Monday, August 26, 2019

Dad in the U.S. Navy 1946-1948

My father Amos J. Wright, Jr. [August 26, 1926-July 31, 2003] spent just under two years in the U.S. Navy soon after the end of World War II. His tour sent him to the south Pacific on a small cargo vessel that sailed among a number of tiny  islands bringing provisions to U.S. personnel still on duty there. 

In this post I let dad tell the story of that period via some journal entries he wrote years later and photos from the time. I've done some other posts about him on this blog. One shared photographs from his time at Auburn which was divided by his Navy years. He graduated in 1950. In another I looked at his work as a very active and longtime member of the Alabama Archaeological Society. Those efforts led to the publication of several articles and two books related to Native Americans in the state.

You can see other navy photographs of dad, a group portrait of his basic 
engineering class at the Great Lakes Naval Station and a listing of the first crew 
of the USS Errol in my blog post "Dad and the USS Errol". There are a number of photographs in dad's Navy 
scrapbook I haven't used here; I'll probably do another post on the topic in the
future.

This material is taken from a handwritten journal he wrote from October
1993 until January 1999 about events in his life. I have corrected small matters
such as misspellings, missing punctuation and apparently missing words. I have
 
also added some paragraph breaks and a footnote. The photos below the text are
from the scrapbook dad put together; most have information on
the back that I have included.



24 March 1997

I enlisted in the regular navy in July 1946 and was sent to Bainbridge, Maryland for boot camp. I was there for 12 weeks with no leave. Since I had one year of ROTC at Auburn they made me a company commander which afforded me a few perks.

When I finished boot camp I was given a 10 day leave in late October and went home. I went to Auburn and spent a couple of days there. I returned (all by train) to Bainbridge where they shipped me out to fireman's school at Great Lakes, Illinois. I was there all winter. We (our squad of 6) would fall out before daybreak and march a mile in the snow to chow. We had leave, and I went to Chicago and Milwaukee every week-end. 

I met a girl at a skating rink and dated her the remaining time I was there. I graduated in March 1947 and was sent (by train) to San Diego. I was given a 10 day leave en route which was through Gadsden to New Orleans on to San Diego. I spent 30 days there (never knew what for) and went over to Tijuana on weekends. About 1 May they sent me to San Francisco where I stayed on Treasure Island in the bay for about 30 days before they loaded us on one of the troop ships (a former Presidents line) where we went to Hawaii and stayed there several days with shore leave. 

Then we went to Wake Island and on to Guam taking about 2 weeks. At Guam I was assigned to the USS Errol AG 133. It was a small (175') cargo ship that was brought in from the Philippines for refurbishing. We spent about two months getting her sea worthy. About 1 July 1947 to 1 July 1948 we took 3 week trips to Saipan, Tinian, Truk, Ponape, Ulithi and other islands carrying frozen cargo to navy personnel on these islands. We had large walk-in reefers (freezers) in the hold which had to be checked every hour. This was my job when I was on watch which we stood 4 hours on and 4 hours off when under way. 

We also carried natives and their goods between the islands as they had no other transportation. Sometimes the deck would be covered with men, women and children where they ate and slept. One trip we carried the coffin of a high ranking princess, and when I went down in the hold to check the reefers I had to walk right by her casket which was made out of wicker kind of like a large basket. It smelled like a fir tree. The ship would moan and groan and I was scared out of my wits every time I had to go down there.

The reefers would have frozen strawberries and other goodies destined for officers' clubs, and we would carefully open one end of a carton and pilfer a few packages sealing up the carton where no one would notice. We had to serve a month as mess cook (assisting the cook in cooking, preparation and cleaning up).

We only had a crew of 13 , a Lt. (captain), a warrant officer (second in command), 3 chiefs and 8 white hats. We were authorized to hire natives to travel with us. We had about 6 who lived on the deck but ate with us. They were good workers. One of them I became good friends with--Ackuous. He was from Truk and was the one who got  me the Japanese 25 cal. rifle that I sent home. I wrapped it in asbestos tape with the bolt on the stock. I went to the navy P.O. and mailed it home. Mother told me when she picked it up at the P.O. in Gadsden they told her I could not ship a gun in the mail like that--it was against regulations. It's a miracle it even got there travelling 10,000 miles.

