The OuTer CirCle The OuTer CirCle
Transcription
The OuTer CirCle The OuTer CirCle
Savannah Attendees Higgins, Howard & Gwen Grp Hdqs Lemmens, Andy & Shirley 368 Levitt, Leon 368th Levitt, Charlie 368th th Bouchard, Gary & Gail 369th and family Burtner, Rene & Helen 369th Burtner, Jennifer 369th Burtner, Michael 369th Hess, Leroy and daugh. Barb369th Jennings, Curtis 369th Jennings, Randy 369th Jennings, Warner 369th Lindsey, Doug & Sara Ann 369th plus guest Pat Wilsky Mettel, Tom 369th Montague, Bert & Inez Montague, Glenn Powell, Dr. David Powell, Michael Powell, Rex Ralston, Gil & Beverly 369th 369th 369th 369th 369th 369th Doersch, Dortha 370th Johnson, Sara 370th plus guest Joan Byrne Paddock, Dave & Gigi 370th kids: Paul and Rose guest Chaplain Paul Lasley Windmiller, Don & Belle 370th plus son Donald Association friends: Ritchie, Dr. Wm & Babe Bishop, Pat & Brenda The he Outer uter Circle ircle 359th Fighter Group Association World War II Station F133 - East Wretham, England Web site: www.359fg.org Volume 19, No. 3 Cum Leone Aug 2008 See you in Dayton! Home from the Hill After 63 years, pilot’s remains are coming home 359th Fighter Group Association The Outer Circle Gigi Doersch Paddock 7567 Vincent Drive Toano, Virginia 23168 Address Service Requested Next issue: Nov. ‘08 First Class Howard Clifton Enoch, Jr., was a pilot in the 368th whose plane went down near Leipzig March 19, 1945. “Cliff” was considered MIA. In April 2008 his son was contacted with the news that the father he never knew was coming home. His P-51D fighter plane under attack by the Luftwaffe, 20-year-old Howard Clifton Enoch, Jr., flying a mission over Halle, Germany, ultimately plunged to the ground in Germany, never to be heard from again. That was March 19, 1945, and the crash site would then become part of East Germany, behind the Iron Curtain, making it all but impossible for the U.S. government to recover remains of fallen soldiers. But reunification of Germany more than a decade ago helped the United States strike an agreement with the government to let the U.S. military search the former East Germany area for remains. That enabled the military to locate and ultimately identify Enoch’s remains and wreckage. Now, Enoch’s son is planning the burial of a father he never knew. In a face-to-face meeting in April, two U.S. Department of Defense officials told him of the positive identifiContinued, pg 3 The article’s title references the poem “Requiem” by Robert Louis Stevenson. Letter from our Prez, pg. 2 Mission Report, pg. 4-5 Historian Report, pg. 6 359th Fighter Group Officers President Andrew Lemmens (239) 768.9899 9696 Casa Linda Ct. Ft. Myers, FL 33919-8420 lemmens9696@comcast.net Vice President and Judge Advocate Vernon Judkins (520) 825.1778 64713 E. Drifter Drive Tucson, AZ 85739 Business Secretary Bert Montague (910) 673.1679 584 Seven Lakes N. West End, NC 27376-9769 inezandbert@earthlink.net Treasurer Charles Levitt (817) 498.9252 5796 Rockport Lane Ft. Worth, TX 76137 charlie.a.levitt@lmco.com Assistant Treasurer Don Windmiller (812) 626.0717 634 Conti Drive Evansville, IN 47711-1062 d.windmiller@insightbb.com Roster Custodian Dorothy Turcotte (413) 532.3161 32 Lindbergh Avenue Holyoke, MA 01040 pilotandme@comcast.net Group Historian Char Baldridge (434) 946.0901 715 Sardis Road Amherst, VA 24521 baldridge@prodigy.net Newsletter Gigi Doersch Paddock (757) 566.8856 7567 Vincent Drive Toano, VA 23168 d-gpaddock@verizon.net Random Thoughts From President Andrew Lemmens The success of our recent mini-reunion was due, in large part, to the scouting and leg-work of Rene Burtner. All of us who attended gave him a resounding “hand.” Everyone pitched in with liquid refreshments and a variety of finger foods. As always, the meeting with old friends was the most rewarding part. • While visiting the Mighty 8th Air Force Museum I spent considerable time walking around the Memorial Gardens. There are now hundreds of commemorative bricks, each engraved with a name, in short walls throughout the garden. There are also dozens of memorial plaques - about 