Cletus Glen
Norris, Sr.: Korean War
Interview by Joanne McMillen
(Midwest City Rotary Club)
Interview Date: February 7, 2005
Q: Would you prefer me
calling you Cletus or Glen?
A: You can call me whatever
you call me, as long as you call me time to eat.
Q: (laughing) OK. When and
where were you born?
A: I was born in Tishomingo,
Oklahoma the third day of August 1929.
Q: And, Glen, can you tell
me when people first began thinking about the Korean War in the United States?
A: I think probably people
were still getting over World War II and in late ’49 and early ‘50s when this
came about it was – I think it was more of a shock to people. They didn’t
realize – they weren’t thinking about war – I know I wasn’t.
Q: So the next question was,
was the war expected or did the war and US involvement come as a complete
surprise?
A: It came as a complete
surprise to me. I was – I was already in the service – I was already in the
national guard. And, ah, when it, ah, I think they closed the border on the 25th
day of June of 1950 and that’s when most people became aware of actually what
was happening, and that’s when the national guard went on active duty. The
national guard went on active duty the first of September of ’49, I believe.
Q: And you were already in
the guard?
A: And I was already in the
guard.
Q: Were you stateside?
A: Yes. Yes, I had just – I
was out of school about a year.
Q: How old were you when the
Korean War broke out?
A: Twenty years old.
Q: And we already know that
you were in the military at that time.
A: Right.
Q: Were you a World War II
veteran and, if so, how did this impact your thoughts?
A: Oh, I was not a World War
II veteran. I – I thought at one point, there, that, ah, I was too young, but I
thought I could lie about my age and get into the later part of World War II,
but it was almost over and, ah, I was – I missed that. So I was not in World War
II.
Q: So we know you enlisted.
What was your motivation for enlisting?
A: (laughter) Well, I grew up
– like I say, I was born in Tishomingo, a very small town, and, ah, most people
did not have money. Most – we were – we were poor, actually. And, ah, I had
graduated from high school, and, ah, a few of us were sitting in the student
union – there’s a little junior college there, and we were – I had started my
first year. And we decided that if we joined the national guard, which there was
a unit there which is what I wound up belonging to, ah, we could join the
national guard and they would pay us, ah, like $26 every two or three months and
that would help us.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: So we joined the national
guard and at the time we were activated I was at the guard.
Q: But at the same time I’ve
heard you had thoughts about, ah, World War II. Was there a sense of patriotism
here or was it more of a voluntary. . .
A: I feel like I was
patriotic, ah, and as time went on that grew and, of course, I was that young
then, but I had heard stories between the end of World War II and the beginning
of 1950 when that started, of people that said, ‘well, I really don’t – I kind
of like war from where I sit because I make more money.’ And it didn’t sit well
with me and also, well, we’ll get into that, I guess – I guess – also I felt
like I had heard people say they would make bargains with God, so to speak:
‘God, I’ll not smoke another cigarette if you’ll get me out of this situation
that I’m in.’ I didn’t like that. And I told myself that what I would ask God to
do was help me do the best job that I can and that would be it. I wouldn’t make
any – I wouldn’t – so I didn’t.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: But from that standpoint,
that’s kind of what I was exposed to from the end of World War II until we were
activated in, ah, September ’49.
Q: I appreciate that. It
gives it the perspective for your thinking at the time and the situation in the
country. What were your personal feelings about going off to war once you were
called and what were your feelings in regard to communism and the anxieties and
tensions it created.
A: I didn’t have any – I
didn’t know what communism was, hardly. I had, really, had no idea. I – like I
say – I was beginning to get an idea what patriotism was. I was – I thought I
was immortal, you know, thought wasn’t anything could affect me. Fact of
matters, we run around – did – this was even after we were activated – we were
still at home getting ready to be transferred to training camps and, ah, we all
felt like we were meanest s.o.b. in the valley, and, ah, then that took hold as
we got in those, in those situations, that we changed the wording a little bit.
. .
Q: (laughter)
A: . . . and “Yeah, though I
walk through the valley of. . .” and we changed that. But, ah, no, I didn’t – I
was ready. I had no qualms about it. I wasn’t worried at that time. I wasn’t
scared at that time.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: So we just went in and
started our training and just accepted each day and each happening as it came
and didn’t worry about it.
Q: You were pretty
invincible in your own mind.
