Pat Carry wrote:
CoastieJohn wrote:
Ironic thread....my Pops just passed about 10 hours ago today. He was a WWII Marine in the Pacific.
Sorry about your loss. Did he talk much about his experiences in the Pacific?
Thanks.
Not till his later years in life. I can recall asking him numerous times growing up what he did over there and he would just shake his head a little and change the subject. Mom never really knew much either. His mom and dad died while he was little . He lived with his uncle on a sailboat. His uncle signed him in when he was 16. His discharge papers gives an earlier birthdate so he could legally get signed in as a 17 year old on paper. He signed up in Feb 1945 and after boot camp and training he was sent over as a paratrooper. He was involved in the Japanese cleanup operations in the Marinas, Guam, Guadalcanal, Phillipines, etc. We knew he received a Purple Heart but didn't know the circumstances. Maybe 6 or 7 years ago....we were sitting on the porch and I asked him about his experiences over there and he opened up some. He stated he was involved in cleaning out a Japanese "nest" and was hit by a motar schrapnel in the leg. That's how he got his PH. That was the very first any of us knew that. As a natural curiosity question, I asked if he killed anyone over there and he said yes. I asked how he knew and he said he watched them fall over (duh!). Along with the fighting, I suspect he also witnessed some Japanese/islander suicides if he was doing cleanup ops. I could finally understand why he never spoke of it for many years. To think he was only 16 and experienced that....I guess like many other battle vets...you just want to forget about it.
I will add that when I asked him back then about his experiences, unbeknownst to us, he was in the very early stages of Alzheimers. We knew his short-term memory wasn't what it used to be. I later read that Alzheimers patients can have good long-term recollections but bad short-term recollections. I have wondered if his early Alzheimers took some of the edge off those combat memories and allowed him to open up about it. I'm glad I got the chance to discuss it with him. BTW....he didn't pass from the Alzheimers, he fell and broke his femur on Wednesday. His surgery to pin his broken femur was Thursday morning. He was alert and all just prior to surgery. While receiving the anethsia, his BP went to zero and the doc couldn't bring him back....and that was it.
On the happy side...right after he got in 1947 or so, he ended up "having" to get married (and then divorced). I met that daughter (my half-sister) when I was a kid back in 1970. We lost contact with her after that. My older brother and I have been looking for her for some time. About 4 months ago I followed up on a clue from an old photo, did a Google search and it lead me to her uncle, who in turn put us in touch with her. We have all reconnected now and will be meeting again after 42 years.