2 ft. square - commemorating bomber groups. Noticeably lacking are ones dedicated to fighter groups. It’s as if the memorial garden is a bomber retreat! The 352nd Fighter Group from Bodney, our neighbor in England, has a beautiful memorial bench in the garden. I think our Group should also have a special memorial in the garden. I don’t presume to say what it should be but we should think abut it. Share your thoughts with us. • I have another item for discussion. What do we do with the memorial plaque that has the names of our deceased service members on it? I think the time has come for it too to be retired. I brought it home from our last “hosted” reunion (2007 Charlottesville). I think it will be difficult to maintain in coming years as our ranks diminish. To me, it has served its purpose to remember our lost comrades each year at annual reunions and memorial services. Such reunions are of the past so what do we do with it now? Again, your comments and ideas are most welcome. -Andy Lemmens Replies can be sent to Andy (contact info on left) or to the Outer Circle. Subscription Fees The Outer Circle reminds readers of its dependence upon subscription fees to meet the current goals of four issues per year. Remin der Annual fee - $15 (association widows exempt) Treasurer Charlie Levitt (contact info on left) sends out reminders for subscription renewal at year’s end. Please mark your calendars to keep subscription fees current. Many thanks to all who sent in contributions “above and beyond” their fee. We gratefully accept! NOW... THE REST OF THE STORY On August 19, I got a call from Larry Nelson, Jr., of Mesa, AZ. He found us from a web site with the Outer Circle on it. Larry called Vernon Judkins, since he lived fairly close. Vernon referred him on to me. Larry, Jr., a firefighter, and his father Larry Nelson, Sr., Aaron W. Nelson, 368th Mayor of Yuma, were seeking information on Aaron W. Nelson, 368th, their grandfather/father respectively. As we talked it became apparent that another member of this family has the aforementioned original oil painting of Howard Fogg’s aerial combat painting, which resided in Wretham Hall until the close of the war in 1945. Maj. Aaron W. Nelson, Executive Officer of the 368th FS, brought this painting home with him at war’s end. The original painting now resides in the home of a close relative of the late Aaron W. Nelson. You can’t beat that!! In addition, Larry, Sr. has several of his father’s letters, which he is putting in chronological order to summarize their content along with several negatives to be printed. I’m prepared to help them with identification of these photos. Aaron Nelson is mentioned twice, very briefly, in Howard Fogg’s wartime diary. Aaron W. Nelson met an untimely death in 1969 as a result of a fall from a ladder. Thus, his family never got to ask him much about his service time in WW II. Several of the Aaron Nelson family members are Eagle Scouts, including his son Larry. Sr., his grandson, Larry, Jr. and his three sons; two of Larry Jr’s. brothers and three of their sons. A grand legacy! Vineyard update – We’ll be harvesting about 10 tons of Chardonnay grapes on Sat. Sept. 6, after culling out 6,000 lbs. of grapes affected by powdery mildew. Oh, the joys of farming! pg. 7 Taps - No Photo Percy Warren 368th March/2008 Thomas W. Morris 370th July/2008 Char’s plea: If you have letters and/or diaries, etc. related to your relative’s wartime years with the 359th, PLEASE share them with me. If you can’t copy, I have a commercial copy machine and would be most happy to do the work, returning all originals to you. You might not think these documents are of any importance, BUT TRUST ME, THEY ARE!! (Contact info, pg. 2) -Char Baldridge, Group Historian Frances Moore (Mrs. Douglas) September/2007 pg. 6 Email Address Change Dortha Doersch dorthad@cox.net ________ Address Changes Nancy Jennings 3188 Verdant Way San Jose, CA 95117-3070 William Kindelan 626 park Ln., Apt. A Greensburg, PA 15601-1539 William Laputz Fountainview Care Ctr. 88 Clark Lane Waterford, CT 06385-2118 Douglas Moore 