A: In our own mind, yeah.
Q: Ah-huh. Well, what about
anxieties and tensions in the United States at the time. Were you cognizant of
any or . . .?
A: No, I wasn’t. I had – I did
– I just didn’t know those things. We weren’t – very few of us had radios back
then. No television at all.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: And, ah, small town papers
that didn’t give out a lot of information. And we didn’t worry about things like
that.
Q: You didn’t know to worry
about it.
A: Pardon?
Q: You didn’t know to worry
about it.
A: Didn’t know. Had no idea.
Q: Feelings of your friends
and acquaintances about the war? What were they?
A: About the same. We were
all, kind of, about the same situation. Same feeling. And they were young, like
myself, that were in, we were of the same attitude and felt about it and all.
We, ah, and as time went on, it, ah, when we went to Japan in our training we
were getting closer and closer and began to realize more and we were ready to
go.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: I – I can’t remember one
person that decided, well, I just can’t hack this. I don’t want to go. So we
felt like it was, ah, that we’d take care of any problem that arose.
Q: Ah-huh. I think you’ve
answered this question about people you knew that – did they all want to join
the military and serve. There wasn’t a draft through the Korean War, was there?
A: Ah, well, of course – yes,
there was. Yes, there was. Of course, at 18 we had to register. And I didn’t
realize that – I didn’t intend to be – I wasn’t thinking about it. I did what I
did and joined. And as time went on I found out that people were being drafted
to, ah, bring the division that I – the 45th Division, which I belonged to, up
to strength. And they brought draftees in from all parts of the country. And,
ah, so, that was that.
Q: How did your family, wife
or girlfriend, feel about you going off to the war?
A: My mom was very concerned.
Didn’t know – she didn’t know what was going to happen, but she was concerned.
My girlfriend, we had broken up, and, ah, which was good for both of us. She was
able to finish school. I didn’t know what was going to happen. And, like I said
while ago, it wasn’t bothering me. And, ah, they were – they loved me and they
helped me many, many times with the letters that I received. There would be
times when we’d get four or five letters that had been on the way, you know, for
many weeks. And, ah, they didn’t want it to happen to me, but, ah, it did.
Q: And how did you get those
letters? Were they consistent in delivering them?
A: Ah, they wrote on a regular
basis, ah, and of course, it was an APO – APO number out of California. And, ah,
they would write the letter, and, ah, mail it, ah. If I remember right, most of
the time when we received our letters, ah, we’d be back at what they would call
a rest area. You’d spend so much time on the main line of resistance and you’d
be pulled back to what they called a blocking position for a period of time.
Then you would go back for a couple of weeks or so rest. And at that point in
time, letters would come in, and you may have four or five or six.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: And you’d have a chance to
read them, and you had to write a letter once in a while. And they were very
meaningful and, and, helpful to me. It kept me going.
Q: Sure. Sure. Where did you
undertake basic training?
A: Camp Polk, Louisiana. Right
new Leesville, La. I started my basic training there, and, ah, then, ah, shortly
after I arrived at Camp Polk, they sent me Fort Riley, Kansas, to a leadership
school. And that was an 8-week school. Came back to – at that time it was Camp
Polk. It’s called Fort Polk now. Came back to Camp Polk and got ready to ship
out. And, ah, shipped out – I’m going to guess it was somewhere – I think it was
in March of ’50 – shipped out at New Orleans. Went down through the Panama
Canal, went up to San Francisco, picked up some troops up there. Spent 28 days
aboard ship and went to the northern island of Hokkaido in Japan, and that’s
where we were in training completing our training, and, ah, when we were
scheduled to go to Korea.
Q: So the total amount of
time you spent in training from . . .
A: Would have been September
of ’49 – of course, that was training that we took in the national guard.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: From then until, ah, we
shipped to Korea in early – early December of ’51 – only about a year.
Q: Ah-huh. What were your
impressions of basic training and maybe a little more about the experience?
A: Basic training to me was
that I – I, for one, enjoyed the training. I enjoyed the regimentation, the
discipline. And, ah, what I didn’t enjoy was being held up on weekends when I
wanted to go home, and, ah, we got in trouble a time or two leaving camp and
spending the weekend, but, ah, I had no problem with basic training. That was
OK.
Q: Ah-huh. After basic
training, once again, where did the military send you?
