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         AN AFTERNOON WITH  - JOHN LINDGREN - 
        Almost as soon as I got back from  
        "Is Doc Bradford there?" I ask.   
        I am astounded that the great man himself has answered the phone. I 
        would learn later, he doesn't like to be called Doc, he prefers Charlie.  
        We make some small talk then he tells me we must get together at the 
        Harvard Club.  I am pleased he seems anxious to see me.  I 
        hadn't expected this after hearing so many stories;  he wants to be 
        left alone, no visitors, he's not well,  he has no time for the 
        503rd reunions and the rest.  
        He sounds enthusiastic about our meeting, "We'll have lunch there!" We 
        arrange it for Friday but there is a small problem, he either doesn't 
        drive or he doesn't have a car, I think he neither has a car nor does he 
        drive.  
        "I'll try to arrange a ride and call you back," he tells me.  
        I hadn't known quite what to expect when I called. My friend, Bill 
         
        He calls me back. He has a ride and I get detailed instructions on how 
        to get to his club. It's not all that difficult; go to the corner of 
         
        It's Friday and I am in my seersucker suit wearing my best four-in-hand 
        tie. I had wanted to wear my bow tie, my daughter Yvonne had given me 
        this past father's day but after several tries it didn't seem to tie too 
        well.  Doc had warned me, "You can't get in club without a tie. If 
        you haven't got one we can get one there." He must have a low opinion of 
        Californian's dress standards and I can't really fault him for that.  
         I am there in no time from  
        As I walked along  
        I had been here before in 1947 with Jack Mara, an old D Company comrade 
        and another time, just after the war, with my cousin. That was a long 
        time ago and nothing is as I remembered it. I don't recognize a thing.  
        Entering the lobby, I go past the bar into a  spacious lounge but 
        Charley isn't there.  In fact, no one is there. I look at the 
        magazines piled on a large table to see if they have the New Yorker 
        there with son John's poem in, but there are no New Yorker magazines at 
        all.  I look in a huge empty main dining room, obviously closed for 
        lunch.  I go back towards a second smaller dining room and look in 
        another smaller lounge. I recognize Charley at once. 
         There he is sitting in chair, a pair of crutches leaning on a pillar 
        beside him. He's wearing a bow tie and a Brooks Brothers  
        I carry the drinks while Charlie moves on his crutches to the dining 
        room. A waitress named Mary serves us. I haven't remembered much else 
        but she looks familiar. They are apparently old friends and exchange 
        pleasantries. Listening to their conversation I have the idea Charlie 
        hasn't been at the club for a while. We order, or rather Doc does. I 
        suggested baked scrod but he nips that in the bud forthwith, "It's no 
        good. You wouldn't like it. We'll have the chicken," he tells Mary.  
        He is in fine spirits. The customers in the small dining room are almost 
        exclusively thin old ladies.  Aside from us, there is one other man 
        eating there. As I sip my sherry, I look out the window at the bright 
        sun and the maple trees.  I feel very good being here with Doc. We 
        sit and he opens the proceedings and sets the agenda, so to speak. "I 
        never get to talk to people about the 503rd. Unless they were there, who 
        could I tell all this to? They'd never know what I'm talking about."  
        He starts on his subject right away by taking a few shots at some 
        traditional regimental whipping boys. The infamous disagreeable G, 
        "wasn't a bad sort really," he tells me, "he simply behaved badly."  
        He plows no new ground here as he ticks off the man's shortcomings.  
        I listen saying very little.  
        He sent a couple of rounds J's way. Nothing new here either.  
        It's been fifty years since R avoided hazardous duty because of bad 
        knees, but Charlie is as incensed by the improper conduct as if it had 
        happened yesterday. Doc has little use for any of these scoundrels and 
        malingerers.  
