WALTER B. WALDON
Patriot, Chapter 1919
(Army, WWII, Europe)
Walter B. Waldon was born
in 1919 in Detroit, Michigan. He spent most of his growing-up years
in a Michigan farming family that lived through the great depression. When
he turned 21 years old he joined the Army, entering service on August 6,
1940. Walter says, “I didn’t go through any basic and advanced training,
they just shipped me to the West Coast and I was assigned directly into the
mortar section of Weapons Platoon, Company L, 3rd Battalion, 15th
Infantry, 3rd Infantry Division at Fort Lewis Washington.” He
remembers that the next year he was back home on leave when Pearl Harbor was
attacked bringing America into World War II.
After a period of intensive
preparation for combat, the 3rd Infantry Division moved by train
from Fort Ord, California to a staging area at Camp Pickett, Virginia. They
took ship from Virginia and were formed up in a 39-vessel convoy carrying
35,000 men of the “Western Task Force” directly into the November 8, 1942
invasion landing in North Africa as part of “Operation Torch.” After
quickly securing Casablanca and then fighting throughout the North African
Campaign, Walter’s unit ended up in the Spring of 1943 in Tunis separating
enemy prisoners. Next, in July 1943, the 3rd Infantry Division
was part of the invasion landing in Sicily and Walter talks of his
experiences in the capture of Palermo, the largest city on the island, and
the move up the coast toward Mount Etna. After securing Sicily, the 3rd
Infantry Division took part in the September 9, 1943 assault landing at
Salerno on mainland Italy. By this time Walter was a Scout in Company L as
the U.S. forces fought their way north. At the Volturno River line Walter
was wounded by a tree burst of a German 88mm shell. After treatment on a
Hospital Ship he was medically evacuated to the 118th Station
Hospital near Bizerte in North Africa.
Walter Waldon returned to
duty in Company L just in time for the assault landing at Anzio in January
1944. After the breakout in May and during the fighting during the drive
north, Walter was again hospitalized, this time for back injuries. He was
first evacuated back to England and then returned to the U.S. “on points.”
He was hospitalized at Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana. When the war ended
Walter was training German Prisoners of War, still at Fort Benjamin
Harrison. He was discharged later in 1945.
Recalled to active duty for the Korean War, Walter served as an Infantry
instructor at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri. He got out of the Army again
after the Korean War, but this time only briefly. He then served in
Aircraft Maintenance for the remainder of his career. Senior Maintenance
Sergeant Waldon was in the MACV Flight Detachment at Long Than (near Bear
Cat) when the TET-68 fighting hit those facilities, but fortunately Walter
did not qualify for another Purple Heart in Vietnam.
Walter Waldon
retired from the Army in San Antonio, Texas in 1974 with 29 years service.
He lives in La Vernia, Texas and frequents the VA Outpatient Clinic in
Austin. His visits to the Purple Heart refreshment cart at the clinic
introduced him to the Military Order of the Purple Heart. Chapter 1919
signed him up and now proudly features his story in PATRIOT BULLETIN.
|