Victory for the U.S.A. | Poem for the 11th Airborne

Yank magazine Sept. 1945 (notice the helmet stenciling)

On the cover of the 14 September 1945 issue of Yank magazine,(Vol. 4 No. 13) is S/Sgt. William Carlisle of Chalmers, Indiana

This poem was written by: Pvt. Bronnell York, Battery D, 457th Parachute Field Artillery Battalion, 11th A/B; even if you are not a poetry enthusiast, it is worth reading.

“Victory For the U.S.A.”

We’re the boys of the 457,
Earning our major pay,
Fighting Japs and jungle life,
For three sixty cents a day.

Back home we’re soon forgotten,
By girls and friends we knew,
Here in the South Seas Islands,
Ten thousand miles from you.

All night the rains keep falling,
It’s more than we can stand,
“NO” folks, we’re not convicts,
We’re defenders of our land.

We’re the boys of many,
Holding the upper hand,
Hitting the silk and hoping,
We’re living when we land.

We’re having it pretty tough now,
You can believe what I say,
Some day we hope to live again,
Back home in the USA.

Victory’s in the making,
Our future will be serene,

We’ve got the Navy backing us,
Along with the fighting Marines.

We’re in this all together,
Fellas like you and me,
We’ll be a united people,
And our Country will be free.

There’s no two ways about it,
We’ll either do or die,
For our Country with dictation,
Is not for you or I.

When the war is over,
And we have finished what they began,
We’ll raise Old Glory high above,
The Empire of Japan.

So, to all you 4F jokers,
Who thinks there’s something you missed,
Don’t let the draft board get you,
And for God’s sake don’t enlist.

It might be a long time yet,
Then it might be any day,
When smiling faces see the Golden Gate,
And sail in Frisco Bay.

When this conflict’s over,
The boys can proudly say,
We had to fight for what was ours,
Victory for the U.S.A.

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“Down from Heaven come the 11”

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Koji of http://p47koji.wordpress.com notified me that he found a William and Norma Carlisle in Chalmers, IN.

I sent a note to inquire about the photo.  I received this reply from his widow:

Hello! So nice of you to write, Bob would have been pleased. The picture on the cover of the Yank magazine is William Robert Carlisle, my husband. I’m sure he could have told you stories of the 11th Airborne.  I’m Mrs. Norma Carlisle, Bob’s wife. I’m sorry to tell you that Bob passed away on Dec. 12 – 1997. I miss him! Hope you and yours are enjoying the Golden Years! God Bless, Norma

I was so disappointed to discover that we had lost yet another trooper’s tales of the era and a little taken back to see that he passed on what would have been my own father’s 83rd birthday.

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Military Humor – 

paratrooper humor

Air Mail

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Farewell Salutes – 

Lola (Hamrick) Adams – Clay, WV; US Army WAC, Signal Corps

Respect
Courtesy of Dan Antion

Franklin H. Bennett – Glendive, MT; US Army, WWII, PTO, Cpl., 54th Signal Maintenance Co., POW, DWC (Cabanatuan Camp, Common Grave 312)

Albert Burdge – Adrena, NJ; US Army Air Corps, WWII, Panama

Alton Christie – Jasper, FL; US Army, Korea, Cpl., Co B/1/21/24th Infantry Division, KIA (Osan, SK)

James Eason – Bellingham, WA; US Army Air Corps, WWII

Norman E. Grizzle – Ducktown, TN; US Army, Korea & Vietnam, 82nd Airborne Division

Joyce McIntosh (105) – St. Anne de Bellevue, CAN; RC Army, cook

Joan Richards – Poss-Essex, ENG; British Women’s Corps, WWII

Ruhl J. Russell (104) – Shadyside, OH; US Army, WWII, Korea, Vietnam, Colonel (Ret.)

Calvin L. Walker – New Haven, CT; US Army Air Corps, WWII, PTO, Kwajalein Is. air traffic comptroller

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About GP

Everett Smith served with the Headquarters Company, 187th Regiment, 11th A/B Division during WWII. This site is in tribute to my father, "Smitty." GP is a member of the 11th Airborne Association. Member # 4511 and extremely proud of that fact!

Posted on January 30, 2023, in First-hand Accounts, Home Front, Post WWII, SMITTY, WWII and tagged , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. 117 Comments.

  1. I do hope rhyming poetry comes back into fashion ~ it’s been proven to light up hard-to-stimulate areas of the brain, related to joyfulness, compassion and the moral sensibility…

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Reblogged this on quirkywritingcorner and commented:
    I love the poem and the cartoons!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. A wonderful poem. Now we only need music for a great anthem. xx Michael

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Delightful poem and cute funnies, GP.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. This was a great poem, well written and spot on. Thanks, GP.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. What an extraordinary poem. Thanks for sharing that and the rest of this history, GP. Hugs.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Wooh! Victory for the kingdom of the Lord, victory for USA! In Jesus name!

    Liked by 2 people

  8. It’s complicated feeling. I believe no one can 100 percent understand people from battlefield.

    Liked by 2 people

  9. He certainly described the situation they were in very well, yet you could hear his pride in defending the U.S.A. Had to smile that he wasn’t recommending this as a volunteer position for the guys and girls back home.

    Liked by 1 person

  10. This is a wonderful article; thanks for sharing it.

    Liked by 1 person

  11. That magazine cover is a keeper, I copied and printed it. In an aside, GP, let me just say what an impressive and seemingly tireless job you do in replying to every comment — you get so many, and deservedly so, for this is an important historical and truly patriotic blog.

    Liked by 1 person

  12. Great poem. Well said since it comes from the heart.

    Liked by 1 person

  13. What a great poem, GP. Thank you for sharing that, as well as the Norma Carlisle letter. Really ironic Bob passed on the date of your dad’s birthday.

