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davesdigs


 MINDORO INVASION - 12/15/1944
 



Oh, my God, this is it!

The Japanese suicide plane is zeroed in right at me as I stand transfixed on the deck of LST 605 just forward of the bridge. Seven kamikazes are attacking three LSTs waiting their turn to hit thMindoro Island beach.

LST 472 is ahead of us. A suicide plane plunges into its deck, sets it ablaze and sinks it.

LST 738 is astern. Another suicide plane crashes into her. LST 738 sinks.

Now it’s our turn.

The veteran gunners of the 605 pour fire into the diving plane. The PT boats surrounding us send up a withering wall of forty- and twenty-millimeter and fifty-caliber machine gun fire.

The plane is about to hit. Knowing I am near death, I stand paralyzed with fear. Too numb to even pray.

At the last second, the sheer weight of the anti-aircraft barrage flips the plane over, and it plunges into the sea just off the port side with a tremendous explosion that almost lifts the 328-foot, 4,000-ton ship out of the water.

Imagine being on the eightieth floor of World Trade Center Tower I the morning of September 11, 2001, looking out the window and seeing a twin-engine jet passenger plane coming at you on a collision course. Feel the horror of knowing your life is about to be snuffed out in a horrendous, fiery crash. Know you are going to die a horrible, painful death. Then jump back fifty-seven years to the invasion of Mindoro Island in the Philippines and join me on the deck of LST 605 as she is about to be demolished by a Japanese suicide plane.

Now realize you are the luckiest person on earth, saved from a crushing, flaming death 10,000 miles away from your beloved wife and seven-month-old son.

Rewind.
The Mindoro invasion armada lands 10,000 army troops and supplies on the morning of December 15 and as rapidly as possible pulls off the beach and returns to the relative safety of Leyte Island, 300 miles to the southeast where the invasion begins. All the troop transports and protective cruisers and destroyers disappear over the horizon. All but one—LST 605.

The moment the 605 slides up on the beach after her narrow escape and opens her bow doors, its 150 Navy passengers making up the base force of Motor Torpedo Boat Task Unit 70.1.4 trample over each other in a mad dash ashore to get as far away from the beached ship as possible.

I have to organize a crew to unload the ship and let it return to Leyte, but I have no one to organize. All day long the ship’s exhausted crew works to remove 2,100 tons of cargo. All night the crew labors on. The next morning, still not completely unloaded, LST 605 is a lonely, sitting duck.

I post two seamen to guard the supply dump on the beach, jump into a jeep and drive off to select a site for our base camp. Seconds later I hear the roar of an enemy aircraft, look back and see a twin-engine “Sally” try to fly into the 605’s bow doors. Under heavy fire from the ship, the bomber crashes about fifty yards short of its target into a pile of fifty-five-gallon aviation gasoline drums, sending a sheet of flame over the ship’s bow, incinerating several crewmen manning the twenty-millimeter cannons. Thirty seconds ago I was standing with the two seamen—thirty seconds separate me from another appointment with death. As the “Sally” roars in, both seamen flop onto their bellies in the sand. A sheet of steel flies out of the cauldron of fire and scoops out the underbelly of Seaman Fuellhart. When Seaman Genaro sees the mutilated corpse of his buddy, he flips. Physically unscathed, Genaro is traumatized. When I see him several days later his black hair is snow white. One reads about such events in fiction and scoffs, but Genaro's hair is white as snow.

The 605 finally empties her belly, slides off the beach and gets underway. Her crew has little respect for the 150-man base force of MTB Task Unit 70.1.4.

Recently, I search the Internet in vain for a 605 survivor, so I can apologize to its seven officers and 200 enlisted men for the rotten, cowardly way we behave December 15, 1944.

LST 605’s crew was battle tested. I can hear them screaming at the U.S.S Nashville to “for God’s sake shoot!” as a suicide plane smashes into the invasion fleet’s flagship on December 13 en route to Mindoro. The Nashville doesn’t fire a shot. The kamikaze and its two 500-pound bombs disable the light cruiser, killing 133 and wounding 199.

The tragic event foreshadows daily kamikaze attacks—the heaviest Japanese aerial counteroffensive of the war to that point. Not one ship in the second supply convoy to Mindoro gets through wave after wave of unremitting suicide plane attacks.

Our task unit of twenty-six PT boats suffers one-third casualties and wins a Navy Unit Commendation. I’ve got ribbons with battle stars and nightmares for several years after World War II. We lose one boat to a suicide plane and two boats to “friendly” fire from our destroyers who mistake seventy-eight-foot-long PT boats for twelve-foot Japanese suicide boats used to ram our ships at Luzon with TNT-loaded bows.

