Per capita, West Virginia sends more sons

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Voices of West Virginia Veterans By Eric Douglas Per capita, West Virginia sends more sons and daughters to war than any other state in the nation. Is serving in the military a way out for many of our young people? No question. Is it a way to get a job and an education in tough times? No question about that either. According to many state veterans I interviewed recently, it s also an opportunity to defend our nation s values and to stand up for what they believe is right. As a journalist and a documentarian, I have always been interested in people s stories. In 2011, I heard that the Veterans History Project at the Library of Congress had only about 20 oral histories from West Virginia war veterans. That surprised me, and I decided I wanted to do what I could to improve that situation. In early 2012, I began traveling throughout West Virginia to interview some of our state s war veterans. I drove more than 2,000 miles, met with 48 veterans, recorded more than 50 hours of interviews, and spent more than 500 hours putting my project together. In May 2013, I released a 48-minute multimedia documentary titled West Virginia Voices of War. The documentary combines audio recordings with portraits of each veteran and images from various wars. In addition, I published a companion book to the documentary titled Common Valor, which features the stories of the veterans I interviewed. In developing the documentary and book, my goal was for other veterans to watch and read and say, He told my story too. In this article, I will relay some of the experiences and perspectives of the veterans who so generously shared their stories with me. As I interviewed more and more veterans, a number of common themes emerged. I was surprised at the number of veterans who mentioned but only as a footnote that they had been awarded a Bronze Star or some other citation for bravery. Most didn t feel that they had earned it, saying their acts of valor were just something they did while serving. None of them felt like a hero. All of the veterans spoke of their reasons for serving, their struggles to stay in touch with family, and the fight to return home. More than one veteran wept, remembering friends lost or terrible things they saw on the battlefield. The stories were strikingly similar, regardless of the war, branch of service, or even gender. Leaving for war was difficult for every veteran. Bob Gunno of Charleston served as a Spec 4 in the army in Vietnam. One of his more vivid memories is of the day his family saw him off. Everyone was in the airport, he recalls. Dad waited until everyone said goodbye. That was the first time I had ever seen him with tears. He didn t say anything except I love you. He hugged me and then turned and walked off. I still remember that to this day. Col. Paige Parrish Hunter from Clendenin deployed to Kuwait for Desert Storm with the 130th Airlift Wing of the West Virginia Air National Guard. It was the first time since Korea that this unit deployed, she explains. I will never 18 November 2014. www.wonderfulwv.com

History From left to right: U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Donna Smith of Williamson, Medal of Honor recipient Hershel Woody Williams of Ona, Col. Paige Parrish Hunter of Clendenin, Sgt. Marva Gray of Charleston, Maj. Richard Ojeda of Holden, and Bronze Star awardee Bob Young of St. Albans. All photos this page Eric Douglas forget when I stepped on the bottom step to the aircraft. My parents looked kind of small standing there. I thought, It might be the last time I see them. A Brush with Death Second Class Signalman Ira Richmond from Beckley narrowly avoided death on a U.S. Navy warship during World War II. On that particular day, instead of being at his regular duty station on the bridge, Richmond was at General Quarters manning a gun. General Quarters, also known as battle stations, alerts the crew to battle or imminent danger. Anyone not already on duty when General Quarters is sounded has to report to a battle station. From ten o clock in the morning, every five minutes, three suicide planes came over that mountain, he remembers. We got hit. We had one coming on the starboard and one on the port. And then one came over the bow. We got the ones on the port and starboard. But the one coming over the bow hit the mast. Everybody up there with the captain was killed. If Richmond had been at the ship s helm, he would have died. 19