A: Well, when we shipped –
when we shipped out of the United States, we went right straight to Japan, and
we continued our training.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: It was, it was. . .well, I
don’t guess you’d – I guess you’d still call it basic training. We had – we had
had that much time for those of us that were in the guard at the time to be,
probably, considered through with our basic part of our training because we had
trained in our weapons, we had trained in qualifying in our weapons, then we
took up the additional training when we got to Japan. And whoever made the
decision whatever time it was, that decision was made for us to prepare, ah, our
training for the move to Korea.
Q: Were you confident that
you’d be going to Korea?
A: We – myself – most of us
felt like we might.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: That’s kind of what our
feeling was. Fact of the matter is, in early – late October or early November of
that year, ah, we looked at the bulletin board one day in our company area, and
it said it looks there’s going to be several hundred be able to do home pretty
soon. At that point in time I already had my orders cut and had enough cash in
my pocket that I had accumulated to go to the big island, to Tokyo, on leave.
And I cancelled it because I thought I was going to get to go home. And, then,
shortly after that, then I think that was either – I think it was after
Thanksgiving because I still had my menu for Thanksgiving dinner – that they
said that had been cancelled, you will be on your way to Korea. So that would
have been late November or the very first part of December of ’51 when we found
out for sure that that’s what – that there, again, we still were that young and
still that confident in our capabilities of getting things done, that we weren’t
– weren’t worried.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: We weren’t . . .
Q: You were ready.
A: We were ready.
Q: In what capacity did you
serve during the Korean War, your duty, rank and place of service?
A: I was, ah, attained the
rank of staff sergeant. I was the section leader of a 75-recoilless rifle
platoon, and, ah, where we served – I was in a heavy weapons company. I was in H
company of the 180th infantry regiment of the 45th infantry division. And I have
to plug that because I know that all divisions and people that serve in any
unit, ah, is proud of their unit. Ah, but I was very proud of the 45th infantry
division, and, as a matter of fact, General George S. Patton, who you probably
have heard of many times in World War II, and I have that hanging on my wall at
home, made the statement in there that the 45th infantry division was the best –
was one of the best, if not the best, infantry division in the history of
American arms. And that’s something I was very proud of. But, ah, like I said, I
was a staff sergeant and I served, ah, ah, in H company in the second battalion.
And, ah, we operated, ah, not as a company, but as an addition to rifle
companies to give them more fire-power. We had, like I say, I had the
75-recoilless rifle. We had heavy machine guns and heavy mortars and they would
attach platoons or sections of us to rifle companies to help in crease their
fire power. And, ah, that’s where we spent our time.
Q: Ah-huh. In terms of your
experience in Korea, under what kinds of conditions did you live and work?
A: We had the rainy season – a
lot of rain – we had the winter campaign – it was terribly cold. Temperatures
would get down to minus 37 to minus 40 and stay that way. And, ah, you didn’t –
seemed like you couldn’t put on enough clothes to keep warm. And, ah, you could
say it was miserable. But we weathered it, I mean, that was the way it was. You
accepted it – we accepted it and went on.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: And, which makes me
remember, at one point there, back in a rest area that I mentioned a while ago,
they set up a 12-man squad tent and run 1/2 inch galvanized pipe down it and
made showers in there. And we got to come down off of the hill and take a hot
shower, which was the best thing that ever happened (laughter), you know. Which
was the best thing that ever happened to me. But, ah, there again, those
instances and, ah, and – we got into the point now where we were scared. You’re
not scared to the point where you panic and give up, but you’re scared all the
time. And that’s when I said, ah, help me do the best that I can what I set out
to do was better let nature take its course, or whatever. But, ah. . .
Q: Sounds like you were on
high alert.
A: It, ah, we, ah, one
fortunate thing about the division – the division, ah, took over – the division
replaced the first cavalry division – the whole division all at one time. And so
when we went in – when we made it up to the front line we went in and took over
their positions, and, ah, still, we didn’t – we knew that it could happen, but
we weren’t thinking in terms of ‘well, I’m going to get killed in the next 30
minutes’ or whatever. And, ah, we just did what we were told, took each day as
it came.
Q: When you were up at the
front line, what about the time you were up there? Was it hours? Was it days?
A: Most of the time we’d spend
18 to 20 or 25 days . . .
Q: On the front lines?
A: In the line. On the line.
