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HomeMy WebLinkAboutHorace B. Hamilton, Brazos Valley HeroesBy Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle First of Two Parts We are losing our World War II veterans daily, and with them their memories of their experiences in the war. There is one group that has few left to recall the greatest event of their time, the day it all started. Those veterans call themselves the Pearl Harbor Survivors. Horace B. Hamilton, who lives near Caldwell, is one of those survivors who lived through that fateful day. As recalled by Hamilton, "I had graduated from Leander High in 1941 at the age of 16.1 was born in Florence, Texas, on June 2, 1924, and didn't turn 17 until after I graduated. I wanted tojoin the navy, so with my parents' permission, I joined on June 13, did my boot training in San Diego and was sent to Pearl Harbor to go aboard the USS Phoenix, a light cruiser. "One of the first things we did after I went aboard was escort three presidential liners filled with troops to reinforce Corregidor Island in the Philippines. I didn't realize at the time that most of those guys would be dead or serve out the war in a prison camp if they survived the Battan Death March. "We had returned to Pearl for about a week before the attack. That Sunday started out like any other morning aboard ship. I had my breakfast and was on the fantail, the back end of the ship. We saw some planes coming, but didn't think too much about it because our pilots used the Utah as a target ship. They would fly in and drop sand bags, like they were bombs, for target practice. "About the time they started dropping their torpedoes and bombs, we saw the red sun on the sides of their planes. One of the guys yelled'Those are Japs!'The torpedo planes were the first to hit. Pearl was shallow, and those torpedoes were set properly and they knew which ships to fly to.They had very good spy work before they hit us that day. "On Battleship Row, the USS Nevada got underway and was trying to make it around Ford Island when they took a bomb down their smokestack. Instead of clogging up the harbor, they pulled to the side before it sank. That act kept the channel open. The next ship was the USS Arizona, and it went down quickly. They hit the Maryland, the Tennessee; the Oklahoma capsized, then the West Virginia and the last one of the battleships, the California, took a torpedo. "Several waves of planes came over us - torpedo planes, dive bombers, higher-altitude bombers and fighter planes. They also had a midget sub in the harbor. On the Phoenix, we had a lot of near misses. Before we could return fire, we had to have the marines, who had 45s, shoot the locks off the ammo lockers because no one our guns. We and the Detroit, along with four'tin cans; destroyers, got underway and made it out of the harbor. "Our orders when we got to sea were to search out and engage the enemy. For three days we tried to find the Japanese, but they had left the area. It is a good thing they had left, because if we had "When we pulled out of Pearl, a picture was taken of the Phoenix. It is probably the most famous photo taken at Pearl. It shows the Arizona and the Maryland in the background, on fire and with all the black smoke filling the sky. In the foreground of the photo is a periscope sticking out of the water from that Japanese sub. We didn't have one casualty or take any direct hit. From that day forward, we were called the'Lucky Phoenix. off the Nevada and supplies and ammo. We had to cut off our gun liners and repairthem. As soon as we could get that done, we took a convoy of wounded, civilians and dignitaries back to San Francisco. On the Detroit, they had loaded all the gold they had in Hawaii to take to San Francisco. We made two of those trips to San Francisco. "Afterthat, we escorted the Queen Mary and the other ships to Australia. We were the first American warship to dock at Melbourne in 30 years. We were re-supplied and operated along the western coast of Australia, patrolling the Indian Ocean and what was then the Dutch West Indies. It was here the Japanese would sink the his flagship. We began our part of the campaign to take back the Pacific with our first action in the Solomon Islands at New Britain, and then Guadalcanal. The Phoenix made every battle we were involved in on every island landing, including Leyte Gulf. "In 1943, we headed back to the east coast of the U.S. for an Secretary of State, to Casablanca, Morocco, where he and President Roosevelt met with Churchill and the other allied leaders at the the battles leading up to the invasion of the Philippines. There they would be involved in the greatest naval battle in history. 