They decided, on the spur of the moment, to drive to another state. It was the kind of thing young men did.
It came about in the usual way: they met some young women.
The encounter was at a service station/grocery store situated out on the main highway. Dad and his friends had been driving around that morning and were nearby when the gas gauge hit EMPTY. The young women had stopped to buy gas and go to the bathroom while the attendant serviced their car.
Young women. Young men. They struck up a conversation.
The young women said, "We're going to a dance, tonight. Y'all should come."
That's really all it took.
Oh, after the women pulled away there was a bit of a debate ... but not much of one. The dance was at a bar in another state. That was a factor. But not enough of one to discourage even the most cautious of the foursome. Money ... now that was a real concern. Only two of them were working at the time ... and payday had been yesterday. Some of that money had already gone to cigarettes and beer. And some more had just gone to feed the gas tank.
Still, they had been friends since grade school; they were used to pooling their funds so they could share fun times. A quick check of available cash showed they would have enough to afford some beers and a bit to eat ... so why not? Dancing with girls —girls they had not known since childhood— awaited a mere three hours away.
The entire discussion lasted less than five minutes.
I keep calling them young men because that's what they were; not boys, men. Two were 19 and two were 20, but all were living at home on their respective family farms. Dad (one of the 20-year olds ... but only for three weeks) had worked for a while in Detroit at a meat processor; but the job ran out, so he had had no choice but to return home. The other three had never lived anywhere else. In better economic times, none of them would have been living at home. But as 1941 was coming to a close, many people were still light on money. FDR's various government-sponsored jobs and economic stimuli had been effective in leading the country out of the Great Depression, but not even the most optimistic thought it a quick recovery.
So that's how they came to have the freedom and time to drive to a dance in another state on a Saturday afternoon. Boys would need permission to go; men did not. Off they went.
Turns out there was no dance.
But there was a bar, and the young women were there. And the young men did dance with the young women. They all smoked and enjoyed a beer or two ... or three. So, from the young men's perspective, it was a win all round.
Perhaps the most unexpected part of the evening was the invitation, near closing time, for the young men to stay over for Sunday lunch. If Dad and his friends could, the young women said, they would cook fried chicken and the trimmings for an afternoon picnic. It was one of the warmest December's on record; upper 60's at midday ... Jackets would be needed, but a picnic sounded nice.
Another quick discussion. Another quick cash check. There was a motor court nearby. If all four men stayed in one room, the money would stretch. So, when the bar closed, the young women left for their respective lodgings and the young men made their way to the motor court.
The next day was sunny and dry. By lunchtime, the temp was a pleasant 68 degrees. Dad and his buddies met their new friends in the local park as planned. The chicken was tender and delicious. The company was enjoyable. They whiled away the afternoon, only stopping when the first chill breeze came sweeping across the little pond around which the park was situated. It would have ended, soon, anyway, The Sun was starting to slide down the sky, and it usually slid down pretty quickly in December, no matter how nice the day.
So, having said their goodbyes, the new acquaintances parted ways: the women back to their local, and presumably warm, homes. Dad and his friends climbed into their own car and started back toward West Kentucky. It wasn't long, even with jackets, before they felt the need to turn on the cabin heater.
Dark fell upon them swiftly.
It was about half way into the trip home that one of them pointed out what should have already been known. The fuel gauge was once again approaching zero. It was not an uncommon event for these young men. They never completely filled the tank, only adding enough for the driving they had in mind. But the serendipity drive out of state had distracted them, allowed the usual state of affairs to slip their minds.
They started looking for any gas station that was open ... at night ... on a Sunday. Eventually —and very luckily it seemed— they spotted a light that grew to a place, a place that soon defined itself as a gas station ... and it was, blessedly, open. They pulled off the highway and up to the pumps.
And waited.
No one came out to fill the tank.
It was Dad's turn at the wheel. He backed up and, again, ran over the hose he knew would ring a bell within the building.
Still, no one came.
