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    Archive for the ‘Normandy Invasion’ Category

    “It was rather hazardous duty”

    October 17th

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    Harry Furr wanted to be a pilot.  With World War II expanding across the globe, the graduate of Central High School in Oklahoma City tried to join the Royal Air Force and the U.S. Army Air Corps.  He was disappointed by the response – his eyesight was not good enough.  He was told only those with 20-20 vision need apply, and Harry Furr could only see that well with glasses.

    But, Harry Furr persevered, and in a rather ironic twist, he got his chance to fly thanks to Adolph Hitler.  You see, Hitler created a glider program when the Nazis came to power in 1933, and used engineless aircraft for the German invasion of Belgium in 1940.  Despite heavy casualties suffered by Nazi glider infantry and paratroopers during invasions of Greece and Crete in 1941, gliders had been established as an affordable means of delivering troops and supplies in a war zone.  The United States countered the Nazis by establishing its own glider program, reaching out to volunteer aviators like Harry Furr.

    The American glider program relaxed the usual vision requirements.  Harry Furr eagerly applied, and was quickly accepted.  “I was able to get in, and I was very happy about it,” he told me.  “I had no idea what I was going to fly, or when or where, but I would be flying,” Furr proudly said.

    Furr enlisted in July of 1942 and began two years of pilot training.  He learned to fly at the old Wiley Post Airport in Oklahoma City on the corner of May Avenue and Britton Road.  He trained on gliders in Vinita, Oklahoma and Spencer, Iowa and Louisville, Kentucky and Dalhart, Texas before heading to Europe in January, 1944.

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    The beauty of gliders was their low cost – less than $25,000 – and their ability to fly, quietly and undetected, into enemy territory.  Made of plywood and canvas, American gliders were towed to altitude by a C-47.  Once near the target the gliders cut free from their towing cable and let gravity and the pilot’s skill do the rest.  Furr remembered, “they were clumsy, difficult to land, came down pretty fast.  They were difficult to manage and weren’t a lot of fun to fly.”  Many gliders, quite simply, crashed.  The gliders, and their pilots, were important to the Allied war effort, but they clearly were  expendable.

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    Gliders were usually cut free at around 5,000 feet, leaving the pilots little time to seek a landing spot.  Pilots were not briefed in advance about where to land, or what they might encounter.  Without an engine, lights, parachutes, radio communication or armaments, the gliders had one chance to land, in the dark.   Once on the ground, the pilots used the glider’s brakes or skidded into something to stop and unloaded its cargo of men and supplies.  The men aboard, and the pilots, then turned-infantry soldier, forced to fend for themselves behind enemy lines.

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    The first major American glider mission came during Operation Husky, the more than a month-long battle for Sicily in 1943.  Harry Furr saw his first combat action in an even bigger invasion:  Operation Overlord, at Normandy, on D-Day.

    Early in the evening of June 6, 1944, Harry Furr flew a heavy British Horsa across the English Channel to Utah Beach.  With 15 men, a Jeep, trailer, medical supplies and co-pilot on-board, Furr’s glider was cut loose at 500 feet.  The Horsa brushed the tops of trees as it made its landing in a field.  “I smashed the whole front end of that glider out, landing,” Furr said, “but no one was hurt, we got down safe, got the load out OK and we made it out OK.  We had to go through maching gun nests to get out of the field.  The Germans were throwing in mortars on this field, so it was very intense until we got out of that field.”

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    Harry Furr flew two more missions in the glider program – Operation Market Garden (Holland) and Operation Varsity (Rhine River Crossing).  Market Garden was the single largest glider operation of the war; Varsity was the deadliest, with more than 70 paradrop and gliding towing planes shot down.  Seventy glider pilots were killed during Varsity, and another 114 were wounded or injured, but Harry Furr escaped unscathed.  “The Germans were expecting us, the enemy fire was horrific at Varsity,” Furr recalled.

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    (above)  Harry Furr, center, and friends pose in front of a captured Nazi flag.

    Late in the war, Furr returned to the United States to train for the impending invasion of Japan, when the war came to an abrupt, and welcome, end.  Furr was not looking forward to invading Japan, but he wishes the war had ended in a different way than it did.  He has reservations about the dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.  “Truman had a chance to take some of those officials out to an atoll in the Pacific and show them what we had, and see whether they wanted to continue,” Furr said.  “But he didn’t do that.  They could have dropped the bomb out in the Pacific and showed them what a horrific bomb it was and maybe the war would have ended then.  I’m not proud of our doing that.  We destroyed hundreds of thousands of people, which we might not have had to do, but that was the way to end it, so that’s what we did.”

    Harry Furr thinks World War II was necessary because “we were tired of what the Germans were doing to the world – they did a lot of things they should not have done.”  But, his experience in World War II leads Furr to provide sobering advice to future generations contemplating war.  ”Think very carefully about what you are about to do, resolve every available issue before you go to war,” he warned.  “Try everything before you pull the trigger.  Something might just work.”

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    (above)  Harry Furr with Dick Pryor at Furr’s Oklahoma City home on August 14, 2007.

    Until next time, Dick Pryor

    (Harry Furr was profiled on the Oklahoma News Report on October 17, 2007.  To see the story, click on “Videos” on this website and go to “OETA’s Dick Pryor interviews Oklahoma WWII veterans.”)

    Posted in Adolf Hitler, Army Air Corps, Normandy Invasion, OETA, Oklahoma News Report, The Oklahoman, The War, War in Europe, World War II | 1 Comment »

    “We were unbeatable”

    September 26th

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    Anybody who knows Fred Norman will tell you he is a “character.”  Quick with a quip, with a warm and easy smile, Fred Norman is someone you will never forget.

