Description
William R. Catton Jr. volunteered for navy service on his 17th birthday in January 1943 and served as a plane handler onboard the aircraft carrier USS Ticonderoga from August 1944 through the end of WWII. He learned how to rebuild an aircraft engine and fire a 50-caliber machine gun before he was 18 and made two voyages across the Pacific and saw a year of combat before he was 20. He was wounded in a devastating kamikaze attack in January 1945, and he was on deck to watch the sunrise on Mount Fuji when Ticonderoga entered Tokyo Bay after the Japanese surrender seven months later.
Bill was a prolific correspondent who displayed a wide-eyed sense of adventure and a self-conscious pride in being a witness to history. He reported events and personal interactions in clear, often colorful prose. Upon returning home, his sea stories mostly went untold, his Purple Heart medal and stripes went into a box of mementos never to be shown, while his letters from the war-carefully saved by his mother-went unread until his son began to examine them after his father's death. Bill Catton, who went on to become a sociologist well known for his work on the environment and human ecology, has indeed left us a unique commentary.
About the Author
Theodore Catton is an award-winning author of books about the American West. A freelance historian, he specializes in studies for the National Park Service. He was a Fulbright scholar in Christchurch, New Zealand, where he researched the history of the New Zealand national parks.
Reviews
A Young Sailor at War is a meticulously researched book which carefully draws upon the more than 400 letters of William R. 'Bill' Catton Jr. who enlisted in the Navy at age 17 and was stationed stateside and in the Pacific during World War II. Editor Theodore Catton, son of the letter writer, is to be congratulated for the impressive way he places these letters within the larger context of the voluminous literature on World War II. Indeed, this work captures both the major Naval events of the war as well as the captivating, coming-of-age story of one young sailor." -Judy Barrett Litoff, professor of history, Bryant University and author of We're In This War II: World War II Letters of American Women in Uniform
Book Information
ISBN 9781606353936
Author Theodore Catton
Format Hardback
Page Count 250
Imprint Kent State University Press
Publisher Kent State University Press
Weight(grams) 615g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 38mm