These two photos are from the personal collection of Rex Miller of Charleston. Serving as an army private first class, Miller was stationed in Europe during WWII. He says the threat of dying made the men he served with closer. Facing Danger While not everyone who deploys to a war zone is a combat soldier, everyone is in danger. Some West Virginia war veterans volunteered to put themselves on the line because they knew someone had to do it. Bob Young of St. Albans earned a Bronze Star as a private first class in the army during World War II. Before his unit moved out, tasked with taking the city of Saarbrücken, they had to destroy an enemy machine gun emplacement. He [the forward observer] was trying to get the machine gun placement zeroed in [so they could call in artillery], Young recalls. He would stand up and fire and they would return fire, but he couldn t get it zeroed in. I said, I don t think you re going to scare them to death with that carbine. Let me run back and forth and maybe you can get a better position on them. They fired at me and he was finally able to get them knocked out. He said he would turn me in for a Bronze Star. As it turned out, Young s papers were lost when he returned home. He didn t receive his award or his Purple Heart until 2005. U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Donna Smith from Williamson deployed to Iraq in December of 2009 and returned home in January 2011. My first sergeant was really concerned because I was a mother and divorced, she recalls. I said, Everyone else has kids. If it is meant for me to get killed, it is meant. My mission was to take backpacks with school supplies to the kids. I d never seen anything like it before. They were squeezed into a small space to go to school. They were barefoot. You see all these kids walking alongside the road. It is like 130 degrees and they are walking with no shoes and their feet are blackened. I was thinking, We have it made. My kids fight over a cell phone and [these kids] don t have food and clean water. It just blew my mind. Wounded by Friendly Fire The real possibility of getting injured or killed was something the veterans I spoke to faced every day. Sgt. Bob Payne served with the Marine Corps in Korea, where he was wounded by friendly fire. We had shells going over us. I didn t hear it coming in, he remembers. It knocked me flat against a tree. It was one of ours a short, round Charlie, we called it. Every once in a while you get them. A buddy of mine got a hole in his shoulder. A piece of shrapnel went in the side of my foot here. The sole of my boot kept it from going in any further. They carried us off the hill and took us to a hospital. I didn t stay there very long. I couldn t take just laying there. Payne later returned to duty and began training South Korean soldiers. Army Staff Sgt. Hal Ord from Cross Lanes suffered a more severe injury. He lost his leg to a rocket attack in Iraq. The alarm went off and I had [only] enough time to stand up and turn around before the explosion hit. I remember dirt flying in my face. I woke up and there was screaming all around. I knew something was wrong with my leg, but I didn t look at it. I screamed two or three times for my guys. I used to joke around with Sgt. Kelly, and I guess he thought I was joking around. He said, Get up, man! Get up! Quit play- 20 November 2014. www.wonderfulwv.com

ing. I could see the change in his face when he looked down my body and saw my leg. He turned ghost white. For Ord, one of the hardest parts of his amputation was his son s reaction to it. Seeing him acting out because of what had happened was tough, he says. Now, it has had the reverse action on him. He sees that even with the amputation you can never let something beat you down. After I had my amputation, I had an issue with people staring at me. I finally realized I could go up to people and ask if they wanted to know what happened. It turned it around 100 percent, and I met a lot of good people that way. I ve even helped some other amputees. First Sgt. Robert Moore of Pinch, who served two tours of duty in Vietnam, became emotional as he recalled his experiences as a helicopter crew chief flying rescue and recovery missions. Pausing to compose himself, he described painful memories, now more than 40 years old: The flight crews would all become good friends, partying and hanging out when we were off duty. But then the call would come in and we would have to go pick up the bodies of friends who were shot down, and either recover the helicopter or destroy it in place. That was probably about the hardest thing I had to do go out and pick up friends bodies and bring them back. Coming Home For many veterans, transitioning to being back home was as difficult as the tour of duty. Maj. Richard Ojeda of Holden, a veteran of three deployments for Operation Iraqi Freedom and one for Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan, wanted everything to be fine when he got home, but he had to shake his preconceived ideas. Every time I left Iraq or Afghanistan, I had the mental image that everything was going to be perfect, and that my wife was going to meet me in a field of wheat and I was gonna love it, he says. It doesn t happen. You realize that the entire time that you ve been gone she has had to be Mommy and Daddy. If you re lucky, you do. Every veteran I spoke with was fundamentally changed by the experience of war. They all said they were proud of their service and would do it again if they could, or if they were called to do so. But all were haunted by the experience. All but a few struggled when they came home. Many drank too much; others couldn t sleep. War service brought an end to marriages and careers. I was one of the veterans who decided that I was fine, U.S. Marine Corps Sgt. Bob Payne was wounded by friendly fire during the Korean War. Here he attends worship services (seated at left and marked with an X) and poses in front of his tent. Photos courtesy of Bob Payne Background photo courtesy of Rex Miller 21

