Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutGeorge Cox, Brazos Valley HeroOne in a series of tributes to members of "The Greatest Generation" By Bill Youngkin Special to The Eagle First of Two Parts It is said that time stands still for no man. For George Cox of the Cooks Point Community of Burleson County, on June 6, 2004, as he stood on Utah Beach Normandy for the 60th anniversary of the D -Day invasion, time not only stood still, it came roaring back. The time that came back for him was June 6, 1944, a day that Cox, a scared young Texan, along with thousands of other scared young men, came ashore for the D -Day invasion of France. His photo above was taken beside a rock on Utah Beach, exactly where he came ashore 60 years prior. Life for Cox began March 21, 1921, 88 years ago, in Houston. He attended and graduated from Milby High in Houston in 1941. That summer he married the bride of his life, Leona, and they have celebrated 67 years of marriage together. When the war started, Cox was hopeful that he would not be part of it. According to Cox, "When the war broke out, I was married and had a job as an iron worker at the Humble Oil refinery, which usually entitled you to a draft deferment. We were also expecting our first child when my draft notice came. So many of my friends I had gone to school with were already serving and I guess, because of that I decided not to till my employer about my draft notice. - "When I showed up at the induction center, I passed my physical, was sworn in and sent to Ft. Sam Houston. They sent me along with 700 others to Camp Rucker, Alabama, for basic training and to be formed into the 746th Tank Battalion. When I asked for a furlough so I could be home for the birth of my son, my sergeant said women had been having babies forever without men being around, and my wife wouldn't need me either. I didn't getto see my son until he was six weeks old, when I had my only furlough of the war. "Upon my return we were sent to Virginia, then (amp Shank, New York, for boarding a passenger ship for Scotland. There were over 10,000 of us on that ship. Wezig- zagged our way across the Atlantic without an escort, outrunning the German U -boats the whole way. "We ended up at Fairfield, England, where we were issued new tanks and equipment. We trained for what we all knew would be an invasion of France. About the 2nd or 3rd of June we headed to the beach for loading of our tanks on barges, and on the 5th of June we headed across the Channel. It was a rough crossing, and all of us got sick on the way over. We were supposed to hit the beach at 7:30 a.m. on June 6, 1944, but we didn't get on the beach until 11:30 a.m. "We had prepared to land in water, and it was seven feet deep where we landed. I was our tank commander, and when I held my arm out of the hatch of our tank, it was just above the water. We landed on a beach that history would refer to as Utah Beach. The infantry boys had gotten off the beach to join up with the 101st and 82nd Airborne Division, which had parachuted in the night before. All the routes off the beach were clogged up by destroyed equipment, bomb craters or something else. We managed to get eight miles inland before stopping at 11p.m. that night. That is why D -Day was called'The Longest Day'in the movie by the same name. "We set up a perimeter guard, scared to death and not really knowing what to be scared of. The next morning we joined up with portions of the 101st that were pinned down by the Germans. That day, June 7,1944, was also the day I became one of the first causalities of my company. 'The first German I saw was behind a woodpile shooting at us. There were 54 of our tanks in line and I was the last one. Our captain directed us down a road to our left and we immediately ran into an SS Panzer Tank Unit. I had just turned by this church when our engagement started. We had fired six to eight of our big shells with good results, as we could see Germans flying through the air with each shell's impact. I was looking through my periscope when the Germans shot the top two inches of it off. "That knocked me down. While I was knocked down and trying to retrieve another periscope, the Germans shot and killed my gunner. The next shell that hit us wounded three more in the crew, so I yelled for them to go out the bottom of the tank. We were hit by a bazooka shell, which caused shrapnel to hit my right eye, temple, hand and shoulder. "I really couldn't see, as the flames in the tank had burned off my eyelashes and my facial hair. I jumped out of the turret and landed in a sewer drainage ditch which I followed back to the 101st guys. Some medics came by with a guy on a litter. I caught hold of one of their belts because I couldn't see anything by now, and they led me to an aid station. They patched me up and sent me back to England, where they removed the shrapnel from my eye. After four days in the hospital my burned face began to heal and my eyesight returned. I recovered enough that I was returned to my unit on July 28, 1944, which was now located at St. Lo, France. When we returned for the 60th anniversary of D -Day, I stood beside that church where our tank was hit.1 remembered every bit of it like it was yesterday. All of it, to include the smells." Next week: Part two of George Cox's story. If you want to have a name added to the Veterans Memorial, for more information, to make a contribution, or ff you know a World War 11 veteran whose story needs to be told, contact the BVVM at www.bvvm.org or Bill Youngkin at (979) 160 -7030. V int I i f"11 3 i One in a series of tributes to members of "The Greatest Generation" By Bill Youngkin Special to the Eagle Second of Two Parts It is often said that "war is hell," which R can be for those