Memories
of WW II
War Stories
Memories
of WW II as told by the Veterans.
All
Veterans and Veterans families from all countries are encouraged to submit a personal entry of
their memories for use on the following pages.
THANK YOU!
Please use the Link below (click) to add your story
Read some of the stories of our veterans by scrolling down this page or visit the links to some great web sites.
Before you begin your journey of WW II Veterans stories, LHG would appreciate it if you would take a few moments to pay your respects to all that have ever served in the Armed Forces.
Links
Art
Starratt's World War II Experiences web site
WORLD
WAR II MEMORIES
(Ken Arnold has put together a Great site)
Memories
Nowadays, we worship, as heroes, people who have never done anything remotely heroic. We idolize people who can throw a ball, or hit a ball, or sing, or dance, or act. Indeed, most people believe that fame is more important than heroism. Occasionally, we do recognize real heroes, but generally they have to be at least a little bit famous first. I invite you to read about a real hero, a man of faith who lived heroically before he became famous and afterwards too.
“My
parents raised me to help others as they did. They never really told me to, they
did it by example. Daddy didn't have to think about picking up the phosphorous
bomb and throwing it out of the airplane. He knew that if he didn't get this
dangerous thing out of the airplane they all would die. It is hard to think
of being so unselfish, but those who had been raised like my parents to
help others don't think. They don't think - they do what they can to help
even if it means losing their own lives in the process.”
Bette Cobb, daughter of Medal of Honor recipient Henry “Red” Erwin.
Henry
Erwin lived heroically his whole life, up to and beyond the incredible act of
heroism for which he received the Medal of Honor. He was the oldest of seven
children and his father died when he was just ten. Reflecting on that period,
Erwin said, “I asked the Lord to help me, and he did. And he has never, never
let me down.”
Instead
of finishing high school, he went to work in a steel mill to feed his family.
Young Henry worked very hard and earned enough to get his family into a new
home. In 1942, he enlisted in the Army. He actually had hopes of one day
receiving the Medal of Honor. Little did he know what it would cost him.
In 1945, on a B-29 bombing mission to
Japan, Sergeant Erwin was the radio man. One of his other jobs on the flight was
to drop large phosphorescent flares down a chute in the bottom of the aircraft.
But something went tragically wrong that day. Erwin said, “We
hit an air pocket and that thing came plowing back up into the plane. It
exploded and hit me in the face. Blinded me. Took my ear off. Took all my red
hair.”
A
flare like that puts out lots of smoke very fast. “It filled the plane with
smoke so dense, we could not see any of the instruments. It was burning our
throats, our noses, our eyes. That phosphorous smoke is terrible,” said
Captain William Loesch, the bombardier.
Henry
Erwin was blind. One of his ears had been burned off. The B-29 was diving toward
the ocean. It’s astonishing that anyone in those circumstances could have the
presence of mind to understand what needed to be done. Sergeant Erwin not only
understood. With God’s help, he did what had to be done. “I couldn’t see,
but I knew I had to get the thing out, or we were all going to die. I kept
trying to find it, and I couldn’t find it. And I said Lord, you’re going to
have to help me.”
Henry
found the flare, which was burning at over a thousand degrees. One of the first
things we learn as children, and one of the most important things we ever learn,
is to avoid touching hot objects. It’s utterly unnatural to pick up a hot
object. But Henry knew what he had to do. He picked the flare up with his bare
hand. “I was determined I was going to get that thing out.”
Hugging
the flare, he crawled to the front of the rapidly descending plane. When he got
to the cockpit, he told the officers there to open the window. Then he threw the
flare out. “I was fortunate to get it out, with the help of the good Lord.”
"I
don’t know how the hell he did it,” said Captain Loesch. At three hundred
feet above sea level the pilots regained control of the plane and leveled it
out. Henry Erwin wasn’t merely
badly burned. The man was smoldering! His crewmates, a dozen men whose lives he
had saved, put him out with fire extinguishers. The B-29 was over five hours out
from the nearest airbase at Iwo Jima!
Sergeant Erwin never lost consciousness. “Maybe it was a good thing,” he
later said. “For I was the first-aid man on the ship, and I told the gunner
just how to give me plasma.”
He made it back to Iwo Jima. It
normally takes Congress months, or years, to pass an act awarding the Medal of
Honor. In Sergeant Erwin’s case, it only took Congress a day. They hurried it
along because nobody expected Henry to live very long and they wanted him to get
the medal before he died. A week after his act of heroism, Sergeant Erwin
received the Medal of Honor, on his deathbed. Or so people thought.
But he
was as determined to live as he was determined to get the flare out of the
plane.
When
he came home to the states, he was still in terrible shape and was wrapped up
like a mummy. One of the big questions on his mind had to be how his wife would
take it. He had married Betty, his Sunday school sweetheart, just six months
earlier. But he was no longer the handsome, healthy young man she had known.
Would she faint? Would she cry? Would she leave and never come back? Evidently,
she was made of the same stuff he was. She kissed him and said, “Welcome
home.”
Henry
had regained some of his vision by that time and he could see her through his
left eye. “I thought she was the prettiest thing I’d ever seen. Made tears
come in my eyes. I knew then that I had nothing to worry about. I just thanked
the good Lord that I was home.”
When
the moment of truth came in his life, Henry Erwin stepped forward and did what
needed to be done, with the help of the good Lord, as he would say. He lived
through the most painful type of injury a human being can suffer. Nothing
compares to being severely burned, and anyone who knows about burns knows that
the face and hands are the worst parts of the body to burn. He went through over
forty painful reconstructive surgeries. And, after all that, he went on to work
for the Veterans Administration, helping burn victims. He and Mrs. Erwin raised
four children. One of them became a minister. Henry Erwin lived an inspiring
life and passed away on January 16th, 2002.
"The biggest thing I got from
him was a life of integrity. His whole life revolved around integrity. He kept
his nose clean and honored the Lord." Rev. H.E. Erwin, Jr.
Dear God, please show me how to live a life that honors and glorifies you, a life that prepares me to step forward the way Henry Erwin did, if it ever becomes necessary for me to do so. Please help me to remain ever aware of your goodness, in spite of whatever difficulties and pain I may face. Amen.
I found material for this article in several places. They’re listed below, along with a few other websites related to the Medal of Honor where you can read about more real heroes. Most of the quotes attributed to Henry Erwin are his very words from a video titled Medal of Honor: Real Heroes of a Grateful Nation. The video, produced by GRB Entertainment, included the stories of other MOH recipients like James Stockdale.
by Danny Murphy,
Danny Murphy is a writer and humorist and the
creator of www.christiancomedy.com
A story about Henry Erwin from The Tuscaloosa News by Ben Windham.
A fuller account of what happened, from Home of Heroes.
A tribute to Henry Erwin by his daughter, Bette Cobb.
A Brief History - The Medal of Honor
Congressional Medal of Honor Society