Edited
and modified 2-21-2020
I
have included some correspondence with a serviceman who was on Okinawa at the
same time we were. I have also included part of my autobiography from that time
period.
This is rough! I hope you
can enjoy it until I can clean it up.
J
5-12-2013-I’m adding some new material
that was unavailable when this page was created.
Okinawa Picture Album
These
are photos from Okinawa. Many are captioned by my father. I have included the
caption, in his own hand wherever possible.
I
am adding the new material first. My brother saved these, and sent them to me
in March of 2013.
New
stuff first. From
my autobiography.
Okinawa
The next thing I
remembered was having to go get shots, (my
favorite thing, when I was a little boy), and getting aboard the U.S.S.
Mitchell, and being seasick for a week. See http://www.petesmemories.com/dlsbxpt1.html
We arrived at Okinawa.
It’s 1950. If I would have asked a few questions, this research project
wouldn’t be such a horrible chore, looking through documents and records. I was
unable (with my limited internet experience) to find the ship we were on, and I
couldn’t find any records of what squadron, or what my dad’s job was, there.
While doing research, I came across the web site of an old retired air force
guy. He made the crossing the same time period, different vessel. His
description of the trip fits my memory, exactly. Here’s what he wrote;
From: Terry Peterson [mailto:pete@thepetersonranch.com]
Sent: Monday, December 27, 2010 11:30 PM
To: kfannon@gte.net
Subject: Kadena
I am Terry Peterson, son of Harold E. Peterson.
My father was stationed in Okinawa in 1950. My mother and I traveled by boat/ship,
and lived in a Quonset. I was very young, but I have many vivid memories of the
mosquito netting, and the blackouts at night. I am writing a memoir, and I
would like to gather as much accurate info as possible. It sounds like we may
have made the crossing on the same ship, but I remember the name as the USS
Mitchell, however her records do not coincide. How would I go about finding
more information? Any help at all would be deeply appreciated.
Thanks.
Terry
Good morning Terry,
So you lived on the rock? Do you know when you
arrived and when you left? Also; what outfit was your father a part of?
I left California at the end of May 1950 for a 3
week trip to Okinawa on the USS General Nelson M. Walker (a 3 stacker). The
other troop ships were smaller 2 stackers (smoke stacks). It was the largest
troop ship in the Pacific. We did not go by way of Hawaii as a lot of the troop
ships did. On the way we got caught in the tail end of a typhoon. The waves
were so huge that when the bow would dive in all three of the screws would be
clear of the water. This caused the ship to shudder so hard that you thought
that the rivets would start popping out. We arrived at Naha harbor on June 15th
– just 10 days before the Korean War started.
I was Air Force and selected to stay at Naha
with the 51st Fighter Interceptor Wing (Air Installations Squadron). We had the
F-80’s. My best friend was sent up to Kadena where
they had the B-29’s.
If you haven’t already been to these sites you
might want to:
http://www.navsource.org/archives/09/22/22114.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_General_William_Mitchell_(AP-114)
http://www.ask.com/wiki/USS_General_William_Mitchell_(AP-114)?qsrc=3044
Terry, if you have further questions that might jog this 81 year
old mind just fire away.
Keith Carrollton, TX
and I
replied
I think that you are correct. The other USS Mitchell that I found
was scrapped in 1949, therefore it couldn’t
have been the one. I was only five years old, and I went to kindergarten and
first grade at the American school. I remember the trip, and the storm we hit
seemed to last weeks, to a youngster. There were a lot of civilians aboard, and
I don’t remember a lot of uniforms, I’m thinking you were mostly traveling with
other troops.
First
photo is
Wikipedia Rite
of
passage One
of our photos
I have a lot of memories, of our maids, Hatsuko,
and Suzuko, (they hated steak, and preferred
rice and fish), of the Habu and mongoose
fights, and origami, and parades, and the music, and the strange smells, I
remember a hamburger with Japanese mustard (hot), and a ginger ale (real ginger
beer), and rain every day, and the beautiful beach with upside down, rusty,
weapons carrier, left over from the war, and I could go on and on. It’s amazing
to me how many memories I have. My dad went as 1st. lt. Peterson, and became
captain, and I can still remember a lot of the names, as we followed a lot of
those guys around the world.
I am delighted to hear from you. I hope you’ll stay in touch. Any
little tidbits you have for me would be appreciated. I loved my dad, I just didn’t ask enough questions. It's good there is someone left to ask.
Thanks so much.
Happy Holidays to you.
End of correspondence
It is 2-21-2020. I
just received another email from Keith. I wrote to him yesterday, and he
responded immediately. I will add that here.
Dear Keith,
I am Terry Peterson, son
of Harold E. Peterson. My father was stationed in Okinawa in 1950. I wrote to
you 10 years ago, you were 81 years young, and I hope this finds you in good
health!
I wrote to ask you about
the USSMITCHELL. You wrote back to describe your trip. You asked; So you lived on the rock? Do you know when you arrived and
when you left? Also; what outfit was your father a part of?
At the time I was unable to answer, but have since received voluminous
material, and I assembled an album. You can click on http://www.petesmemories.com/okinawa2.html. It
starts with dad’s outfit.
I am sure this will
bring back some memories.
I would love to hear from you again!