Ah, give or take, whatever was going on, and that goes back to what I said while
ago, we would spend that time up there and then they would pull us back into a
blocking position, which would probably be on the order of 2 to 5 miles,
probably, behind the line. We would have to be alert all the time back there,
but we could rest because we would be what they called second-lined if something
was to go through back in that area. And, then, ah, for 10 to 15 days, whatever
it was, and then from there they’d pull us back to an area where we could rest.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: And, ah, play a little
volleyball or, or even have a cot to sleep on. Up on the line you slept in a
hole – what we called hooches, and, of course, you’d think midnight – what we
called midnight requisitions, which was stealing stuff, and make it livable for
us. But, ah . . .
Q: And what about the food
that you ate when you were up there?
A: By far and large it was
C-rations. You know, you had sausage, you had corned beef hash, you had this,
that, and the other. One little incident that happened, we hadn’t been in the
line but very few days and, ah, they called us back from our position, back on
the reverse – the reverse slope of the mountain, which is the back side, and the
Korean Service Corps brought up a hot meal for us, and it was turkey and if I
remember right then we had turkey and dressing and had what we called patriotic
ice cream, which was, ah, chocolate, vanilla, and strawberry all in a little
block.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: And we had not been there
long till they through an artillery barrage in on us and, ah, I didn’t get to
eat my ice cream, had to slam it up and get back into the hole, and, ah, but,
ah, those, ah, those experiences there – that you’d – and nobody – I don’t think
I knew of anybody that griped at all that ‘I’m here – why am I here? Why?’ You
know, ‘I shouldn’t be here.’ We all felt like we shouldn’t be there, but we, ah,
like my young son said one time that, ah, the military’s the first one that says
we don’t want war, but ah, we did.
I have a couple of instances that I
would mention that left a big impression on me that people don’t realize – a lot
of people don’t realize. I was sent back to Seoul for some reason or other one
time and I was standing on the corner of the street – it was kind of like a, ah,
some kind of store on the corner. It was a bus stop where the busses would come
in and unload and pick up people. This very small child about 4 years old, a
little boy, had no – and I’m talking winter time – had no coat, had a little bit
of a vest on. I – I see him even now and I think that he was barefooted, but I’m
not sure, but he was standing out there on this street corner and waiting for
this bus to pull up and get up under the tailpipe where the exhaust was coming
out trying to keep warm. And that was everywhere and all the time.
The second instance along that line,
at, ah, I had – I had done my time, so to speak, and was coming home. And they’d
sent back to Inchon, and they had a chow hall back there, and then when you went
in and had your dinner, you came out, you had a barrel that you washed your mess
gear in. We had a barrel that you poured your – if you had scraps, you put it in
the barrel, and then you washed and went on. Maybe 50 yards from where the
building was there was a barbed wire fence and these little kids – and, I know,
probably, that their parents probably told them to do it, but they’d have one of
our milk cans that our powdered milk come in or a coffee can or something and
they would run as hard as they could come to that barrel and try to dig that
food out of it. And a Korean guy with a piece of wire or a switch or something
would whip them back to get them back. And I thought ‘there’s got to be
something better than this.’ And, ah, it – I – it never left, never left, and
yet today we see it all over the place – where are we?
Q: Some things we just don’t
learn. What kind of contact did you have with the people back home?
A: Just the letters that Mom
and my wife, my girlfriend at the time, sent.
Q: Were you free to write
whatever you wanted to in your letters, or were those. . .?
A: I can’t remember – I can’t
remember them ever, ah, editing anything that I wrote, but I never wrote
anything about what was going on other than the fact that, ah, that, ah, that,
you know, it’s raining or it’s snowing or its cold or something or glad I got
your letter or whatever. Just – that’s about the only thing I ever wrote.
Q: Was it hard to write
letters and not talk about your experiences?
A: No, not – I didn’t – well,
I think what it was that I didn’t want to worry, to say whatever was going on
that might worry Mom or might worry the girlfriend. And that’s the only people I
ever wrote a letter to was my Mom.
Q: Ah-huh. The next question
asks if you feel comfortable talking about combat, please describe the combat
experiences you had, if any.
A: Well, there again, I was
scared. Plenty scared. We were very, very fortunate. Of course, like I said
awhile ago when I said I was in a heavy weapons company, I was on the line, but
I never went – only one time I was sent forward about a half a mile in front of
the line to try to close a bunker out, which we did. And I was very nervous. We
were there at a point in time when Truman, or they signed a so-called
cease-fire. That limited, ah, there was no really offensive pushes at that time.