To add to the mystery, they could see shadows moving about inside the station. Not sure what to make of it, but truly feeling the need for gas, they turned off the engine and walked up to the station door.
Everything changed when they entered.
There were over a dozen people, all men, standing, sitting, leaning all about the single room that doubled as office and sales floor. All of the men were facing a radio placed in the center of the room.
Everyone was talking.
For a few seconds, no one even noticed Dad and his friends had entered. Eventually, though, one of the leaners saw them and elbowed the leaner next to him. That fellow turned out to be the owner.
He told Dad and friends that he could, yes, unlock one of the pumps and sell them gas; but made sure they understood that, usually, the station would not even be open that time of night; that, were it not for the news, all these men would be at their homes instead of crowded into his station.
Dad and friends were puzzled by all this. The radio in their car had not worked in months, and there had been no extra money with which to get it repaired. So they asked: what could be so big that it resulted in all this?
"It's Pearl Harbor," said the station owner. "The Japanese attacked our base in Hawaii while they were all havin' their breakfasts. It came over the radio about 1:30 this afternoon. People've been comin' in here ever since to try to get an update. We're guessin' it's gonna be war." All of this came out in an unbroken stream.
But the young men caught it, all of it. And, being the ages they were, they understood what it might mean for them, personally.
And that's when they had the next discussion. A quick check of the pooled cash presented them with a dilemma: there was enough to buy gas or to buy cigarettes, but not enough for both.
And, suddenly, cigarettes seemed very important.
So, while the other men in the gas station cussed and discussed the unprovoked Japanese attack on U.S. soil, Dad and his friends debated cigarettes vs gasoline. They had a little over an hour of driving ahead of them. Would the fuel last long enough for them to get home? Or, if they bought the cigarettes, would they find themselves pushing the car part of the way? And if so, how much of the way?
This debate did not end quickly.
Back and forth they went, sometimes shifting sides, giving their all to the analysis of the problem before them: gasoline or cigarettes? It seemed to them a matter, almost, of life and death. Standing there in the too hot room, the cacophony of voices all but drowning out the radio, their debate became heated, and these four childhood friends almost came to blows.
The winning argument came from the other 20-year old: "If we run out of gas, we'll have cigarettes to keep us warm."
And that was that.
The four of them quietly filed out into the night of December 7, 1941, climbed into their doubtful conveyance, and pulled away from all the noise and confusion. For the longest time, no one said anything. Eventually, though, they got to it.
"Are you going to volunteer?"
Now that the cigarettes vs gasoline debate was settled, and they were once more in the quiet, relative safety of the car, they could talk about it, examine it, consider the future that had completely changed over the course of one very nice day. Try to get some sort of handle on what they would do.
The gas ran out about 20 minutes from Dad's house, the nearest. They took turns —three behind, one steering— pushing it down the highway, along the farm-to-market road, into the long rutted driveway, and all the way up to Dad's house.
That whole journey —riding, pushing— they talked about the likelihood of war. None of them even mentioned the dance, the beers, the young women, or the picnic.
Or how nice the weather had been that whole first week of December, 1941.
Showing posts with label Dad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dad. Show all posts
Monday, May 29, 2017
Dad and the December Dance (for Memorial Day, 2017, by Steve Orr)
Sunday, January 31, 2016
The Treasures in the Box (a Lectionary reflection by Steve Orr)
I got a surprise ---well, surprises--- this week.
I looked out the front door and saw a small box snugged up against the brick wall. That wasn't surprising; we get quite a few boxes. The surprise, the first one anyway, is that it was addressed to me. There are many boxes arriving at our door, but few of them are addressed to me.
I have a small confession. I love it when a box is addressed to me; feels like Christmas or my birthday all over again. I thought that might diminish as I grew older, but it hasn't. It's one of the ongoing joys of my life. As soon as I see my name on the box, I feel the endorphin rush and that goofy grin spreading across my face. Every single time.
I already loved it and I hadn't even opened it.
The second surprise, and definitely the bigger surprise is what I found inside: letters, 30 or 40 of them, and all of them from the mystery that was my father.
