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the way back to Iowa we saw headlines in the newspaper screaming: “Paris
Has Fallen!” It was Jun 14, 1940. The German march
through Europe was almost complete. The future of the United
States looked bleak and uncertain. The British needed supplies,
ships, and weapons to fight off the Nazi intruders.
Milo was a member of Company I in the 34th Infantry Division
in Sheldon. Every summer he went to an encampment for two
weeks. While there, he and members of his company were
notified that the National Guard would soon be activated.
The entire National Guard was soon called up for action
and Company I was kept at the Sheldon Armory for several
weeks beginning on February 1, 1941.
Their day of departure for active duty finally came.
Church bells rang and bands played as the entire Company
of 120 young men marched to the Union Depot to board a
troop train for Camp Claiborne in Louisiana. The day impacted
citizens of Sheldon emotionally. Wives, mothers, brothers
and sisters, friends and neighbors gathered at the depot
to say farewell. The dark, cloudy day matched the mood
of the people in that melancholy atmosphere. Those men
would be trained for one year before being sent to England
and later to North Africa where many of them paid the supreme
sacrifice with their lives.
With Milo gone, we had to hire more help at the dry cleaning
shop. Many of the young women of our town began to take
jobs formerly held by men. Selective Service was brought
into the picture and all males under 40 years of age had
to register and be classified. 1-A was given to young single
men; students and married men were classified as 2-A; the
classification of 3-A was assigned to men over 25, married
with children; I was given the classification 3-A – married,
one child, and 25 years old.
Inasmuch as I had already served four years in the Navy
and had lived in a town of 4,00 people, I was frequently
asked, “When are you going to enlist, with all that
training you’ve had?” War had not yet been
declared so I put the matter aside for eleven months into
1941.
We had an ample amount of employees in the shop during
the month of December that year and business was slow.
So, on December 3, at about 11a.m. I phoned Nelina and
suggested we drive to California for a couple of weeks.
Although we had only been married for three and a half
years she was already prepared for these hasty decisions.
“Yes, I promise, we’ll be home for Christmas”,
I told my wife.
We did not realize it then that four years would pass
before we live together in Sheldon again.
We left Sheldon at about 2 p.m. on December 3, 1941.
Grandma Hoevens hurried over to help Nelina pack. Vic.
Jr. was two and a half years old. Just as I was leaving
the office Hessel Dyksta, a young man who helped in the
cleaning plant, walked in and heard that we were going
to California. “Is there room for me, too?” he
asked.
“Be at our house in one hour,” I told him.
We decided to drive south to Louisiana first to visit
my brother Milo and other friends at Camp Claiborne. We
arrived there on December 5 and spent Friday evening, and
all day Saturday, with him. We left early in the morning
of December 7.
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