Sincerely,
Terry
Keith responded;
Keith<kfannon@gte.net>
7:24 AM 2-21-2020
Hi Terry,
Thanks so much for sending the photos. I probably told you
that I didn't get to explore the island very much. I arrived on June 10? and we left for Korea In Sept. After the war started
June 25th every thing was a complete frenzy getting
ready to leave.
I am trying to remember if the 51st Base Sq. stayed on the
island. 90 year old brain doesn't work as well as it used to.
You got to see a lot more of the island than I did. I only
went to Kadena one time. A friend of mine that
came over with me was stationed there. The rest of the time I was stuck
at Naha.
I was in Air Installations Sq. We did most all of the base
maintenance. That meant that we had to build all of the shipping crates
and move it all to the harbor. I worked in the office taking all the
requests.
Again, thanks for getting in touch again and sending the pics.
Take care,
S/Sgt Keith Fannon
And, my latest email to him;
Hello again, Keith.
WOW! It is really neat to hear from you
again!
First, I want to thank you for your
service. You didn’t tell me that they shipped you straight off to Korea, the
first time you wrote to me. I thought you had spent a year there, like most of
the single guys. I figured you might even know some of the people in the album
that I sent. I hope you got a chance to look at that. http://www.petesmemories.com/okinawa2.html
Second, I thank you for taking the time
to correspond with me. You provided information, which inspired me to do a lot
of research. I have since, generated over a hundred web pages, many of which
are meant to preserve some family history, including my autobiography.
One of the things I couldn’t find was
the exact time we got to Okinawa, but I did go to kindergarten, and the first
grade there, so it was probably closer to 1951. I have a photo from our return
trip dated 15 March, 1952. I was thinking that we were there for a full two
years, but, apparently, I only did partial school years. (late
1950 or early ’51 to early 1952.) This 74 year old brain has gone a little
sour!
I am including our correspondence in my
“Okinawa album” and part of my autobiography. If you didn’t get a chance to
look at it, I hope you will, at another time. http://www.petesmemories.com/okinawa2.html
It is really exciting to exchange
emails with you, and I hope we can continue to do so!
My very best regards,
Terry
Back to bio
I have some memories of
the quonset hut
that we lived in.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quonset_hut
FINE
DINING
I have created an “Okinawa
page”. There are many photos and memories there. Also at http://www.petesmemories.com/dlsbxpt3.html there
are more. http://www.petesmemories.com/okinawa2.html
I remember huge elephant
ear plants, and colorful lizards climbing on everything. I remember my parents
visiting someone, and I was sent outside to play. There was a captured,
Japanese, 50 caliber machine gun in the tree in this guy's back yard.
I managed to knock
this enormous gun out of the tree, and it landed on my leg. I remember the base
hospital, and the penicillin shots. I became infected with “staph”, and it
plagued me for the rest of my life.
There were a lot of
memories I can only write as they enter my thoughts, like our maids, and habu and mongoose fights,
And bull fights. The
bulls fight each other, rather than a MATADOR. See https://www.visitokinawa.jp/information/okinawa-bullfighting-ushiorase
and parades, and learning
some Japanese at kindergarten, and first grade, and origami, and yen (I was
given a pile of paper money to go to the movies, which cost a nickel to see.),
and the beach, the beautiful beaches, the one we used to go to had an old war
vehicle, upside down and rusting, a grim reminder to everyone but us kids, that
a war had been fought right there, less than five years ago, and the beautiful
seashells, and the crystal clear water, and the minnows, and the hermit crabs,
and all the things that excite children.
Be sure to look at
“Okinawa page”. http://www.petesmemories.com/Okinawa.html
What a beautiful place
it was, and then another boat ride (no seasickness this time), and we end up in
Yuma.
End of excerpt from
autobiography.
The
following color(?) photos are from overseas. I’m not
sure of the locations.
Some similar ones
were labeled “Formosa”. We visited several places in the far
east.
Not
sure about these. The date is 1953, and we did move from the Quonset hut to a
house. Is this it??????
I
don’t remember If Doc Padden was in Okinawa.
The
photos with the black border are from my mother’s personal album.
I
received them shuffled. I will not attempt to organize them. It is too time
consuming.
End new stuff
This is the
original material from which this page was created.
NEW YORK - The figure in the
photograph is clad in Army fatigues, boots, and helmet,
lying on his back in peaceful
repose, folded hands holding a military cap.
But he is not asleep; he is
dead. And this is not just another fallen GI; it is Ernie Pyle,
the most celebrated war correspondent
of World War II.
In April 1945, the one-time
Indiana farm boy had just arrived in the Pacific after four years
of covering combat in North
Africa, Italy, and France.
The Army's 77th Infantry
Division landed on Ie Shima,
a small island off Okinawa, to capture an airfield.
On April 18, a jeep carrying
Pyle and three officers came under machine gun fire. All scrambled for cover,
but when Pyle raised his head, a
.30-caliber bullet caught him in the left temple, killing him instantly.
Army photographer Alexander
Roberts was at a command post when he learned what happened.
Roberts went to the scene,
and despite continuing enemy fire, crept forward to record it with his
Speed Graphic camera.
His risky act earned him a
Bronze Star medal for valor.
© Copyright
2008 Globe Newspaper Company.
This says, “White Beach, maybe where you will land.”
(not sure what that means)
Sunset in Okinawa
End