Dad was a Corps of Engineers combat engineer stationed at Trinidad, British West Indies. Mom and David, their firstborn, were living with her parents in Natick, Massachusetts, with plans to join Dad in Trinidad once the baby was born. The family sent a Radiogram “from” our older brother, David, then about 17 months old. The guys in Trinidad made up this sign to announce the news to Dad. It and my brother will be 80 years old this year, both doing well.
Mom’s parents accompanied her and the boys by ship to Trinidad. They sailed on a “Lady Boat,” one of five Royal Mail Ships operated by the Canadian National Steamship Company that made regular trips up and down the Atlantic coast from Halifax to the Caribbean via Bermuda. I cannot right now find the name of “our” boat, except that I know she was not Lady Hawkins, which was sunk by German torpedoes off Cape Hatteras in January 1942. Another sister ship, Lady Drake, was sunk north of Bermuda in May 1942.[2]
They all boarded the ship in Boston on the morning of 7 December 1941, although with all of their own stuff to shuffle, they were not fully aware of what was going on in Hawaii until they settled into their cabins. The voyage took them to Bermuda, St. Kitts, Nevis, Antigua, Montserrat, St. Lucia, St. Vincents, Grenada, and Port of Spain at Trinidad. By the time they landed, however, orders had already been sent for all dependents to go home. Mom and Dad and the boys had about a week before they boarded the next northward Lady Boat and went back to Massachusetts. At least Dad had the chance to see and hold his new two-month-old son, and John was baptized, although without the family gown. David was celebrated for enthusiastically shouting his first word, “Bot!” [boat], as they disembarked in Trinidad. They had all been coaching him, without success, throughout the trip.
Dad spent the next three years in the Caribbean as Area Engineer, overseeing construction of airfields in Surinam, Venezuela, British Guiana, and French Guiana that were used to ferry aircraft and personnel across the Atlantic to North Africa, where the Allies were staging for their attack on Nazi Europe. He came back to the States in June 1944. In January 1945 he was Commanding Officer of the 1291st Engineer Combat Battalion when it shipped to Europe, although pretty much as soon as they landed, the battalion was disbanded and the men were reassigned to other units that had been decimated by the fighting during the Battle of the Bulge.[3] Dad became Battalion Commander of the 368th Engineer General Service Regiment. In August 1945 they boarded a ship that was to take them to the Pacific Theater, but when the bombs at Nagasaki and Hiroshima were dropped and the war ended, their ship simply headed for New York. Dad was among the first soldiers to reach home!
[1] I should note that we do not have any Winthrop ancestors; my mother just could not come up with anything else for John’s middle name.
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RMS_Lady_Hawkins.
[3] As Dad was the only Commanding Officer in the short history of the 1291st, he brought the battalion flag home with him; I still have it.