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HomeMy WebLinkAboutJ erome G. "Jack" Zubik, Brazos Valley HeroesA N Jerome G. "Jack" Zubik By Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle For those Aggies who attended A&M from 1929 until 1982 and were in the Corps of Cadets, there were two names that you came to recognize for senior dress - Holick's for your senior boots and Zubik's for your uniforms, especially yours boot pants and midnight shirts. Jerome G. "Jack" Zubik and his father before him were skilled tailors to decades of Aggies. But Jack Zubik didn't just make uniforms, he wore them in World War II. According to Zubik, "I was born April 20, 1917, in Brazos County and graduated from Stephen F. Austin High in Bryan in 1934. My father was an immigrant from Czechoslovakia and had apprenticed and learned to be a tailor. In 1929 he started Zubik's Tailor Shop on College Main at Northgate. I learned the trade from him and worked for and with my dad until I left for the service in 1943. "We all had draft numbers, but I got tired of waiting. So I signed up for voluntary induction, which meant I left with the next call-up. I was sent to Ft. Sam Houston at Dodd Field and then to Camp Hood for 18 weeks. Sixteen of those weeks were basic training as an infantryman and the last two at North Camp Hood in what the army termed'killer college' It was designed to teach you how to kill and how not to be killed. I was particularly interested in the how not to get killed part." Zubik would be shipped to LeHavre France aboard the Queen Elizabeth along with 18,000 other men. As he recalled, "When we landed on French soil, a fellow Texan had painted a sign on the beach which read"Texas 5,343 miles - with an arrow pointing west. I knew I was a long way from home but didn't know how far until then. "I was in a replacement depot in France when a jeep came and picked up four of us and delivered us to the 45th Infantry Division, about two miles into Germany along the Siegfried Line. I remember thinking, 'We've about got this war won - we're already in Germany'When I reported, I was placed in the first squad in my platoon. With me being added to the squad, it now totaled five men. There were a total of 10 men in my platoon, which usually would have 40-60 men. "One of the first soldiers I met was Jim Wilkensen from Azle, Texas. He had started attending A&M and knew my name. We had a brand new platoon leader and he started appointing people jobs. He said, 'You will be the squad leader of the first squad. I told him that I had no combat experience and was afraid I might run. I guess he considered that and my honesty and decided I should be the assistant squad leader. The first time into the line, the first dead body I saw was an American and it sort of shook me up. But the next four bodies were Germans. I decided it was better odds on our side than on their side. "We had several skirmishes with the Germans and on one night patrol our squad leader was shot in the knee, making me the squad leader. By this time I had a lot more experience than most of the replacements we had received. When the Battle of the Bulge started, we marched back 22 miles into France as fast as we could go. It was so damn cold. You couldn't dig foxholes because you couldn't break through the crust. I ended up with frostbite on my fingers and toes and had to spend 10 days in a hospital they had setup in a monastery. "I went back to my unit to join in crossing the Rhine River, which was very much like the Brazos - wide and deep. One of the major skirmishes I remember after crossing the Rhine was Nuremberg. Nuremberg was a walled city with a wall up 8 to 10 feet high around it. Myjob was to take a squad to the wall under as much cover as we could find, follow the wall until we came to an opening andthen enter the city. While we were moving along the wall, a German machine gun opened up on us, showering us with brick splatters. By the time we silenced that gun, five of us were wounded. But we were able to be attended by our medic and stayed with the outfit. "We took Munich and then proceeded tojust outside Berlin. We could have taken Berlin, but the politicians had agreed to let the Russians take it. So we sat and watched Berlin fall to the Russians. That is where the war ended for me. "When the war ended, my Dad wanted me to visit his two sisters who lived in Czechoslovakia, where he was born. I tried to get a pass to go but I was told by my commanding officer that the area was under the control of the Russians and there was no guarantee they would let me in or let me out. I decided I wanted to see my wife and children more than the ancestral home and my aunts. "When I was discharged in San Antonio there were about 500 of us waiting to be called to process out of the army. This major walked to the front of the group and said, 'I'm going to make one soldier very happy. Sgt. Jerome Zubik, you're going to be first' With my name of Zubik, I had been at the end of every line I had stood in in the army. That major made me very happy." When Zubik returned home he operated Zubik'sTailors until his retirement. When asked about his war experience Zubik said, "I am proud to have served. It made me physically and mentally strong. You learned to take care of yourself, but you also took care of your buddy next to you., For his service, Zubik would be awarded the Bronze Star for his actions along the Siegfeld Line and a Purple Heart. Jerome G. "lack"Zubik'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 I/ veteran whose story needs to be told, contact the BVVM at www.bvvm.org or Bill Youngkin at (979) 260-7030.