A hero back at home
Noaki Schwartz
World War II veteran Earl Fusselman is a planner.
On the first Tuesday of every month, he cuts his hair. When he enters a
room, he instinctively straightens crooked pictures. And when he has a
date, he may be an hour early but never a minute late.
But despite a lifetime of calculations, he never did get to fight the war
on a foreign battlefield. Instead, after training troops of men and
eagerly waiting for his chance to go overseas, fate intervened.
Fusselman, 82, is one of those rarely recognized war heroes, the kind who
worked behind the scenes. Though none of the bullets fired from his gun
ever made it onto enemy positions, the lessons he taught hundreds of men
were instrumental in winning the war -- and more importantly, in saving
their lives.
In 1944, at age 27, Fusselman joined the National Guard. Back when
cigarettes were 20 cents a pack, he earned $21 a month as a private. From
Topeka, Kansas he went to Little Rock, Ark., and began training in the
Army to go to the Philippines.
But his train to Los Angeles, the first trip in his journey to Asia, was
late and he instead found himself headed for officer candidates’ school.
Again, he almost made it to Europe, but the assignment of duties to
soldiers, based on the alphabetical order of their names, led Fusselman
to school and the man ahead of him to England.
“We were hyped up and ready to go. We wanted to get into it,” he said,
recalling the enthusiasm people felt at the thought of serving their
country.
However, he proved an adept student. Within a month, he was a lieutenant
and nine months after his commission, he was promoted to captain. All the
while, as he trained and waved companies off to fight the war, Fusselman
yearned to join them.
He became so frustrated that by the last company he trained, Fusselman
nearly commanded a colonel to send him off to war. And then, just as he
was once again close to shipping off, Fusselman caught spinal meningitis
from a rat bite while sleeping in the desert. The sickness left him with
a 106-degree temperature, debilitating headaches and a month of sticking
six-inch needles into his spine to drain the fluid.
“My fingers bled from grabbing on to the bed coils so hard,” he
remembered, shuddering at the thought.
Six months later, Fusselman was recuperating in Palm Springs, still
determined to fight once he recovered. But fate had other plans.
One night he went out to dinner and met Gigi, who a couple months later
would become his wife for the next 44 years. Now experiencing newfound
love, thoughts of gunfire and falling bombs in a foreign country
evaporated. He received an honorable discharge and remained on domestic
shores.
These days, Fusselman neatly divides his time between different
organizations for which he volunteers, such as American Legion Post 291
on the Balboa Peninsula, where he serves on the board of directors. Each
week, he also goes to the Veterans Administration hospital in Long Beach
to assist wheelchair-bound patients.
And just before going to the hospital each Sunday morning, like
clockwork, Fusselman visits his wife’s grave.
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