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10 July 2024
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A birthday salute for 108-year-old WWII paratrooper
AEROTECH NEWS
  by Dennis Anderson
special to Aerotech nNews
COMPTON, Calif. - In the week before the 4th of July holiday period, representatives of branches of the armed forces, all active in military commemo- rative parachuting, joined to pay tribute to one of the surviving paratroopers of World War II.
On June 29, in the Los Ange- les suburb of Compton, broth- ers and sisters in the American military family traveled from across the United States and as far as Hawaii to honor one of our remaining living representatives of what has been rightly called the “Greatest Generation.”
“It was a day to remember as we gathered to honor a national treasure, Sgt. Joe Harris on his 108th birthday,” said Jordan Bednarz, an Army paratrooper veteran and member of the 82nd Airborne Division Association.
“The love and dedication shown by the Harris family and Compton community are second to none,” said Bednarz.
The U.S. armed forces have been a force of mixed race and origin since the founding, but it took President Harry Truman’s executive order in 1947 to deseg- regate the U.S. military. Ending Jim Crow era segregation made our military better and stron- ger, but troops of all colors and origins always served in spite of prejudices they endured.
Traveling to honor Harris were Donald Garrison, of the Triple Nickle Association, and joining Bednarz, were Chris Amador, Enrico Catubo and Dale Lindley of Liberty Jump Team, and Tracie Hunter of the Beyond The Call non-profit. All service branches were rep- resented.
Most people have heard of the Tuskegee Airmen, the black fighter pilots who distinguished themselves during World War II in the fight to beat Hitler and vanquish Nazism and fascism, but the “Triple Nickles” were less known until recently.
In the Antelope Valley, Palm- dale Deputy Raymundo Wilson is son of Tuskegee “Red Tail” pi- lot Mike Wilson, who got credit for teaming to shoot down a Nazi Me-262 fighter jet in the closing months of World War II.
With almost all World War II veterans having died, it falls to descendants and torchbearers to keep the history alive, like na-
Photograph courtesy of Beyond The Call
   tional membership of the 555th Parachute Infantry Association. Of the 16 million Americans who served in World War II, fewer than 100,000 are alive today, according to Department
of Veterans Affairs records. Jonathan Vann, 40, an Army captain who jumped in honor of the Triple Nickles earlier this year at their wartime base in Pendleton, Ore., said, “I study my history, and these were the men who inspired me, who made me aware that I could do
anything.”
In Compton, Los Ange-
les County Sheriff ’s deputies blocked off streets in honor of Sgt. Joe Harris, who turned 108 under sunny skies. Beneath a pavilion tent, family, troopers and friends presented the gal- lant gentleman with a unit flag, a spectacular cake, and all the accolades earned but seldom given during wartime service.
“The most important things we do ... will never involve a jump,” said Bednarz, who or- ganized tributes to the 555th paratroopers.
It is hard to glean what clean living accounts for such longev- ity, but “Daddy Joe” was present and accounted for. Military brothers and sisters flew in to honor his service with the 555th Parachute Infantry.
Among the honors, a per- sonal letter signed by Maj. Gen. James “Pat” Work, Command- ing Officer of the 82nd Airborne Division.
The letter read: “Mr. Joe Har-
ris, Paratrooper, Happy 108th Birthday. We hope it is wonder- ful. The 82nd Airborne Divi- sion still stands on your ‘Triple Nickle’ shoulders immensely proud of the 555th Parachute Infantry Battalion. God Bless you. All the Way, All American Six Commanding.”
During WWII, Joe Harris and 555th paratroopers jumped into fire to prove their bravery and ability during the closing stages of history’s greatest conflict. At his great age, he is believed to be the unit’s surviving member.
“As an American I am very proud of Joe Harris. At 108 years oldhemayaswellbe18ashestill represents our community,” said Omar Bradley, a former Comp- ton mayor.
The WWII veteran worked many years for the U.S. Border Patrol and has lived in Compton for 60 years, family members said.
Harris made dozens of jumps into rugged terrain, rocky gorges and forested areas that were burning, some of the fires ignited by a Japanese secret weapon, the incendiary “balloon bomb,” that drifted to American shores on the jet stream.
Together, the “Triple Nickle” paratroopers size up as the most courageous unit that never got to fight in Europe and the Pa- cific. Organized too tardily for overseas combat, they deployed to Pendleton, Oregon.
Sgt. Harris and his brother pi- oneer “smoke jumpers” jumped into forest fires, putting out
Photograph courtesy of Beyond The Call
Courtesy photograph
Paratroopers Jordan Bednarz, Enrico Catubo, Gris Amador, Donald Garrison traveled across United States to honor 108-year old World War II Airborne veteran Sgt. Joe Harris.
  blazes, some ignited by Japanese incendiary “balloon bombs” launched at the West Coast.
Fearing civilian panic, the Japanese balloon offensive was a closely guarded secret, and so was the service of the “Triple Nickle.”
Before they disbanded, Gen. James Gavin, hero of D-Day, welcomed the unit into the 82nd Airborne Division and took a position of principle that the “Triple Nickles” would march with the division in a World War II Victory Parade.





























































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