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HomeMy WebLinkAbout Eldon L. Sanders, Brazos Valley HeroesBy Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle Eldon L. Sanders of the Peach Creek Community of Brazos County had a career of service to his country and service to the medical treatment for those who serve their country. His passion for the care and medical needs of others began with his father in Pawnee, Illinois. According to Sanders: "My father was not a doctor but was a livery man, which meant he operated a buggy service for others. His most frequent customer was our local doctor. At that period of time, all babies were delivered at home. My father would drive the doctor on his rounds to birth all the babies. "After one birth atone farm, the doctor would sleep in the buggy on the way to the next delivery while my father drove. This continued until 1947, when they paved the roads in the area sufficiently so that one could drive a car over what had been impassible roads except in ahorse-drawn buggy. "As a result, my father had all the birth records in his livery book. Until 1929, there were no requirements for a birth certificate when a baby was born. I now have that book, and people who were bom in that time period still contact me requesting their birth information." It was that experience and a visit to the doctor for what was thought to be a broken collarbone which influenced the direction Sanders' life would take, even with war beginning in Europe and the Pacific. "The doctor who treated me recognized my interest in what was happening in his office and he allowed me to help in his office through my high school years, assisting him in the treatment of some pretty serious injuries. "After I graduated in May 1941, I enlisted in the regular army corps (Air Corps) for the purpose of taking flying training. At that time, the law did not permit commissioning of an officer below the age of 21, but the army had the `Flying Sergeants' program. I was sworn in August 1941 and shipped to Camp Grant, Illinois, for further processing. As soon as I completed my classification test, I and iwo other regular army enlistees were placed on a train to Sheppard Field, Texas. What a surprise that was. base dispensary. While waiting to see the doctor, the men there were unpacking and I volunteered to help. When it became obvious to one of the doctors there that I had some familiarity with the equipment, he left but soon returned with the first sergeant of the medical detachment, and the doctor instructed him to have me assigned to them. I became a medic on the 13th day of December,1941." It would be.his field of service for the rest of his career. After additional training, Sanders would be shipped to the European Theatre. But before he left, he married an army nurse he had met who was his superior officer. Their dating was conducted in secret - as well as their marriage -for some time thereafter. As recalled by Sanders: "We departed Hampton Roads, Virginia, on April 1, 1944.- The trip was pretty uneventful until the evening of April 20, 1944. As we began to pass through the Straits of Gibraltar, we were attacked by 23 JU-88 torpedo bombers. The SS Paul Hamilton, an ammunition carrier with 580 men aboard, was hit. We were about 100 yards behind them when it blew up, killing all aboard. "The blast was so powertul it caused a tidal wave to almost to wash over our ship, hitting us with shrapnel. And the most gruesome flotsam you could imagine landed on our ship. I had been assigned duty as an ammunition carrier for the five-inch cannon mounted on the bow of our ship. When the tidal wave hit us, I had to hang onto anything available to keep from being washed overboard. "We eventually landed at Bari, Italy, and then on to Naples, Italy, where I was part of the Air Force Service Command, where I remained until the war ended. With the war's end I was sent home and discharged. Ninety days later, I re-enlisted and was able to continue my career in medical service. I eventually received my commission and served at facilities across the United States and the world, retiring as a lieutenant colonel. We returned to my wife's family farm here in Brazos County that has been in her family since the late 1800's. It was a satisfying career and it has been a satisfying retirement. "I think witnessing that terrible event in the Straits of Gibraltar created an attitude in me that I would give all the support I could to our medical staff, who in turn gave all their support to our patients. That attitude "The place was under construction and we ended remained with me and is why I had such a satisfying up in a tent city at Iowa Park, Texas. During my training career." at Sheppard Field it was the only place I had been where you could sink in mud up to your knees and have dust blow in your eyes. I finally received my flight physical and discovered, much to my dismay, that I was disqualified because of red/green color blindness. "They had no place for me, so I became a regular of the KP group until I got sick and had to go to the -~ . - - Eldon L. Sander'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 World War II veteran whose story needs to be told, contact the BWM at www.veteransmemorial.org or BiII Youngkin at (979) 260-7030. ~_ __