[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 52 (Thursday, March 29, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2225-S2226]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO MR. LEONARD GILLIAM
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, today I wish to pay tribute to a true
American hero who honorably answered the call to serve his country in
its dire time of need, Mr. Leonard Gilliam of Laurel County, KY.
Mr. Gilliam was born in McWhorter, KY, in 1919. The 92-year-old has
had an incredible life on this Earth thus far. Leonard was a country
boy who had lived on his family farm his entire life. He was the first
boy from McWhorter to get the call from the U.S. Army in 1941; he was
21 years old.
The newly enlisted men, along with Gilliam, headed to basic training
in Fort Thomas, KY. Gilliam was trained in artillery; during training
he learned how to man a tank gun. After training ended he was
transferred to Fort Benning, GA, where he would reside until December
of 1941. The attack on Pearl Harbor led to the declaration of war,
which for Gilliam would mean being deployed to the front.
The young Leonard Gilliam knew that going to war would be difficult,
and his bringing up had prepared him to face the difficult road ahead.
He had spent his childhood working on the farm and walking through
fields and creeks, to and from the Twin Branch School, every day. But
what the eager Gilliam did not foresee was the opportunities he would
be presented with during his time in the service. A chance to see the
world and forge a lifelong friendship were not in the then 21-year-
old's plans back then.
His much needed experience with tanks landed him a spot on the front
lines, and Gilliam entered the war in Casablanca, North Africa. He
traveled through Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia before heading towards
Europe. Gilliam was called to invade the island of Sicily on July 10,
1942. He was later awarded the Bronze Arrowhead for his courageous
actions during the invasion.
Gilliam spent time in Sicily guarding POWs. He remembers eating with
them, talking with them, and even giving them cigarettes. Looking back,
he says that the prisoners were some of the finest people he has ever
met. He stayed at the prison in Sicily until he was called to go to
Normandy. He arrived in France a mere 4 days after the invasion of the
beach on June 6, 1944.
The hardships experienced by Gilliam in France were some of the
toughest times of the war for him. But in the midst of a dark shadow
cast by war, Gilliam met Vayne McCoy, a fellow tank gunner who would
soon become his best friend. The two friends helped each other see the
end of the war, and then they lost track of each other once they had
returned back to the States. It wasn't until 1997--53 years later--when
the two would reunite. The two war buddies shared a deep bond, one that
they continue to share to this day.
The veteran now recalls the warm welcome he received when he finally
made his return trip home in 1945 after 3 years overseas. Mr. Gilliam
is a modest man. He feels like he is undeserving of the hero's welcome
he received after World War II. He believes that the real heroes were
the ones that ``stayed over there,'' the ones who made the ultimate
sacrifice for their country and never got the chance to come home.
[[Page S2226]]
The former soldier now enjoys life as a full-time family man. He is a
husband, father, grandfather, and great-grandfather. Leonard is a
remarkable man who has been on a once-in-a-lifetime adventure. Even
after all that he has been through, both the good and the bad, he is
still grateful he had opportunity. Although he says he wouldn't go on a
trip around the world again for $1 million, he doesn't regret getting
to see the world for free the first time.
In November 2011, there was an article about Mr. Leonard Gilliam
published in the Sentinel Echo Silver Edition, a magazine based in
Laurel County, KY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that said
article be printed in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From the Sentinel Echo: Silver Edition, Nov. 2011]
World War II: A Trip Around the World
(By Carrie Dillard)
Leonard Gilliam remembers the days when he and his family
``didn't have a cable bill, water bill or electric bill.''
The 92-year-old Laurel County native has lived on his family
farm his whole life.
He was born in 1919 in McWhorter. It was a time when, he
said, ``everybody used a mule pair, everybody had a milk cow
and some beef cattle, and everybody had their own hogs.''
You worked hard, he said. Kept your house warm buying coal
for $1 a ton at the mines or a jug of kerosene for 10 cents a
gallon. You cooked on a wood stove, and there were always
chores to do.
He had to ``go through the field and cross the creek
twice'' on his walk to Twin Branch School each day, so when
he joined the U.S. Army in 1941, he was used to walking.
During the course of his military career, Gilliam would
spend approximately three years overseas, engage in six major
battles and one invasion. He would end his days in World War
II in Berlin, Germany, during the Army occupation in July
1945.
Gilliam was drafted. ``They didn't draft until (age) 21 in
those days,'' he said. He was the first one in the McWhorter
community who got the call.
``There was a busload of us left London early one
morning,'' he said, on their way to Fort Thomas, Kentucky. In
less than two days, a contingent from all across the state
filled a train headed to Fort Bragg, North Carolina, for
basic training.
