A trip down memory lane some 50+ years
ago and a tale of two reluctant soldiers.
He caught my eye as we waited to board a
slow train to Missouri under the watchful eye of two Army NCOs. Newly sworn
into the Green Machine, it was off to Ft Leonard Wood, MO, to become trained killers
(opps, Army not Marines) one September day in 1963.
About 5’4”, 140 lbs, red hair, map of
Ireland face, he radiated surliness. From Boston, he had committed some offense against society on his way through
Denver and, as was common in the early 1960’s, a kindly prosecutor suggested he
join the Army and all would be forgotten. Little did we know then we would
become tight buddies and be in the same units our entire time in the Army.
Our bonding began after I went between
cars to smoke a cigarette. Per the PSG (prior
service guy who couldn’t make it on the outside) and was “in charge” of our
group, this was forbidden. Tom joined me. When the PSG got proddy I offered to
throw his sorry ass off the train. Tom offered to help.
The five days spent at the reception
center was an eye opener. Picture a grim moderately sloped hillside covered in
crushed gravel, about the size of a tennis court, no shelter of any kind, with
cut off telephone posts strung across the top. Each post had alphabet letters.
Per your last name, you stood in a line behind the appropriate post. All
fucking day except for noon chow. Need a latrine? You should have taken care of
that before formation. Thirsty? Tough shit. From time to time we were herded to haircuts,
to the medical staff, to testing, and were issued our uniforms and such. Then
we were trucked to our basic training battalion (and the last time I rode
anywhere until after basic).
The reception center was within earshot of the
infiltration course. For several hours at night you could hear machine gun fire
and explosions.
Leaving the reception area was
absolutely forbidden! Tom and I used our free evening hours to explore some
of the area.
Basic was basic. Millions have
experienced it. My normal response to inter personal conflicts wasn’t approved
by the cadre.
Corporal Arnold. “Goddamnit shithead, gut
punch them. I get pissed off dealing with bloody noses.”
“Yes, sir”!
With the Army running on the alphabet,
Tom was in the third platoon and me in the fourth. Both platoons shared the
same building after week three when the whole company was relocated after one
of the barracks collapsed.( WWII ‘temporary’ barracks)
At the rifle range, the first step was
zeroing our rifles. From a standing position in a concrete pipe on end
(simulated a fox hole) we fired three single shots at a bulls eye six feet
away. For many, including Tom, this was the first time they had ever fired a
weapon. I grew up with rifles and was in the NRA Junior program for years. My three
holes could be covered with a nickel. Tom struggled with a rifle. After evening
chow and before lights out I worked with him on fundamentals. He never got to
the expert level but did qualify.
We moved about a mile to AIT, Combat
Engineer School, along with about twenty from our basic company. Tom kept a low
profile. I didn’t. We did manage a weekend pass. Six of us, four in the back of
a pickup with a camper shell, took off to Columbia, MO to chase college girls.
Tom was initially the most successful of our group but her boyfriend and his
pals objected. Had to rescue him. The local constabulary suggested we load our
sorry asses in whatever vehicle we arrived in and get out of town.
The Daniel
Boone hotel also requested we vacate our rooms but didn’t offer a refund.
Our next opportunity for trouble was Fort
Dix, NJ as we awaited sea transport to Germany. Tom was from a Boston
longshoreman clan and understood shipping.
“The next troop ship sails in eight days.
That means eight days of pulling shit details. Let’s go to Boston”.
“Hell, yeah”.
We returned in time to make the load out
for the buses going to the Brooklyn Army Terminal. As the irritated Sergeant
read off names and the named person responded, he either directed the
individual to a bus or ordered them to a spot near him. Not surprisingly, Tom
and I were in the second group.
“Where have you two fuckers been the past
few days”, he demanded.
“We’ve been stuck guarding some fucking
duck pond, and with no relief. I demand to see the I.G.”!
“Yeah”, said Tom.
Glaring at us, the Sergeant said,
“Get on the fucking bus”.
Which we did.
Whenever we weren’t in a permanent unit,
I removed my name tags. In a mob of green uniforms, everyone a slick sleeved
Private, it was the rare cadre that would remember your face.
“What is your name, and where is your
name tag?”
“Private Anderson, Sergeant. Lost my
duffle bag and was given this to wear”.