    I attended Norman High School with his daughter, Nancy, so of course I proudly watched Fred as he presented the weather on KOCO-TV in Oklahoma City.  Fred would tell it to you straight, with that mischievous grin, and a lot more often than not he was right about the weather.   As we all know, that’s saying something in Oklahoma.

    But he’s a lot more than Fred Norman, TV meteorologist.  Fred Norman is a real hero; he didn’t just play one on TV.  Long before he stood in front of the camera, Fred was a navigator on heavy bombers that flew into enemy territory on more than 35 missions during World War II.

    It was inevitable that Fred Norman would serve during the war.  Norman’s father fought against the Germans in World War I.   He had lived in Hawaii for a while, so he was familiar with Pearl Harbor.  His grandparents and parents were from England, so he knew about the war of aggression being fought in Europe.  He was attracted to flying by reading “Flying Aces” magazine.   Only one problem: Fred was born in Canada.

    “Well, it did present a little problem,” said Fred.  “As you know, we didn’t have the Air Force, we had the Army Air Corps.  But, I took all the tests and got selected, and then they called me up and said I couldn’t get into the flying cadet program because I wasn’t a citizen, although my parents were naturalized.  Fortunately, they got it all straightened out before I joined the Canadian RAF.”war-photos-3-009.jpg

    After less than six months of training, Norman was on his way to England.  He enjoyed the time he spent there, especially the nights at Piccadilly Circus, where young Americans would enjoy the social life and get to know the young women (much to the chagrin of British guys).  

    Flying at 30,000 feet, he saw a different war than did those on the ground, although he admits the weather in Europe sometimes made work difficult.  Not to mention the Nazi flak.  The flak hit him once, but the flak jacket he wore saved him.  After that, Norman became one of the Army Air Corps’ biggest proponents of flak jackets.

    Norman says pilots had to swerve to the target to keep from getting hit, but the B-17 could take it.  “We brought one plane home with 400 holes in it,” he said.  “No other plane could take that punishment and keep going, but the B-17 did.”

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    “Air power,” Norman said, “is what won the war. ” Norman added, “He who does not have air power domination is going to lose.  We had the power, and we used it.  How could it have come out any other way?  We were unbeatable.”

    After the war ended, Norman returned to the United States and became an instructor.  He is especially pleased that he was able to help train the famed black fliers, the Tuskegee Airmen.  Norman said, “I was very impressed.  They were more disciplined.  We were kind of cocky.  They were courageous and willing and rearing to go, but the group I taught never got into battle, because the war abruptly ended, and within a week I was on my way home.”

    Fred Norman used the G.I. Bill to get his college degree, went to work for the National Weather Bureau and never looked back.  After stints as a TV meteorologist in Tampa, Amarillo and Denver, he settled in Oklahoma City. 

    Norman spent 16 years at KOCO.  That’s where I got to know him, for real.  By the mid-1980’s I was anchoring and reporting sports at KOCO, and Fred and I worked together on the weekend news, weather and sports team for a couple of years.   Now, about twenty years later, it’s been a real honor to tell “the rest of the story” of Fred Norman, the aviator.

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    (above) Dick Pryor with Fred Norman at his Duncan home.  Norman worked with Dick, Gerry Bonds and Ross Dixon at KOCO-TV in Oklahoma City.  

    Until next time, Dick Pryor

    (Fred Norman was profiled on the Oklahoma News Report on September 26, 2007.  To see the story, click on “Videos” on this website and go to “OETA’s Dick Pryor interviews Oklahoma WWII veterans.)

    Posted in Army Air Corps, Normandy Invasion, OETA, Oklahoma News Report, The War, War in Europe, World War II | No Comments »

    Tulsans Pack Circle Cinema for “The War” Preview Screening

    September 19th

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    A standing room crowd watched the first hour-long preview of Ken Burns’ important, new documentary, “The War,” Tuesday at the Circle Cinema Theatre in Tulsa.  Several veterans attended the pre-screening event and they seemed to appreciate the approach used by Burns to tell the story of the “greatest generation” at home and in the theaters of war.  The film presents the horrors and heartbreak of war in the riveting and personal style that has made Burns America’s most prominent producer of historical documentaries.

    Following the screening, OETA’s Dick Pryor moderated a panel discussion with WWII veteran Kenneth Renberg, a German who trained American troops and fought with the 45th Infantry Division; Dr. Brad Agnew, Professor of History at Northeastern State University and an expert on military history; and Eva Unterman, a survivor of the holocaust who spent most of the war in Nazi concentration camps.  OETA’s Lori Holliday showed the dynamic, new Oklahoma World War II Stories website (including this blog) and encouraged everyone attending to participate in the story collection project using the website’s “Share a Story” module.   To-date, more than 700 people have shared a story - an overwhelming response! 

    Special thanks to Clark Wiens and Amberla Tepe of the Circle Cinema Theatre for hosting such a great event to begin the march toward “The War.”  Ken Burns’ 15-hour epic, “The War,” debuts Sunday night at 7:00 on OETA.

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    (above)  Several veterans attended the screening of “The War” at the Circle Cinema in Tulsa.  (below)  War memorabilia decorated the Circle Cinema. memorabilia-in-tulsa.JPG

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    (above)  Holocaust survivor Eva Unterman of Tulsa, one of the panel members at the Circle Cinema screening, with Moderator Dick Pryor.

    Posted in 45th Infantry Division, Adolf Hitler, Army, Army Air Corps, Battle of the Bulge, Circle Cinema, Concentration Camps, Marines, Navy, Normandy Invasion, OETA, The Oklahoman, The War, War in Europe, World War II | No Comments »

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