20 April 1997

In early 1948 we sailed from Guam on one of our supply trips to Ponape [1] in the Caroline Islands. We anchored in the bay there and were not allowed to go ashore. These were about three week trips. We anchored in sight of Ponape and a smaller island nearby. We could see a small dock on the smaller island and watched as small boats went over each day from Ponape carrying supplies to a leper colony on the island. The supplies would be unloaded on the end of the dock, and the boat left. Then the lepers would come out on the dock and get the supplies. We were so far away we could only tell that it was people.

We would go swimming here off the ship. Someone had to stand guard on the bridge of the ship with a carbine to ward off any sharks but we never had any trouble. 

On our return trip one night I was asleep and was suddenly jolted from my bunk. I knew we had collided with something. I ran up the ladder and came out of a hatch to the deck. I was still holding the sides of the hatch when a great gust of water swept down the deck. Alarms were going off and flood lights on. 

I ran forward on the deck and saw we had run aground on a reef. They reversed the engines and tried to back off but to no avail. Our radio operator sent out an SOS and the first station to reply was Hawaii--thousands of miles away. We had to wait 2 or 3 days for a seagoing tug to come from Guam. He hooked on and pulled us off. We had ballast space under the ship and the second hull was not crushed. The tug escorted us back to Guam.

Our Captain who was an old navy man about ready for retirement was court martialed and relieved of command of any ship. We white hats never knew what really happened, but we heard that the log showed a disagreement between the Captain and first officer on what the course should be.

We went into dry dock [at Guam] and remained there about four months while the ship was repaired. During this time the ship was given a complete overhaul--engines rebuilt, hull scrapped and painted, etc. While we were there we were hit by a typhoon. All ships went to sea to ride her out but of course we stayed in the dry dock it being so large that we had no problem. After the typhoon passed the coconut trees looked like telephone poles--being stripped of all foliage.

Just a few weeks after we got out of dry dock I was shipped back to San Francisco at Treasure Island for discharge. I was there for about 2 weeks being processed. We weren't required to work and had liberty on the weekend. One Saturday morning I was in line checking out to go on leave, and a Chief Petty officer came up and collected all our passes. They put us on a bus and took us to San Francisco where we had to march in a St. Patrick's Day parade up Market Street. It was after noon before we got our passes back. 


******
1. Panope is now known as Pohnpei. Another former name was Ascension Island. Panope was under Japanese control during World War II; about 2000 troops were stationed there. The island was shelled several times by American battleships including the USS Alabama. The Wikipedia article on Pohnpei notes,
"
On April 1, 1865, the CSS Shenandoah surprised four United States whalers at Ascension Island (Pohnpei) and destroyed them all. The local king, Nananierikie, was delighted to receive much of the spoils from this action.[19]"




******************

Dad's description of his Navy time ends here. In one of the small notebooks
where she kept diary-like entries, household expenses and such, Rosa Mae
Wright also wrote about her son's navy experiences and gave a few more details.



"A.J. Wright enlisted in the U.S. Navy July 20, 1946 at Birmingham Ala. Left for
Bainbridge Md. Stayed there 3 months then was sent to Great Lakes training
school in Illinois. Had to report in San Diego Calif on March 1, 1947 then sailed
on the U.S.S. Gen. Anderson for Guam on March 20. Arrived in Pearl Harbor
March 25. Left Pearl Harbor March 28 for Wake Island. Arrived there April 2.
Then on to Guam April 7 has been assigned to the U.S.S. Errol. Left
Guam July 26, 47 for Saipan [sp] and Rota Islands Returned to Guam July
31, 1947. Entered 103 Hospital on Guam M.i. on August 5, 1947. Got home
July 10th, 1948, Met him in Bham at 8:15 o'clock pm."


Dad doesn't mentioned a hospital stay, so I'm not sure what my grandmother
means by that reference. Dad had a lifelong aversion to hospitals and illness,, so maybe he didn't want to remember the details.

Below are photos and further comments.



On leave in Gadsden


In Washington, D.C.


