CLAYTON P. SCOTT

(In 1997 Clayton dictated the events of his life, particularly his military career, in order that his children and grandchildren could have that record. It is condensed as follows :)

I was born May 26, 1920, on a farm near Garden Grove, Iowa, the fourth in a family of six children, born to Pearl A. and Margaret Baker Scott. We came from good German stock on both sides of the family. My great-grandfather, Peter Schott, was born in 1821 in Bavaria, Germany. In 1837, when he was teen-aged, he immigrated to America with his parents and brother.

The family name was changed when my grandfather was in military service during the Civil War. The ''h" was dropped and all his records were under the name of Scott. We don't know if he purposely changed it or the Army clerks simply misspelled it. It is a known fact that sometimes clerks misspelled names. This also occasionally happened in keeping county records. A cousin, Doyle Snyder, found while doing research for the Scott history that in some cases a "t" had been dropped and there were family records kept under the name "Scot."

My parents homesteaded in Montana. Dad had been there five years before his marriage to Mom in 1913. They lived in Blaine County, Montana, the county seat of which was Harlem. Their 320 acre farm was close to an Indian reservation, only 12 miles from the Canadian border. Three of my siblings were born there: Mary lone born December 2, 1914, Kenneth Baker born January 10, 1916, and Harriet Pauline born December 6 of that same year.

In 1919 our parents prepared to move back to Garden Grove, Iowa, where my great­grandparents had lived and where my dad was born. They sold the farm and all the equipment. Kenneth remembers that they did not get full payment for what they sold. At one time Dad went to see Billy McCall, an attorney in Garden Grove, who advised him that it would cost more than it was worth to go after it. I remember his saying that he left more in Montana than he ever had owned in Iowa.

The trip to Iowa took eleven days, traveling in their 1916 Model-T Ford. Each night they camped. Mom would fix their supper, fix breakfast the next morning, and pack a lunch for the day. No road maps were available. I have a "Road Log" that they used, denoting the distance and direction to travel between ranches, hills, and forks in the road.

In those days Garden Grove was a thriving community. There were a lot of beautiful old homes, including the Lady Amber Inn, a local hotel named after a race horse that belonged to Squire Steams. Squire Steams lived in what we thought was a mansion. It had a circular drive and a roofed area near the front door, where drivers could drop off their passengers. There was also a carriage house out back. It had room for four or five horses plus one or two carriages. In recent years, different owners have tried to restore the property but the project becomes too expensive and they have had to give it up.

Today, Garden Grove, like many other small communities, has deteriorated. The family farm can no longer provide for a family to be self-sustaining and younger people have moved from the area. This situation has impacted businesses. .With the improvement of cars and roads, the mind-set of people has changed. The "bigger is better" concept has set in. They are going to larger communities to do their buying, and small town merchants have been forced out of business. It is tragic to drive through these towns that once were thriving and see store fronts boarded up. Some buildings have been bull-dozed, which is better than leaving them standing. Houses and other buildings are also run-down. While the "good old days" were not all good, some that was good has been sacrificed to "progress."

My parents had bought an 80-acre farm near Garden Grove. The house had no running water, inside toilet, or central heating. We had a wood and coal burning stove. I was born there, as well as my two sisters, Dorothy and Doris, who were born on September 29, 1924. In those days, babies were born at home, delivered by a mid-wife. The morning after the twins were born, I walked up to the crib and said, "My name is Clayton. "What is yours?"

My parents told me that, among the other childhood diseases, I had scarlet fever when I was two years old, and they almost lost me. I would have missed the fun of growing up. With six in the family, we are evidence that it is possible to have a good time with no expense. We made homemade t-squares to push wheels around. We made our own baseball bats and hockey sticks. We used tin cans for hockey pucks and wore clamp-on skates. These are probably unknown today, but the skates clamped on our street shoes rather than being attached. My brother and I took advantage of an unexpected "gift." The railroad ran through our farm and the men had left a section-hand trailer at the crossing. Kenneth and I put it on the track and coasted down the grade. He also had a pony named Prince that we would harness and hitch to a two­wheel cart. A neighbor, Lois Morgan, formerly Lois Craig, has a snapshot of us boys in the cart viewing the remains of the Garden Grove school after it burned.

Practically all our activities were of our own creation, but I remember a circus our parents took us to, and Christmas presents of a toy wind-up train, a sled, and knickers in various years. You don't know about knickers? They were also called knickerbockers- "loose fitting short trousers gathered in at the knee," according to Webster's dictionary. (In the "Music Man," Professor Harold Hill warned parents to watch for "tell-tale signs of corruption" like Captain Billie’s “Whiz Bang in the pocket, or knickerbockers buttoned above the knee.) Boys wore them to school or with matching jacket to church. These were our "Sunday clothes." Graduating to long pants was a step toward manhood.