        After he was through castigating these rascals I brought up M's return 
        to the states from Noemfoor under a cloud so to speak, but Doc had 
        somehow granted M absolution for his sins and I supposed it must be 
        accepted by all as an act of faith.  I didn't quite understand how 
        M had behaved differently in such a way to be forgiven by Charlie for 
        his [in my eyes] disgraceful conduct.  Charlie explained it this 
        way, "M was a brave man who didn't fear combat.  He simply wanted 
        to go home, pulled a few strings and left." I don't quite understand his 
        train of thought here, but I hold my tongue.  How Doc could admire 
        this man, a known malingerer, who purposely banged at his knee causing 
        it to swell and then conspired with a physician to get a ticket home, is 
        far beyond me. I don't ask the hard questions and thankfully we go to a 
        new subject.  
        It is obvious he has given careful consideration to all of this and the 
        thoughts pour out to his audience of one who can understand what he is 
        saying.  He lashes out at a few more who are guilty of certain 
        lapses who probably will never be quite forgiven but these are minor 
        offenders, misdemeanour cases. These people are those who stay at the 
        command post and don't bother to visit the troops or are out taking 
        pictures when they should be taking care of their men. He has hundreds 
        of stories that he heard right from the horse's mouth so to speak as he 
        questioned the wounded coming to his dispensary for treatment.  
        He wrote down these stories that are found in an unpublished manuscript 
        called "Combat Over Corregidor."  
        He talks of the 2nd Battalion heroes and the surgeon, of course, is one 
        of them. He would join combat patrols whenever he could, which was often 
        enough, to be where the action was. Charlie was the first person I saw 
        coming through to the company after a bloody night battle. He got the 
        Silver Star for his trouble.  
        The 503rd was not known for rewarding its heroes and only the most 
        extraordinary feats of arms were recognized.  Little Joe Whitson 
        earned the Distinguished Service Cross for conspicuous bravery on 
        Corregidor perhaps the bravest of the brave in Charlie's eyes. They knew 
        each other well and Doc admired this officer twenty years his junior.  
        He told of Frank Keller, a D Company paratrooper who stayed for two days 
        with a wounded comrade in a ravine  crawling with the enemy.  
        He was proud of his medics as well he should be. Jack Bowers, his senior 
        medical enlisted man was sort of a rogue, but a brave and able man. 
        Bowers was wounded along with B at the mouth of  
        John Prendergast was a tough Irishman and brave as a lion but in other 
        ways not entirely scrupulous.  Charley Leabhart was a first class 
        medic and creator of one of Doc's favorite puns, "It gets Corrugguder 
        and Corrugguder." 
         We have, as he promised at the outset, spoken of nothing else but the 
        war and the regiment. Perhaps he is writing his memoirs, who knows?  
        He talks of his family a little. I mention my grandfather was a great 
        admirer of Teddy Roosevelt. "My father was a very good friend of Teddy 
        Roosevelt. He was at our home quite often."   
         I was told by others, that President Franklin Roosevelt had seen to it 
        that Doc was returned from  
        He asks me if I knew his brother was governor of  
        I am startled when he blurts out at one point, "I don't think I am of 
        much use to anyone now and am ready to die." I tell him he looks like he 
        is in good health and what's the rush. I wish I had remembered it at the 
        time and I would have given him Mr. Maugham's admonition to a friend. 
        "Death is a dreary business, I advise you to have nothing to do with 
        it." We go out in the lobby, Doc is moving along on his crutches and we 
        sit down and talk some more in the leather easy chairs.  
        We're not there too long when two pretty young girls, perhaps six or 
        seven years old, come up to us. These are the daughters of Charlie's 
        friend who has driven him here from  
        He is grinning broadly and looks at me through his glasses with his face 
        raised up ever so slightly and I suddenly see him slowly lumbering 
        toward our position like a big bear, the first man to reach us that 
        February morning after D Company's bloody fight at Wheeler Point.  
        It has been a beautiful afternoon. I think Charlie had a good time too. 
        The station wagon pulls away from the curb. I look at my watch and my 
        heart sinks. It is nearly three-thirty and the rental Shadow has surely 
        been towed. We had been talking for a long time. 
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| Combat Over Corregidor appears as a joint project of The 503d Parachute Regimental Combat Team Association of World War II Inc., and the Heritage Bn. We are privately supported by The Corregidor Historic Society and a group of like-minded individuals. Join us and make sure that we'll be here the next time you are. | 
        Combat Over Corregidor � 2002 The Charles H. 
Bradford Estate;