|
Born 26 April 1921 in rural Kentucky, Raymond Kerns quit school after
the eighth grade to help on his dad's small tobacco farm. At 19, he was
playing guitar with friends at an amateur contest in Ohio when he met
15-year-old singer Dorothy Helen Lane. That night, he went home and told
his mother, "I just met the girl I'm going to marry."
He wasn't sure how he was going to support a wife,
but the answer came in the form of the classic "Uncle Sam Wants you" poster.
He joined up and was sent to Hawaii.
At the age of six, Raymond Kerns had seen Lindbergh's
"Spirit of St. Louis" glide across the sky over his family's farm, and he'd
wanted to fly ever since. Because he had no high school diploma, however,
the Army refused to give him flight training - even though he passed the
admission exam with flying colors.
Undaunted, Kerns invested his paychecks in civilian flying
lessons. Shortly after his first solo flight, Pearl Harbor was attacked, and the
Army was suddenly desperate for pilots. He became one of the first forward observers
of the Army Air Corps, flying a Piper L-4 above the battlefield to help troops.
While he was flying his "Paper Cup" above Hawaii, New Guinea,
and the Philippines, Dorothy Lane was repairing radios in warplanes at a plant
in Columbus, Ohio. They had corresponded since their first meeting, but did not
see each other again until a brief visit when Kerns returned to the States to
attend Officers Candidate School in 1942.
Later that year, he proposed by telegram, and on 5
January 1943, they were married in Denton, Texas, where Kerns was taking
additional flight training. After the brief ceremony, they walked down
the street to an ice cream parlor to celebrate.
After four years of civilian life, Kerns decided
to make the Army his career, and returned to active duty. In the Korean
conflict, Kerns piloted both fixed-wing aircrafts and helicopters. Over
the years, the Kernses were stationed in Japan, Germany, and many
stateside locations, including Camp Hanford, Washington; Washington,
D.C.; Fort Leavenworth, Kansas; Fort Sill, Oklahoma; and Fort Hood,
Texas. They're daughter Carol was born in 1956, and their son Noel in 1961.
Raymond Kerns left home again to serve in Vietnam in
the late 1960s, and retired from the Army in 1972 as a Lieutenant Colonel.
His many decorations include the Silver Star, the Air Medal, and various
awards for meritorious achievement. He was also awarded the Purple Heart
for injuries sustained during World War II, when his Piper Cub was shot
down by Japanese troops who continued to fire on him from shore as he
floated near his sinking plane.
After retirement, Raymond Kerns entered the University
of Texas at Austin and earned a degree. He
also became the first president of the 89th Field Artillery Battalion
Association, wrote the 89th's official history, and published the Association's
highly regarded newsletter for over a decade.
Raymond and Dorothy Kerns recently celebrated their 65th wedding anniversary,
and Kent State University Press in Ohio will publish Kerns's account of
his experiences as a liaison pilot during World War II, titled "Above
the Thunder", in the fall of 2008.
|