We looked forward to Saturday nights. Those were big events when everyone went to town. In those days, Garden Grove was a town of about 600 population with several businesses on both sides of Main Street. We took our cream and eggs to trade for groceries. We referred to it as going to town to "do our trading," which it was, literally. All the people in our area traded at Garden Grove. The county seat was Leon but we only went there on very special occasions, like when Dad worked for the county, he had to go there to pick up his check.

There was an opera house in Garden Grove, where they had movies. I would go once in awhile. Dad used to give me an allowance of 10¢ each Saturday night. I could go to the movies or buy a package of gum and a soft drink. At this time, my neighbor friends, George and Bill Morgan, each received 25¢ weekly allowance. I was unhappy about this, of course; but after the Depression hit, I didn't get any, and would have been happy to have had the 10¢ again.

We kids all had our chores to do. "When some of my friends from town would come out to play, Dad would say, "I don't want those town kids hanging around." My job was to feed the animals. In the summer time we would pick strawberries. Dad had a large truck garden and strawberry patch. He paid us 2¢ a quart for picking. He sold the berries to a local store operated by Harvey Northup. It was a general store and one day the picking was traded for a reel type push mower. Another day's picking was traded for an old saddle horse named Charlie.

"When I got a little older I would operate a disk with four head of horses. One time, coming back to the house, the horses ran away and ended up in a ditch. The harness did not break so they had all tumbled together. We were fortunate that I didn't fall off or the disk didn't run up on the horses. Another job I had, when Dad was plowing com, was to follow to uncover the hills that he covered.

Garden Grove was one of the early consolidated schools. Even though we lived on a farm about a mile from town, we rode a Model-T bus to school. Of course, like our homes, that building was not modem. We had outdoor privies and no gymnasium. I remember one day in junior high, while the teacher was out of the room, several of us got to shooting paper wads. When he came back, of course he saw the mess and called the superintendent in. Several of us admitted to having shot the wads. He took us down to his office and spanked us the number of times we admitted to having thrown. Some got one swat, some got as high as ten. I got three, but probably each of us deserved several times the number we received. Dad was on the school board, and when I told him about the spanking, he said, ''Next time tell the superintendent to take it easy - you'll get another one when you get home."

That old school burned about 1930. Dad and the board visited the new school at Murray and probably hired the same architect. In the new school we had modem rest rooms, a gymnasium, and junior high and high school assembly rooms.

Family was very important in those days. My mother had one sister and three brothers. There were 18 of us who were first cousins. We would drive to LeRoy every Thanksgiving and Christmas to Grandpa Baker's house. In the Bert Wells family was Mom's sister, Aunt Hattie. When I was nine years old, I rode the pony, Prince, about five or six miles to Aunt Hattie's. One year at threshing time I stayed with them for three weeks and got lots of jobs riding my pony to carry water to the crew. I was paid 25¢ a day. I continued to do that during the threshing season every summer, even after they moved to Corydon, about 25 miles away. By this time I was charging 50¢ a day.

Dad's work for the county was dragging roads. All roads in and out of Garden Grove were dirt. He would hitch four head of horses on a small road grader. For this he was paid 80¢ an hour. When he used a team of two horses for some smaller job, he was paid 50¢ an hour. In the wintertime, they would hire others to help scoop snow to open the roads. For this he was paid 25¢ an hour. One Thursday it rained. He had left his horses at Crown, a whistle stop between Garden Grove and Leon. He took me on my first train ride on Friday morning when we went after the horses to bring them home so the farmer, Charley Morgan's grandfather, wouldn't have to board them for the weekend.

As I became a little older, Kenneth and I pulled some ornery tricks.  For instance, we would put a shiny pair of pliers, with a string attached, on the road near our house, then hide in a culvert. Somebody in a Model T would see the shiny pliers as they went by and come back to pick them up. In the meantime, we would have pulled the pliers into the tube of the culvert. We did this one day after I'd had a bath and shampoo. You can imagine what my mother said when I came back with a head full of dirt.

Kenneth and I smoked our share of com silks in those days, too. Another thing we did was to drive the Model T to the cattle tank to wash it. We'd have to back up the hill because gravity fed the gas into the tank. We couldn't drive up the hill forward because the tank was lower than the engine and wouldn't feed.

I remember the first "talkie" movie was "Coconuts" with the four Marx brothers. It was in Leon. The talkies were much better than the silent films of that era.

Our family was raised in the Garden Grove Methodist Church. In fact, I won a Bible for one or two years of perfect attendance. Later, after Rose and I were married, I joined the Episcopalian Church.

In 1934, when I was 13, my parents lost their Garden Grove farm. Even with the county job, Dad could no longer make payments on the principle or the interest. He said that he paid three times too much for it in 1919. We moved to a larger farm on the Missouri state line, west of Pleasanton. It was an 880 acre livestock and grain farm situated half in Missouri, half in Iowa. It was owned by Dr. Jeffries of Chicago, formerly of Davis City. His father, Isaac Jeffries, owned the adjoining farm, which was about the same size.