You could get to know Dad, but only the pieces he chose to reveal. As father and son, Dad and I occupied the same residence for about two decades. Then I knew him, adult-to-adult so to speak, for almost three more decades. All of those years, and yet, I knew very little about him. It seems like other people can rattle off tale after tale of each parent's childhood, school years, romances, and careers. And I can do some of that, but there is a very, very limited supply of those stories about Dad. He just didn't share much with us.
Maybe he was, as I have always assumed, just a very private person. He definitely personified the saying, "Still waters run deep." He was also, in my view, the kind of person who, "kept his own counsel." In recent years, I have concluded Dad may well have been an introvert, living deep within himself and only surfacing from time to time to interact with the rest of us as needed.
The period of Dad's life of which I know the least is his service during World War II. Dad rarely talked about the war. This puzzled me as a child; many a childhood friend told me tales of their father's service. But as I became an adult, and several of my own friends were returning from the Vietnam War, I gained some understanding. Some things are too hard to recall, much less tell to children. In time, I just packed away all my questions about that time in his life, accepting that he might never be able to tell me more than the very handful of stories he had already shared.
The box was from my cousin, the daughter of one of dad's sisters. The letters? Almost all from Dad during World War II.
I immediately opened the letter on top. Dad's handwriting was difficult for me to read. But I could understand enough to realize just what a treasure I now possessed. Here was a young man with a lightness of spirit I never saw in my Dad. He was having a little fun with my aunt and uncle. My Dad, funny. Funny! Mind-blowing. And then, not three sentences in, he referred to his "wife."
Wait. What?!
Dad didn't meet my mother until AFTER the war. Who was this wife? And where did she go? I checked a couple more of the letters; all referenced his wife. After the shock, I found myself experiencing something else, a kind of hope. I will learn something new about my father, and from his own hand.
I am amazed to have such a treasure appear at this point of my life. In time, we will transcribe them and share their content with my sister and the rest of the family. Thousands of questions have resurrected themselves, now; questions I had long ago decided could never be answered. I can no longer ask Dad. It's likely I will never, "understand all mysteries." But at least now, I may get some answers.
And get to know him a little better.
____________________________________
See more reflections at
http://steveorr.blogspot.com
____________________________________
READINGS FOR THE COMING WEEK
http://lectionary.library.vanderbilt.edu/
Fourth Sunday after the Epiphany (January 31, 2016)
First reading
Jeremiah 1:4-10
Psalm
Psalm 71:1-6
Second reading
1 Corinthians 13:1-13
Gospel
Luke 4:21-30
____________________________________
Winter continues, but it's warm at Lectionary Breakfast! Can you gather with us Friday morning at the Waco "Egg and I" restaurant? We start at 8:00, enjoying an hour (ish) of food, friendships, and illumination from God's word.
Mysteries are revealed.
Enjoy the week!
Steve
I looked out the front door and saw a small box snugged up against the brick wall. That wasn't surprising; we get quite a few boxes. The surprise, the first one anyway, is that it was addressed to me. There are many boxes arriving at our door, but few of them are addressed to me.
I have a small confession. I love it when a box is addressed to me; feels like Christmas or my birthday all over again. I thought that might diminish as I grew older, but it hasn't. It's one of the ongoing joys of my life. As soon as I see my name on the box, I feel the endorphin rush and that goofy grin spreading across my face. Every single time.
I already loved it and I hadn't even opened it.
The second surprise, and definitely the bigger surprise is what I found inside: letters, 30 or 40 of them, and all of them from the mystery that was my father.
You could get to know Dad, but only the pieces he chose to reveal. As father and son, Dad and I occupied the same residence for about two decades. Then I knew him, adult-to-adult so to speak, for almost three more decades. All of those years, and yet, I knew very little about him. It seems like other people can rattle off tale after tale of each parent's childhood, school years, romances, and careers. And I can do some of that, but there is a very, very limited supply of those stories about Dad. He just didn't share much with us.
