Showing posts with label Ed Bearss. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ed Bearss. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 16, 2020

A Remarkable American

Just learned Ed Bearss has passed at 97. A remarkable American. Severely wounded as a Marine fighting in the Pacific in early 1944, spending two years in hospitals and permanently losing use of one arm, Ed went on to a long career with the National Park Service, serving as its Chief Historian, and an even longer career as tour guide, author, lecturer, and preservationist. He appeared in Ken Burns Civil War series and for those fortunate to have undergone the Ed Bearss Experience he is one of those rare unforgettable characters you meet in life. From 2012 to 2015 I was on four Civil War battlefield tours on which Ed was one of the guides and was fortunate to host Ed twice and spend extended time with him on his last two visits to our Civil War Roundtable in Scottsdale.  The photo below was taken in January 2019 when Ed and I visited the Commemorative Air Force Museum in Mesa. With Ed is Dennis Fennessey, president of the museum.

It was on my first hosting tour with Ed that I drove him back and forth to Tucson to visit the Museum of the Horse Soldier.  During our four hours on the road I took the opportunity to ask him a lot of questions and once you got Ed started he really could get on a roll.  I learned he'd attended the first major league All-Star game in Chicago in July 1933 and we had a mutual love of baseball.  He knew every Secretary of the Interior since the Kennedy administration and had worked with Lyndon Johnson after his retirement in setting up the LBJ Ranch Historical Site (he also had a plethora of stories about LBJ which were hilarious and outrageous).  In response to my questioning he took me through his wounding at Suicide Creek on Cape Gloucester on January 2, 1944 and his two year sojourn in Australian and American hospitals.  I will never forget that drive.

Two stories from my battlefield tours:

The very first one was at Antietam.  Ed led the tour of The Cornfield, the site of brutal, bloody fighting on the morning of September 17, 1862.  At that point, I really didn't know who Ed was.  All I knew was that it was a hot, humid Maryland day and this old guy (he was only 89 at the time) was yelling at us (even Ed's whispering voice was booming) to stay hydrated.  Meanwhile I noticed that on our 3 hour tour around the field Ed did not take a sip of water!

Three years later at The Crater at the Petersburg battlefield, Ed, as usual, was moving very quickly ahead of most of us, turned around, admonished us keep up with him and warned that "stragglers will be shot"!

Ed's voice during his set pieces whether on tour or in speaking engagements has been described as abattlefield voice, a kind of booming growl, like an ancient wax-cylinder record amplified to full volume—about the way you'd imagine William Tecumseh Sherman sounding the day he burned Atlanta, with a touch of Teddy Roosevelt charging up San Juan Hill.”  In a Washington Post piece listening to him was described as like hearing a Homeric bard.

On his last visit to Scottsdale, Ed overslept and I had to get access to his hotel room to wake him in order to make his early morning flight (Ed traveled alone).  Running so late I had to help him get dressed.  That experience gave me first hand knowledge of the extent of his wounds (a useless left arm and a right shoulder so damaged it had little strength) and I realized how long it must take him each day to get dressed on his own and marveled at the mental strength of this man who coped by himself, got through every day with no complaints, and why, in turn, he expected the best effort from everyone around him.

 

Wednesday, January 23, 2019

Commemorative Air Force Museum

In December I wrote of my father in law's WW2 experience and used a couple of photos from my visit to the Commemorative Air Force (CAF) Museum in Mesa AZ.  Last week I returned to the museum accompanied by Ed Bearss and two members of our Scottsdale Civil War Roundtable.  I wrote of my last experience with Ed in Bearss & Stripes Forever.  As the new Program Chair for the Roundtable I'm responsible for booking monthly speakers, arranging logistics, and managing their appearance at our Roundtable, one of the largest in the U.S. with normally between 125 and 275 attendees.

Ed has been coming every January for the last twenty years, speaking on Tuesday nights, and then on Wednesday seeing a museum or other attraction he's never visited before.  Even at the age of 95 he remains intellectually curious and seeks out new experiences.  This past week our tour guide at the museum was Dennis Fennessey, who leads the CAF. 

