Date: Fri 31-Oct-1997
Date: Fri 31-Oct-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: MICHEL
Quick Words:
schools-Downing-WWII
Full Text:
Hearing A Soldier's Perspective On World War II
(with photos)
BY MICHELE HOGAN
Students in Karen Kirch's seventh grade classes got a sense of what World War
II felt like from a man who had served six years in the artillery, and had
been a part of three campaigns in the Asiatic Pacific Theater and the European
Theater.
William Downing, Newtown resident, said, "All the training cannot possibly
prepare you for that clash; that point where you know there is somebody over
there, and he is trying to kill you."
Mr Downing's job was to calculate firing data for the guns (105mm Howitzer
canons). He recounted a dramatic moment in his service.
"I remember one night, in the infantry, in the front lines, there was a gap
(and we suspected that the enemy would try to get through the gap). We got all
12 guns laid on the target. When the enemy came through, I picked up the phone
(walkie-talkie) and called `fire.' All twelve guns went off. Our fire landed
on the enemy, the Japanese, and I heard the cheers from our side as the fire
landed."
Mr Downing showed the students a sword that was believed to have been used by
the Japanese for beheadings. A student asked if he had got the sword while in
the service, and Mr Downing explained that in the war, you had no place for
anything but the bare essentials.
He described the conditions on board the troop ship he took from Norfolk, Va.,
to the Panama Canal. The narrow bunks were tiered four or five high, and each
man had to keep all his possessions, including fire arms, with him in that
tiny space.
There was no ladder to get to the top bunks, so people just hoisted themselves
up or clambered up over the bunks. "If someone's lying there (on a lower bunk)
he may get a foot in his face."
A student asked, "What was the hardest thing to leave behind?" Mr Downing
explained that he never thought about it. "Back then there was a spirit in
this country - it wasn't that you had to do it, you wanted to do it - every
man was involved."
He went on to describe how a friend with a disability that prevented him from
serving in the military instead found another way to help - he drove an
ambulance.
Mr Downing's sense of immediacy as he described the grueling day-to-day
existence of the war, punctuated with moments of terror, prompted a student to
ask Mr Downing if he was glad he had had the experience.
Mr Downing responded that "it's such a short period of time, but such an
intense time, that I can't imagine what my life would have been without it.
Yes, I am glad I had the experience."
Mrs Kirch said that her main objective in having Mr Downing speak to the
seventh graders was to help the students understand the individual's
experience in the war. Students will be comparing Mr Downing's personal
experience with that of current military personnel, and the descriptions from
the novel April Morning .
