Oral History Interview with Charles Clevenger, July 16, 2001 Page: Title Page

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Oral History Interview with Charles Clevenger, July 16, 2001 (Sound)

Oral History Interview with Charles Clevenger, July 16, 2001

The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with Charles Clevenger. Clevenger was born in Fulton County, Indiana in May 1925 and enlisted in the Marine Corps in March 1944. Following boot camp and communications training in January 1945, he embarked aboard the USS Meriwether (APA-203) in San Diego and sailed to Pearl Harbor. He boarded another troopship in Hawaii and sailed to Saipan. Clevenger then boarded USS LST-641 bound for Okinawa. During that transit the LST sailed through a typhoon. He was assigned to the 1st Provisional Anti-aircraft Artillery Group of III Amphibious Corps and landed on Okinawa on 5 April 1945. His group operated 90mm artillery and he describes the features of the radar system. His duties included communicating by radio and telephone with other anti-aircraft batteries on the island. He frequently heard Tokyo Rose broadcasting American music. He had several close calls with Japanese bombers and was on Okinawa when Japan surrendered. He was transferred to the First Marine Division and embarked on the USS Randall (APA-224) on 30 September bound for China. His convoy encountered nearly 1,000 mines in the Yellow Sea. He was badly burned while in China, but soon recovered and remained for nine more months. His duties involved repatriating surrendered Japanese troops and assisting the Chinese Nationalist Government in occupying key areas. He embarked on the liberty ship SS Deborah Gannett (1944) on 30 June 1946 for transit back to the US. The ship arrived in Norfolk on 14 August 1946 and Clevenger was discharged a week later.

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Clevenger, Charles. Oral History Interview with Charles Clevenger, July 16, 2001, text, July 16, 2001; Fredericksburg, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1603644/m1/1/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting National Museum of the Pacific War/Admiral Nimitz Foundation.

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