Submitted by TampaSaint t3_11a8qn8 in OldSchoolCool
TampaSaint OP t1_j9u026t wrote
Reply to comment by Southern_Snowshoe in My Dad, somewhere on an aircraft carrier in World War II; he was a fighter pilot in the navy during WWII. He earned the Navy Cross Medal for extraordinary heroism in combat (second to the medal of honor) and came home to live a quiet life and raise a family. by TampaSaint
Thank you. I have no clue where or when this was taken, and only found found it years after his death when his younger brother died. We also only have a few black and whites from those times, mostly group pictures and such. This one stands out. I wish I had seen this picture while he lived, to get the story behind it.
Southern_Snowshoe t1_j9ufthl wrote
Do you know which carrier(s) your father was assigned to? Mine was assigned to the escort carriers Bismarck Sea and Barnes. The former was lost to suicide attack off Iwo Jima, although Dad wasn’t aboard at the time. He lamented the fact that all his belongings, including a bunch of aircraft parts he’d swiped and squirreled away, were lost. He had some harebrained scheme to use all these “found” parts and instruments to build his own plane after the war. Probably just as well that it didn’t play out that way since Uncle Sam would take a dim view of it if Dad were found out.
TampaSaint OP t1_j9uhspg wrote
Ha Ha good plan. My dad was mostly on an obscure carrier called the USS Chenango which I linked in a comment above. Oddly, he almost never spoke of the time. We have no idea how her earned all the medals. Its on his official discharge papers but he never spoke of combat. Only that he liked the food and that he thought he suffered less than those doing infantry type fighting. The only stories he ever told us were when he had an engine failure during combat, ditched into the sea, and earned the name "Corky" because his buddies all said he was bobbing up and down just like a cork.
Southern_Snowshoe t1_j9uliq3 wrote
That’s a great story! Funny, my father also said he felt fortunate to not be a Marine or soldier slogging it out in the jungle. I remember him saying more than once, “Barring being forced down, I always knew I had a warm dry bed waiting for me and that I wouldn’t be sleeping in a muddy ditch.”
I missed the link you mentioned. I’ll check that out. I happened across a photo of my father last year in the Wikipedia article on his ship, the USS Bismarck Sea. Buried in the article is a photo of an accident unfolding on the deck and a crumpled individual in the middle of the mess. It seemed very similar to a story Dad told me about an accident he was involved in, so I dug a bit deeper. Sure enough, it was Dad. He was mentioned in the photos source material. (He was virtually uninjured but his plane captain and another pilot were lost).
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