The CAF was founded in 1953 in Texas and consisted for a few years as a motley collection of historical aircraft.  The group's original name was an inside joke, the Confederate Air Force (the name was changed in 2002).  During the 1960s the members realized that historical, particularly WW2 aircraft were not being preserved and made it a mission to do so.  Today the CAF consists of 175 aircraft at 71 bases across America, with the Mesa outfit being one of the largest.

Visiting is a wonderful experience.  There is a museum section with aircraft on exhibit ranging from WW1 biplanes to F-4's and Mig 21's, along with many displays explaining the history of the American air force.  The Museum also has a lecture series and we were fortunate to listen to one during our visit - on the origin of the DC-3, the most famous plane in aviation history and a tale I wrote about several years ago (see TWA Flight 599).  You can also tour the maintenance hanger and walk among the aircraft as they are being worked on.  The Mesa museum has a B-25 and its star attraction a B-17 which flies passengers on short rides much of the year, but was in the hanger when we visited. 

Don't miss it!  Some photos below starting with the B-17 landing when I visited in December.










Thursday, February 8, 2018

Bearss And Stripes Forever

Ed Bearss, of whom we've written about before, is a National Treasure.  Retired Chief Historian of the National Park Service and now its Historian Emeritus, at 94 Ed remains astoundingly active, on the road two hundred days a year giving lectures and leading battlefield tours here and in Europe.  Ed is a leading figure in much of the battlefield preservation and conservation that has occurred in the United States since the 1950s and was a featured commentator on the renowned PBS Civil War series of Ken Burns.

(Ed Bearss wearing shirt with logo, "I don't need an internet search engine. I know Ed Bearss".  Photo taken by THC at City Point, near Petersburg, VA 2015)

My first encounter with him was on a hot, humid July day in 2012 at Antietam where he marched us around The Cornfield, site of fierce back and forth combat on September 17, 1862, for three hours, barking at us to stay hydrated, though I noticed he never drank anything.  Three years later at The Crater outside Petersburg, Ed admonished us for our failure to keep up with him, warning "all stragglers will be shot!".  His distinctive declamatory speaking style led one writer in the Washington Post to liken listening to Ed to what it must have been like to hear a Homeric bard.

Because of my association with the Scottsdale Civil War Roundtable, last month I had the privilege of spending a day with Ed, a day I will always remember.  Ed appears at the Roundtable each year in January and each time he stays in town the next day and we plan an excursion for him.  Even in his 90s, Ed remains curious and wants to see and learn about new things so as you can imagine the challenge gets bigger every year to find something he has not yet visited.

This year one of our Board members suggested we consider the Museum of the Horse Soldier in Tucson.  The museum, which is only five years old, is devoted to the history of the men, horses, and equipment of the U.S. Cavalry.  One of our Board members put me in touch with John Langellier, a Western historian living in Tucson involved in the creation of the museum.  John, in turn, put me in touch with Rae Whitley, the young (at least by my standards!) museum director.  Rae was thrilled to hear that Ed Bearss was coming to visit and told us he'd be happy to give him a guided tour.

The four hours I spent with Ed driving back and forth to Tucson is something I will never forget.  We talked the entire time, with Ed doing most of it (no surprise to anyone who knows him!).  I asked  about the National Park Service, his career, working with LBJ down at his ranch, his war service, as well as his lengthy hospitalization and recovery from his war wounds.  I wish I had recorded it!
IMG_0870.jpg(Ed was the recipient of the 2017 Founder's Literature Award by the Pritzker Military Museum & Library)

Regarding his war service, Ed told me of growing up on a ranch in eastern Montana, not far from the Little Bighorn battlefield, during the Depression.  Ed enlisted in the Marines in April 1942 at the age of 18, inspired by the example of a distant cousin, Hiram Bears, a Marine who received the Medal of Honor for heroism during the Filipino Insurrection and the Distinguished Service Cross for his actions during the First World War.  After attending bootcamp in San Diego, Ed was shipped to the Pacific as part of the 1st Marine Division.  He saw his first action on Guadalcanal in November 1942, and subsequently also saw action on the Russell Islands.

