The Puerto Rico-born veteran of World
War II and the Korean War was 22 when he joined the Army in 1940. He
was assigned to the Puerto Rican 65th Infantry Regiment.
His unit didn't see combat during World
War II. Some researchers say World War II Army commanders lacked confidence
in the fighting spirit of Puerto Rican soldiers and wouldn't commit
them.
When the island soldiers had the chance
to prove themselves during the Korean War, they earned hero status and
became the pride of Puerto Rico.
Three of his Miranda's brothers, all Army
staff sergeants, were infantrymen during World War II. Two fought in
Europe and one in the Pacific.
"I was the only one in the 65th, though,"
Miranda noted. "My unit, the 2nd Battalion, went to Panama in 1942 for
jungle training, but we were not sent to the Pacific to fight. Instead,
we went to Algeria, North Africa, on a troop ship that took nine days.
That's where we took amphibious training preparing to invade the Italian
island of Elba. But we never invaded the island."
Instead, the Army sent the unit to join
up with the 7th Army in Marseilles for the invasion of southern France,"
he said. One memorable wartime adventure, he said, was when he was a
staff sergeant leading a detail guarding German prisoners of war as
they loaded supplies into boxcars bound for U.S. troops sweeping toward
Germany. One day, Miranda chanced to open the door of a boxcar on a
train headed for Switzerland and discovered six German POWs trying to
escape.
"I packed them in a jeep, one over the
other and one on the spare tire, and drove 25 miles to Aubignon," Miranda
said.
"The Germans were good soldiers, well
disciplined, but some of them were glad to be captured by the Americans
because we had good food," he said with a hearty laugh. After the war
he and his comrades boarded a ship in Marseilles and sailed home to
Puerto Rico.
"I was back in Puerto Rico in 1945, and
by 1950 we were on maneuvers on Vieques, the same island where the Navy
and Marines had problems with their training a few months ago," Miranda
said.
Arriving at Pusan, South Korea, on Sept.
20, 1950, the outfit quickly won respect on the battlefield. Over the
next three years, the 65th participated in nine major campaigns and
earned a Presidential Unit Citation, Meritorious Unit Commendation and
two Republic of Korea Unit citations. Individual members earned four
Distinguished Service Crosses and 124 Silver Stars.
Miranda said one of his worst memories
is that "Korea was miserably cold." He said screaming Chinese and North
Korean soldiers had a thing for 2 a.m. human-wave attacks, deafening
drumbeats and blaring bugles.
"I remember seeing a lot of kids and ladies
killed by bombs and guns. It was a bad time," said Miranda, who wears
a hearing aid because his eardrums burst from artillery gunfire.
"We lost a lot of men," said Miranda,
who was in charge of a mortar platoon. "We landed at Pusan and fought
the North Koreans all the way to the Yalu River and the Chinese border,
killing thousands of them."
That's when the Chinese crosse the Yalu
in force and pushed the American, British and Turkish allies back to
Pusan.
"Then we started all over again," Miranda
said. "I remember when we started to take a hill near Seoul and found
out that it was more heavily defended than we thought. We hit the ground
and bullets were flying everywhere. By the time it was over, we'd killed
all but seven, but we'd lost about 150 men."
Miranda said after about 13 months, he
and his company commander were the only original unit members left.
He said he turned down a battlefield commission when it attached to
a transfer to division.
Miranda went back to Puerto Rico, but
later served in Missouri and Germany. "I put in for retirement in July
1960, then received a letter from the Army saying that I was war-qualified
for promotion to E-8 and E-9, the new noncommissioned officer ranks,"
he said. He declined and retired that December.
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Name:
Rafael Miranda
Age: 81
Date of Birth: Oct. 24, 1918
Place of Birth: Barranquita, Puerto Rico
Enlisted in Army: Nov. 18, 1940
Length of Service: 20 years
Date of Discharge: Nov. 30, 1960
Awards and Decorations: Good Conduct Medal with bronze
clasp and three loops, Expert Infantryman's Badge, World War II
Victory Medal; American Theater Campaign Medal and the European-African-Middle
Eastern Campaign Medal; and World War II Rome-Arno, Central Europe
and Rhineland campaign ribbons.
Best Memory: Returning to Puerto Rico from the Korean War.
Worse Memories: The miserably cold weather in Korea and
the human waves of screaming Chinese and North Korean soldiers
who attacked regularly at about 2 a.m. to deafening drumbeats
and bugle calls.
Hobbies: Gardening
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Using his GI Bill benefit, the combat
veteran earned a bachelor's degree at the University of Puerto Rico
in San Juan, where he taught math for about a year. He gave up teaching
school because he was making "poco dinero (little money)." A Korean
War buddy got him a job training cooks.
The youngest of 12 siblings, Miranda said
he doesn't know much about his ancestors, except his paternal grandfather
emigrated from Spain in the 1800s and settled in Barranquita, a small
farming town in the center of the island.
"There were three types of farming in
those days -- sugar cane, tobacco and coffee," Miranda said in heavily
accented English. "My father planted about 20 acres of tobacco. He also
planted 'minus products' like corn, tomatoes, onions and potatoes for
consumers and the family. We raised cattle and chickens."
"We were poor, but everyone was, so I
never really noticed," said Miranda, who dropped out of school after
the eighth grade to start working to help his family.
He and his late wife, Carmen, moved to
Tampa, Fla., near Madeira Beach, in 1984. They opened a liquor store
there, but closed it three years later because of crime. "Someone smashed
my plate glass doors and stole some of the merchandise," Miranda said.
Miranda said after his wife died in 1988,
"I was lonely and came to the Soldiers' and Airmen's Home in 1989. I
feel very, very happy. I have my room, my garden, my children and grandchildren
and my memories.
"Living at the Soldiers' and Airmen's
Home is the best thing I could do," Miranda said. "There's no better
place for people of our age."