Posted on Dec 20, 2019
A WWII Airman's Son Tracks Down His Father's Last Mission—to Destroy a Nazi Weapon Factory
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Posted 5 y ago
Responses: 6
Great post Tony - I wish my dad would have given me more info on what he did during WWII.
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My dad grew up never knowing who his father was. Lt. "Buddy" Baker died in the Pacific without having married my grandmother, or given his infant son a name. "Buz", as Dad was known then, would wait for thirty years to discover the truth, and finally meet his grandfather... a grizzled WWI vet from Maine. I was fortunate enough to meet Mr. Baker Sr. at the age of five, shortly before he died. As I grew older, and entered the service myself...I wanted to know more about my grandfather. At the time, I was a student Naval Flight Officer, trying very hard to live up to the ghost of a young officer from another war that I never knew. I eventually traced his squadron...who flew B-25s in Luzon against enemy shipping. I even corresponded with a man who may have known him, but couldn't recall...admitting to me that back then, they didn't try to get too close to replacements. The first time I soloed, as I pushed the throttle forward and leapt from the earth all alone...I was thinking of "Buddy". Ultimately, I didn't have the "right stuff"...and maybe it's a good thing I didn't. My son knows his father, grandfathers, and even his great grandfather...who fought with the Marines at Guadalcanal. Some years ago, I got to go up in a restored B-25 and sit "right seat"...I'm proud of the man, and of carrying his blood, if not his name.
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