Dad wrote on the back of this one, "Long 'n' short of it. Turkey Day 11/28/46". This photo would have been taken during his training at Great Lakes. The other man is unidentified.




I presume this young lady is the "girl" he met at a skating rink and dated while he was at Great Lakes







At sea in the South Pacific in October 1947. This photo is the only evidence we have that dad ever wore a beard.



Another shot at Fox Lake



In dry dock at Guam






Dad and his friend Ackuous




USS Errol 



Lau Yee Chai was one of the most notable restaurants in Honolulu before, during and for some years after World War II. You can read about it and see photos here. Dad is on the left in the photo below; I presume they are waiting to enjoy some food.




USS Errol in Saipan December 1947


The deck of the USS Errol in Guam February 1948


The crew on Truk Island 1947


The Captain on Truk Christmas Eve 1947. This would have been the first captain Lieutenant Russell Quartus June, who served until September 14, 1948.


A beer party on Guam May 1948


Engine room November 1947


Control stacks November 1947


The USS Errol at Koror October 1947





Dad's Notice of Separation




Dad's Honorable Discharge














Friday, August 23, 2019

Gibson's Bar-B-Q in Huntsville


Recently my younger brother Richard and I were on a brief trip together in north Alabama. While in Huntsville we decided to have lunch at Gibson's Bar-B-Q on Memorial Parkway. We've eaten there before, and enjoyed it and did this time, too. We both had the small pork plate and sides; I had some delicious green beans and fried okra.

On this visit Richard reminded me that Gibson's was one of our dad's favorite eating places. No doubt this place is a favorite with many people; the food is good, inexpensive and the atmosphere relaxed and casual. I doubt much has changed since Velma and Paul Hampton opened this Gibson's in 1956. 

Velma was the daughter of Decatur BBQ legend Big Bob Gibson, who began cooking his style in the 1920's. He opened his first restaurant in 1925, and one of the world's BBQ legends was born. 

For more about the state's delicacy see Mark A. Johnson's 2017 book An Irresistible History of Alabama Barbecue from Wood Pit to White Sauce. 

UPDATE 13 January 2024

Demolition began on Gibson's BBQ, which never reopened after a fire in April 2022. You can read all about it in Matt Wake's article




Next time we'll have to get a back adjustment before we hit the Blow Dry Bar.














This old ad appears on Gibson's web site. 

Wednesday, August 21, 2019

Alabama History & Culture News: August 21 edition





For a number of years I've been posting links to just-published Alabama history and culture articles in the "alabamahistory" group at Yahoo!Groups. Most of the articles are from newspapers, with others from magazines and TV and radio websites. You can subscribe to the emails there if you wish; I send out two or three a week along with relevant meeting announcements and so forth. 

Here's the latest batch:



On this day in Alabama history: NFL great died
Harry Vincent Gilmer (1926-2016) was a native of Birmingham who played halfback for the University of Alabama before becoming a player and coach ...

On this day in Alabama history: Historical commission founded
Alabama followed suit as Gov. George C. Wallace signed a law establishing the Alabama HistoricalCommission on Aug. 19, 1966. Today, the AHC ...


On this day in Alabama history: Gene Bartow was born
Gene Bartow was the first men's basketball coach and the first athletic director at the University of Alabamaat Birmingham. During his 18 seasons as ...


ARTS AND HUMANITIES: Georgia hamlet resurrected by a movie
Although Flagg's novel was inspired by a restaurant in Irondale, Alabama, it is ... The book and the movie center around two sets of memorable female ...


Birmingham author on US quarters praises choice of Tuskegee Airmen featured on Alabama coin
“It respects our World War II veterans (whose numbers grow smaller every day), gives a nod to Alabama's(still growing) role in aviation history, and ...


Remembering Nancy Parker: Devoted journalist, loving wife and mother
Nancy is a native of Opelika, Alabama where she graduated with honors from ... Both books are available on Amazon.com and local bookstores.


Trussville Historical Society Museum Open on Aug. 17
Visitors will be able to see treasures from Trussville's history. Take a walk back in time and see an Alabamafossilized tree that was found in Trussville.