The farm was completely equipped with livestock and all the necessary machinery, including an old Farmall tractor. Dad went in on 50/50 shares, paying the rent from his share of the income from the farm. Dr. Jeffries furnished the land and improvements, our family provided the labor. Livestock and equipment were jointly owned. The land was over ten times what we had been accustomed to farming.

I learned to drive the tractor in Missouri, the very first summer after I turned 14. Dad bought a new 10-foot binder run by the power-take-off. This was quite a new adaption of power machinery. The former horse-pulled binders were powered by a bull-wheel. In other words, the bull-wheel furnished the extra power that later was furnished by the power-take-off.

Dr. Jeffries and Dad modernized the house the first summer we lived there. Homer McLain and his father did most of the remodeling-they called themselves "The Slam Bang Construction Company." They installed a water system that started at a spring about 1/2-mile away on the Grand River bottom. The water was pumped up by a windmill and piped to the house storage tank.  From the storage tank we could operate a hand-powered pump to force it into a pressure tank for running water in the bathroom and kitchen. We still did not have electricity, hence it required wind and hand power to operate the pumps. That summer we bought our first radio, a battery operated Zenith. The battery charged up by a wind charger.

I was in eighth grade a second time. Dad was still on the school board and had them hold me back a year since I had been sickly and too small for my age, but I received my diploma in February. The next fall I went to high school in Pleasanton. We had to pay tuition because our house was in Missouri. It was a small school with only 10-12 students in each class, mostly girls. In the rural areas, boys dropped out of school to help on their parents' farms.

There were only three people on staff - a superintendent, principal, and one teacher, and all of them taught classes. There were no elective courses, and in order to include the necessary curriculum, the freshmen and sophomores took the same classes for the first two years. The juniors and seniors would also take their classes together.

Country kids had to provide their own transportation. Some of the girls roomed in town to be close to the school. I rode my pony, Prince. Many times Prince would break loose, go home about 30 minutes before school was out. I walked the 2 1/2 miles home about half the time.

When I started as a junior in high school, I was still very small. I weighed less than 100 pounds, but that year I grew and gained weight. Mom always attributed that to the exercise of skating to school. One winter we had an ice storm that stayed on for at least 30 days, so for that month, I skated the 2 1/2 miles every day.

I played basketball the three years at Pleasanton and won a letter during my junior year. We had no gymnasium. Our basketball court was the outdoor tennis court, so in the winter we practiced in the lumberyard alleyway. We only had eight or ten fellows that played basketball. I remember one of the tournaments in Leon when all the members of the regular team fouled out and four substitutes got to play. I was one of those. I was always a substitute.

During our junior year, our class and others had a trip to Fort Madison to visit the prison. We rode in an open livestock truck. We visited their dining room and had lunch with them. I recall that the prisoners all had metal trays, and the silverware was such that they wouldn't be able to injure anyone with it. From the hallways, we visited some of the cellblocks. Prison life looked to be quite tough.

Because the Cainsville, Missouri school had started running a bus all the way to our house, I transferred to that school for my senior year. The bus was simply a small 2 1/2 ton straight truck on which they had built and covered a box, then added bench seats on both sides. It was rough riding over those dirt roads.

Cainsville was a larger school. There were 16 of us in my graduating class of 1938. We had some elective courses - two of mine were typing and bookkeeping. I also played basketball at Cainsville. I was still fairly small for my age and evidently not very athletic, because I continued to be a substitute. At that time my dad had a 1937 Ford V-8. I had learned to drive a few years earlier but only drove the car when the family was going. I didn't start taking the car by myself until after high school graduation.

After I graduated, I stayed home to help my parents on the farm. While I was still at home, Dad bought a Farmall-H tractor with rubber tires, self-starter, lights, with all the power that you could get. One fall, during plowing season, Kenneth and I kept that tractor going 24 hours a day for six days straight, changing off every six hours. By the end of the week I was so tired I didn’t know if I was coming or going. We quit only because winter began and the ground froze.

Dr. Jeffries liked the land and bought neighboring farms as they came up for sale. Eventually, during World War II, his farm grew to 2,500 acres. Of course, I was gone by then and Dad finally had to give up the farm because he couldn't get enough help.

After com harvest in the fall of 1940, there were strong indications that war was coming. My parents didn't think much of career military people. I think this stemmed from Depression days when World War I veterans marched on Washington, D. C. They wanted the bonus they had been promised and never received. They built shacks on the Potomac River to stay in while they were demonstrating. General McArthur had quite a time putting down the demonstration.

In 1940, radio advertising included jobs in defense plants, but they stressed more education. A neighbor and school friend of mine, Harold (Shorty) Hagan, and I decided to go to Lincoln, Nebraska to an aircraft fabrication school. An aircraft fabricator formed small aircraft parts of aluminum using saws, drills, bending machines, and leather mallets. This was a short course, as I recall - less than two months. When we completed this vocational school, we were told where aircraft factory jobs were available. I'm not sure why we chose Buffalo, New York. We applied and were hired at the Curtiss-Wright plant, which had a government contract to build fighter planes known as the Warhawk or Curtiss P-40. These are the planes General Chennault
and the volunteer Flying Tigers made famous prior to World War II. The jobs paid 60¢ an hour to start, with an additional 6¢ an hour for the night shift. We both worked on the afternoon to evening shift starting around 4:00p.m. and ending about 1:00.