Mostly it was patrol action where – that in itself we lost a lot of people, but,
ah, ah, it was just night after night 50 percent alert. There’s a patrol in this
area. There’s something in this area, ah, and, ah, we, ah, were on guard all
night long. But if – if you could say that you had it easy, I had it easier than
infantrymen in a rifle company, because they were the ones that were sent out on
patrols at night, and, ah, then tried to cover them if in case it was needed.
And, ah, there again, you know, you’re 20 years old and you’re still invincible
and you’re – but you realize you could not make it. You’re still scared. You
still do what you’re supposed to. And that’s what – that’s what I’m very proud
of – from that period of time there was no protesting. Everybody did their job
and everybody went. Nobody wanted to, like we said.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: But, ah, that was – I guess
I was – I guess – I don’t guess I was in the line but, off and on, every other
month or so, I guess, for – from December until June of the following year. Up
to June of ’52. That’s when I came home.
Q: Your most memorable
experience in Korea, combat or otherwise? You’ve addressed some things already.
Is there anything else?
A: I think the most memorable
experience, ah, was the two that I gave you just now about the way things were.
The other thing was when I realized I was going to get to come home. And they
sent back to Inchon to – away from it, and I was coming home. But those – those
two experiences, I mean they – they etched in my mind more than anything else.
Being shot at, you know, you just accept that. But, ah, that did, and I never
forgot those – those two instances. At the same time the little boy was trying
to keep warm at the bus an old lady was trying to steal something out of the
store and she was almost beat to the ground, trying to – and those things, ah,
but, ah, the good experiences after – we were on a tour and took a bus trip up
to – I can’t even remember now where it was, but ice fields. We went out on the
ice fields with this bus tour and there was about 10 or so Koreans on the bus. I
had a cap on that showed what. . . and, ah, I told them that I’d been in Korea,
and, ah, I know part of a Korean folk song in English and I sang it for them.
And they enjoyed it, so they wound up giving me two or three little mementos and
that was something that affected all of us when one of them realized and looked
you in the eye and cried and said ‘thank you for being there.’ And that – that
affects you, too.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: And, ah, I think we should
have been there the way it all come out. I’ve always felt like I don’t think we
won anything. I don’t think the war has ever been over with. We still have 150
miles of chain link fence and I’ve always been one that felt like if we’re going
to have to, fight to win, don’t just fight up to a certain spot then quit.
Q: Ah-huh. Finish what you
start.
A: Pardon?
Q: Finish what you start.
A: Finish what you start.
Absolutely.
Q: So, the next question is
how has that experience impacted your life, or how have these experiences
impacted your life?
A: Well, that part of it, I
think, as I told you a while ago, has made me look at people different. I’m more
– I’m more cognizant of how a person – it’s hard for me to explain. Empathy. I
feel for a person. I want things to be right. I hate to see a person abused. I
hate to see a child cry.
Q: How long did you serve in
Korea? You’ve given the dates, but. . . .
A: From December of ’51 until
June of ’52.
Q: So a year and a half.
A: No, not a year. A little
over six months.
Q: That’s right, OK. Six
months. And after serving in Korea, where did the military send you, or were you
immediately discharged? You said you went home, but were you discharged?
A: Ah, when they – they sent
me home in June of ’52, I came to Camp Stoneman, California, and, ah, processed
there for about five days, and then they put me on a train and sent me to Fort
Sill, Oklahoma. And that’s where I was – that’s where I was released.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: At Fort Sill.
Q: What kind of reception
did you receive when you got back to the United States? Back home, specifically?
A: If I recall, it seems to me
like it was night when they got there, or she got there, and it was one person
because my mom couldn’t come. There was one person that picked me up. There was
no reception, no flag waiving or bands playing. My sis came to Fort Sill and
picked me up. And that didn’t bother me one bit, at that time. And since then,
I’ve wondered how it could be with other factions, but it didn’t bother at the
time.
Q: Ah-huh. I understand.
A: I was just glad to be home.
Q: I hear you there.
A: Now backing up to Camp
Stoneman, when I hit the – in Frisco, all I wanted to do was find a hamburger –
a cheeseburger with French fries. I didn’t find it at that point, but. . .