US Mint unveils final six America the Beautiful quarter dollar designs
... and the final coin, for 2021, representing the Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site in Alabama. The final six coin designs and their designers are:.


On this day in Alabama history: Alabama was first state to ratify 16th Amendment
Alabama became the first state to ratify the new amendment on Aug. 17, 1909. Western and Southern states offered the strongest support for the tax in ...


Older than Alabama: Mt. Hebron Baptist Church in Leeds marks 200 years
Older than Alabama: Mt. Hebron Baptist Church in Leeds marks 200 years ... about its history, which interweaves and reflects the history of Alabama.


The first gay president?
In that spirit, we turn to the life of our nation's only bachelor president and his intimate personal relationship with William Rufus King of Alabama (vice ...



First-timers tune in to Sacred Harp at North Alabama Agriplex
... used in the iconic Sacred Harp hymn book — was just part of the lesson that locals got Thursday night at their North Alabama Agriplex singing class; ...


On this day in Alabama history: Francis Bartow Lloyd began syndicated column
Francis Bartow Lloyd was a reporter and city editor with The Montgomery Advertiser and also was the state representative to the Legislature for ...


PRESERVING HISTORY: Photographer shares images of 'forgotten treasures'
PRESERVING HISTORY: Photographer shares images of 'forgotten ... Wills is a photographer and keeper of Alabama's forgotten and vanishing ...


Alabama's Margaret Renkl, writer for New York Times, launches first book, 'Late Migrations'
A couple of years ago, Alabama native Margaret Renkl, who had made a career out of writing and editing, was stressed. Really stressed. Living in ...


GM of first Black owned radio station in Alabama inducted in to AlabamaBroadcasters Association ...
GM of first Black owned radio station in Alabama inducted in to Alabama ... Malone said Batts has always been an unconditional open book.



Residents try to save historic theater in Tuscumbia
Residents try to save historic theater in Tuscumbia ... “It's a piece of Alabama historythere aren't many of these things left it's rare to find an intact solid ...



The Hot Spot recognized on State Register of Historic Places
In late June, Marvin opened his mail to find a letter from the Alabama Historical Commission. It reads in part: “Considering its long service to the ...



On this day in Alabama history: LBW Community College named in Andalusia
Lurleen B. Wallace Community College was founded in Andalusia and named for the first female governor of Alabama. The Alabama State Board of ...


Fred Gray honored by Alabama Humanities Foundation
Gray's legal career has lasted more than 60 years, taking on some of the most famous civil rights cases in history. Early in his career, he represented ...


Living History series continues at Confederate Memorial Park
By J.R. TIDWELL / Editor. The Alabama Historical Commission and Confederate Memorial Park in Marbury will host a “Drill, Drill, Drill!” program as ...


INSIDE THE STATEHOUSE: The story of the legendary Floyd Mann
One of the legendary figures in Alabama political lore is Floyd Mann. Col. ... the Patterson administration that Mann made his mark in Alabama history.

Monday, August 19, 2019

The Doctor, His Son the Spy & The Police

Did you know Alabama has a direct connection to the rock group The Police? Let's investigate.

I jumped down this rabbit hole recently when I consulted the Wikipedia entry for that group's drummer, Stewart Copeland. Dianne and I had been re-watching a favorite TV show, Dead Like Me, and I realized he had written the music that opens each episode [and very catchy it is!]. Since The Police disbanded, he's composed for a number of films, TV shows, and video games. 

As noted in his entry, Copeland is the son of Miles A. Copeland, Jr., who was born on July 16, 1916 in Birmingham. Both his father and his Scottish mother Lorraine worked for intelligence agencies during World War II. After the war Miles Jr. and family settled in the Middle East; he worked on many covert operations for the CIA until his retirement in 1957. Lorraine became an archaeologist specializing in the region.

The family remained in the Middle East until moving to London in 1970. Miles Jr. sometimes returned to the agency on special assignments. Before his death in 1991 he kept busy writing articles for magazines and newspapers, books on foreign policy and an autobiography. Copeland was prominent enough to rate an obituary in the New York Times. He is buried in England.