My good friend Mike Haughian catches a “friendly” destroyer’s five-inch shell in the chest. We even the score by shooting down a Marine Corsair that makes the mistake of flying over Mangarin Bay immediately after a suicide plane lands on one of our boats. Our PTs shoot at anything that flies, including U. S. Navy PBY flying boats.

Even today I hate the sound of a loud, single-engine aircraft. It reminds me of the nightly visits of “Putt-putt Charley” and the eerie whooooshing sound of a “daisy-cutter” anti-personnel bomb dropping on a nearby random target and mowing down any object or person stupid enough to be standing up within two hundred yards.
As terrified as I am during daily attacks, nothing frightens me more during the Mindoro campaign than the certainty of death, as I stand petrified and trembling on the deck of LST 605 the morning of December 15, 1944.

Posted by davesdigs at 7:07 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 GEORGE WINSLOW BLODGETT - MY FAVORITE UNCLE
 



My glamorous Uncle Win. Oldest of my father’s seven siblings. Master sculptor. Dedicated to preserving the culture and faces of Southwest Indians. Created 41 busts in his Santa Fe, New Mexico studio in the 1930s.

Tan. Trim. Friend of the Navajos, Pueblos, Acomas and Tewas. Here are three bronze castings that greet me every morning—Albert Lujan, José Nacio Herrara, and an unnamed old Indian man who walked 100 miles to sit stolidly for his clay portrait in spite of warnings from his shaman that he was risking death. Winslow’s friends. My friends.

Deeply tanned, handsome figure, highly respected in the art colony of Santa Fe and driven by his goal to create 50 bronze heads of real native Americans. Dropped dead at 70 short of his goal.

Piercing, brown eyes, baldheaded. White sweatshirt, white flannel slacks, white tennis shoes, white custom-built Lincoln roadster. A dashing, exciting, inspirational figure worshiped by dozens of nieces and nephews.

If you are ever in the New York City Metropolitan Museum of Art, you may see the Buddha-like bust of Albert Lujan, Tewa from Taos. Famed art critic Ina Sizer Cassidy wrote these words about this magnificent bronze in the New Mexico magazine: “Winslow’s work is simplified in the last degree, his planes being only those needed to delineate the significant form and inner spirit of his model, giving strength and dignity to his portraits. It is amazing to observe the individual expressions he gets in the eyes of his sitters, as clearly individualized as is gotten by painters and accomplished by lines and planes alone.”

In Creative Art magazine, noted psychologist David Seabury paid this tribute: “It is so rare to find a man who senses meaning and yet does not try to evade reality, who seeks meaning in the form and lets that meaning so empower his vision and strengthen his touch that he renders the life before him with true power and perception.”

After World War II, he became Executive Director of the World Federalist organization for New Mexico and worked tirelessly for peace but never gave up his dream of creating a national gallery for the preservation of American Indian Art—a dream that came true after his death in 1958.

When I gaze intently into the eyes of Albert and José Nacio as they sit on our dining room buffet, I feel the warmth and kinship they shared with Winslow, my favorite artist and beloved friend.




Posted by davesdigs at 12:52 AM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 MEMORIES
 



Happy 92nd birthday, Harv.
Who’s this?
It’s me, Dave.
Dave Blodgett? Well, I’ll be darned. You made my day. Good old Dave.
Where do you live?
California.
Didn’t you live on Nevada Street in Northfield?
No, that was my grandfather.
Oh, yeah. Who was that Marxist Carleton professor?
Karl Niebyl.
Wasn't he canned?
President Cowling fired him. The student body was up in arms. Sent a delegation to Cowling to protest, but he outsmarted them. Said the firing had nothing to do with Niebyl’s teaching, but was a matter of moral turpitude and people would be hurt by disclosures. Cut the ground out from under the protest. One of the people who probably would have been hurt was my older sister Jeanne. She worshiped him.
What happened to him?
He set up an advanced school for U. S. Navy personnel at Pearl Harbor. He mesmerized the admirals just like he totally dominated the faculty at Carleton.
I wasn’t into politics at Carleton. Just football and ice hockey.
You were my hero. I watched every game you played. You were a halfback and ran a naked reverse always good for five yards. We used to call you “Guts.”
You know I was a personal friend of Paul Wellstone.
Yes, Harv. His campaign manager was Jeff Blodgett.
What a guy!
We sure miss him.
He’d lead the fight against Bush and Cheney and this crazy, illegal invasion of Iraq.
Was he piloting that plane that crashed and killed him, his wife and daughter?
No. It was a leased plane, and the pilots screwed up. A horrible tragedy!
Your wife Norma and my friend Bill Schwied’s sister, Phyllis Solomon, went to Washington to protest the senseless execution of the Rosenbergs. Remember?
Yeah. Why were they executed? My memory isn’t much good anymore at 92.”
You’re doing great! I just called to make sure you were backing Obama. I knew you would be.
I’m going to my 70th class reunion at Carleton in June, I guess. Didn’t you live at the corner house?
No, that was my grandfather.
Who lived across the street?
I don’t remember. Did you read my tribute to Paul Wellstone?
I don’t think so.
I’ll give you my blog address and you can have Linda log in. I’ll e-mail it.
Give me your phone number again.
No, Harv, let me call you. I’ve got Peanuts.
You made my day. Gee, it’s good talking with you.
It gives me a big boost. Two old guys with great memories. Happy 92nd birthday, Harv.
Love you.
Love you too.