Maybe he was, as I have always assumed, just a very private person. He definitely personified the saying, "Still waters run deep." He was also, in my view, the kind of person who, "kept his own counsel." In recent years, I have concluded Dad may well have been an introvert, living deep within himself and only surfacing from time to time to interact with the rest of us as needed.
The period of Dad's life of which I know the least is his service during World War II. Dad rarely talked about the war. This puzzled me as a child; many a childhood friend told me tales of their father's service. But as I became an adult, and several of my own friends were returning from the Vietnam War, I gained some understanding. Some things are too hard to recall, much less tell to children. In time, I just packed away all my questions about that time in his life, accepting that he might never be able to tell me more than the very handful of stories he had already shared.
The box was from my cousin, the daughter of one of dad's sisters. The letters? Almost all from Dad during World War II.
I immediately opened the letter on top. Dad's handwriting was difficult for me to read. But I could understand enough to realize just what a treasure I now possessed. Here was a young man with a lightness of spirit I never saw in my Dad. He was having a little fun with my aunt and uncle. My Dad, funny. Funny! Mind-blowing. And then, not three sentences in, he referred to his "wife."
Wait. What?!
Dad didn't meet my mother until AFTER the war. Who was this wife? And where did she go? I checked a couple more of the letters; all referenced his wife. After the shock, I found myself experiencing something else, a kind of hope. I will learn something new about my father, and from his own hand.
I am amazed to have such a treasure appear at this point of my life. In time, we will transcribe them and share their content with my sister and the rest of the family. Thousands of questions have resurrected themselves, now; questions I had long ago decided could never be answered. I can no longer ask Dad. It's likely I will never, "understand all mysteries." But at least now, I may get some answers.
And get to know him a little better.
____________________________________
See more reflections at
http://steveorr.blogspot.com
____________________________________
READINGS FOR THE COMING WEEK
http://lectionary.library.vanderbilt.edu/
Fourth Sunday after the Epiphany (January 31, 2016)
First reading
Jeremiah 1:4-10
Psalm
Psalm 71:1-6
Second reading
1 Corinthians 13:1-13
Gospel
Luke 4:21-30
____________________________________
Winter continues, but it's warm at Lectionary Breakfast! Can you gather with us Friday morning at the Waco "Egg and I" restaurant? We start at 8:00, enjoying an hour (ish) of food, friendships, and illumination from God's word.
Mysteries are revealed.
Enjoy the week!
Steve
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
See That Island Out There?
See That Island Out There?
(a brief Lectionary reflection by Steve Orr)
Courtesy of http://www.flickr.com/photos/circulating/2701670382/
One of the interesting things I recall from my childhood is a period when my Dad worked on a riverboat. Now, this may seem remarkable to you, and it is, but not so much as you might think. When you grow up on a river, it is not so uncommon to find work on it.
The port of Paducah, Kentucky is a busy one. Sitting at the confluence of the Ohio and Tennessee Rivers, the town, like so many river towns, owes it's very existence to these rivers. Everything orients on the rivers. People give directions saying things like, "Start at the foot of Broadway . . ." and "Drive to the flood wall and make a left onto First Street." How many streets do you know that have a foot? How many towns have a flood wall?
I have a lot of fond memories centered on those rivers. And one that still rankles a bit.
During the period Dad worked on the river, I have several memories of dropping him off at the spot on the river where the Hougland Barge Lines personnel came to begin their tour. Dad worked "30 on, 30 off"; which meant, since we were little kids and Mom couldn't leave us at home, we were there once each month to either put Dad ON the boat or pick him up FROM the boat.
It was on one of these occasions that Dad pointed out across the river to what I later came to know was Owens Island, and said, "You see that Island out there? That's the island Mark Twain had Huck and Jim hide out on." From that moment on, it was an article of faith that Owens Island was the physical reality put to good use by Mr. Clemens in his classic novel.
