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Ulick
the Cow
Photo Courtesy Maurice Higginbotham |
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The
Higginbotham brothers
Photo Courtesy Maurice Higginbotham |
Thunderbolts
Over Houston
Milton and
Marvin
Maurice remembers
Marvin
Ulick the Cow
Maurice and
Edna
Murphy's Wounds
The Mascot
(Merrion's Fighter Squadron)
Letters (Merrion
visits Murphy in hospital)
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Thunderbolts
Over Houston
While Merrion
Higginbotham was finishing his P47 training in Victoria, he did
what quite a few Texas pilots did when they got a chance. He buzzed
the family house with his plane. Since he had advance notice of
a flight, he was able to write a letter to the family and tell them
what to expect - sort of. He "got permission" to slip away from
his group of P47s and by following landmarks, he was able to fly
over the house. Maurice had been waiting all morning on the front
steps. Merrion buzzed them twice. Once to make sure they had enough
time to come outside and on the second pass he flew - not over the
Higginbotham house, but the one next door - so they would be able
to see him clearly. Mauice said it was just for a few seconds, and
he wouldn't have recognized his face had he not been expecting him.
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Milton
Photo Courtesy Maurice Higginbotham |
Milton and
Marvin
Milton's
Story
"Milton joined the Navy December 14, 1942 at the age of 17.
He trained as a radioman in San Diego, and was assigned to Carrier
aircraft Service Unit #8. He remained in the states for most of
his service time.
He was sent on the shakedown cruise of the new escort aircraft carrier
Bismark Sea. The 10,200 ton carrier was later sunk about 30 miles
off the coast of Iwo Jima by a Japanese aerial attack on February
21, 1945. This ship received two mortal hits. The Japanese pilots
strafed and killed 100 of the men, as they struggled helplessly
in cold mountainous seas. There were more than 300 casualties, including
the men shot in the water. Survivors told of the merciless strafing
by the Japanese pilots of swimmers near the sinking carrier.
After the war, he went to the same Morse school that his brother
Maurice later attended and became a telegrapher with the railroad.
Milton was also a gifted cartoonist and draftsman. He died in Houston
at the age of 40."
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Marvin
Photo Courtesy Maurice Higginbotham |
Story
of Marvin
The oldest brother
Marvin also was not sent overseas. He was kept in the States because
he was considered "old" at the time (about 25 years old). He spent
most of his time as a rifle instructor and working in the ordinance
depot, repairing firearms.
Marvin joined the Army the first time on May 7, 1937 during the
Great Depression. He was also assigned to the Second Infantry Division,
12th Field Artillery at Fort Sam Houston. The Artillery pieces then
were still horse-drawn, but were motorized in time for World War
II.
After he was discharged from the Army, he re-enlisted in the Army
Air Corps and served at times as a rifle instructor and a tail gunner
on a B-17 Flying Fortress. On one of his training missions over
an Air Force gunnery range near the Texas Coast, he described the
following incident:
"We were flying splash missions with our .50 caliber machine
guns. A splash mission is where we would shoot a short burst of
machinegun fire into the water, and wait a few seconds and try to
hit the first splash. That took some practice to do, as the big
bomber was traveling a few hundred mph. That meant you had to allow
for the speed, and altitude and aim behind the first splash to hit
it.
Of course, being a tail gunner I could only see behind the plane,
and just as I let go with a burst of machinegun fire, I saw the
bullets rake across the deck of a schooner, whose owner had entered
the restricted gunnery zone. A few seconds later, I could see the
prop-wash behind the boat as it's captain decided he'd better get
the Hell out of there, and fast."
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Maurice
remembers Marvin
"Marvin was one
of the most generous people I have ever known. In 1945, when I was
eleven years old, he bought me a used 12 gauge shotgun and a whole
case of shells for it, a .22 rifle, and an old 1888 model 45-70
Winchester army rifle. That was remarkably generous of him, as he
was only making about $30.00 a month."
"My friends and I used to go hunting together in the nearby woods,
and shoot snakes in Halls Bayou north of Little York Road. We really
enjoyed the outdoors. Believe it or not, we found a saltwater crab
in that bayou. I never figured how he got that far up into a fresh
water bayou. Maybe someone threw him in alive. I really regret that
I traded that old Winchester. It was obsolete even then and impossible
to find ammunition for, but now they are found only in museums."
"Marvin was the best pistol, rifle and shotgun marksman that I have
ever seen. Once, while he was home on leave, I saw him shoot the
tail feathers off of a rooster with a .22 caliber revolver at about
25 feet. The rooster was presenting a side view near our old outhouse
out back. Although, he clipped the feathers short, he never touched
the rooster, and the bird never realized what happened to his feathers;
he just kept pecking away at the chicken scratch. We lived in the
country so there was no danger of hitting anyone or damaging property."
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Ulick
the Cow
Photo Courtesy Maurice Higginbotham |
Ulick
the Cow
Maurice explains
that the cow was named for the time when he (Maurice) was held up
to the fence when he was just learning to speak. His arm was held
over the wire and the cow would lick his hand. "You lick" was what
Maurice was saying to the cow and that became her name.
Before entering the army, one of Murphy's chores had been to milk
Ulick, the family cow.
In the photo above Murphy took time out on leave (in dress uniform)
to keep in practice while Mother Higginbotham (Ida) supervises.
Maurice said that while milking Ulick, Murphy would squirt him with
a stream of milk and then apologize. He'd tell him to come over
and then he'd squirt him again. After swearing he'd never, ever
do it again, he'd coax Maurice over and squirt him a third time.
Maurice said that after the third time he got wise.
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Maurice
and Edna Higginbotham
Photo Courtesy Maurice Higginbotham |
Maurice
and Edna Higginbotham
Easter c. 1948
Maurice and Edna (too grown up for such foolishness) reluctantly
pose with "children". Incidentally - the house buzzed by Merrion
was the house that Edna Pierce would later move into - making her
the "girl next door" that Maurice would later marry.
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Murphy
and Milton on leave
Two of the Higginbotham brothers imitate Mussilini and Hitler (with
a black hair comb held to resemble Hitler's moustache)
Photo Courtesy Maurice Higginbotham |
Murphy's
Wounds
Murphy was wounded
when a German 88 mm. artillery shell exploded close to his position.
The same shell killed three men, and wounded several more. Shrapnel
hit Murphy in three places. One went completely through his right
leg at the hip and exited on the inside of his leg, barely missing
his "vital parts". Another piece of shrapnel hit him in his upper
right shoulder (the one he mentions in one of his letters) The third
piece of shrapnel entered the left side of his back.
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The
Mascot
Photo Courtesy Maurice Higginbotham |
The Mascot
An angel was the mascot of the squadron, and a Major Thorne had
an angel painted on the nose of his plane, urinating.
Fighter planes were equipped with a urinal in front of the pilot's
seat that drained out the bottom of the plane. As you can imagine,
this was a necessity on long missions. Anyway, the Major claimed
that he had "pissed all over Germany".
In this photo Merrion stood right under the stream, so it would
look as though it was hitting his hat.
Letters
- next page
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