The Wikipedia entry for Miles Jr. simply notes his birth in Birmingham as the "son of a doctor". So, what was his father's story? Since I've done a bit of medical history on this blog and elsewhere, that little tidbit caught my interest. So here we go...

Miles (Meter) Axe Copeland was born July 24, 1868, in Illinois. He died on March 9, 1958, and is buried in Elmwood Cemetery. I have yet to find out what he did in the first three decades of his life, but by the early 20th century he was in Alabama. He graduated from the Birmingham Medical College in 1903 and was certified by the Jefferson County Board of Medical Examiners in that same year. You can see the school's faculty and graduating students for 1902-1903 here. Copeland's instructors there included some of the state's most prominent physicians at the time, including William E.B. Davis, his brother John D.S. Davis, and Edgar P. Hogan

I have traced some of the family's residences and Copeland's medical offices through entries in the U.S. Census and the annual American Medical Directory [AMD]. In 1912 they were living at 721 South 20th Street [AMD]. The 1920 Census shows them at 2208 17th Avenue. The AMD shows them living at 2128 16th Avenue South in 1929 and 1931, as does the 1940 census. The Census listings note that Copeland owned his homes. 

His office was in the Farley Building in 1912, the Watts Building in 1929 and at 1927 1st Avenue North in 1931 [all AMD]. The BhamWiki entry on the Farley Building shows Copeland's office in room 406 in 1909, which is the date the building opened. He may have had his office there until the Watts Building opened in 1927. For some reason he moved yet again to the 1st Avenue North location by 1931. 

I have yet to find Copeland's date of marriage to his wife Leonora (1890-1966); she is also buried in Elmwood Cemetery. His parents were Miles Copeland (1829-1891) and Catherine Magdaline Axe Copeland (1835-1914). That explains where the "Axe" name enters the family line.

In the 1920 census they were living at the 2208 17th Avenue address. Son Miles was 3, their younger son Hunter was 1. A couple boarded with them. In 1940 Miles was 23 and Hunter was 21. Both were living again with their parents and are listed in the census as divorced. Miles' occupation was given as "sales manager", Hunter's as "office salesman". We know what happened to the younger Miles; I wonder about Hunter. The family had two young men as lodgers. 

One of Stewart's brothers, Miles Copeland III was born in London and graduated from Birmingham-Southern College in 1966. He has been active in the business end of music; his various ventures have included founding I.R.S. Records and various talent and booking agencies. He managed among others such bands as  Wishbone Ash and The Police, as well as Sting's solo music and acting careers. One of his agencies was Copeland International Arts or CIA. 

A third brother, Ian Copeland, was a music promoter and booking agent who helped launch the New Wave movement in the U.S. His memoir, Wild Thing: The Backstage, On the Road, In the Studio, Off the Charts Memoirs of Ian Copeland, was published in 1995. He died the following year. 

Some further comments are below. I wonder where Sting's father was born?


UPDATE 21 October 2020 

Stewart Copeland has done a podcast about his father the spy. Read about it here


UPDATE 11 November 2021

A recent article on AL.com interviews Miles Copeland III and his ties to Birmingham and The Police. 





Miles (Meter) Axe Copeland, MD [1868-1958]

Source: Ancestry.com 



Dr. Copeland with his wife Leonora G. Armstrong Copeland and their sons Miles Axe Copeland and Hunter Armstrong Copeland. Perhaps they are posing on the porch of one of their Birmingham homes. 

Source: Ancestry.com



Miles A. Copeland, Jr. [1916-1991]

Source: BhamWiki





Miles A. Copeland, Jr., as a young man

Source: Ancestry.com 





After graduating from the Birmingham Medical College, a private institution, Dr. Copeland joined the faculty of the school. This photograph dates from that period. BMC closed in 1915. 




Birmingham Medical College in 1912. Dr. Copeland both studied and taught here. This building stood on the same block as Hillman Hospital and Jefferson Tower, an historical area I have called "Birmingham's heaviest medical block." 

Source: BhamWiki





Farley Building on Third Avenue in a postcard around 1910

Source: Troy Libraries via Alabama Mosaic




Watts Building postcard

The building is located at 20th Street and Third Avenue North

Source: Troy Libraries via Alabama Mosaic