4 // COASTWEEKEND.COM Books, gardening, hiking, hobbies, recreation, personalities, travel & more CLOSE TO HOME ‘I had a blessed life’ Long Beach Peninsula resident, veteran recalls the old days and World War II By DAVID CAMPICHE The white shingled house sits on a shaded lot in Seaview, Washington, and seems proud to have served the Williams family for the last hundred years with shelter and comfort. The oldest living recipi- ent of that quiet grace is one Warner Williams, a young 93, and a man anyone would choose for a mentor or as a coveted member of an extended family. “This is my home. Went to the first grade in this place,” he says. Indeed, Williams talks about catching the nar- row-gauge railroad that ran down the street. How his uncle, Reese Williams, mis- creant and a marvelous story teller (a family tradition), saw to it that his nephew arrived home safely. Williams remembers the horse-drawn wagon peddling milk, eggs and vegetables down his street. He talks about learning to swim with sand underfoot at China Beach in Ilwaco, Washing- ton, long before that beach was altered in the dredging of the new Port of Ilwaco. Clamming was close to home — the frontal dune just west of the family house. The ocean was in his backyard, and Williams learned to both love and respect it. In those days, struggling with a wild unpredictable ocean without GPS or modern tracking and communication systems, many a fisherman drowned. About the time of his birth, an entire fishing fleet disap- peared in a sudden spring storm. Though he has a Ph.D. from Stanford and was for years the dean of undergrad- uate studies at Portland State University, Williams denies any love affair with com- puters. “Don’t like them, particularly. Can’t use ‘em well,” he says. “Best I ever did was play a few games of solitaire.” Does he prefer a slower way of life? Ask the man, and you will get a warm comforting smile. September afternoons find him licking up the last of the summer sun and engaging in the art of conversation, often covering ground with his wit and an extraordinary sense of humor. If he is in a serious mood, one might pry out a war story, though he wishes such violence never happened. “War is bad,” he declares up front. Bad, as in the Battle of the Bulge; Pfc. Williams and his buddies fought at Elsen- born Ridge, where, vastly outnumbered, they held off two divisions of crack German soldiers until, five days later and out of fuel, the Germans moved south. Elsenborn was the only line that held firm against the German surprise attack in the Ardennes forest. He was in harm’s way again at the famous Ludendorff Bridge at Remagen. He crossed with one of the first platoons and remembers stumbling and dropping his machine gun and the sound it made, scraping across the steel grates of that strategic bridge, as it plunged into the Rhine River. He remembers PHOTO BY LAURIE ANDERSON Peninsula resident Warner Williams, 93, grew up in Seaview and saw action in Europe during World War II. PHOTO BY LAURIE ANDERSON Warner Williams, 93, lives in the same house in Seaview, Wash- ington, that he was raised in. his fellow soldiers being slaughtered while crossing the Danube, and his anger at the loss of dear friends, comrades at arms. “War is bad,” he repeats. “War is always bad.” I wrote a bit about Williams some years ago. His generation is slipping away and so are the rich and powerful stories. Williams fought in the heat of World War II, and though he choos- es not to acknowledge it, he is a hero. “I’m no hero,” he de- clares. “The real heroes lie in graves at Normandy and across Europe and the Pacif- ic. You have to understand; heroes are the ones who didn’t make it home.“ If anything, Williams remains a humble man who understands himself. He sips on his coffee, and his sharp eyes penetrate across the warm space of a kitchen smelling of porcini stew and my wife’s fresh apple pie. “Anyone who says he wasn’t afraid is men- tally lost. I was scared every day,” he says. He talks of war movies, and how only one, “Saving Private Ryan,” seems to cov- er the truth. Williams was in the first unit to enter Dachau Concentration Camp. He stood on a communal grave that held 60,000 murdered Jews. At that he draws in a deep breath. “60,000,” he repeats. In 1945, he found himself angry. Infuriated. Asked his God, “Why?” God didn’t answer. We talked about the long road of life. “I’m no smarter now than I was in the sixth grade,” he says. I laugh quietly and think, You must have been quite a prodigy, Warner Williams, because friend, look at you now. We talk about free speech and the Aryan Nation. “Peo- ple who draw swastikas and form fascist groups can’t re- ally know what Hitler stood for: evil incarnate,” he says. “Every person is my brother and sister. I don’t care who they pray to. Each deserves my love and respect.” We talk about life after death. He hopes for a reunion with loved ones. “I believe in that,” he says. “I wouldn’t change much. I had a blessed life. When we get together, I want to see my brother Rod, and my parents. Sylvia, my beloved wife. What a blessing she was. And the son we lost.” Life is full of loss. The Buddha prepared us for pain and joy. Jesus for salvation. We talk of luck, fate and karma. There simply are never enough answers. He bites into Laurie’s sublime apple pie and smiles broadly. Perhaps the pie triggers fond memories? Warner Williams met Syl- via in the choir at Whitman College. On a slow day after Pearl Harbor, Williams and three friends enlisted. They thought they would finish college first. Stick with the reserves. No such luck — just months later, Williams found himself in Normandy. Soon, he landed in Patton’s Third Army, and by now, you know some of that story. But what can anyone really know? War is savage and memories are mostly kept secret. Buried with time and dust. The people who know war best are the foot soldiers. Williams earned many medals for valor. They hang in his home in Seaview, lonely-like but distinguished, on a painted wooden wall. He would trade them all for one of the friends he lost in Belgium. To this day, Williams remains proud and humble, an intelligent human being, gilded with courage and dis- tinction. “Nobody ever wins a war,” he says. The other day, he had just positioned himself in a chair in his front yard to soak up some late summer sun. Suddenly there was a downpour. When asked if he was disappointed, his response was, “I don’t care! I’m in Seaview!”