I told people (many, many people) that tidbit for . . . oh, about a decade; told them so with confidence. I did so regularly ... until that day my Senior Year, in the Paducah Tilghman High School Library, when my friend Bruce brought it all crashing down.
Bruce, upon hearing me state this juicy fact, took issue with me, insisting that not only was it NOT the island from Huckleberry Finn, but that it COULD NOT be that island. Bruce was smart; and he was a Boy Scout, something for which I had great personal reverence since I flunked Cub Scouts. So why I debated this with him for so long I can only ascribe to my faith in the words of my father. I stubbornly clung to my belief?
Gently, I now realize, Bruce led me to the Library where he spun the globe so we could look at the United States. He pointed to a spot on that map and asked me what it was. It was obviously the Mississippi River and I so stipulated. Then he asked me what river did Mark Twain grow up on and eventually work on. I readily admitted it was the very same river. And then he asked me on which river Huck and Jim had all their adventures. I was a little slower to answer that one, possibly, at least subconsciously, realizing where this was going. But, eventually, I agreed that, too, was the Mississippi River.
Moving his finger slightly to the right, he located Paducah and asked the names of those two rivers. Of course I knew their names as the Tennessee and the Ohio. I then saw where this was going and I quickly pointed out that Owens Island could STILL be the island in the book because Huck and Jim traveled DOWN river as they fled.
That was when he administered the coup de grĂ¢ce.
Spinning the globe up so that we were looking directly down on the area including all three rivers, he pointed to where the two rivers which fronted our hometown ran a mile further SOUTH to join up with the Mississippi. Suddenly I saw it. There was never anything clearer. Owens Island could not be the island from the book. Huck and Jim floated DOWN the Mississippi, and could NEVER have come past Paducah. I realized that Dad had not told me the truth.
And that is the story of how I learned my father liked to tell tales. He didn't mean anything bad by doing so. It was all just a bit of fun to him, a way to exercise his imagination. The problem, of course, is that until confronted he never let on. A person could . . . *ahem* . . . remain ignorant of the truth for years . . . and years.
After that, I was no longer quite so naive about the things Dad told me. I usually sought verification from other, more dependable, sources; Mama or Granny (who had seen right through Dad from the moment he first showed up to date Mama). And, to be fair to Dad, I also learned to be a little skeptical about things in general; no longer just accepting EVERYTHING on face value, but applying a little scrutiny when anything seemed not quite right. So, in the long run (the very long run), I concede the experience had a positive result.
It also explains why I completely understand the skepticism expressed by the sneering doubters (in the Acts 2 passage from this week's Lectionary readings) upon encountering the polyglottal cacophony at Pentecost. They came to see what the fuss was all about and found a dozen men speaking what seemed, for the most part, to be gibberish. It's no surprise to me they thought the speakers were drunk.
Picture it: twelve people are speaking at the same time, each in a different language. To the average hearer, only one of the men would be making sense, the one speaking THEIR language; the rest would be an oral jumble of non-intelligible sounds all piled on top of one another.
And here is the point: it's OK to be a bit skeptical in unusual situations. If it is a REAL miracle, God will make it plain, just as He did in the Acts passage.
Trust me.
###############################
READINGS FOR THE COMING WEEK
http://lectionary.library.vanderbilt.edu/
Day of Pentecost (May 27, 2012)
Acts 2:1-21 or Ezekiel 37:1-14
Psalm 104:24-34, 35b
Romans 8:22-27 or Acts 2:1-21
John 15:26-27; 16:4b-15
We're getting together Friday morning at 8:00 at Cafe Cappuccino (downtown on 6th, near the Courthouse). If you're in Waco, join us for breakfast and discussions of the coming week's passages.
We're not EXPECTING any flaming tongues, but Cholula Hot Sauce is available on request ;-)
Enjoy the week!
Steve
(a brief Lectionary reflection by Steve Orr)
One of the interesting things I recall from my childhood is a period when my Dad worked on a riverboat. Now, this may seem remarkable to you, and it is, but not so much as you might think. When you grow up on a river, it is not so uncommon to find work on it.