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 BVVM at www.bvvm.org or Bill Youngkin at (979) 260-7030. The deadline for adding names to the memorial wall for this year's Veteran's Day By Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle Second of Two Parts the fleet as best they could, some venturing into the Japanese Fleet formation. "Still, the Japanese Fleet came on. Our destroyers picked them up several miles away and passed the word. Already guns were beginning to train out, getting the range for the first salvo, the most important thing in an engagement like this. Few on the ship had ever witnessed a naval battle before v yet everyone handled themselves like veterans. "The Seventh Fleet was ready as the Japs edged closer. We knew at any second the big guns on one of the ships was going to explode, then all would open up. At 3:53 our battleships opened up, the cue for all the ships to let go. Tracer shells shot out at the surprised enemy as ships seemed to fire from every conceivable angle. A Jap battleship was the main target, and shells landed around it in a never-ending stream. The first salvos were near misses. After that, there were no misses. Every ship poured shell after shell into the now-flaming Japanese warship until the blaze lit up the horizon for miles around.The flames told us how well we were succeeding. Horace B. Hamilton of Burleson County was one of the survivors of Pearl Harbor aboard the USS Phoenix. After Pearl Harbor, the Phoenix would be called the "Lucky Phoenix" because she did not incur any direct hits or suffer any casualties during the Japanese assault on Pearl Harbor. That title of "Lucky Phoenix" would stay with the crew of the Phoenix until the war's end. The Phoenix would be involved in one other epic event in the Pacific, the Battle of Leyte Gulf. According to Hamilton, "We aided the invasion of the Philippines and were offshore when General MacArthurwaded ashore and proclaimed, 'I have returned: This is where we started to have a lot of air attacks by the Japanese. Again, we were lucky and suffered no direct hits by the Japanese planes. What we didn't realize was we were about to be in the next great naval battle of the Pacific, the Battle of Surigao Strait" Hamilton has an account of that event that was compiled shortly after the battle. It states in part: "It was a blustering hot day in the Philippines when word came that the Japanese Fleet was on the move toward our position and a huge naval engagement might be expected within a matter of hours. Our ship took on an air of its own, as if feeling the pulse of the crew and our long-sought chance to prove our worth. "The dinner hour was strangely quiet as each man pondered over what the future might hold. Word passed of the size and strength of the Japanese fleet, so all hands were aware of the problem facing us. "Our force consisted of battleships, cruisers and destroyers reinforced by a sizeable number of PT boats who served as advance spotters. We had all heard Tokyo Rose boast about the Japanese's one big strike to destroy the American Fleet, and here it was. We knew the fate of the Philippines lay in the balance. "For 45 minutes this battle raged on with the Japanese. After their major ships were aflame and sinking, they turned and ran. Early the following dawn, we could see the actual damage we had done. Jap ships were ablaze, belching smoke thousands of feet in the air. As we came upon them, we turned our guns on the sinking cripples so they would never again threaten the American Fleet. All hands were tired but supremely happy after a hectic night. One of the greatest naval battles in history was ours, and we knew it." Hamilton and the crew of the Phoenix would return to Leyte Gulf and continue to assist the American invasion of the Philippines. One of their last duty assignments of the war was to take aboard the survivors of the Battan Death March and deliver them to hospitals in the area. These were the same men they had delivered to Corregidor just before the war started with the surprise attack conducted at Pearl Harbor. When asked about his time of service, Hamilton stated, "I'm glad I did it. I'm glad I did my part. Freedom is not free. You have to pay the price, and that price is usually the blood of the veterans.' "We got underway and took up our battle lines shortly after sunset. Most of the crew was on deck, waiting for the call to battle stations. Hours passed. It began to look like the Japanese had turned tail and run. Under a full moon, our ships were clearly visible and everyone was uneasy at the delay. "Suddenly, word went out that our spotting boats, the PT boats, had located the Japanese Fleet. It was now 1;30, and . .1 - nT L.... Lna If you want to have a name added to the Brazos Valley 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.bvvm.org