1 orders to the war. "I was sent to Asansol, India, where I became part of the 1 st Air Commandos. Their mission had been and The 1st Commandos would fly in British and Gurkha troops to attack points on the rail line, which was their sole supply line that ran along the Irrawaddy River. The bombers and fighter planes would assist in those raids and then we would pull our soldiers out before the Japanese could arrive to repel our raids. If we couldn't get the Gurkhas out in time, they just melted into the jungle and made life very difficult for any Japanese troops that followed them into the jungle. The Gurkhas were fierce,fighters, but especially effective in a jungle environment. That rail line also crossed the River Kwai, which was the basis of a movie after the war entitled `Bridge Over the River Kwai' "The war ended with the bombing of Japan. As one of the newer pilots, I was utilized as a co-pilot flying a C-47 moving supplies into China. That was a big come- down for a fighter pilot. That was also my first time to fly over the Himalayas, or'The Hump,' as it was called. The first time I flew over the Himalayas, the view of Mt. Everest was spectacular but I didn't have my camera. "We ended up flying out of Husian, China, and Sian, China, but China was becoming a dangerous place after the war because of the communists. I finally got orders to head home in December 1945, landing at Camp Kilmer, New Jersey, on January 3, 1946. By the time I got home, I had decided that I liked the military life and wanted to stay in. I was fortunate to be interviewed for acceptance into the regular Army (Air Corps), which later became the U.S. Air Force. "Starting in 1952 through 1955 I was involved with the U.S. Nuclear Testing Program in Nevada and the South Pacific. I have witnessed numerous nuclear blasts and was amazed at the destructive ability of a nuclear blast. During this time I was around more civilians than military people. I can tell you that those nuclear physicists are a little different from most of us. They were some really intelligent guys in the nuclear program. That nuclear.program and the testing we did is probably the reason there hasn't been alarge-scale global war since World War II." Ravey finished his combat career while flying C- 130s in the Vietnam war. His military career ended with him serving as the vice-commander of Clark Air Base in the Philippines. As stated by Ravey, "I enjoyed the service. You can take any job and make it interesting or you can make it dull. I always made my job an interesting and enjoyable one." Bill J. Ravey's name is found on the Brazos Valley Veterans Memorial. If you want to have a name added to the Veterans Memorial, for more information, to make a contribution. or if you know a Wnrld war Il vataran