December 7, 1941 - the sneak attack on Pearl Harbor by the Japanese! It has been said, and is probably true, that everyone who heard that radio report remembers exactly where they were at that moment. I had been in Buffalo approximately a year and was at a Sunday tea dance when the loud speaker blared out the news of the attack. They also announced that all military people should report to their bases immediately.

Early in January, 1942 I started visiting recruiting offices. The day after Pearl Harbor and through December, many people were volunteering to enlist. I wanted to fly and found that the army had lowered requirements. Until that time, they required two years of college, but now they would take healthy high school graduates who could pass a tough written exam. Several of us took our physical exams. I couldn't pass the 20/20 eye test. I was wearing glasses at the time and went to a civilian optometrist. Of course, he wanted to know about my job. He checked my glasses and found that they were very weak. In his opinion, my problem was simply eye-strain. He told me to quit wearing the glasses, quit reading, and drink carrot juice for a month.

During that month, I visited all the other recruiting offices, including the Navy, Marines, and Coast Guard. The Navy offered me a good deal. I would have been an aircraft metal worker, probably stationed on an aircraft carrier. I was honest with the recruiter and told him I was still hoping to be accepted into the Army Aviation Cadet Program, and after the 30-day routine of carrot juice and resting my eyes, I passed!

The next hurdle was the mental exam. I was competing against college students, but out of 14 or 15 that took the test, I was one of the four or five that passed. By this time it was late March 1942, and I was sworn in as Private in the Air Corps unassigned. They had a backlog of students for the Aviation Cadet program, and I was immediately put on a 30-day leave. I went home, reported back to Buffalo only to discover that there was another 30-day delay. The telegram informing me of this didn't arrive in time to prevent my return trip. By now I was out of money so I hitchhiked home again, which was not an unusual mode of travel at that time.

I finally became a cadet earning $75 a month when I reported to the Air Corps Classification Center in Nashville, Tennessee on August 19, 1942. I learned the seriousness of rules when I failed to wear my uniform cap outside the barracks. I had my first - and only ­ demerit and had to walk a two-hour "tour" carrying a parachute on my back.

About a month after the exams at that center were finished, I was told that I qualified to be a bombardier instead of a pilot. I was eager to do this, and on September 17, 1942, I was transferred to bombardier pre-flight school in Ellington Field, just outside of Houston, Texas. The training was very hard - some equated it to a college education that we received in three months. We studied lots of math and calculus, weather, map reading and other subjects pertaining to flying. We also did lots of drill (marching) and calisthenics.

I graduated from pre-flight school and transferred to Big Spring, Texas on December 12, 1942 to commence bombardier training. I was assigned to 43-4, indicating that our class would graduate in 1943. We had lots of ground school including aircraft instruments, air navigation, an E-6B computer (circular slide rule), as well as bombsight maintenance. We also dropped practice bombs from our training plane. Beside the pilot and bombardier instructor, I had a student partner who took pictures of my five bomb drops. These were sand-filled bombs with a small charge of black powder that would explode into a small patch of white smoke so that the camera could record the bomb hit. After my turn at dropping practice bombs, the photographer and I swapped positions while he made his five bomb runs and I took the pictures.

I graduated on March 11, 1943, was given my bombardier wings, and was commissioned as 2nd Lieutenant in the Army Air Corps. My parents and sister, Doris, came to see me receive my wings. Doris joined the Navy as a WAVE (Women Accepted for Volunteer Service) soon after. After the ceremony, I followed the custom and gave a dollar to the first enlisted man who saluted me.

My next assignment was to Las Vegas Gunnery School. We flew in training planes with the pilot and myself as Student Gunner. I fired a 50-caliber machine gun at a tow target, and we had ground school which included skeet shooting and learning the operation of 50-caliber machine guns. I was there for six weeks and was ordered to Moses Lake, Washington, for operational training in a B-17 Flying Fortress.  I took advantage of a 10-day delay enroute between Las Vegas and Washington, and visited my parents and friends in Iowa. When I returned to the base, I was assigned to a crew, and after the proper number of practice bomb drops and navigation flights, our crew was transferred to Geiger Field near Spokane, Washington. We were there about 30 days and transferred to Walla Walla, Washington in August, 1943. Our pilot was replaced and we had to start the three-month phase of training again, but after 30 days our complete training group was transferred to Avon Park, Florida. Complications occurred causing us to spend six days in that transfer.

