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Honor Flight gives closure to Jemison veteran

Published Friday, July 31, 2009

When Jasper Carl Glass of Jemison was drafted into the Army Air Corps on July 30, 1943, he wanted to be a pilot.

When Glass learned there was not a need for pilots at the time, he turned down an offer to go to gunnery school and was placed in a chemical warfare company in the Southwest Pacific.

Jasper Carl Glass

Photo by Scott Mims

Jasper Carl Glass

Although he didn’t get his wish, he found himself in the midst of history.

“I was on Tinian when the atomic bomb was dropped,” Glass recalled. “We didn’t know what it was to begin with.”

Tinian is part of the Mariana Islands, which also include Guam and the island of Saipan. There, Glass and about 20 other men watched from their tents as the first atomic bomb was loaded onto the Enola Gay, a B-29 Superfortress bomber.

“At 9 a.m. the next morning, they announced over the loudspeaker that the first atomic bomb had been dropped on Hiroshima,” he said.

Three days later (Glass indicated it seemed longer than that), the men heard a similar announcement that a second atomic bomb had been dropped on Nagasaki.

While the chemical warfare company — one of two such companies in the military — did test chemical weapons, they were never used during the war.

Glass was discharged Nov. 1, 1945 and returned back to his hometown of Jemison to finish his high school education.

“I liked one credit of finishing high school,” he recalled.

He graduated in 1946 and married Ann Crowe two years later. But he had to wait much longer — 61 years to be precise — to receive his three bronze stars.

Wednesday, Glass added another chapter to his story as he and 100 other World War II vets flew to Washington, D.C. to see their memorial.

The trip was made possible thanks to Honor Flight, a nonprofit organization that provides the experience at no cost to the veterans.

Upon returning to the Birmingham airport, the veterans were greeted by family and friends waving American Flags and chanting, “USA! USA!”

For Glass and those who went with him, it was a long overdue “thank you” for their service.

“I think it does the veterans good to show them that they were appreciated, because there were a lot of them who didn’t come back,” he said.


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Comments

Posted by 1oldman (anonymous) on August 1, 2009 at 8:07 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Congratulations to all WWII vets for a job well done. We lost a ton of men during that war, and many come back to a life of pain and suffering from injuries inflicted while serving, and lost their lives prematurely because of them. Thanks you.

Posted by getbizi (anonymous) on August 1, 2009 at 8:23 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Thankyou Mr. Glass for your contribution toward our freedom and your part in history. Thanks are due to Honor Flight for making this story possible. And lastly, thanks Scott Mims for an excellent story.

Posted by wlpowell63 (anonymous) on August 1, 2009 at 12:11 p.m. (Suggest removal)

As a member of Disabled American Veterans, I like to add that this coming month, they will get a chance to send WW2 vets to D.C. again. So if you are a WW2 veteran that wants to go to D.C. Contact your vet organization or contact http://www.honorflight.org to find out...

Posted by wlpowell63 (anonymous) on August 1, 2009 at 10:28 p.m. (Suggest removal)

My father is a WW2 Marine Corps veteran. He fought in the Pacific Theater. Went through Tarawa and was wounded in Saipan. His oldest brother kept going until the war ended. But these are the ones that we are devoted to. We kept our country from Imperialisum and Nazisum. If Hitler had his way, then we would never be here. But thanks to you WW2 veterans. You deserve the credit. But let me get this information to you all as well. There are 1000 WW2 veterans dying every day. So if you see a veteran, tell him/her how you feel and thank them for their time and effort before they go.

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