8887 S. Lewis Ave., #303 Tulsa, OK 74137-3219 (918) 298.7968 John Waugh 8 Lonran Drive Rochester, NY 14624-3914 Historian Report Connections! From Char Baldridge In March of this year, Janet and Richard Fogg (Richard is the son of the late Howard L. Fogg, Jr., 368th) contacted me inquiring about photographs to include in a manuscript of Howard Fogg’s transcribed wartime diary. Howard had faithfully kept a daily diary from October ‘43 through September ‘44. The Foggs’ plan was to collect materials to publish a book. Peter Randall of the “Little Friends” web site directed them to Rene Burtner, who in turn directed them to me. Capt. Howard L. Fogg was one of the original fighter pilots with the 368th Fighter Squadron of the 359th FG. On April 14, 1944 Howard L. Fogg, Jr., posed with one of his oil paintings based on his combat experience. This painting hung on a wall of the bar at Wretham Hall until the end of the war. Upon returning stateside Howard went on to become a renowned artist of railroad trains. I’d been aware of Howard Fogg’s diary for many years and couldn’t believe that some day soon I might be able read it in its entirety. Howard Fogg had graciously sent a couple of excerpts from his diary, upon my phone requests, but I never quite had the guts to ask him if he would permit me to make a copy of it for the 359th FG history archive files. Can you believe that? The Foggs replied they’d have clean draft of their transcribed manu- script of Howard L. Fogg’s wartime diary completed by the end of April and would send me a review copy. I sent them some relevant information about the Group and several photos for inclusion as supporting and/or informational material for their project. Working with them has been a fantastic experience for me! In early May, I received their unbelievable manuscript of Fogg in the Cockpit, The Wartime Diary of Captain Howard L. Fogg, Jr., October 1943 to Sept. 1944, with supporting information written by Janet and Richard Fogg, approximately 60,000 words. I’ve read every word of this manuscript twice and was completely blown away. It is of such a human scale and so insightful as to the life you guys lived. It would certainly bring back a flood of memories to all that were there. The Foggs currently have this manuscript out to several possible publishers. We’ll keep you informed on the progress of their publication. continued => cations of the remains, at a gathering of family members of missing soldiers in Connecticut. Said Howard Enoch III, director of the Robsham Theater Arts Center at Boston College, “It was the bitter sweetness of a dream come true and sadness of the lost years.” Enoch never knew his father. Only 19 when he signed up, the father left behind a 17-year-old wife and an unborn son in the hills of western Kentucky. The son was born three months after his father’s death. The older Enoch entered the Army on April 15, 1944. Nearly a year later he was a second lieutenant with the 368th Fighter Squadron and was wingman to Major Niven Cranfill furnishing support for the 1st Force, 3rd Air Division, hitting targets at Halle. He engaged a swarm of Me262s east of Leipzig when he went down. Eight years later, the military declared the soldier unrecoverable. In 2004, German historian Hans Guenther Ploes identified a particular rural area as a potential location of plane wreckage. Defense Department officials found fragments of the plane scattered over an area the size of a football field. Two years later, military investigators recovered human remains and aircraft wreckage. A forensic analysis confirmed the identity in April. Enoch keeps a memorial to his father on a shelf in his living room, where black-and-white photos are joined by military distinctions that include a Purple Heart, air medal, and a pilot ring his father used to wear, but stopped for fear of scratching it. His father’s name is also featured on the Tablets of the Missing at the Henri-Chappelle American Cemetery in Belgium. After their discovery the archaeological findings were sent to Hawaii for analysis. (Lieutenant Enoch’s