Tall, but true, Tennessee tales
Jessica Garrison
COSTA MESA -- From the gates of the Alamo, to the Battle of the
Bulge to a classroom at St. Joachim’s Church School, Cub Scout Pack 80
was having quite an afternoon.
David Lester, great-great-grandson of Davy Crockett, and himself a
decorated World War II combat veteran, joined the Scouts this week for
apple bars and conversation about American history -- and what history
means to little boys.
“I thought it was amazing. At first I didn’t believe in him, in Davy
Crockett,” said Samuel Van Gordon, 8. “But I also thought it was amazing
that [Lester] could get out of the war alive.”
Lester, 80, a veteran of the Battle of the Bulge who now lives in
Costa Mesa with his wife, regaled the Scouts with stories of his famous
relative and with hair-raising remembrances of his own battle
experiences.
Davy Crockett, who is famous among the under-60 set because he and his
coonskin cap were featured attractions at Disneyland for decades, was far
more complicated than the folks at Disney or his detractors would have
them believe, Lester said.
“I am very proud of him, and I was very angry at some of the books
that have been written about him,” Lester said.
Although Crockett, who lived from 1787 to 1836, has been denounced as
an “Indian killer” who waged a brutal war against Tennessee tribes
alongside President Andrew Jackson, Lester said his relative also fought
for Native American rights.
As a congressman, Lester pointed out, Crockett broke with Jackson over
the president’s decision to expel Native Americans from the Southeast and
force them onto reservations in Oklahoma.
“He got into an argument with President Jackson over how Jackson
mistreated the Indians and the veterans [of the War of 1812],” Lester
said.
After his run-in with Jackson, Crockett left Washington and started a
business in his home state.
After a flash flood destroyed his business and his first wife died,
Crockett married Elizabeth Patton, great-grandmother of Gen. George
Patton, and struck out for Texas, where, as anyone familiar with
Disneyland knows, Crockett died at the Alamo fighting for Texas
independence.
After concluding his presentation on his great, great-grandfather,
Lester sat back and smiled at the boys: any questions?
Hands shot up, but the questions seemed to suggest that some of the
nuances of Lester’s presentation were lost on the third-graders.
“Who was Davy Crockett?” asked the first boy.
“Did he really wear a coonskin cap?” queried another.
“Do you know anyone who fought in the Civil War?” asked a third.
When Lester said that he once did, a fourth boy raised his hand. His
grandfather had fought in the Civil War, too, he said.
At that moment, Lester responded that his hearing had been damaged by
a hand grenade in World War II.
“I got wounded on a river-crossing by a German hand grenade,” he said.
That got everyone’s attention, and the topic of conversation
immediately changed from Davy Crockett to World War II.
“But you didn’t die, right?” a boy asked.
Lester said that he had not, and added that a skill he shared with his
more famous relative -- hunting -- probably saved his life.
In the war, said Lester, boys who grew up in cities couldn’t shoot to
save their lives, whereas Lester, who had survived the depression by
hunting for food, was a very good shot.
He wound up in the civil engineering corps. All through Holland,
Belgium and Germany, his battalion would rush out under cover of darkness
and build bridges over rivers for the infantry to cross.
“We suffered. We had a lot of casualties,” said Lester, warming to his
subject. And incredibly, he told the Scouts, when he joined the Army, he
was assigned to the Tennessee 30th Infantry “Old Hickory” Division, the
same division Col. Davy Crockett fought with during the War of 1812, only
it was called the Tennessee Militia back then.
“I wrote my mother about that, and she couldn’t believe it,” he said.
Talking about World War II is something Lester does almost as easily
and frequently as he discusses his great-great-grandfather.
He is a member of the Orange County Freedom Committee, a group that
sends World War II veterans to schools around Orange County to make sure
no one forgets the sacrifices of the World War II generation.
“We are passing the torch of liberty to future generations,” said
retired U.S. Army Col. Gene Robens, who served as a member of Gen. Dwight
D. Eisenhower’s staff during the D-day invasion.
“In schools now, they’ve left out a lot of history, and we’re trying
to fill that gap,” he explained. “There’s no politics at all.”
“It’s very important,” said George Grupe, a combat veteran who
considers himself a master historian. “There are so many young people who
are not aware of what occurred in World War II.”
Newport-Mesa school district Supt. Robert Barbot said he supported the
mission of the freedom committee.
“They’ve got so much to offer,” he said. “As they get older, they need
to pass the baton. ... Unfortunately, they are beginning to die off.”
The boys in Pack 80 seemed unaware that they were the subject of a
well-thought out campaign of history education. Still, they were
absolutely spellbound by Lester’s tales.
One time, he told them, he and his company were laying a bridge across
a river in Germany. So well trained were they that they could put up a
bridge in about 30 minutes.
All of a sudden, grenades began to explode around them.
The Germans had ambushed them, he explained, and were using grenades
instead of guns because they did not want to give their position away.
Lester was in the river, right at the bank. As the grenades whizzed
by, he looked up and saw four German soldiers.
“I was right under their nose, but they never saw me,” he said.
All the members of Pack 80, and their mothers, stared at Lester
awe-struck and open-mouthed.
And then Lester concluded his presentation, he politely refused
another apple bar, and went on his way.
Samuel was impressed.
“I was amazed that he had a machine gun in the war,” he said. “I
thought it was very hard to win the war, and I really admire what they
did.”
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