I don’t know how it began, but around the supper table at
729 Moraine, three children piped up, "Dad, dad, tell us a story about
Sarge". When I had been a teenager for
some time, and long after stories about Sarge weren’t requested, I realized my
Dad was Sarge. Curiously, I never asked
him.
Sarge was an NCO in this man’s Army. Dad joined the Army in September, 1924, days
after turning 17 on August 28. At that
point he was bouncing between the Akron Children’s Home and Charity Latch
School. I can find no information on
Charity Latch School, but it sounds like an ominous destination for a tall,
smart and probably willful young man.
Dad was more than six feet, and certainly that tall as a teenager. Like many young men, the Army was his
alternative to having no future.
The 1930 Census had my dad in Ft. Benning, Georgia, the
locus of his stories. He loved the south
and the heat; he hated the lingering effects of malaria. Sadly, I don't remember a lot from the stories we demanded
almost every night.
Before the good stories, though, here are a couple of snippets. They stole watermelons from farmer’s fields,
punched their fist through to get the seedless core and left the trail of
destruction behind them in the field. I
wonder how they saw so well in the dark. Narrow escapes from buckshot were recounted. Mom didn't like the watermelon stories.
In those days there was a soft drink bottler, or two, in
every town. Cliquot Club and White Rock ginger ale. Nichol Cola.
Barq’s root beer. Nehi. Orange Crush.
You could buy stock in any of them, pennies a share.
Coca Cola stock was the same crap shoot in 1924 as any other bottled
drink company. Apparently dad took a
flyer on the stock market with his pay; his reminiscence was only the guys who
bought Coca Cola got rich.
Dad was a communications officer. A telegraph and radio man.
His equipment was big, and went on maneuvers packed on mules. He had a large brown discoloration on his
shin that mom told me much later came from a mule kick.
Then there was the new recruit sent to find a left handed
spanner.
But the story we hollered for over and over was the pie
stretcher.
A new recruit was assigned to KP duty there in Company
A. When he worked his way through
peeling all the potatoes Cook scratched his head for a bit for the next job and
then realized he didn’t have enough pies for all the men for dinner. “Son, I want you to go over to Company B and
ask Cook to borrow the pie stretcher.”
Over at Company B, of course, the pie stretcher had just
been lent to Company C, so the new fellow was sent over there to retrieve it.
The story of the adventures of this new recruit looking for
the elusive pie stretcher always went on until mom said it was time to clear
the table.
early 1900s photo Pack mule of U.S. Army Signal Corps, used for carrying storage batteries for the field wireless telegraph