Military

World War II veteran recounts stories as a member of the 101 Airborne

Send a link to a friend  Share

[November 10, 2015]  LINCOLN - This past Sunday the Grace Lutheran Church of Lincoln held the first of two Veteran Celebrations. The events had been planned by the congregation as an awareness of the sacrifices our Veterans made in World War II, the Korean Conflict, and in Vietnam.

Last Sunday the guest speaker was Vince Speranza, a World War II Veteran, who was a member of the Screaming Eagles 101 Airborne Division that held off the German’s during the Battle of the Bulge.

This coming Sunday, the guest speaker will be Capt. Guy Gruters, Vietnam F-100 fighter pilot who was shot down twice and spent five years as a Prisoner of War at the Hanoi Hilton.

The first special program began at noon on Sunday with Pastor Daniel McQuality welcoming the congregation, guests, and the guest speaker.

The Lincoln Community High School Choir presented the National Anthem, and then McQuality turned the program over to Speranza.

Speranza’s story began when he was 16 years old, and the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. He recalled that as a teenager he was outraged that anyone would dare to do such a thing. Living in New York, he said many of his friends felt the same way that he did. Their response was that they had to go and fight for their country. Speranza said that though they were only 16, he and some of his friends determined that they would go to the enlistment office and lie about their ages. But the enlistment officer saw through their ruse and sent them on their way. The young men were told that they could come back when they were 18, and that they did.

Speranza signed up and went through basic training preparing to go to war against the German’s. He recalled a day when his company was called outside to lineup. As they stood in order, they saw for the first time, soldiers in parachutes floating down to earth from above. Speranza said that using paratroopers was a brand new concept and the young soldiers on the ground were in awe of the sight.

In a few minutes though, their leader inquired as to how many soldiers would like to sign up to be part of the parachuting fighters. No one rushed to volunteer until they were told that taking on the role included a $50 increase in pay. Seven soldiers then volunteered including Speranza.

Speranza recalled that in training, each paratrooper had to make five successful jumps before they were considered ready to go overseas. The jumps had been made, and his troop was sent to a camp in New York State to await deployment. Speranza said, in the army the food was not the best, especially the spaghetti. Being an Italian, he often boasted that his mother made the best spaghetti in the world, and someday he would take all his buddies home with him for dinner.



Well, the camp in New York was less than an hour drive from his mother’s home, and his fellow soldiers called him on the offer. He called his mother, and she was willing to oblige, so Speranza and 18 others converged on his New York home for a meal. At the end of the meal, his mother said that no one would be able to leave her home until they had sat down and written a letter to their mother. After the war, Speranza one day asked his mother why that had been so important to her. She in returned asked of all those young men who sat at her table, how many came home after the war. The answer was only a very few, and she said that was why they all needed to write a letter to their mothers.

Speranza spoke in detail about his experiences in Germany and how his troop, the 101 Airborne Division, had struggled to prevent the German invasion of Bastogne, with success at the Battle of the Bulge. The heroic efforts of those young men and many others like them were not without its consequences. As they held off the Germans, they suffered many casualties. Doctors and medic camps were lost to the Germans, and medical supplies were scarce. In addition, supplies on the battlefield were scarce as well.

Speranza recalled a day when he was ordered to travel alone to a nearby bombed out town where the allied forces had set up a hospital in an abandoned church. He was to retrieve supplies such as batteries for the field radios.

Speranza made the trip successfully. When he reached the church turned hospital, he knew one of his good friends lay inside, and he took the time to stop in and see the young man. Inside, when he checked on his friend, the friend asked him to find him something to drink. Speranza said he ran out, trying to find something for his friend to drink. What he found was beer. Most all of the buildings in the town had been destroyed by the Germans. But at the second stop Speranza made, he found a beer tap that was working. With no other means of collecting the liquid, he filled his helmet full of beer and carried it back to his friend. Several other soldiers also wished for a drink, and he found himself making multiple trips back to the tavern to fill his helmet. After a while though his Good Samaritan efforts were put to a stop as the chief at the hospital intercepted him and scolded him saying that many of the men in the hospital had stomach or “gut” injuries and that giving them liquids could be fatal.

Speranza said that he was very surprised when after many, many years, he finally returned to that little town and found out that he had become a folk legend. Many had learned the story of the soldier carrying beer to his buddies in a helmet. A local brewery had created Airborne Beer, and in the year Speranza returned, the label on the beer was a characterization of a young soldier carrying beer in a helmet. The beer was even served with a ceramic helmet.

[to top of second column]

At age 85, Speranza returned to the battlefield and the town near Bastogne. In addition to the beer served in a helmet, there was a war museum and warehouse in the town. There, a local historian had maps that showed all the manholes of the allied forces, and they were marked with who occupied them. Speranza said he met a Frenchman in a tavern who was able to take him out and show him the exact manholes that Speranza had occupied.

While these were the ‘good time’ stories that Speranza shared, life as a soldier in World War II was far from fun. Speranza spoke about the job at hand the soldiers were there to do. He talked about the Battle of the Bulge and successfully killing Germans. “We felt good….that’s the way you had to feel,” he said. And added, “That is when a kid becomes a man.”

Speranza also talked about the harsh reality of the German prison camps and the sights he had witnessed. It’s common knowledge that the Germans practiced very inhumane means of exterminating Jews. Speranza said that when they came on one of these terrible prison camps he saw firsthand bodies of men, women, and children piled like brush waiting to be destroyed or placed in mass burial sites. Speranza said, “We’d heard about these concentration camps, but didn’t believe it. How could one man do that to another….it was just unbelievable.”

Speranza said the memories that he was left with after the war were something he wanted to put behind him. For 65 years, he didn’t talk about his experiences, didn’t want to share that part of his life. But in 2009 at age 85, he and his daughter made the first trip back to Bastogne. Once there, the people of the region realized that he was one of the Airborne and had fought the Battle of the Bulge. Speranza said he was overwhelmed by the way he was treated. Many thanked him for their freedom and their life and regarded him as a great hero who defended them.
 


It was then that he decided to go ahead and put his memories into written form. He penned his book, “NUTS!” which has its own special meaning outlined in the book, and began touring throughout the country talking about his experiences in World War II. Now at age 90, he has returned to Bastogne each year since 2009 and is planning on going back again this December. For the first time, he will be accompanied by his granddaughter Ella.



When Speranza was done speaking, he fielded a few questions from the audience. He was asked if the movies we see about World War II were accurate. He said that in his experience, the movies are not accurate, and neither are some of the history books. He said regarding the movies, there always seems to be a romantic component, and he said frankly, the soldiers in the Airborne had no time for that, and he doesn’t see how very many of the soldiers anywhere could have had time.

He also made a comment on what we teach our children today. He said that in many cases, children are being led to believe that war is the fault of the Americans. He said the American armed forces are not the problem in this day and age, they are the solution.



As the morning came to an end, Pastor McQuality presented Speranza with a hand painted Cowl from a B-51, such as would have been flown by the Airborne.



McQuality is a veteran himself and comes from a family of veterans. Earlier in the day he had recounted his military service as a member of the Army serving in Afghanistan. He was also happy to be able to show off the hatch door from the very B-17 his grandfather flew and was shot down in during World War II.

The day ended with a hearty lunch for everyone, and Speranza offering up signed copies of his book.

The public is invited to join the veteran observation this Sunday at noon as well. Grace Lutheran Church is located on the south edge of Lincoln at 1458 Route 121, the old Maple Club building.

[Nila Smith]

< Recent features

Back to top