Before we left Avon Park, I was pulled from the crew and sent to Boca Raton, Florida for radar training. Radar was very new in 1944. I had never heard of it. When I asked what it was, Iwas told that it was an electronic gadget that saw through the clouds, and ground returns came up on a radar scope. With it we were able to identify cities and various landmarks on the radar scope and were able to tell the range and direction of radar returns to plot the aircraft position. In May 1944, I finished radar training and was sent to Langley Field for shipment overseas. I had a 10-day leave to go home to visit my parents. For some reason, when I returned to Langley Field, in spite of never having smoked before, I bought a carton of cigarettes and lighter. I started smoking in England, establishing a habit it took 25 years to tire of. I quit cold in 1969.

We left Langley on July 4, 1944, stopped for fuel at Bangor, Maine where we were delayed because of weather, refueled again in Gander, Newfoundland, then departed for our night trip to Scotland. We arrived in Prestwick, Scotland on July 9, 1944. From there we delivered the radar-equipped plane to Alcanbury, England, where I took six weeks of training that was practically the same training I had in Boca Raton and Langley Field.

Upon completion of training, I was sent to Ridgewell, the 381st Bomb Group, 534th Bomb Squadron. The base was near Cambridge. I was not assigned to any particular crew but flew with whomever was squadron lead, group lead, or deputy group lead. I assisted the navigator by giving him position fixes, range and bearings of various towns, and I would start the bombardier on his bomb run. I would direct the airplane toward the target and call off sighting angles. If he could not sight the target visually, I would complete the bomb run by calling off sighting angles which he set in the bombsite and the bombsite would automatically drop the bombs in the proper release point.

On our very first combat mission, September 8, 1944, we bombed the I.G. Farben factory in Ludwigshaven, Germany. I was an observer with a full crew. I think the commander wanted to see how I would react under fire. When we turned toward the target, at the initial point where we started the bomb run, flak bursts ahead of us were so thick it appeared that we could get out and walk on it. However, everything was o.k. The whole group got back to our home base all right. On my remaining missions, I flew as Radar Bombardier.

My sixth mission was to Cologne, Germany. Our target was a Ford Motor Plant. The "Stars and Stripes," a European military newspaper, reported the next day that 1100 heavy bombers had blitzed Germany for the third day in a row. The paper further reported that we lost 42 bombers and seven Fighters while we shot down 31 Nazi Fighters, plus our gunners in the bomb stream claimed five victories. This was the first of four times that I was scheduled to drop bombs on the city of Cologne with a population of approximately one million people.

My eighth mission on October 6, 1944 was my first group lead and longest combat mission at 1,520 nautical miles, taking eight hours 40 minutes. We led the 36-plane group and our target was a power plant in Straslund, Germany. Enemy fighters attacked us from 12:00 high before the bomb drop. Flak burst beneath us and smoke engulfed our plane. Early reports by "Stars and Stripes" were that 19 bombers and 10 fighters were lost in this raid.

My last B-17 flight, mission #14, was on November 10, 1944. Our target was the airdrome which was defended by a very heavy flak area. Seven hundred fifty bombers hit airfields and industrial plants in the Cologne and Frankfurt area. "Stars and Stripes" reported that we lost 27 bombers and seven of the 600 escorting fighters.

During the above missions, I received the Air Medal and one Oak Leaf Cluster, which indicated I had received two Air Medals. The citation mentioned sustained bomber combat operations. "The courage, coolness and skill displayed by these officers and enlisted men upon these occasions reflect great credit upon themselves and the Armed Forces of the United States." Also, during the above period, I had been promoted to First Lieutenant, Army Air Corps and my base pay now amounted to $191 per month plus $95 flying pay.

Our 381st Bomb Group was one of 18 that had a call for radar operators like myself to be transferred to the only 8th Air Force group flying on night combat missions, dropping supplies to the French Maquis and underground forces in Denmark. The work was slowing down since our ground forces were beyond most German-held nations, and I was scheduled to start night bombing with the Royal Air Force, assigned to the 492nd Bomb Group, 858th Squadron. We would be flying "spoof raids" in which we would drop a couple 500 pound bombs on our target and lots of flares lighting up the target area, to make the night fighters and flak gunners think there would be a large bombing raid, then RAP pilots would bomb a completely different target
150-200 miles from our target.

We were located at Harrington Aerodrome, a British Air Field near Northampton, England. Our first night mission (my 15th) was to a target in France, on December 28, 1944, and the second on January 2, 1945 to the same target. On February 27 (my 19th mission) the spoof target was a railroad yard in Wilhelmshaven. Our following missions were in Germany and Denmark. We had a close call during a mission on March 23, 1945. As we departed the Danish coast at 4,000 feet, we saw lots of fireworks, which were the tracers of their guns shooting at us. They hit one of our engines which the pilots had to feather (stop the propeller). Later another engine was acting up. I was afraid it wouldn't continue running all the way to England. The North Sea was extremely cold in winter. We had been briefed that a downed flyer would not last over 20 minutes in the North Sea in wintertime. Both the pilot and co-pilot thought we could make the English coast without much of a problem. I was really worried, but when we were 50 miles out from the British coast, I saw it on my radar set, and we made it with no further incident.