Posted by davesdigs at 8:46 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 MY SON, MY SON
 



You must have been a beautiful baby cause all babies are beautiful; but baby, look at you now.

Clean cut kid. Every teacher’s favorite from K through 12. National Merit Scholar. Phi Beta Kappa at Oberlin College. On to law school at U of Chicago. Illinois Bar, California Bar. Handsome at 40 with a rich crop of Murray hair.

A perfect world comes crashing down, drowned in a sea of vodka. Alcoholic. Bottom out. Find AA. Find Liska. Sober up. Temptation everywhere but not a drop to drink for 28 years. Four kids. Will, athlete of the year at Laguna Beach High.Yale grad. Sweet Laska, Wooster BA. Sohomore bass playing Robert at Willamette. Monika, freshman at Skidmore. Miraculous.

Turned your life around. Administrative Law Judge, adjudicating unemployment compensation claims for the great state of Illinois.

Quit drinking, Quit smoking, but not eating. Working out. Weigh in at 255 net
.
Liska wheeling and dealing in commercial properties far off in Vienna.

Retiring at 64 and moving to Mozart’s city to lend Liska a hand. In our aging years, we will miss you. Go in peace with our blessings.

My son, my son. Our pride and joy for nearly 64 years. Pianist. Student. Great choral singer. Reader. Communicator. Standing with you through tough times and good times. Life’s a roller coaster. Big time winner. Big Time loser, Now captain of your soul, master of your fate. We give you eternal and unconditional love.

Mom and Dad

Posted by davesdigs at 6:48 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 GENESIS
 


Sounds of six excited children laughing, crying, shouting, singing, brawling, peeing, pounding the upright piano and splashing weekly in a tub of murky, lukewarm water for number four in the queue—water dropped hot and clear earlier into the bathtub from a kerosene fueled boiler.

Crescendo sounds of night crickets give a thunderstorm-warning chorus just like tree frogs do singing fortissimo in the heat of a summer day.

Listening to Enrico Caruso sobbing “Vesti la giubba” from “Pagliacci”on a Victor Red Seal record.

Sounds of dozens of children playing past time to bed down in wet sheets evaporating to cool tired, hot, happy dreamers who catch lightning bugs in Mason jars and count shooting stars and marvel at the pulsating aurora borealis in the northern sky.

Sounds of horseshoes clopping in from farms east of town hauling huge metal cans of fresh Holstein milk to the local farmers’ cooperative and the hooves of the blind dairyman’s white dray mare who knows every step of her way and Hod Baldwin’s roan bringing fresh vegetables from his truck garden and the Fremouw’s ice wagon drawn by monstrous Percherons. The sound of ice picks chipping out 100-pound blocks of Cannon River ice stored in sawdust bins south of pipes that empty raw sewage into the river. Grunting sounds of the muscle bound deliverymen wearing thick leather pads on their backs to cradle the huge frozen chunks they lug up the back steps and deposit in the tops of ice boxes.

Smells of lilacs, apple blossoms, chicken manure, winter dust beaten out of carpets, and fresh laundry pinned to a round, rotating clothesline, dog droppings, acrid smoke from firecrackers, grass clippings thrown up by ball-bearing, hand pushed lawn mowers and fresh tar laid down on Fourth Street. Smoke from leaf bonfires and toasty marshmallows.

Taste buds overwhelmed by licks off homemade peach ice cream paddles. Caramel bound popcorn balls. Crisp apples dipped in taffy. Chilled slabs of watermelon and seed spitting duels. Crisp fat carved from boned, rolled prime ribs of beef. Coverall pockets filled with Sun Maid raisins. Cotton candy and bite-sized peanut butter and molasses Mary Janes.

Dancing with abandon in cool, refreshing raindrops breaking a heat wave as we wade in knee deep open street ditches and sail stick boats in the muddy runoff. Face lickings from our amorous mongrel dog Trump. The tug of a kite string. The pull of a two-pound crappie on a fish line. A one-handed catch of a softball.

The safe, warm feeling of a mother’s hug that cures cuts, bruises and hurt feelings.

Precious childhood memories that transcend life’s pain and sorrow.




Posted by davesdigs at 1:10 AM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 
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Author: davesdigs  
From Laguna Woods, California, USA
Age: 87
 
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