A day to give tribute
DON CANTRELL
Saturday’s dedication of the $175 million National World War II
Memorial in Washington D.C. has prompted many harbor area residents
to extend a heartfelt salute this Memorial Day to U.S. service men
and women who served with honor.
More than 16 million Americans served during the war period that
ran from Dec. 8, 1941 through mid-August of ’45.
It would be impossible to name all the local veterans from
yesteryear, but the Pilot sports department, over the years, has made
efforts to record as many athletic field veterans as it could.
There were two memorable young men from Newport Harbor High who
perished in the Philippines from enemy fire by Japanese forces.
They were George Shafer and Vernon Fitzpatrick.
Shafer was a 1934 blocking back on the varsity grid team coached
by Ralph Reed. Shafer often blocked for the noted fullback Al Irwin.
Shafer, a rugged but soft-spoken player, was an Army infantryman, who
was killed in jungle fighting.
Fitzpatrick, quarterback on the championship ’42 football team,
and a prized baseball hitter, was machine-gunned by Japanese fighter
pilots when parachuting over Luzon in December of 1944.
“We were always two touchdowns better when Fitzpatrick was in the
game,” former Newport Harbor coach Wendell Pickens, once said.
Joe Muniz, a skilled ’44 blocking back, once said, “Fitzpatrick
and Johnny Ikeda [a ’41 running back] were about nip and tuck for
guts.”
Muniz, a Navy veteran, cruised by Nagasaki, Japan, after it had
been leveled by an atomic bomb in August of ’44.
Joe’s brother, Manuel, a second-team All-CIF tackle and a member
of the ’42 championship team, was an Army infantryman who was wounded
at Okinawa in ’44 and earned a Purple Heart.
Manuel went on to play first string for four years at Arizona
State before being offered an invitation to join the New York Giants.
Injured knees, however, prompted Manuel to decline the offer.
One noteworthy bomber pilot was Walt Kelly, an end on the ’36
Newport grid team. He also set some track and field records and
starred as a 6-foot-4 center on the basketball team. Kelly and his
B-24 mates gained banner headlines once when they destroyed a giant
Japanese cruiser at Rabaul Bay in the Pacific.
Kelly recalled that he looked back once and saw his three bombs go
right down the smoke stack.
Sadly, Kelly stepped out of a medical tent a few days later and
witnessed his plane and his mates destroyed in an explosion at the
end of the runway.
Another highly honored airman was Sparks McClellan, a center on
the ’39 grid team. He was recognized with medals for numerous heroic
acts.
McClellan flew many combat routes in the South Pacific with his
Navy Hellcat, which fire-bombed Japanese troops on island shore lines
to clear the way for U.S. Marines invading beaches.
Two other pilots were Lt. Bill Dickey, a baseball player out of
Newport in the late ‘30s, and Ray Rosso, a fighter pilot, who was in
a substitute squadron in Hawaii ready for action days before the war
ended.
Rosso, who coached Orange Coast College football from 1948 through
1955, drew national sports praise once when he directed Chaffey
College to a victory in the second Junior Rose Bowl. His 1951 OCC
team won a conference title.
Dick Tucker, who coached OCC to a triumph in the 1963 Junior Rose Bowl and directed the Pirates for 24 years, served with the Navy
Shore Patrol in WWII.
Al Irwin, who coached football and swimming for years at Newport
Harbor and OCC, including a ’56 championship football team for Coast,
was a flight deck officer aboard the USS Lexington in the South
Pacific.
Another noted OCC grid chief was Steve Mussau, who directed the
Pirates to a title in ’57. He was a solid paratrooper during WWII and
earned ample recognition.
Edward C. Stephens, a crack-back running guard for the great
fullback Hal Sheflin in ‘41, survived a brutal attack on his
destroyer by a Japanese suicide bomber in late 1945. Stephens, who
was injured by shrapnel after the plane crashed near his gunnery
officer’s post, earned the Purple Heart. After a hospital stay, he
was returned to action.
Two Sheflin brothers, Bob and Hal, spent a long time in Pacific
waters after their ships were struck. Bob avoided one shell that
split his engine room, but spent 72 hours in the ocean before he was
recovered.
Hal suffered a lost lung from gas fumes as a deck gunner before he
was blown off the ship. Brother Bill was on his ship when it entered
the harbor in Tokyo as Japanese officials boarded the USS Missouri to
officially surrender before Gen. Douglas MacArthur.
George Mickelwait, the sterling quarterback on the 1938 and ’39
grid teams who was voted second-team All-Southern California in ‘39,
suffered serious injuries at the Battle of the Bulge in Europe. Some
German fire struck him in the back. He, too, earned the Purple Heart.
George O. Thompson, a ’37 quarterback who often exhibited great
talent with fullback Rollo McClellan, joined the Coast Guard and
eventually became a rear admiral. McClellan went on to a superb
performance aboard a Navy landing barge shipping ground troops to
shore lines.
Louis Glesenkamp, an outstanding halfback from the ’36 grid team,
was an Army tank sergeant on Pacific islands. He was later admired
for teaching Newport track and field athletes how to pole vault with
skill.
They will never be forgotten.
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