    Liked by 1 person

  14. I’m always moved by soldiers’ writing, and especially by their poetry. It’s such a direct expression of feeling and conviction, and clearly a way of trying to deal with what they’ve experienced. It’s one thing to learn names and dates of battles, and quite another to enter them through the words of someone who was there.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Exactly, Linda. That’s what I’m always saying about how schools go about teaching history. I believe hearing an eye-witness story to a historical event will stick in a student’s mind longer that memorizing dates.

      Liked by 1 person

      • As I may have mentioned, Ted Lawson, the journalist author of “Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo,” visited our 5th grade class about 1948. He was one of the pilots for the Doolittle Raid on Tokyo. The teacher, IIRR, told us not to bring up the fact he was missing a leg, but the subject came up, anyway. He told us the leg had been injured as he left the ‘craft. He didn’t mention that he left the aircraft through the windshield. I asked him what made something “news.” He told us the old (new to us) saw about “dog bites man” is not news; “man bites dog” is news.

        Liked by 1 person

        • So ___ that’s where that saying came from! That generation, as you could see, didn’t ask for sympathy or grandeur, they just did their jobs. This world is truly going to miss them!

          Like

  15. We’re in this all together,
    Fellas like you and me,
    We’ll be a united people,
    And our Country will be free.

    I wish we were more united these days! Thanks for sharing this wonderful poem that portrayed how those fighting men felt and the lovely letter from Mrs. Carlisle!!

    Liked by 1 person

  16. I found the comments quite interesting, G. And your responses. There is little black and white about war. Shades of grey. Those who fight, deserve to be honored, regardless. Always. But their are times when their need to fight is abundantly clear, as in World War II, and other times when the leaders who send them off to die are clearly wrong. –Curt

    Liked by 1 person

  17. It is a well written poem and clearly right from the heart.

    Like

  18. Pvt. York’s spirit lives on in his poem.

    Liked by 1 person

  19. A terrific poem, GP. A lovely letter from Norma Carlisle. Thanks for sharing both.

    Liked by 1 person

  20. Nothing like hearing the truth from someone who was there. Great work by Pvt York.
    Best wishes, Pete.

    Liked by 1 person

  21. Great poem, GP, that seems to come straight from the minds of men in a combat unit. The 11th had yearbooks? I think that’s good for the vets and their kin. My combat unit in Vietnam, 1st Infantry, had yearbooks. I have the one from 1969, one of the years I was with them. In the back are the names of the KIAs of that year, 483 of them.

    Liked by 1 person

    • The 11th was the first division that was entirely airborne, I suppose that rated enough for the yearbook.
      Those Vietnam years, seeing the KIA lists getting larger each day in the newspapers, first JFK and then LBJ lying bold-faced on TV and losing many of my friends; I can’t tell you how much I wish there was more to say than Thank You.

      Liked by 3 people

  22. Excellent poem, JC.
    ‘Hitting the silk and hoping,
    We’re living when we land.”
    Living…to continue the fight to live.

    Liked by 2 people

  23. What an excellent poem, and how nice to write to the soldier’s widow. I’m sure she loved the warm thoughts.

    Liked by 1 person

  24. Thaty poem is very good and thank you for sharing it. There is nothing better than hearing it how it is from a totally ordinary man, rather than an author or a poet.

    Liked by 1 person

  25. Wonderful post, GP. We need some of those people today that new working together accomplished more than discord.

    Liked by 1 person

  26. Enjoyed this post, as usual, particularly the human-interest part about contacting Bob Carlisle’s widow.

    Liked by 1 person

  27. Those who didn’t get drafted or enlist (especially those who could serve but didn’t) get to feel outside that group that met the challenge of their generation.

    The honor rule of thumb hierarchy: 1. enlistees – regular Army (or any other other service branch, including the often excluded US Coast Guard); 2. draftees; 3. National Guard (the Gulf war and those after changed this since draftees no longer exist and National Guard got called up several times to war, giving these reserve forces equality with other volunteers in Nr. 1); 4. conscientious objectors who served in some form of National Service role; 5. conscientious objectors who served time in prison for their beliefs; 6. 4-F (only those with legitimate medical issues), 7. 4-F (“bone spurs”, those with fathers who know the right people or had fathers who were the right people to keep Sonny out of the military); 8. conscientious objectors who left country to avoid service.

    This is pretty much how we who volunteered to serve our country view those who chose other routes. Now that it is all volunteer, most of these no longer apply, but there are people who would fill those “positions” or they’d have volunteered for the military of some form of National Service in gratitude for the blessings of living in the USA.

    Liked by 1 person

  28. Great message in that poem and interesting letter from Mrs. Carlisle.

    Liked by 1 person

  29. Powerful, GP. I’m always moved by your posts and grateful for the reminders of what it means to be a war-time soldier. God bless them all.

    Like

  30. “Down from heaven come the 11”

    Like

  31. That poem embodies what those who went to war felt, I think.

    Like

  32. Thanks for sharing this, especially putting a name to the face of what many people just assume is a “generic soldier” on the cover and for contacting the surviving widow. This is what makes history come alive. (Are you familiar with the book “The Rifle”? It does much the same as you did with this blog post, using an M-1 Garand as the spark for getting WWII vets to talk about their experiences and, in the process, help modern combat vets deal with their own problems.)

    Liked by 3 people

  33. That’s a great poem. It expresses how I think everyone in that long battle must have felt.

    Liked by 1 person

  34. Powerfully written.

    Liked by 1 person

  35. The lyrics certainly encapsulate the mindset of the service personnel as they struggled in war. Although this is poetic form, it does not embellish reality.

    Liked by 1 person

  36. Thank you, Ned.

    Like

  37. Thanks for the plug, Dan.

    Like

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