I personally finished my missions in April 1945. I received two more Oak Leaf Clusters to my Air Medal as well as the Distinguished Flying Cross. My ribbon for the European Theater of Operations now had three Battle Stars. On April 26, 1945, I was transferred to Stone, England to process for my trip home. VE Day occurred on May 8, 1945. All the U.S. Military were restricted to their bases and missed the celebrations in the cities.

On May 11, 1945 I boarded the USAT Brazil at Southampton. It was a very small ship with lots of returning combat veterans as well as wounded soldiers on board. The North Atlantic was very rough and I was quite seasick. We docked at New York and debarked for Camp Kilmar, New Jersey, on to Jefferson Barracks near St. Louis, Missouri, where I took a 30-day delay en route to my next station, Santa Ana, California. From Santa Ana I was sent to Boca Raton, Florida for a refresher course in radar. While there, I applied for pilot training and I transferred to Maxwell Field, Alabama on August 10, 1945. Soon afterward the personnel department reviewed my records and determined I had enough points to leave the service if I desired. It seemed everyone was going home and I believe I had lost my enthusiasm to be a pilot. I was released from active duty and accepted a commission in the Reserve of the Army Air Force. I returned home and helped Dad do the fall plowing, picking corn, etc., and enrolled at Iowa State College on a pre-engineering course.

It was at this time that I met Rose. We both attended a Saturday night dance in Leon in September, 1945. She was with her brother, Del, and he and I were both wearing our uniforms. I became aware of her as she danced with her brother and at the end of that number, Rose came by and touched my wings. "Look, Miller," she said, "a bombardier." I said, "Yes, are you interested?" We began dating.

Lena Rosamond (Rose) Miller was born on January 9, 1929, to Clyde E. and Evangeline Gorton Miller. Rose's mother passed away when Rose was three days old and she was raised in Osceola by her grandparents, John Wesley Miller and Ida May Eby Miller. According to the Earp family genealogy, Rose's grandmother, Ida, was a first cousin to Wyatt Earp. Their ancestor, Thomas Earp, Jr., was born in Ireland in 1656 and the family immigrated to Maryland, from where they moved to Illinois and Iowa.

Rose and I dated for about six months and decided to marry. Her father, Clyde Miller, went with me to get the license. We both thought she was 18 years old and found out later she was only 17. We were married on March 8, 1946 by Rev. Clyde Carter in the Asbury Methodist parsonage in Des Moines.  Her sister and brother-in-law, Don and Imogene Morris, stood up with us. Later they, Clyde and his wife, accompanied us on a night out. We had dinner at Babe's restaurant and stayed in the Fort Des Moines Hotel. We ate lunch again at Babe's on Sunday. On Monday morning Rose returned to her cashier's job at Younkers and I returned to Ames. I came down with strep throat on this day and was in the hospital a week. I therefore missed my quarterly exams, and since I had enrolled mid-term, I felt I was too far behind to continue. I dropped out and came home. Rose and I lived with my parents due to the housing shortage and continued to live with them while I farmed some rented land with the help of my dad. I remember shocking oats that hot summer and saying to my neighbor, "The Army was never like this!"

I found out that many former officers were reverting to enlisted status. I re-enlisted on September 6, 1946 as a T/Sgt. (E5). From that time, Rose followed me from assignment to assignment - Chanute Field near Rantoul, Illinois, where I was an electronic repair person; and to Westover Field near Springfield, Massachusetts, where I learned a lot about Army administration in my job at the Separation Center. Rose was employed as a file clerk while we lived in Springfield, but she came home quite often to visit her Grandfather Miller. She also visited Dr. Harken who told us we could expect a baby in early March, 1948. Rose had worked for him as a nurse aide prior to our marriage and she wanted Dr. Harken to deliver the baby. She came home at the expected time and I obtained a 20-day leave, which required a five-day extension when the baby was late.

Stephanie Gaye was born March 12, 1948. Dr. Harken had taken an x-ray before the birth because he suspected some kind of complication. It showed that Stephanie was a double breach birth. Dr. Harken wanted me in the delivery room but I had to go out before she was born. Later I told Rose she would never go through that again. They didn't take the baby to Rose all day. I tried to tell her that she had 10 fingers but she didn't have 10 toes. Dr. Harken overheard our conversation and came in saying, "Clayton doesn't quite understand the physical handicap that Stephanie has. She is a beautiful baby from the waist up but has a congenital deformity in her hips and legs." He also told Rose that if she didn't want the baby, he would raise and care for her, as she would need much more medical attention than a normal child. When Stephanie was given to Rose, she told the doctor she definitely wanted her!

Soon after Stephanie's birth I received a telegram saying that I was being recalled in my reserve grade as a 1st Lieutenant with orders to transfer to Davis-Monthan AFB (Air Force Base) near Tucson, Arizona. I returned to Westover Field immediately and received my discharge to accept a commission on March 23, 1948. I returned to Iowa to pick up Rose and Stephanie before departing for Tucson. Dr. Harken advised us to take it easy on our trip. He wasn't concerned about Stephanie, but concerned about Rose's health. We followed his advice and took five days to make the trip in our first family car, a new 1948 Ford five-passenger coupe. I was assigned to the 20th Bomb Squadron of the Second Bomb Group as a Radar Operator on B-29s.