The port of Paducah, Kentucky is a busy one. Sitting at the confluence of the Ohio and Tennessee Rivers, the town, like so many river towns, owes it's very existence to these rivers. Everything orients on the rivers. People give directions saying things like, "Start at the foot of Broadway . . ." and "Drive to the flood wall and make a left onto First Street." How many streets do you know that have a foot? How many towns have a flood wall?
I have a lot of fond memories centered on those rivers. And one that still rankles a bit.
During the period Dad worked on the river, I have several memories of dropping him off at the spot on the river where the Hougland Barge Lines personnel came to begin their tour. Dad worked "30 on, 30 off"; which meant, since we were little kids and Mom couldn't leave us at home, we were there once each month to either put Dad ON the boat or pick him up FROM the boat.
It was on one of these occasions that Dad pointed out across the river to what I later came to know was Owens Island, and said, "You see that Island out there? That's the island Mark Twain had Huck and Jim hide out on." From that moment on, it was an article of faith that Owens Island was the physical reality put to good use by Mr. Clemens in his classic novel.
I told people (many, many people) that tidbit for . . . oh, about a decade; told them so with confidence. I did so regularly ... until that day my Senior Year, in the Paducah Tilghman High School Library, when my friend Bruce brought it all crashing down.
Bruce, upon hearing me state this juicy fact, took issue with me, insisting that not only was it NOT the island from Huckleberry Finn, but that it COULD NOT be that island. Bruce was smart; and he was a Boy Scout, something for which I had great personal reverence since I flunked Cub Scouts. So why I debated this with him for so long I can only ascribe to my faith in the words of my father. I stubbornly clung to my belief?
Gently, I now realize, Bruce led me to the Library where he spun the globe so we could look at the United States. He pointed to a spot on that map and asked me what it was. It was obviously the Mississippi River and I so stipulated. Then he asked me what river did Mark Twain grow up on and eventually work on. I readily admitted it was the very same river. And then he asked me on which river Huck and Jim had all their adventures. I was a little slower to answer that one, possibly, at least subconsciously, realizing where this was going. But, eventually, I agreed that, too, was the Mississippi River.
Moving his finger slightly to the right, he located Paducah and asked the names of those two rivers. Of course I knew their names as the Tennessee and the Ohio. I then saw where this was going and I quickly pointed out that Owens Island could STILL be the island in the book because Huck and Jim traveled DOWN river as they fled.
That was when he administered the coup de grĂ¢ce.
Spinning the globe up so that we were looking directly down on the area including all three rivers, he pointed to where the two rivers which fronted our hometown ran a mile further SOUTH to join up with the Mississippi. Suddenly I saw it. There was never anything clearer. Owens Island could not be the island from the book. Huck and Jim floated DOWN the Mississippi, and could NEVER have come past Paducah. I realized that Dad had not told me the truth.
And that is the story of how I learned my father liked to tell tales. He didn't mean anything bad by doing so. It was all just a bit of fun to him, a way to exercise his imagination. The problem, of course, is that until confronted he never let on. A person could . . . *ahem* . . . remain ignorant of the truth for years . . . and years.
After that, I was no longer quite so naive about the things Dad told me. I usually sought verification from other, more dependable, sources; Mama or Granny (who had seen right through Dad from the moment he first showed up to date Mama). And, to be fair to Dad, I also learned to be a little skeptical about things in general; no longer just accepting EVERYTHING on face value, but applying a little scrutiny when anything seemed not quite right. So, in the long run (the very long run), I concede the experience had a positive result.
It also explains why I completely understand the skepticism expressed by the sneering doubters (in the Acts 2 passage from this week's Lectionary readings) upon encountering the polyglottal cacophony at Pentecost. They came to see what the fuss was all about and found a dozen men speaking what seemed, for the most part, to be gibberish. It's no surprise to me they thought the speakers were drunk.
Picture it: twelve people are speaking at the same time, each in a different language. To the average hearer, only one of the men would be making sense, the one speaking THEIR language; the rest would be an oral jumble of non-intelligible sounds all piled on top of one another.