involved. But It is also tough on the families back home. The story of George and Leona Cox of the Cooks Point Community of Burleson County is one thatwas all too common during World War I. George and Leona were newlyweds when he was drafted in 1942. They had a son born shortly after he entered the army. Leona was living with George's parents in Houston while he participated in the D -Day invasion on June 6, 1944. He was wounded and temporarily blinded on June 7, 1944, his second day on French soil. Cox's tank was so badly shot up and burned that he was initially thought to be dead. But since they had not recovered his body, he was reported as missing in action. According to Leona, who was back in Houston, "There were 11 boys from our little church in Houston who were off in the war. Every morning I gathered with members of those boys' families and we prayed for the safe return of each one. I just felt that George would come home, because I truly believed in the power of prayer. But when I saw two soldiers come to our front door, I thought they were coming to tell me George was dead. We all were aware of D -Day and the terrible losses and we thought George was probably involved. "Much to my relief, they came to inform me he was missing in action. Later I received a telegram reporting that he was wounded and had been blinded. I was just glad he was alive. His first letter after that was to let know his sight had returned and he was going to be alright. We continued to pray daily until the end of the war for those 11 boys. Our prayers were answered, because all 11 came home -some like George, with injuries, but they all came home" According to Cox, "I rejoined my unit on July 28, 1944, just outside St. Lo, France. I was given a new tank and a new crew. We pushed on to the Falaise Gap, chasing the German army. We were now part of the 9th Infantry Division. We drove south of Paris by 30 miles and then headed for Belgium, sometimes making 100 miles in one day. We ended up at Eupen, Belgium, just across the German borderfrom Aachen, Germany. "We crossed the Siegfried Line into Germany on September 13, 1944. The recent photo of me was taken on our tour we went on for the 60th anniversary of D -Day and I am standing next to the concrete barriers that were built after World War I and used in the Siegfried Line. On December 15, 1944, we were sent back across the line into Belgium because the Battle of the Bulge had started. "We were lucky during the Battle of the Bulge in that we were in the'hinge of the'Bulge and were used primarily as artillery support. We were able to sleep inside houses and nay warm while most of the GIs were almost freeainq to death. About the end of January we started to push back againstthe Germans. That would continue until the end of the war. "The problem with invading Germany was getting over the Rhine River, as most bridges had been blown by the Germans. We got word that the bridge over the Rhine at Remagen had been captured. The whole 9th Armored Division headed for Remagen, traveling all night long. After we got there, we tried to get as many men and as much material over as fast as we could. We were trying to build a pontoon bridge, but R wasn't completed yet and the Germans were throwing everything they could at us to keep us from going over the Remagen Bridge and completing that pontoon bridge. "I made five trips across before the Remagen Bridge collapsed. When it did collapse, a lot of GIs went down with ft. On one occasion across, we were attacked by a German fighter plane. He was turned sideways, banking over the bridge. I was firing my rifle at him as was everyone else. You could see our tracers hitting him. He just kept coming, just missing the bridge and crashing into the river. "When our army crossed over the Rhine a lot of guys used the bathroom in the river - to include General Patton, who made a big deal about it. I lost my best friend a couple of days later after we crossed the Rhine. He was from Conroe and we had been together from the start. I was issued a new tank and a new crew after we crossed the Rhine, and we chased Germans all the way to the Elbe River. At the Elbe we had Germans swimming across to surrender to us to get away from the Russians. When the war ended, we were sent south between Nuremberg and Munich. "If you didn't have enough points to get discharged, you were trained and shipped out for the invasion of Japan. You had to have 85 points and I had 88.1 was glad to be going home. The guys that were sent to fight Japan were shipped out for the Pacific, but while they were on their way, the war ended. As a result, they beat us home. I shipped home to Texas and was discharged in November 1945. "I returned to the iron - working business and eventually went to work for Charter Oil at the Houston port, retiring in 1975. We built our home in Burleson County in 1971 and I have lived, farmed and ranched here since. "After I went back to Europe for the 60th anniversary for D -Day I have thought about that time in my fife a lot.I didn'twant to serve to begin with because I had a wife and baby. But after going on to serve, I'm very proud that l did. And I am proud of what we did. At one of the ceremonies they held and attended, I was asked to participate with some British veterans in a ceremony. They were placing wreaths at our memorial, and while I was standing there with them for the placing of wreaths on our memorial, I just couldn't keep the tears out of my eyes." Ifyou wantto have anameadded tothe lieteransMemodal, for more information, to make a contribution, or if you know a World War II veteran whose story needs to be told, contort the BWM at www.bvvm.org or Bill Youngkin at (979) 260 -7030. who served our country during World War II