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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLowell J. Davidson, Brazos Valley HeroesBy Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle Lowell J. Davidson's time in combat in World War II was short but eventful. He left home as the engineer and top turret gunner for a B-24 bomber in the spring of 1944. Eight months and 35 combat missions later, he was back home to Texas in time to witness the birth of his first child. Life for Davidson began in Stillwater, Minnesota, on February 6, 1923. His father was a brick mason who decided the weather in Texas was much better than the weather up north for the construction industry and moved his family to Texas. According to Davidson, "With my dad in construction, we lived various places in Texas, but I graduated from Reagan High School in Houston in 1940. After graduating, I drove a truck until I got a job where my dad was working construction. Thatjob was working as a welder at a defense plant constructing torpedoes. I was told that I wouldn't get drafted with this defense job, so I decided to get married. Six months later, in 1942,1 received my draft notice. "I reported for duty and was sent in early 1943 to Biloxi, Mississippi, for training as an aircraft mechanic. From there I was sent to B-24 engineer school in Colorado, where I also was trained as a gunner. After all that training, our crew was assembled in Colorado Springs, Colorado, on our B-24. I was the engineer and the top turret gunner. "We flew to South America and then across the Atlantic to Dakar, Africa. We lost two planes on takeoff from Dakar because they had been sabotaged by the Germans. We landed in England and became part of the 8th Air Force - specifically, the 489th Bomb Squadron stationed at Adlebridge, England. During that time of the war, if you completed 35 missions, the Army Air Corps would take you off the flight line and find you anotherjobforthe rest of the war. I guess the thought was that if you had survived that many missions, you had tempted fate enough. "There pre some missions you remember better than others, but you always remember your first and your last missions - I guess because you are so nervous on both. On the first, you don't know what to expect and on the last you are thinking about getting it done so you can go home and hoping your plane is not one of the ones lost on that mission. "D-Day will also be always be in my memory, because that was the only day we flew two missions, both at low levels. We were low enough that day that we could see them shooting at us. I will also always remember the sight of all those ships and the wakes they made going across the channel. Even from the height of our plane, there were ships as far as you could see. "During my time the German fighters were few and far between, but the German anti-aircraft batteries were very proficient, I guess because they had so much practice by the time I got there. They also could pinpoint us on their radar, even if it was cloudy, and hit us. Our people came up with a plan to fool the radar and it worked real well when we went over known radar sites. All of the planes had boxes of tin foil strips that we would throw out of the back of the planes, all at the same time. Those tin foil strips made their radar ineffective in locating us. "On our 25th mission, we bombed Berlin. There was so much flak that you could just about walk on it. The only time the flak was that bad was on our last mission, which was to a plant site on the northern coast of Germany. That may have added to my nervousness on my last mission. "When we were on a mission, we didn't put on our flak jacket and helmet until we started seeing flak bursts because they were so heavy. I remember one occasion where I had just put my flak helmet on when a piece of shrapnel hit me on my helmet. Another instance, a piece of flak hit the sights on my turret gun. When it did, it exploded that plastic, blowing it in my face and all over the turret. That was as close as I came to being wounded. "Our radio operator wasn't so lucky. His position was d irectly below me, and when we opened the bomb bay door to drop our bombs, those doors on a B-24 would sometimes creep down. To keep the doors open and make sure we dropped our bombs, he would squat by the open door and hold the lever that kept the doors open. On one mission, while keeping the doors open, he was hit in his rear end. I was really glad that wasn't my job. "One incident that I was always remember occurred on the ground before one of our missions. When we as a crew entered our plane to go on a mission, all the gunners would get in their turrets, elevate the guns and pull the triggers to see if they clicked and were operational. "On one occasion, our plane had been used the day before by another crew and the ammo had not been removed. Our nose gunner failed to notice the ammo and he also didn't elevate his guns enough, because he sent about a 15-shell burst into a brand-new plane sitting next to us on the line. It caught on fire and burned to the ground. We thought our plane might catch on fire also, so I went back into our plane and the crew chief and I moved it away from the fire. It was a good thing that the burning plane didn't have any bombs aboard" For his service, Davidson received the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal with three clusters. When the war was over, Davidson was discharged and worked as a brick mason in Houston for several years before moving to Bryan in 1970. When asked about his time in the war, Davidson responded, "It was quite an experience. That was a unique time in history. I am proud to have done my part" Lowell J. DMdso8 name is found on the Brazos Valley Veterans Memorial. ff 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 11 veteran whose story needs to be told contact the 8 WM at www.bvvm.org or Bill Youngkin at (979) 260-7030.