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HomeMy WebLinkAboutCharlie Dileo, Brazos Valley HeroesBy Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle Charlie Dileo has a lot of experiences to look back on after 86 years of fife, but one experience he will always remember was his time in the army during World War 11. As recalled by Dileo, "I was raised on a farm where Nuches lane in Bryan is now located. We farmed cotton, corn and cattle on a little over 118 acres we had. I attended school at Woodville until I left to farm on a full -time basis. My dad died before the war started, leaving three of us boys to help my mother and sister on the farm. "Because of my families' situation, my brothers and I didn't think we would be drafted. But all three were - one into the Army Air Corps, one into the Navy, and me into the Army. With no one to work the farm, my mother and sister had to shut the farm down until we returned from the war. "I was sentto Ft. Sam (Houston) in San Antonio and then to Camp Hale just outside of Leadville, Colorado, in February 1943. Camp Hale was hel I, as we had to dril I in weather that was sometimes 35 degrees below zero. After basic training I was assigned to the 26th Remount Troop. "Our job was to train pack mules for service in the war in Burma. We were assigned two mules and two horses each week. Our job was to ride the horse dragging the two mules, on halters and with packs, up the mountain and then down the other side, then turn around and do the same thing that afternoon. It was pretty dangerous, as those mules would dig in and resist following, especially when coming down the mountain. When they dug in their hooves coming down, they often dislodged rocks that came tumbling down the mountain at you. Several guys got hurt, me included. 'The day I got hurt, the worst was when we had ridden to the top of the mountain. It was real icy, but the sergeant decided we should ride around a boulder and back for time. When it came my turn, my horse fell rounding the boulder, landing on my leg. They had to cut my horse loose from the gear so he could stand up. Then they lifted me up. My ankle wasthe size of watermelon.They had to cut my boot off and put me bads on the horse to take me down the mountain. When I saw how close my horse and I were when we fell to a 100 -foot dropoff, I really got scared. "When we got down from the mountain my lieutenant, Lt. Courtney, who was from College Station and an A &M graduate, transported me to the hospital in his Jeep. He was my buddy. I was in the hospital for 14 days and on light duty thereafter. They told me they were going to send me home, but when I got my orders they said Pennsylvania, not Bryan. "We eventually boarded ship in New York, where I spent the worst 14 days of my life. It was up and down, up and down. I didn't leave my bunk for the first three days I was so sick. Thank goodness I was on the top bunk. If they hadn't taken me up on deck for some fresh air I don't know if I would have made it We landed in England and then on to France, where I was assigned to a quartermaster unit and assigned as a M.P. in Verdun, France. I would remain a M.P. until I was discharged. "One of our primary jobs as M.P.s was to make sure the American soldiers who were being relieved off the lines weren't allowed to enter the houses of ill- repute operating in the area. We weren't very popular, but we did ourjob until one day one soldier pulled a pistol and stuck it in my face. I decided he should be allowed in. It was his health and I would let him worry about it. I decided my health was better served by letting him go in. "Another function for our M.P. unit - and really the primary one - was to take charge of and hold the German POWs that were being sent back. We also had to take the POWs on work details each day, mostly to the rail yard to load and offload the trains that came through. We never had any problems with any of the German POWs. I think most of them were just real glad to be out of the war. "I remember one time after we had loaded a train, I was assigned to guard it. Shortly after I took over the guard duty, a plane came over the hill and was coming real fast. When it opened up and started shelling the train, I knew it was a E German plane and started trying to find something to hide j behind. I was abletojump behind some railroad ties stacked nearby. That plane really shot up that train but missed me, just barely. "One other memory was getting to salute General Patton, pearl - handled revolvers and all, when he came through our headquarters one day. I was a lot luckier than some in the war and was able to head home soon after the war ended. Some, like my next -door neighbor and best friend growing up, Luke Patranella, didn't get to come home. He was killed '. 20 miles from where I was at stationed at the time." After the war, Dileo worked at a couple of jobs until he went to work at Stacy's Furniture, where he worked for 20 years. He left Stacy's to start his own business, Charle's Furniture, which he operated until he retired in 1988. But he has never retired from full -time cattle ranching. When asked about his experience in World War II Dileo replied, "I'm glad I served and glad I came out alive. But I would do it again if I had to" Charlie Dileo's name isfound on the BrazosValleyVeterans 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, contactthe BWM at www.veteransmemoNal.org or Bill Youngkin at (979) 260 -7030. One in a series of tributes to members of "The Greatest Generation'