May 18, 2012
May 18, 2012I grew up there in east Fort Worth. And in—about ’38—I was about seventeen, I imagine—yeah, seventeen. I was going to— There weren’t any jobs around for kids, so I joined the Texas National Guard just to get their twenty-one dollars a month. And in ’39, well, actually in 1940, they started mobilizing the Nation-al Guard, and they were drafting twenty-year-olds. I was going to be nineteen in October, so I’d be prime draft bait in about a year. I’d already been in the guard for about a year and a half, so I just went ahead and joined up with them. And we went to Camp Bowie, Texas, down at Brownwood; stayed there about a year, training. And we were supposed to get out in a year. I was actually home, waiting on a discharge, on December 7, 1941. And, of course, you know what happened then.
So I just—I went back to the camp and they said, “No dis-charges. Everybody’s in for the duration.” In ’42, we got—the whole division got transferred to north Florida, when we was taking amphibious training. And this unit I was in was the Tex-as National Guard Thirty-Sixth Infantry Division. After about a year there, we went on maneuvers up in the Pinelands of North Carolina, South Carolina, for several months. Then we moved on up to Cape Cod, a camp called Camp Edwards, which is when we were taking amphibious training out in Nantucket Bay. That was in 1942. In the spring, I think it was April or May of ’43, we loaded on this ship, and the whole division went to North Africa.