“OK, Anderson. Tomorrow after formation
report to supply for a work detail”.
“Yes, Sergeant”. (Yeah, like that is
going to happen)
Aboard the good ship General Maurice
Rose, Tom was assigned to the kitchen detail. While he had never been seasick,
he managed to puke on a hot grill covered with cooking eggs, and was banished.
The voyage was scheduled for nine days
but took fourteen. Why was never explained to we cattle. Those who understood
such things explained the ocean state wasn’t conducive to a fast voyage. This
landlubber didn’t understand the bow and foredeck underwater wasn’t the usual
condition.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rr-vs662Quo
Had the trip went as scheduled, my
malingering wouldn’t have mattered. On the eleventh day, I was cornered by
three pissed off NCO’s. Traveling steerage, they were still assigned
supervision of the numerous shit details. I had become an irritant, and needed,
in fine Army tradition, instant correction.
One thing I knew before going into the
Army, don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time. NCOs can be quite creative
in devising attitude corrections. They respect the malcontent who accepts his
punishment without whining. Not that they don’t remember you, and watch you a
bit more closely than your peers.
Disembarking in Bremerhaven, we stood for
three hours in the freezing wind on an open area at the railroad station. Gave
Tom and I ample time to deduce a nearby building might be a liquor store, slip
away to verify our assumption, and exchange a few US dollars for something
called Steinhaeger. Nine hours later, arriving at our final destination, Hanau,
Germany we were drunk on our asses.
This didn’t please First Sergeant Richard
Nelson or Sergeant First Class James J McGarity Jr. They decided to ship our
sorry asses to a three week demolition course in Bavaria with the hope,
“You
will blow your asses off and we won’t have to deal with you”.
Nine of us from AIT were assigned to the
same float bridge engineer company. Another five or so were in the next door
fixed bridge company. This made our transition easier.
Tom and I had a lot of fun in Germany,
and got into a lot of mischief. As an example, after winning a drinking
contest, we found ourselves at a dispensary being treated for acute alcohol
poisoning. Don’t believe the term, stomach pumping. A tube in forced down your
gullet, chemicals are introduced, and you puke your guts out, repeatedly. After
release, we headed back downtown and resumed partying, but did pace ourselves.
Toward the end of 1965, we got a nice
Army wide pay raise, and promotion slots opened up. By 1966, both Tom and I
were E-5s. He was a buck sergeant, me a SP 5. I think the First Sergeant’s
reasoning was this:
“I take the biggest assholes, put them in charge of the other assholes, and make them responsible for the assholes. Then I can concentrate on just a few assholes. Makes my job easier”.
“I take the biggest assholes, put them in charge of the other assholes, and make them responsible for the assholes. Then I can concentrate on just a few assholes. Makes my job easier”.
After the Army Tom went on to college and
then medical school. He became a shrink.
The one thing I’ve always admired about
the Marine Corps is the way they go about making each Marine proud to be a
Marine. If the Army had an official song in the early 60’s I never heard
it. Certainly never learned the lyrics.
Keep your boots shined, march in step, and do your job was all that was
expected.
Tom struggled with basic soldier shit. I
found it to be easy and usually was the guard mount supernumerary, the extra in
case someone couldn’t complete their duty. I helped Tom with soldiering, and he
helped me with what is today called “anger management”. We had each other’s
backs even when we developed other circles of buddies. He was the only person I
trusted completely.
Hope this trip down memory lane didn’t
bore you, and you got a few laughs.
8 comments:
I always enjoy reading other people's "military adventures".
Thanks for the post!
Has Tom passed away? And if so, did you keep in touch until then?
And thanks for sharing your experiences. I don't find it boring. And I do laugh. :)
Great story, great memories. Thank you for sharing them.
You are most welcome.
We stayed in touch for awhile. After he married we went our ways. His new bride did not approve of me.
Happy you enjoyed the post.
Stories like this take me back...my Dad was an AF master-sergeant in charge of training the newbys. He would come home with tales of how he tortured them (not figuratively, of course). His favorite was to "borrow" a hankie, pretend to blow a bunch of snot in it, and give it back to the trainee. I'm sure there were nastier antics, that he preferred not to share with his little girls, tee hee.
The devious ways of senior NCOs! Did he ever give you kids Article 15s?
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