Meyers, Francis Joseph Jr., LTC

Deceased
 
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Last Rank
Lieutenant Colonel
Last Service Branch
Infantry
Last Primary MOS
2164-Air-Ground Liaison Officer
Last MOS Group
Infantry
Primary Unit
1967-1968, Korea Military Advisory Group (KMAG)
Service Years
1941 - 1968
Infantry Ranger
Lieutenant Colonel
Ten Overseas Service Bars

 Last Photo   Personal Details 



Home State
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
Year of Birth
1916
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by LTC Roger Allen Gaines (Army Chief Admin) to remember Meyers, Francis Joseph Jr., LTC USA(Ret).

If you knew or served with this Soldier and have additional information or photos to support this Page, please leave a message for the Page Administrator(s) HERE.
 
Contact Info
Home Town
Ebensburg, PA
Last Address
Ebensburg, PA
Date of Passing
Jul 21, 1992
 
Location of Interment
Arlington National Cemetery (VLM) - Arlington, Virginia
Wall/Plot Coordinates
Section 60, Site 4188

 Official Badges 

US Army Retired Belgian Fourragere Infantry Shoulder Cord Netherlands Orange Lanyard

US Army Retired (Pre-2007) Meritorious Unit Commendation French Fourragere


 Unofficial Badges 




 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
National Cemetery Administration (NCA)
  1992, National Cemetery Administration (NCA)


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

 
“I am wounded but not slain, I will lay me down and bleed awhile, but shall rise and fight again.” It seems as if Rudyard Kipling had Francis Joseph Myers, Jr., in mind when he wrote “The Ballad of Johnny Armstrong.” Joe was a magnificent, natural warrior who could be counted on in any fight. However, this description fails to adequately describe Joe as a friend, husband, father, and grandfather. Perhaps the words of classmate and close friend Fred J. Ascani ’41 of C Company, best describes the more amiable half of Joe. “He was a fun-loving individual who always tried to keep everyone happy.”

Joe was born to Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Myers, Sr., and spent most of his childhood in the small coal-mining town of Ebensburg, Pennsylvania. In high school, Joe was a standout athlete, lettering in basketball, football, and track, as well as a successful but indifferent student. His hobbies included “smooth dancing” and “fast driving.” His success in high school led to an appointment to the Naval Academy and he attended the Naval Academy preparatory school for one year before entering in 1935. Joe survived the rigors of freshman year at Annapolis only to be dismissed due to academic deficiencies his sophomore year. Joe showed his characteristic resilience for the first time after that disappointment by aggressively seeking an appointment to West Point. He was successful and entered with the Class of 1941 in July of 1937. 
 

Joe’s tenure at West Point was characterized by his natural fighting spirit and showcased on the track and soccer teams, but Joe’s warrior ethic did not win many battles against the Academic and Tactical Departments. Although Joe’s final class standing was less than stellar, he made the most of his four years at “Hell on the Hudson” and gathered his own personal army of loyal friends and acquaintances.
 

On 7 December 1941, nearly six months after Joe graduated, the U.S. was thrust into World War II. Loeutenant Myers, not wanting to miss out on all the excitement, looked for the quickest way to get into the fight. He found it with the newly formed Airborne Infantry. After Jump School in January 1943, Joe was assigned to the 505th Parachute Infantry Regimental Combat Team, 82d Airborne Division, and sent to North Africa for the Invasion of Sicily. In July 1943, Joe took part in his first combat parachute jump. After landing, he was knocked unconscious by an exploding shell and woke up in a German hospital in Caltagirone, where he received excellent care. He was a POW for one week before Montgomery and the Canadians took the town from the Germans.
 

Joe took his second combat jump into Italy, where he was, once again, wounded and sent to England. On D Day, 6 June 1944, Joe attempted his third jump with the famed 82d into St. Mere Eglise and, again, Joe was wounded and evacuated to England. Joe’s three Purple Hearts are a testimony to the theory that “wherever bullets were flying, there you’d find Joe.” A fourth combat jump in daylight near Nijmegen, Holland, was made during Operation Market Garden, “A Bridge Too Far.” His fifth jump was not really a jump, as he tailgated from a “cattle” truck in Werbomont, Belgium, in December 1944 and fought to the Salm River. He participated in the breach of the Siegfried Line, pushing south to the final drive across the Elbe River. There, Joe earned his third Bronze Star for valor.
 

Occupational duty in Berlin was sweet. Horses were ridden and tennis was played with high spirits. In 1946, Joe marched down 5th Avenue with GEN Gavin ’29 and the rest of the 82d Airborne. He also enjoyed 15 minutes of fame when interviewed on CBS national radio by the famous Arthur Godfrey. In September of that year, Joe married Franny McLean Mullins, the widow of a fellow ’41er, Charles Love “Moon” Mullins IV, in the Cadet Chapel at West Point. Fran had two small children with Moon, Charles V. and James. Joe raised his former track teammate’s children as his own. In addition to Moon’s boys, Joe raised four children of his own, two boys: Francis III and Patrick, and two girls: Debra and Maureen.
 

Joe won his Army aviator wings at San Marcos, Texas, but had them lifted at Fort Sill. From what we know, Joe was marvelous in the air but treacherous on the ground; parking the aircraft was his downfall. Without missing a beat, Joe returned to the 505th at Fort Bragg for a year before returning to Fort Benning for three years to teach in the Airborne and Ranger departments.
 