Maj. Richard Ojeda of Holden (left) was deployed three times to Iraq and once to Afghanistan. Here he helps a young Afghani boy put on new shoes donated by people in his hometown. Photo courtesy of Richard Ojeda Every veteran I spoke with was fundamentally changed by the experience of war. They all said they were proud of their service and would do it again if they could, or if they were called to do so. But all were haunted by the experience. All but a few struggled when they came home. Many drank too much; others couldn t sleep. War service brought an end to marriages and careers. says Sgt. Marva Gray of Charleston, who served two years in Iraq. I went back to school. I went back to work. I went back to church. I was fine. It didn t seem to bother me that I wasn t sleeping. I would go days, going to work, sleeping maybe an hour, and then going to school. In 2007, it hit me that I wasn t fine. I went to the VA and got help. It s not normal to go to bed at 4:00 and get back up at 6:00. I finally adjusted my sleep habits, but I still have a problem driving the interstate. If I am driving and an emergency siren goes off, I literally have to pull the car over. Debris on the side of the road makes me nervous. If a big truck comes up behind me, I pull the car over until it gets by. My fuse is a little shorter. I get angry quicker. My family sees the change. Talking Can Help For some, talking about their experiences, rather than keeping them in, has been the key to transitioning back home successfully. Yet it is easier said than done. I have always attributed my conversion to being a Medal of Honor recipient, says retired Marine Corps Chief Warrant Officer Hershel Woody Williams of Ona. I was forced by the public to talk about my experiences. I had all kinds of nightmares and all the things that go with that. But since I was forced to talk about it, I didn t hold it in. It was a therapy to me. Williams, who regularly speaks to veterans groups, encourages his audiences to talk about their experiences. Nearly every veteran I interviewed said that no matter how much they wanted to get home, they felt guilty for leaving their brothers and sisters behind in the war zone. After my first tour, I understood, says Staff Sgt. David Dean of Nitro, who served two tours of duty in Iraq for Operation Iraqi Freedom. It s not that anybody wants to go to war. But those of us that feel that call to duty, you feel that s where you re supposed to be. You think, if somebody else is there, I should be shoulder to shoulder with those guys. Even now, there is a whole platoon from my old unit that is down range. I d be right there with them if I could, but I couldn t do it anymore. Rex Miller of Charleston, who was an army private first 22 November 2014. www.wonderfulwv.com

class in Europe during World War II, says it was the threat of dying that made men closer. When you are right there where you can die together, and you go through all of that, I think it makes you closer, he explains. It is different from anything else when you get in the service like that. Your life is on the line. The stories of all of the veterans I interviewed are now part of the Library of Congress s Veterans History Project, as well as the collection at the West Virginia State Archives. Since I recorded these histories, a number of my interviewees have passed away. Four died before the documentary and book were released on Memorial Day 2013. I am honored to have had the opportunity to hear all these stories, and to have had a part in preserving them. You can watch West Virginia Voices of War on Eric Douglas s website: booksbyeric.com. In addition, last July, the West Virginia Library Commission distributed copies of the documentary on DVD to every public library in West Virginia. Common Valor can be purchased from the website, from amazon.com, or at Tamarack in Beckley. Note: Author Eric Douglas will show selected portions of West Virginia Voices of War and speak on the process of recording oral histories on November 6 at 7:00 PM at the West Virginia State Archives in the State Culture Center in Charleston. Eric Douglas of Pinch is a graduate of Marshall University. He is the author of several series of novels, short stories, and children s books. He has also produced documentaries on the people of Russia and the lobster divers of Honduras. This is his first documentary project based in West Virginia. For more of his work, visit his website, booksbyeric.com. Maj. Richard Ojeda says that returning home after immersion in military service abroad was never easy for him. He had to acknowledge that his absence was a great hardship on his family. Photos courtesy of Richard Ojeda Background photo courtesy of Richard Ojeda 23