Q: In terms or your war
experiences, how did those experiences affect your relations and interactions
with family, friends, spouse, or girlfriend?
A: I think over and above
anything else, it made me realize the love that was there and the caring that
was there and – closer, so much closer to them.
Q: Ah-huh. Do you still keep
in touch with some of the people you served with?
A: Not many. Hardly any at
all. There’s one person who still lives in my hometown. Fact of the matter is,
he was my first gunner – no, he was one of my ammo bearers. But, ah, one little
incident that – two years ago – the lady’s name is Franz – she writes one of the
columns in the Daily Oklahoman. I pick up the paper – Mom picks up the paper one
morning and she said ‘you’ve got your name in the paper.’ Daily Oklahoman. I
said ‘well, I don’t know what’s going on.’ Well, she had got hold of this letter
or the guy had written a letter. His name is John Zook. He lives in North
Carolina. He was a member of our machine gun platoon. He had come to the reunion
– the 45th infantry division association has a reunion once a year in Oklahoma
City. And he couldn’t find anybody from H company, second battalion, 180th
infantry. And so he wrote this letter and he said ‘I knew some people – two or
three – during that period of time and one of them was Cletus G. Norris.’ And,
ah, he said. . . anyway, I guess I called her or she called – someway or another
got in contact with her. And, ah, I said ‘well, I’ll just call that gentlemen.’
I called him, had a nice conversation with him, and the following year met him
at our reunion, and got reacquainted. And then later, she called me and asked me
had I got in contact with him. And the whole article – her article was centered
around that meeting that we’d had and it happened to be on my birthday
(laughing). So I cut it out of the Daily Oklahoman. But, by far, a lot of our
people that was in my company – and that’s about the only ones that I got to
know at all – was, a lot of them were draftees, like I mentioned before that was
from Pennsylvania and New York and different places that when they went home,
then never came back. There’s been a few that’s come back to one of our
reunions, but, ah, that’s about the extent of it. We have an association – the
180th association, but, ah, everybody’s gone now. It’s kind of few and far
between that we visit anymore.
Q: Ah-huh. What kinds of
general observations and conclusions do you have about the Korean War and your
Korean War experience?
A: I wouldn’t take a million
for the experience right now, but I wouldn’t give you a nickel for another one.
Ah, it was something that needed to be done, we were called to do it, and by far
and large everybody went and done their job to the best of their ability and
never griped about it. And, ah, I think it helped. I think it helped so still,
quell, or slow down the advance of communism. I’ve never warmed up yet, after
all these years, but, ah. . . I’ll tell you Joanne, if I may call you Joanne?
Q: Sure.
A: Like I say, I wouldn’t –
I’m a very fortunate person. The only time I get a little bit out of line any
more when people still refer to it as a police action or conflict. You can have
those things, but war is spelled w-a-r, and that’s exactly what that was.
Q: Ah-huh.
A: We’re a little better now
than what we were, but it’s still called the ‘forgotten war.’
Q: Ah-huh.
A: And there was something on
the order of 53,000 that paid the price totally. That’s the extent.
Q: Certainly experience it,
like you say, impacts your whole life – formed who you are today – and at the
same time, wouldn’t want to go back there.
A: Absolutely. Absolutely.
Q: Well, do you have any
other comments that you’d like to share?
A: That about sums it up. I’m
just – I think you for the opportunity. And I will say this that, ah, there’s
even – even there – there’s some funny things that happened and some things that
you like to remember. I went over, like I said earlier, 28 days it took us to
get to Japan on the General William S. Regal, and it was a mess. I spent five
days in Sasebo, Japan on the way being deloused and getting new clothes. Walked
down the dock that day to get aboard ship to come home and the closer I got the
more I realized that I knew the ship and I had to come home on the General
William S. Regal, and I didn’t like that at all! (laughter) But it got me home
and that’s all that mattered.
Q: You didn’t protest it
enough to stay where you were!
A: And I had sense enough on
the way home that I stayed hid out. On the way over I had to do a lot of work,
but on the way home I stayed hid. But anyway, ah, I’m glad this is happening
because whatever a person’s got to say, it may mean something to someone, it may
call to, ah, something happened, and it may do some good, we hope.
Q: Thank you. Certainly
they’re valuable stories to share.
A: Yeah.
Rose State College
Last modified on August 25, 2005
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