In 1952, Major Myers returned to combat as 25th Infantry Division Battalion Executive Officer in Korea and, in 1953, he served as Advisor to the Korean forces. During 1953–55, Joe served in Japan and during 1956–59, he served with the XVIII Airborne Corps, G-3, and was HQ Commandant. In 1959, he graduated from CGSC and then assumed the role of advisor in Viet Nam. During the early 1960s, Joe was assigned to Ft. Campbell and Ft. McPherson. During 1964–67, he served as Assistant Professor of Military Science in the Army ROTC program at Penn State and, on the side, earned a master’s degree in education. His final tour was in the G-3 section, KMAG, in Seoul, Korea.
 

In July 1968, Joe retired as a Lieutenant Colonel at Fort Lewis, Washington. He spent the next ten years working at the Army Education Center with the Bootstrap Program. Joe enjoyed his retirement years by sampling golf courses around the country and visiting children and grandchildren.
 

In July 1992, Joe attended a family reunion in Colorado Springs. One night during that reunion, Joe got out of bed to sit where the whole family gathered, laughing and playing cards. He donned his trademark grin to enjoy the company. “I just want to get one last look,” he told his son. He then went back to sleep and died that night. Joe was laid to rest in Arlington National Cemetery with full military honors.
 

He will be remembered as a man possessing a dual personality: one half was a happy-go-lucky kid always looking for a good time while the other half was a professional soldier who fought and bled for his country without complaint. He was a true American warrior who lived his life according to West Point’s motto, “Duty, Honor, Country.” In the final analysis, “May it be said, well done,” Papa Joe. “Be thou at peace.”
 

   

   1967-1968, Korea Military Advisory Group (KMAG)

Lieutenant Colonel
From Month/Year
- / 1967
To Month/Year
- / 1968
Unit
Korea Military Advisory Group (KMAG) Unit Page
Rank
Lieutenant Colonel
MOS
Not Specified
Base, Fort or City
Not Specified
State/Country
Not Specified
 
 
 Patch
 Korea Military Advisory Group (KMAG) Details

Korea Military Advisory Group (KMAG)
Following the end of World War II, the United States and the Soviet union split up the administration of Korea, with the United States taking charge of the southern half. Beginning in January 1946, the U.S. military government in the south began to form a Korean defense force, and 18 lieutenants from the U.S. Army's 40th Infantry Division were tasked with organizing eight Korea Constabulary Regiments (one for each province,), which were to act as a police force. The Constabulary grew rapidly, from 2,000 men in April 1946 to 50,000 in March 1948. When the ROK declared independence on 15 August 1948, the Constabulary was absorbed into the Republic of Korea Army, and the United States created a Provisional Military Advisory Group (PMAG) to continue the work of training and advising the fledgling South Korean military,[4] led by Brigadier General William Lynn Roberts. The 100 American advisors in Korea, working under the auspices of the Department of Internal Security (DIS), were reassigned to PMAG at this time, and the unit's roster was expanded. KMAG Headquarters, daegu, South Korea circa 1950 On 1 July 1949, PMAG was redesignated the United States Military Advisory Group to the Republic of Korea (KMAG). When North Korean forces invaded South Korea on 25 June 1950, KMAG became the United States Military Advisory Group, Korea, 8668th Army Unit, under the command of the United States Eighth Army. Brigadier General Francis W. Farrell took command of the unit on 25 July. On 28 December 1950, it was renamed as the 8202nd Army Unit.
Type
Joint
 
Parent Unit
Support to Foreign Countries
Strength
Group
Created/Owned By
Not Specified
   

Last Updated: Jan 17, 2010
   
   
Yearbook
 
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20 Members Also There at Same Time
Korea Military Advisory Group (KMAG)

Schumacher, Fred, COL, (1943-1970) IN 11A Colonel
Jamieson, William, LTC, (1950-1984) IN 1542 Captain
Strube, Edward, CPT, (1966-1970) AD 1180 Captain
Kupka, Michael, 1LT, (1966-1969) EN 1331 First Lieutenant
Lewis, Olan, LTC, (1966-1995) EN 1221 First Lieutenant
Plummer, Roy, 1LT, (1967-1969) LO 2625 First Lieutenant
Taylor, Jack, MSG, (1953-1983) AG 71L10 Sergeant First Class
Drayton, Terry, SSG, (1966-1971) AV 67D Staff Sergeant
Hackbardt, Donald, SGT, (1967-1969) QM 76Y40 Sergeant
Spurlin, Steve, SGT, (1967-1969) SC 31M30 Sergeant
Huie, Jim, SP 5, (1967-1969) QM 76H10 Specialist 5
James, Richard, SP 5, (1966-1969) AG 75C20 Specialist 5
Schroeder, John, SP 5, (1966-1968) AG 71L20 Specialist 5
Scott, Francis, SP 5, (1967-1969) AG 71L20 Specialist 5
Sorensen, Mark, SP 5, (1966-1969) OD 22L Specialist 5
Turner, Jr, Thomas B., SP 5, (1968-1970) AG 71H10 Specialist 4
Detachment L (Prov)

Gayle, Clyde J., CW4, (1966-1991) MP 95B10 Sergeant
Reynolds, Wayne, SSG, (1965-1971) MP 95B10 Sergeant
Baker, Roland, SP 5, (1966-1969) AG 71L10 Specialist 5
Clarke, Albert, CPL, (1967-1976) QM 76Y10 Specialist 4

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