remains were identified at the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command or JPAC for short – the largest forensic anthropology lab in the world.) The Army studied the geography of the crash, the style and plane identification, and, ultimately, DNA. Howard III says, “I have a father, and he has a story. I am just now, after all these years, beginning to know that story... I grew up believing no one knew anything and no one remembered my dad. I was so wrong. And now I am so grateful!” Burial of Howard Clifton Enoch, Jr., will take place September 22 at Arlington Cemetery, service at 1:00 p.m. Special thanks to Leon Levitt and to Mark Baker (USAF Ret.) who contacted the Outer Circle with this story; Howard Enoch III for permission to publish. Thanks also to Char Baldridge and the 368th Squadron History, the Boston Globe, and the Framingham Mass. Daily News. Contact info for Howard Enoch III: 7 Hilltop Lane, Framingham, MA 01701 enoch@bc.edu Set your sights on Dayton: July 10-12, 2009 Howard L. Fogg, 368th Take aim for next year’s mini-reunion in Dayton, Oh., home of the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force. Watch the Outer Circle for details! pg. 3 Co-founders Tony Chardella Floyd Myers Board of Directors Andrew Lemmens President Vernon Judkins Vice President John Baldridge Lawrence Beaupre Randall Jennings Tom Mettel Nancy Jennings Char Baldridge Gigi Paddock Past Presidents Nancy Jennings, 2006 Tom Mettel, 2005 Randall Jennings, 2004 Lawrence Beaupre, 2003 John Baldridge, 2002 Arvy Kysely, 2001 Andrew Lemmens, 2000 Leon Levitt, 1999 John McAlevey, 1998 Tom Morris, 1997 Bill Stepp, 1996 Gene Surowiec, 1995 George Doersch, 1994 Andrew Lemmens, 1992/93 Earl Adkins, 1991 Jack Bateman, 1990 Martha Staley, 1989 Robert York, 1988 Larry Bouchard, 1987 Charles Morton, 1985/86 Joe Meisl, 1983/84 John Oliphint, 1981/82 Robert Gaines, 1979/80 William R. Rufe, 1977/78 Anthony Macari, 1975/76 Anthony Chardella, 1973/74 Floyd Myers, 1973/74 Georgia on My Mind pg. 4 pg. 5 2008 Mini-Reunion, Savannah Photo contributors: Rene Burtner, Tom Mettel, Leon Levitt, Paul Paddock Mighty 8th Air Force Museum “He lived to bear his country’s arms. He died to save its honor. He was a soldier and he knew a soldier’s duty. His sacrifice will help to keep aglow the flaming torch that lights our lives... that millions yet unborn may know the priceless joy of liberty. And we who pay homage, and revere his memory, in solemn pride rededicate ourselves to a complete fulfillment of the task for which he so gallantly has placed his life upon the altar of humanity’s freedom.” H. H. Arnold Commanding General Army Air Forces Rene Burtner Andy & Shirley Lemmens Chapel of the Fallen Eagles 359th display case Leon Levitt Howard Higgins Charlie Levitt Museum Memorial Gardens Mission Report Group tour of Mighty 8th AF Museum Dortha Doersch, Belle & Donald & Don Windmiller, Dave & Rose Paddock 359th Plaque in Museum Warner & Curtis Jennings Tom Mettel Dr. David & Rex Powell The Group’s ‘08 mini-reunion has come and gone. A very accommodating hotel (Best Western Bradbury Suites), a big hospitality room, nearby restaurants, and the Mighty 8th Air Force Museum, all combined for a great get-together this summer. Everyone brought the “party” (many thanks to the Burtner family for replenishing supplies!) as Andy Lemmens mentioned in his letter (pg. 2). Special thanks to Rene Burtner serving as “man on the ground” and handling arrangements. The Group visited the Mighty 8th Museum & Memorial Gardens escorted by tour guides. We met afterward in the Crown and Eagle Pub for lunch. A trolley tour of Savannah was enjoyed by the attendees, as we visited the Historic, Colonial, and Victorian districts on a city tour, exploring the extraordinary architecture, charming city squares, and the legends that make Savannah so unique. The Group had a great weekend and enjoyed being together in such a beautiful setting. All systems “go” as we look ahead to meeting next summer in Dayton, Oh., July 10-12, 2009.
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