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HomeMy WebLinkAboutPaul Ybarra, Brazos Valley HeroesBy Bili Youngkin Special to The Eagle Paul Ybarra of Navasota is a kind, friendly man who meets everyone with a smile. But when recounting some of his experiences during World War II, his smiling eyes water and his chili trembles. These experiences, though more than 60 years in the past, still evoke a strong emotional response. Life for Paul Ybarra began at Clay in Burleson County on June 21, 1919, on a farm. Farming was what he did early in life, what he returned to after the war and what he did for the remainder of his working life. Now almost 89 years old, he is recovering at the College Station Med from a fall he recently suffered. As recalled by Ybarra, "After the war started I went to the office in Navasota to enlist but was told that my feet were too flat. I asked to be checked again and was accepted." Ybarra entered the army on March 13, 1942, and was sent to Ft. Sam Houston in San Antonio and then to Ft. Sill, Okla., for training in artillery. He was assigned to Camp Barkley, Texas, where he became part of "A" Battery, 343rd Field Artillery Battalion of the 90th Infantry Division. The division's Texas- Oklahoma or "TO" patch was to become known as the "Tough Ombres." ,. As recalled by Ybarra, "After, Christmas 1943, we were sent to Ft. Dix, New Jersey, and in early 1944 we went aboard the Queen Mary for England. In England uve trained for what we all knew would be the invasion of France." On June 3, 1944, the battalion was moved to Newport, England, where they boarded Liberty ships. On June 5th, the ships left the harbor and sailed around the southern tip of England to join up for the invasion of the Normandy Coast, on June 6, 1944, D-Day. Ybarra's unit, as part of the 90th Infantry Division, went ashore on Utah Beach. Ybarra, though not in the first wave, went ashore the first day. This memory is one that affects him today. "When we went ashore the dead and wounded lay all around, some (wounded) asking for help," he said. "We were afraid. We just wanted to get away so we ran about a mile off the beach to set up. That beach was a horrible place. When that day was over, I had to pinch myself to realize I'm still here." The 90th, along with the 343rd, was involved with the push across the Cotentin Peninsula to Cherbourg, France, in an attempt to cut off the escape route of the German army. The advance was so fast that artillery units like the 343rd were being "leapfrogged" until they finally lost contact with the enemy after 53 days of constant combat. One of Ybarra's other memories that caused him to answer after a struggle to control his emotions was the Battle of the Bulge. As he quietly stated, "It was cold. I never experienced such cold before. When you are artillery and the elevation of your tube . goes past a certain degree, the higher you raise your tube, the closer the targets, the closer the enemy. During this time we had them almost straight up and then we leveled them." After the Bulge it was back across the Siegfried Line and on into Germany. It was during that time that Ybarra was to receive the one medal he has kept all these years - a Purple Heart. When discussing that event, he pulled up his trouser leg to show his scar. The Purple Heart is now faded but forms the center piece of the shadow box his family made for his military memorabilia. During the time of the Battle of the Bulge and thereafter, Ybarra's unit would be part of Patton's Third Army. Ybarra's deception of General Patton is "he was a fighter." When the war ended Ybarra and his unit were in Czechoslovakia at Cejkovy. One of Ybarra's friends in the outfit and someone from back home was Lee Edge from Bryan, whom Ybarra described as a good and very brave man: "He helped us get out of a bad spot one time." Ybarra didn't elaborate further, but the records of the unit show that Wallace L. Edge of Bryan was awarded the Bronze Star. As stated by Ybarra: "After the war I would go see him from time to time. After the war when I got home, my mother and father say they never want me to leave ever again and I didn't want to, either. But I was glad I served and I'm proud of what we did. I'm proud of my country." And we all should be proud of Paul Ybarra and those like him. Paul Ybarra's name is found on the Brazos Valley Veterans Memorial. If you want to ha ve a name added to the Veterans Memorial, for more information, to make a contribution, or if you know a World War II veteran whose story needs to be told, contact the BWM at www. veteransmemorial. org or Bill Youngkin at (979) 260-7030.