Woodbury County

Lt. Carl Wayne McCuen

 

A Home Front “Soldier”—
Gives Sons: Works in War Plant: Buys Bonds
One Son a Jap Prisoner, Other in Air Force Officer Training

By Neil Miller

With one of her two sons a Japanese prisoner of war and the other in the army air corps, Mrs. Ella Masterson, 615 W. Fourth Street, has gone “all out” in the effort to win the war in a hurry and get her boys home safely.

Mrs. Masterson has been working in the inspection department at the Wincharger plant, helping turn out dynamotors for the army and the navy. Her work constitutes an important aid to the country’s war effort, but Mrs. Masterson goes still further by investing more than one-third of her total wages in war bonds.

“I’m thankful that I have the work and that I am able to turn some of my earnings back into the war effort,” she says. “I wouldn’t want my boys to think that I just sat around and waited for them to fight the war through alone.”

Father with A.E.F.

Mrs. Materson’s eldest son, Walter Rea McCuen, is 25 years old. He was born during the First World War while his father was with American forces in France. Carl Wayne McCuen, the other boy, is 21 years old. Both enlisted in 1939.

Walter joined the navy while Carl turned toward the army air corps. Walter’s first ship was the Henderson. Shortly before Pearl Harbor, he was transferred to a submarine tender. He was stationed in the Philippines when the Japanese made their first attack. His ship was so badly damaged that it had to be beached. However, it was used as a machine shop and it did a heroic job of repairing damaged equipment during the dark of Bataan and Corregidor.

When the fall of the fortress became inevitable, the ship was towed to deep water and sunk but the crew remained to fight the heroic battle through to its conclusion. Mrs. Masterson received a cable from Walter soon after Pearl Harbor and a letter came through before the fall of Corregidor. He had been reported missing after the Japs finally ended the heroic defense.

Recently, Mrs. Masterson was notified by the chief of navy personnel that Walter was taken prisoner when the fortress fell and that he now is being held as a prisoner of war. The notice came from the International Red Cross in Tokyo.

Carl, the younger son, now is at Ellington field, Texas, completing a course in officer training school. He expects to be a navigator when he is commissioned and returns to service.

And Mrs. Masterson is working for both branches of service by helping turn out dynamotors and turning a large portion of her wages into bonds.

Source: The Sioux City Journal, May 2, 1943 (photo included)

D.F.C. Awarded Lieut. M’Cuen
Sioux Cityan Is Navigator On B-17 Flying Fortress


An Eighth Air Force Bomber Station, England
– The Distinguished Flying Cross has been awarded to Lieut. Carl W. McCuen, 23, Sioux City, navigator on a B-17 Flying Fortress, for his outstanding contribution to the success of Eighth Air Force attacks on key targets of the German war machine.

A member of the Third bombardment division that was recently cited by the president for the now historic England-Africa shuttle bombing attack on the Messerchmitt plant at Regensburg, Germany, Lieut. McCuen has been on some of the longest missions to targets in Berlin and Wehrmacht installation s confronting the allied ground forces in France.

In addition to the D.F.C., Lieut. McCuen holds the air medal and three oak leaf clusters to the air medal.

The official citation accompanying the award of the D.F.C. commented on “courage, coolness and skill displayed by Lieut. McCuen on all occasions” during his many missions over Nazi held Europe.

The son of Mrs. Ella Masterson of 1501 Jackson Street, Lieut. McCuen was graduated from Atlantic High School prior to entering the army air forces in December 1939. He received his navigator’s wings in April 1943.

Source: The Sioux City Journal, September 6, 1944