In August, 1948 our bomb group was transferred to temporary duty in Lakenheath, England. The transfer was supposed to be for 30 days but it was extended to a total of 100 days before we returned home. Our group was transferred to Chatham AFB near Savannah, Georgia in May, 1949. I was able to drive Rose and Stephanie, as minimum crew members flew the planes. Upon arrival we rented an apartment in a brand new apartment project in a very nice section of the city, but we hadn't even received our furniture when I was put on detached service to the Boeing Airplane Company in Seattle, Washington. We were there about six months and returned to Savannah, where we practiced bombing and navigation until February, 1950 when we were again transferred to temporary duty at Marham, England. After two months of temporary duty we returned to Chatham.

The Korean War was building up and our group was receiving brand new airplanes which required the observers to be triple rated - for instance, navigator, bombardier, and radar operator. Since I had only two of those ratings and several of our squadron observers only had one rating, we were transferred to Randolph AFB at San Antonio, Texas to train crews for Korea. That transfer came up unexpectedly. I called Rose as soon as I found out about it, then I started clearing the base and our furniture van arrived home prior to my arrival. Rose had even started preparing dinner, had a chicken thawing, and the movers packed it with the household goods. It had a distinct odor by the time our van arrived in San Antonio.

Brooke Army Hospital, an Orthopedic and Burn Center, was located at Fort Sam Houston, in San Antonio. As an active military person, I was authorized medical attention and hospitalization for myself and family. An orthopedic surgeon at Iowa University had told us about Brooke and what a wonderful place it was. Of course, we took Stephanie to Brooke Hospital where she had an evaluation and several operations. During one clinic they had 23 orthopedic surgeons listening to her doctor explain her case, making various suggestions for further treatment.

They put Stephanie in a body cast after her operation and eventually gave her an artificial limb, enabling her to walk with crutches. She was about three years old at the time and had a very outgoing personality. The nurses liked to take her to the men's ward and show her to some of the amputees who had lost limbs in Korea. It seems that, as they saw her walking through the ward, it would bring some of them out of their depression.

Our second baby, Sara Jane, was born January 27, 1952, at Brooke Army Medical Center. She was not healthy. She had what we call yellow jaundice and the doctors discovered that a mistake had been made on Rose's blood test. She was really 0 negative, while I was 0 positive. Sara stayed in the hospital several days while her blood was completely changed.

Roseanne, our third child, was born May 18, 1953. The doctors knew of our blood problem and had been trying to overcome it with new medication during Rose's pregnancy. Roseanne passed away in just three days. She is buried at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, a military cemetery. Rose and I will both be cremated and buried in the same grave.

As the Korean War was winding down, I was transferred to Ellington Field for navigation pre-flight training in late 1953. Rose and the girls stayed in San Antonio while Stephanie continued further surgery and physical therapy. I usually commuted by bus between Houston and San Antonio each weekend.

In July 1954, I took the family to Mather AFB near Sacramento, California; in January 1955, we were sent to the 307th Bomb Wing at Lincoln AFB, Nebraska. Rose and the girls stayed while several of us new navigation graduates went to McConnell AFB near Wichita, Kansas for about 30 days of training. To learn radar prediction, I was sent to Shepherd AFB at Wichita Falls, Texas. We were transferred temporarily to Greenham Common, England and Moron AFB near Seville, Spain. We were on what were called "reflex missions," the crews being closer to their targets. On these missions I was Target Intelligence Office at least four different times, lasting six weeks for each trip. During this time I maintained my flying proficiency as 100 hours in the air. Several simulated bomb drops and celestial navigation missions were required. In 1966, I navigated one of our B-47s to Tucson to the salvage yard.

After returning from one of the previous reflex operations, I was recommended by Major Louis Webber for my first commendation medal. It was further endorsed through the wing commander, Col. Reed and approved by Major General Sweeney, 8th Air Force Commander.  I was also given two promotions- to Captain in the early 1950s, and Major in the late 1950s.

In June 1961 we received orders for transfer overseas to Anderson AFB in Guam, part of the Marianna Islands. I would still continue to be an Intelligence officer as well as a B-47 navigator. Rose and the girls accompanied me as we drove to California where we put our car, now a 1960 Thunderbird, on the ship. We boarded a DC4 that was contracted to take families overseas. Sometime during the flight Rose mentioned it seemed to her the Number Two engine didn't sound right. I looked out and saw the exhaust was quite red and told her I thought it was running quite normal. We landed in Hawaii for refueling and before we boarded the plane again, we were told that we would lay over for 12 hours while the maintenance crew changed an engine. Rose asked which one and he said "Number Two." She had been right.