And here is the point: it's OK to be a bit skeptical in unusual situations. If it is a REAL miracle, God will make it plain, just as He did in the Acts passage.
Trust me.
###############################
READINGS FOR THE COMING WEEK
http://lectionary.library.vanderbilt.edu/
Day of Pentecost (May 27, 2012)
Acts 2:1-21 or Ezekiel 37:1-14
Psalm 104:24-34, 35b
Romans 8:22-27 or Acts 2:1-21
John 15:26-27; 16:4b-15
We're getting together Friday morning at 8:00 at Cafe Cappuccino (downtown on 6th, near the Courthouse). If you're in Waco, join us for breakfast and discussions of the coming week's passages.
We're not EXPECTING any flaming tongues, but Cholula Hot Sauce is available on request ;-)
Enjoy the week!
Steve
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
DDay Special Edition - At War With Dad
A memoir by Steve Orr.
THIS IS A REPOST FROM AN EARLIER DATE. IT APPEARS TODAY TO HONOR ALL WHO HAVE SERVED, OR NOW SERVE, OUR COUNTRY IN MILITARY ENDEAVORS.
The argument had been going on for the better part of an hour. Actually, Dad didn't think it was much of an argument considering his Sergeant was doing almost all of the talking. The Captain of the boat handled his side of the argument with looks and shrugs. Dad couldn't hear them, but based on the fury he saw on his Sergeant's face, it seemed like it must be pretty important.
But Dad didn't really care what they were arguing about. In true army fashion, they had been rushed to the disembarkation point, only to find they had to wait over 24 hours before they could board the boat. Then, once on board, he and his crew of two having secured their 40mm Bofors gun, the excitement of finally DOING something was cut short by the journey itself. The crossing had been rough. Most of the men on the boat were seasick, Dad included. And for the last hour, he had watched his Sergeant alternate between puking over the side of the boat and yelling at the salty old Brit who was piloting them across the Channel.
It was June 6, 1944. D-Day. They were on their way to Normandy, France.
Dad knew very little about the plans for that day; only that when they finally did reach shore, they were supposed to hitch their gun to a deuce-and-a-half truck which would transport it, and the three of them, to the place where they would start shooting at things with it. And as a recently promoted Corporal, he knew more than most.
The landing, when it finally came, happened swifty, and not at all as had been described. When the ramp slapped onto beach, everyone on the boat saw the same thing: nothing . . . no other soldiers, no equipment, and most importantly to Dad, no deuce-and-a-half. So, at the urging of the Sergeant, several of the soldiers helped Dad and his crew wrestle the wheeled gun off the boat and across part of the beach until they reached a point where the resistance of the sand could no longer be overcome by human efforts. They were stuck midway between water's edge and the firmer ground that bordered the beach. Nothing was going to move that gun one more inch until a truck could could be found to pull it.
That's when Dad learned the topic of his Sergeant's one-sided argument: he had been trying to convince their civilian pilot they were headed in the wrong direction, but to no avail. The result? They were on the wrong beach.
So, while Sarge and the rest of the soldiers left to reconnect with the larger body of the invading force, Dad and crew had to stay and protect their gun. Which didn't seem like such a bad thing, until the ordnance starting falling all about them. Their gun was cradled in a wheeled structure, or carriage. It didn't provide much cover, but it was the best they were going to find. So they dived under it, dug a shallow trench in the sand and, as Dad put it, "hunkered down." All throughout that day they "hugged the sand" under that gun, praying the random explosions would not find them.
Eventually, the day came to an end, and with it an end to the shelling. It was only later that Dad learned the old pilot's mistake had spared them the horrors, and likely instant death, they would have encountered at their intended destination: Omaha Beach. If you've ever seen the opening sequence to the movie, "Saving Private Ryan," then you have some idea of what they were spared.
[The above is a selection from a longer piece I am writing about the few things my Dad told me of his service during World War II.]
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