Virgil Bonner
Age 89
Born 1926 in Iowa City Iowa
Currently living in Estherville, IA
U.S. Army World War II and Korean War
Veteran
Iowa native Virgil Bonner was prepared
to fight in World War II after being drafted into the U.S. Army
December 20, 1944. But, after spending 15 weeks in infantry training,
a 10 day furlough home, a five day troop train ride to California and
23 days in transit aboard a troop transport ship headed to the
Philippines, Bonner finally arrived in Manila Harbor two weeks before
the war ended. He never got to fight in that war. “We all felt good
about that,” he remembers. “We were ready for an invasion of
Japan, when the A-bomb was dropped and Japan surrendered.”
Bonner did get to witness history
aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay September 2, 1945 with U.S.
General of the Army Douglas Mac Arthur, as the Commander in the
Southwest Pacific, MacArthur accepted the surrender of Japan on
behalf of the Allied Powers.
At the age of 19, Bonner reenlisted for
a three-year stint in the U.S. Army later in 1945. “You could pick
your branch of service,” he recalled, so he picked the
Transportation Corps. “I wanted to go to Europe,” he said, but
Bonner was shipped out to Oakland, CA. and was picked by his
superiors to become a member of the Army's Military Police. “I
became a MP patrolling the Oakland Pier,” he said. Eventually, the
young MP headed to Germany with the 524th MP battalion
stationed in Austria guarding railroad trains moving to and from
Russia.
After his honorable discharge in 1948
at Fort Dix, New Jersey, Bonner joined the U.S. Army Reserves. In
September of 1950, Bonner remembers, he was called up to fight in the
Korean War with the 430th Engineer Battalion, a National
Guard unit, he said. Bonner first landed in Japan, where he stayed
for a month before heading to Korea.
He ended his military career in 1954.
Story and photo © 2015 Joseph Kreiss Photography
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