In Guam I was assigned to the alert section, which was responsible for briefing combat crews who would rotate to Guam from the States for temporary duty. The cold war was still real bad and we had targets assigned in Communist China. This assignment kept us all very busy as I briefed crews on the enemy threat, both fighters and radar controlled flak guns, as well as their targets. I would navigate the General's B-47 back to Offutt AFB at Omaha, when he was scheduled to fly "Looking Glass," the Air Force command post that stayed in the air 24 hours a day from 1961 through the mid-1990s. I also checked out cargo aircraft in order to fly the alert crews to Japan on R & R, and we made three trips to Hong Kong carrying permanent party families on vacation.

I was able to take Rose on two trips to Hong Kong, and I took the whole family on two trips to Japan while I was on duty in Guam. Rose likes to think that she put in my two years on Guam, as I was gone on TDY (temporary duty) one-third of the time. In 1962, our family was in Japan when the Cuban crisis occurred. We were alerted to stay on Yakota AFB but had the opportunity for visiting Tokyo and surrounding communities. It was not the same as tourist sight-seeing. In addition to our awareness that we were in a non-English speaking country and could have been marooned there in case of war, Japanese Communists with red armbands and headbands circled the base. Even though it was frightening, they demonstrated peacefully. We were relieved when the first plane from Guam that came to get the combat crews also took us back to Guam, though Rose hoped the first flight would take her and the girls back to the States.

We had another bad experience in Guam. In 1963 a typhoon hit! During any typhoon alert, all flight crews, including myself, would fly the airplanes to Japan or Okinawa. The Japanese would not allow our planes, loaded with nuclear weapons, to land on their soil. Rose and the girls, with other families, went into a typhoon-proof home and a lot of damage was done to the area. It was quite some time before the base returned to normal.

We were on Guam for two years. In June, 1963 we were transferred to Bergstrom AFB near Austin, Texas, where we bought our first home. I was retired from the Air Force on May 1, 1965 with the grade of Lieutenant Colonel with over 23 years of service. Rose and the girls stayed in Texas to complete the school term. Stephanie would be a senior in high school the next year and Sally a freshman. I came back home to look for a place to live. Housing was very short in Osceola and I finally found a house to rent in Indianola. We stayed there for a year before moving to our present location, 310 South Fillmore.

I was only 45 years old and wanted to continue working. I discovered that I was over ­ qualified for many of the positions I interviewed for, but I did find a job with the state employment service, for which I traveled throughout the state conducting manpower studies. I worked with SCICAP (South Central Iowa Community Action Program) and SCICOG (South Central Iowa Council of Government) with a wide variety of interests. We helped older people find jobs, and we applied and were approved for a federal grant for Osceola's water tower in the Industrial Park, to name several. Between projects, I assisted with funerals at the Kale Funeral Home. In 1979, I commenced working with the local Development Corporation. As Executive Secretary, I was responsible for accomplishing all the detailed paper work pertaining to attracting new industries into the area. I was in this position for 13 years during which we brought in several factories, which offered approximately 1,300 new jobs for the area.

In 1992, at age 72, I retired from that position but continued some volunteer duties. In addition to the above named boards, SCICAP and SCICOG, I served as committee member for RC&D (Resource Conservation and Development), and I served on the board and was secretary­ treasurer of Clarke Community Housing until July 1996. Two of the most interesting involvements were working with Eddy Saylor on the 4-H auction sale during the County Fairs, and with the Iowa Sesquicentennial Commission. A project for the commission was that in 1996 we filled a time capsule and placed it in a floor cavity in the Clarke County Courthouse. I am a past-president of Rotary, and in 1991, I was honored to received the Community Service Award given by the Rotary in conjunction with the Osceola Chamber of Commerce.

Rose has also been working since we returned to Osceola, first at Iowa Southern Utilities, and for many years she was Librarian at the Osceola Public Library. She continued part time for several years afterward. She is currently one of the volunteers reading with children at Clarke Community Elementary School.                                     ·

Stephanie continued her education at the University of Iowa, and married Frank Nidey. They have one son, Nathaniel Levi Scott Nidey. They live in Mt. Vernon, Iowa. Sally married Dr. R. Scott Frey. They also have a son, Stuart Che'. They live in Jacksonville, Florida.

In 1995, Rose and I visited Europe with some of my World War II friends and their wives in observance of the 50th anniversary of the end of the European War. For two weeks we traveled extensively and after this visit, I have no regrets of dropping bombs on military targets in many of the cities we visited. Recently some Americans have been attempting to rewrite history, portraying us as "the bad guys." If people who deny the Holocaust could see what we saw, they might change their minds.

In my 1997 autobiography, I fear I gave too little emphasis to Rose's contribution. I could not have had a successful career without her. She took the responsibility of our daughters during my absence, especially through Steph's surgeries and rehabilitation. Rose never complained about the many transfers. She always wanted to find new living quarters as soon as possible and make it into a home. She and I are proud of our children and the way they are raising our grandsons to be good, well-adjusted boys. That is a challenge in this day and age.

 

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Last Revised November 4, 2012