Sidelines: Memorial Day meaningful for Newport Harbor alumni
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Don Cantrell
Veteran television anchor and writer Tom Brokaw has predicted that
the 60th anniversary this year of World War II will be an overwhelming
event -- “the last anniversary a lot of veterans will live to see.”
And it is fair to say that untold Newport Harbor High athletes were a
bright and integral part of the military forces that bravely struggled
against the evil powers, German, Japan and Italy.
Hence, this year’s Memorial Day stands as a meaningful occasion. Thus,
a wide salute across America is in order, particularly as thousands of
veterans are fading with each passing year.
Newcomers from recent years would not be familiar with the yesteryear
veterans across the harbor area, but the old-timers still remember them
with fondness and respect.
Vernon Fitzpatrick, class of ‘43, one of the most prominent names, has
one of the most shocking stories among local veterans.
Fitzpatrick, who played quarterback for the ’42 championship football
team, lost his life during the Leyte Offensive in the Philippines Dec. 8,
1944 when parachuting to the big island. Sadly, Japanese fighter pilots
used machine guns when coming across Fitzpatrick in mid-air.
Although the champion Newport team always thundered to league
victories with All-CIF fullback Harold Sheflin, coach Wendell Pickens
once said Harbor was always two touchdowns better when Fitzpatrick played
in the game.
Locals mourned another loss in George Shafer, a blocking back on the
‘34 grid team and one deeply admired by his teammate, Al Irwin, who later
returned to coach the Harbor High football team, 1948-55. Irwin later
coached Orange Coast College to a title in 1956.
Shafer had been an infantryman in the Philippines. Irwin initially
coached many swim teams for the Navy at the Great Lakes Training Center.
But, in time, he shifted to the South Pacific where he became a flight
deck officer aboard an aircraft carrier.
Irwin’s cousin, Walt Kelly, Class of ‘37, captured headlines after a
high achievement as a co-pilot at Rabaul Bay in the South Pacific.
Kelly, a versatile athlete at Newport, and his crew had to pass on the
first attempted bombing flight across Rabaul Bay.
Hence, the crew landed on a nearby island with plans to fly out early
morning and skim the giant Japanese carrier it wanted to demolish. The
plan was precise and Kelly still recalls his crew dropping three bombs
right down the carrier’s chute.
The crew had been overloaded with missions and Kelly was pulled aside
for medical reasons. His crew was ordered onward.
A noise later prompted Kelly to rise from bed and go outside. He was
stunned by what he observed. His crew had crashed at the end of the
runway.
Sparks McClellan, another Newport pilot who earned numerous medals and
ribbons, is among the Class of 1940. McClellan, younger brother of Rollo,
Class of ‘38, became a Navy fighter pilot, flying the devastating
Hellcats. His task was to sweep across the beaches and firebomb the
Japanese infantry along the beach lines, which was a successful
operation.
One of Newport’s finest-ever quarterbacks out of the ‘30s was Glenn O.
Thompson, Class of ‘38, who subsequently became a rear admiral in the
Coast Guard. His coach, Ralph Reed, had the highest praise for Thompson
in the season of ’37 when he teamed up with Rollo McClellan for a winning
season.
Hal Sheflin’s running guard from the ’41 grid team earned the Purple
Heart in one severe engagement when he was struck by flak from Japanese
kamikaze planes. Stephens, Class of ‘42, was a gunnery officer aboard a
destroyer.
He was off Okinawa when his ship was struck. During the same intense
battle, his teammate, tackle Manuel Muniz, was wounded on the beach at
Okinawa with an Army unit. Muniz was a second-team All-CIF tackle on the
championship team of ’42.
One of the Newport gridders who was badly hurt in battles against the
Germans in Europe was one-time quarterback George Micklewait, Class of
‘40.
Relatives were well aware of the pain and injuries suffered by
Micklewait, who, in time, returned to work at Harbor High. He was a
second-team All-Southern California back, who had starred under Coach
Dick Spaulding.
One of the oldest, if not the oldest Newport Harbor High product
involved in WWII would be the late Billy V. Brown, who was one of Reed’s
first athletes in the 1930-31 era.
Brown, in the Navy, was a bomber pilot in WWII, as well as the Korean
war, and had a great record. The Navy paid a him a big tribute a few
years ago when he was buried in Kentucky.
Fullback Sheflin and his older brother, Bob, experienced serious
problems aboard their ships in the Pacific. Bob was thrown overboard and
spent 72 hours treading water in the ocean. Harold suffered gas in one
lung and later tumbled overboard.
Newport paid a heavy price for the country’s defense.
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