Gilliam was trained in artillery. He would later man the
tank gun, causing him to lose nearly all of his hearing.
He served in the 2nd Armored Division (Hells on Wheels)
under division commander George S. Patton, who once said the
2nd Armored Division ``could do the impossible'' because he
trained them.
Gilliam was at Fort Benning, Georgia, when the Japanese
attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941.
``They put more guards out, more security,'' he said, ``as
war was declared.'' Gilliam and his division began more
practices and maneuvers, traveling back and forth from
Georgia and North Carolina, until his deployment overseas. In
total, Gilliam would serve six six-month tours overseas.
As a gunner, he said ``the tanks were needed on the front''
as soon as they arrived in Casablanca, North Africa. They
traveled to Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia, and on July 10,
they invaded the island of Sicily, for which Gilliam was
awarded a Bronze Arrowhead.
``Sicily was an interesting place,'' Gilliam said. It was
there he worked as a security officer at an old penitentiary,
guarding POWs.
``I had a gun and they didn't, but they didn't give me any
trouble,'' he said.
In fact, he said, once they got acquainted, the POWs were
``some of the finest people I met.''
He said he'd put his gun up and sit down to eat with the
prisoners. They ate the same rations--MREs (meal, ready to
eat) just as the soldiers did, and were even given
cigarettes.
Gilliam said he and his fellow soldiers were put on a boat
in Sicily and weren't told where they were headed.
``It looked like we was going to the United States,'' he
said, ``but we was going toward England.''
They were on the water at Thanksgiving, and, shortly
thereafter, landed in Liverpool.
The invasion of Normandy took place on June 6, 1944.
Gilliam arrived just four days later.
Although he describes it as some of the roughest times in
the war, it is also where he met a good friend: Vayne McCoy.
McCoy was five years younger than Gilliam, and took to him
like a younger brother. Both Gilliam and McCoy were on tanks.
Gilliam's was called ``Crimson Tide,'' McCoy's ``Churchill.''
The two lost track of one another after the war, but
reunited in 1997, more than 50 years later. Today, they ``get
together pretty often,'' Gilliam said, their families
becoming like family to each other.
Gilliam said the Germans were smart, and without the
combined effort of the U.S. Army and Air Force, they would
not have succeeded in driving them back.
In September 1944, Gilliam crossed the Belgium border, but
it wasn't an easy trek. He said it rained the whole way there
and turned to snow; it was the coldest winter he'd ever felt.
The Battle of the Bulge was upon them. Standing in knee-
deep snow, Gilliam said he and his fellow soldiers would fire
their guns and huddle around the tank to keep warm. He was
nearly overcome by the exhaust fumes from the machine just
trying to get warm. Gilliam suffers from the effects of
frostbite to this day.
For a time, Gilliam and his company stayed in a local
farmer's barn. The owners, he said, knew of their presence,
and he said the owners were overjoyed to help.
Without the protection of that barn, they likely ``would
have frozen to death.'' Gilliam said the group held up in
that barn, sleeping in the hayloft, for three weeks until
temperatures got warmer.
Gilliam said he remembers the faces of young children as
they made the journey across France, Belgium, and Holland.
``The children were standing and waving at us. If we halted
for some reason, they'd climb the tanks and hug everybody.
``The look on those little children's faces, you was glad
to have done that for them,'' he said.
In April 1945, Gilliam said his outfit met the Russians on
the Elbe River.
``For me, the war ended. I didn't fire another shot.''
Gilliam said soldiers returning from World War II got a
hero's welcome, but veterans of other wars, like the Korean
War or Vietnam, did not receive the same respect. ``Soldiers
of the Korean War didn't get that welcome when they came
home,'' he said. ``They could've used a welcome home, too.''
But Gilliam has never considered himself a hero. Those are
the ones who gave the ultimate sacrifice, he said. In 238
days of battle, the 2nd Armored Division suffered 7,348
casualties, including 1,160 killed in action.
``The heroes didn't come back. They're still there.''
His older brother, Blane, was among them. Blane Gilliam, an
Army radio operator who was serving in the Pacific, was
killed in action/missing in action at age 30. Gilliam
received word of his death around the time he reached
Germany.
Following the war, Gilliam returned home and married Wilma
George, who was 11 years his junior.
``Here I was a 25-year-old man, been around the world on a
killing spree,'' he said. They were married for 61 years and
had three children--Wanda, Coy and Linda. Today, Gilliam has
three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. He is a
member of Twin Branch Methodist Church.
``I wouldn't make that trip (again) for one million
dollars,'' he said. ``But I got to see the world (for
free).''
____________________