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Phantom Winger
06-05-08, 12:21 PM
JACKSON, Miss. - Jack Lucas, who at 14 lied his way into military service during World War II and became the youngest Marine to receive the Medal of Honor, died Thursday in a Hattiesburg, Miss., hospital. He was 80.
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Lucas had been battling cancer. Ponda Lee at Moore Funeral Service said the funeral home was told he died before dawn.

Jacklyn "Jack" Lucas was just six days past his 17th birthday in February 1945 when his heroism at Iwo Jima earned him the nation's highest military honor. He used his body to shield three fellow squad members from two grenades, and was nearly killed when one exploded.

"A couple of grenades rolled into the trench," Lucas said in an Associated Press interview shortly before he received the medal from President Truman in October 1945. "I hollered to my pals to get out and did a Superman dive at the grenades. I wasn't a Superman after I got hit. I let out one helluva scream when that thing went off."

He was left with more than 250 pieces of shrapnel in his body and in every major organ and endured 26 surgeries in the months after Iwo Jima.
He was the youngest serviceman to win the Medal of Honor in any conflict other than the Civil War.

"By his inspiring action and valiant spirit of self-sacrifice, he not only protected his comrades from certain injury or possible death but also enabled them to rout the Japanese patrol and continue the advance," the Medal of Honor citation said.

In the AP interview, written as a first-person account under his name, he recalled the months he spent in a hospital.

"Soon as I rest up, I imagine I'll run for president," the story concluded. "Ain't I the hero, though?"

Big for his age and eager to serve, Lucas forged his mother's signature on an enlistment waiver and joined the Marines at 14. Military censors discovered his age through a letter to his 15-year-old girlfriend.
"They had him driving a truck in Hawaii because his age was discovered and they threatened to send him home," said D.K. Drum, who wrote Lucas' story in the 2006 book "Indestructible."

"He said if they sent him home, he would just join the Army."

Lucas eventually stowed away aboard a Navy ship headed for combat in the Pacific Ocean. He turned himself in to avoid being listed as a deserter and volunteered to fight, and the officers on board allowed him to reach his goal of fighting the Japanese.

"They did not know his age. He didn't give it up and they didn't ask," Drum said.

Born in Plymouth, N.C., on Feb. 14, 1928, Lucas was a 13-year-old cadet captain in a military academy when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor.
"I would not settle for watching from the sidelines when the United States was in such desperate need of support from its citizens," Lucas said in "Indestructible." "Everyone was needed to do his part and I could not do mine by remaining in North Carolina."

After the war, Lucas earned a business degree from High Point University in North Carolina and raised, processed and sold beef in the Washington, D.C., area. In the 1960s, he joined the Army and became a paratrooper, Drum said, to conquer his fear of heights. On a training jump, both of his parachutes failed.


"He was the last one out of the airplane and the first one on the ground," Drum said.
He was diagnosed with a form of leukemia in April and spent his last days in the hospital with family and friends, including his wife, Ruby, standing vigil.

crate78
06-05-08, 01:40 PM
We're losing an incredible amount of history every day by the passing of the WWII vets. It's mind boggling what we could hear and learn if they could all tell their stories before passing on.

But--it seems the ones who did the most and gave the most were the least likely to talk about it. An older cousin of my wife's, now deceased, was awarded the Bronze Star as an Army 1st Lieutenant in Germany in WWII. All he would ever say about it was they gave him the Bronze Star for getting his platoon lost in the Black Forest.

I just finished reading a personal account by renowned author Louis L'Amour, entitled, "Education of a Wandering Man". He insisted it was a memoir, not an autobiography. He passed away in 1988. I've read dozens of his books and never realized he was an Army Lieutenant in WWII. He was awarded FOUR Bronze Stars, also in Germany. All he said in his book was that he did what they told him to do, he did it well, and they gave him four Bronze Stars along the way.

Of all the books L'Amour wrote, he covered that era of his life in less than a paragraph.

I had an uncle who helped take the Alleutian Islands back away from the Japanese in WWII. The only thing I recall that he said was to comment about how windy it always was.

If we could still get some of these stories, if nothing else it would contradict the revisionists.

crate

If we could hear just some of the stories these old vets could tell,