His third island engagement was on New Britain.  On January 2, 1944 at Suicide Creek on Cape Gloucester on New Britain he was wounded five times by Japanese machine gun fire.  He was hit in the left heel, buttocks, right shoulder (which remains weak to this day), and twice in the left arm, with one bullet severing nerves to his hand, leaving it permanently useless, and a second shattering two inches of bone above his left elbow.  He was transported in open boat to Buna, on the north coast of New Guinea, which he told me was a very painful journey, and then airlifted to Port Moresby on the southern coast. 

It was the upper arm wound that was most serious causing doctors to evaluate whether to amputate.  They ultimately decided to try a bone graft, taking two inches of bone from his left shin (and leaving him with a limp), and grafting it into his left arm.  After the operation he was placed on intravenous penicillin for a month.  Recovery was slow, with surgeons going in every six weeks to clean out the grafted area, and he was not discharged until March 1946, twenty six months after his wounding.  Ed told me he'd never had any problems with the wound (though his left arm is disabled) until 2017, more than seventy years later, when a small piece of bone that had been left in scar tissue caused a serious infection.

While we were going back and forth to Tucson, Ed asked about my background and had many questions about Arizona and Phoenix.  It also turns out we are both baseball fans and, when younger, we both rooted for the Giants though today I'm a Red Sox guy and Ed follows the Washington Nationals.  I was astonished to find out that somehow a 9-year old boy living on a Montana ranch was in Chicago's Comiskey Park on July 6, 1933 to see Babe Ruth hit a home run in the first major league All-Star game.  And I learned that Ed ended up in Chicago because his grandmother, who had attended the 1893 Columbian Exposition in the Windy City, had saved up the money to attend the World's Fair which opened there on May 27, 1933.  His grandmother died that spring, but her savings allowed his family to attend the fair that summer, something they could not have afforded on their own.

He also told me his favorite president was Harry Truman, in part because he considered him the last president to lead a "normal" life before, during, and after he was in the White House.  He also spoke highly of Manual Lujan, Secretary of the Interior under George HW Bush.  Responding to my question about the current state of the park service, Ed didn't answer directly but mentioned that someone had scheduled a meeting for him with the current Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke.  It was clear to me that Ed was, and remains, a savvy operator on dealing with politicians.

 (Ed Bearss & Ray Whitley)

The museum and tour were outstanding.  Along with Rae Whitley, we were joined by John Langellier  The museum is small and packed with exhibits.  I highly recommend it and you should have Rae or one of his docents give a guided tour.
(THC, Ed Bearss, Rae Whitley)

But more important than what I think is the opinion of Ed Bearss and he thought it superb, telling Rae it was one of the biggest surprises he'd had in a while - a museum he had not heard about with such wonderful and interesting material.  After putting Rae through his paces with lots of questions, he praised the museum director for the depth of his knowledge on cavalry history.  While the collection is smaller than those at U.S. military museums, Ed thought it was better curated and organized.

It was fun listening to Ed and Rae talk about McClellan saddles and the army's use of mules.  Did you know that a mule transported by the army from the U.S. to China during WW2 ended up being captured from Chinese Communist troops by American soldiers in Korea in 1951?  My favorite moment was when Rae asked Ed for background the display of the guidon of Battery D, First New York Artillery stationed in the Wheatfield on the second day of Gettysburg under the command of Captain George B Winslow, which led to a fascinating discussion between the two.  Although the Confederates overran the battery, the guidon was saved by a Union soldier from Massachusetts who took it home where it was kept in his family for almost 150 years before being sold.  There are stains on the guidon which recent testing confirmed are of human and equine blood.

(Ed & Rae discuss the guidon and action in the Wheatfield on July 2, 1863)

Looking forward to hosting Ed next year . . .