Kittenbritches
Invitation to a War: My Early War Experience at Pearl Harbor and Guadalcanal
Invitation to a War: My Early War Experience at Pearl Harbor and Guadalcanal
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Author: Larry a. Drew
Publisher: Kittenbritches
Published: 12/03/2016
Pages: 184
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.56lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.39d
ISBN: 9780998192703
About the Author
Larry A. Drew was born in 1921 in Tappen, North Dakota, and spent his early years on the family ranch. The Great Depression forced a move to Bismarck, North Dakota, before resettling to his grandmother's farm in Westboro, Ohio. Larry attended Jefferson High School in Westboro, where he proved a very able student, and "got the notion" to go to college. This was a first for the family, and his ambition was not met with parental enthusiasm! He spent two years at Ohio State University, where his subjects included ROTC. In 1941 he took a job with Allis-Chalmers in Cincinnati, to earn and save money to finish his degree. Larry eventually achieved his dream, earning his Bachelors degree at the University of California, Berkeley, but not until 1948. In between were several years when "all hell broke loose!" This book tells the story of the first half of those incredibly difficult and perilous war years, at Pearl Harbor and Guadalcanal. Larry returned from the Pacific to the U.S. to attend Officer Candidate School. There he was recruited for "hazardous duty" and found himself serving with the OSS in Burma and China until the end of the war, the subject of another book. After the war Larry married, began a family, and was invited to help build a new organization, the CIA, based on his OSS experiences. A few years later, the Pacific Coast beckoned, and he found himself again working at a US Naval Shipyard, this one at Long Beach, California, as Financial Manager. After retiring from government service in the 1980s, he worked as construction manager for Disneyland's remodel of Fantasyland. He passed away peacefully in his sleep on September 2, 2000, exactly 55 years after the signing of the Surrender of Japan. He now rests with his brothers in arms at the Black Hills National Cemetery in South Dakota.
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