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A Football Hero Who Was An American Hero

From the days when football was important but God, Country, and Family were much more important. Tom Harmon was a man who was comfortable with the decisions he made, even though they often meant putting his life on the line. There are men such as Tom in today’s America but you rarely hear about them. Keep the faith though, because these men are the ones who will help save America.

Source: CNSnews

As a halfback at Michigan, he ran for 33 touchdowns, threw for 16 more, won the Heisman Trophy and was the first player picked in the NFL draft.

But the hardest hits Tom Harmon ever took were not on a football field. They were in the Army Air Corps during World War II.

Harmon came out of a big Catholic family in a small Midwestern town — and was proud of both.

He had five siblings, who were close — and candid — with each other.

“The Harmon children felt it was their right to say anything they pleased about each other, but let an outsider make a smarty remark about one of them and the battle royal was on. They just stuck naturally together.”

Tom Harmon in his book, “Pilots Also Pray”

Having won fame as a college star, Harmon made some remarkable decisions about his early post-college career.

He got his dream job at WJR in Detroit, broadcasting the Michigan football games in the fall of 1941. Yet before the season ended, he knew he had to leave that job and answer the call of duty.

Harmon became the pilot of a B-25 bomber, leading a crew of five other men. When they were flying to their first combat deployment in North Africa, on a route that took them over South America, they ran into a horrendous storm.

One wing of the bomber started to break lose. As the plane began an uncontrollable descent, Harmon ordered the crew to bail out. His co-pilot did through the bottom escape hatch.

He got out and succeeded in deploying his parachute, which dropped him into the branches of a tree near the burning wreckage of his plane.

Not finding the rest of his crew, Harmon headed due east through jungle and swamps, hoping to reach the coastline of French Guiana.

On the fifth day, he came across a family in a thatched hut, who led him to a village, whose people led him to the sea. He survived.

But Tom Harmon did not give up flying. He transferred to a P-38 fighter.

He was deployed to China, where American pilots were fighting Japanese occupiers. This time, he was shot down by a Japanese Zero. He once again survived — but it took him 32 days to get back to his base.

As a football player, Tom Harmon had been inspired by Michigan’s legendary coach Fritz Crisler. Later, Crisler was inspired by him.

“Like other boys in countless alien fields, he flew over tangled jungles, the hot sands of Africa and the rice paddies of China, ready to pay that last full measure of devotion to a nation that taught us to cherish man’s birthright of decency and dignity enough to die for them. His every achievement humbly beseeches parents, sons and all of us to have faith and fidelity in the dark hours of adversity.”

Fritz Crisler – Michigan Football Coach

A Football Hero Who Was An American Hero

TD

H/T Elwood-27

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