Merle Henry Howe was born on April 11, 1896 in Mount Pleasant, Isabella County, Michigan, to parents Henry W. Howe (1864-1916) and Edith Adell Knight (1872-1944). The family had resided in southeast Fremont Township of that same county on an 80-acre farm in Section 26.
Howe attended the Rust and Hay School (Township District No. 5) in that area along with his sister Lena, and both went on to Central State Normal College by 1917, a teacher preparation school and the forerunner of today’s Central Michigan University.
He had planned for a career in teaching but his studies were interrupted by America’s entrance into World War I. By then residing at 208 E. Maple Street in Mount Pleasant, Howe registered for the draft on May 30, 1917 and became a cadet at the Reserve Officer Training Camp at Fort Sheridan. His father having passed away the previous year also made Howe the sole source of support for his mother and younger siblings. His draft registration described Howe as single, tall of medium build, and having gray eyes and light-colored hair.
1908 Rust and Hay School - Merle is back row 2nd from the left; sister Lena is middle row 2nd from the left. |
Howe entered the service with the rank of private on August 15, 1917, having completed R.O.T.C. He was assigned to 3rd Company of the 10th Regiment. His term as a private lasted until January 6, 1918 when he was appointed 1st Lieutenant, Air Corps. Howe was assigned as a pilot to the 158th Aero Squadron and that winter embarked for France on the Tuscania, which had been converted to troop transport duty.
The giant Cunard ship was carrying 2,179 American soldiers, many of which were 32nd Division soldiers from Wisconsin, under British convoy when it was sunk by enemy torpedo on February 7, 1918. As many as 260 may have been lost according to The New York Times. Howe and 100 other Michigan men were on board including a unit of Michigan’s 107th Engineers. Most of them survived the sinking. Re-formed in England, the 158th trained as a Pursuit Squadron but never entered combat.
Howe's World War I Draft Registration |
Before their marriage and
just after his discharge, Howe had returned to Central State Normal College and
concluded his studies for a Bachelor of Science degree in teaching. The state’s professional education publication
at the time, titled “Moderator-Topics,”
contained a short entry in its February 27, 1919 edition under the heading “Central Normal Notes: Lieut. Merle Howe, and old C.M.N. boy, has
just received his discharge and is around the campus again, with most
interesting stories of more than 12 months of overseas service as one of Uncle
Sam’s airmen. Lieut. Howe was on the ill-fated Tuscania when she was torpedoed
off the north coast of Ireland about a year ago, and was one of the last to
leave the ship.”
Howe went to work as a
teacher and the faculty athletic event manager at the old westside Union High
School on Turner Avenue. His mother was also a teacher, working at the one-room
Little Brick school in Deerfield Township west of Mt. Pleasant. This is likely
an occupation chosen after the death of her husband since in those days, most
school boards would not hire a married woman. Over his twenty years at Union,
Merle Howe taught high school electricity, arithmetic, history and general
science courses and was a member of the Grand Rapids Teachers club, Grand
Rapids Schoolmen’s club, Michigan Education Association and the Michigan
Industrial Education Association.
Merle and Virginia had four
children: Virginia H. born March 19, 1922; Marion September 3, 1924; John
Thomas July 18, 1928; and Joseph Wehner August 30, 1932.
Central State Normal School Class of 2019 - Howe is on the left |
1931 Union HS Yearbook - Howe 2nd row from bottom, 2nd from left |
In January 1923, Howe joined the local Grand Rapids unit of the Michigan National Guard, then located on Michigan Street and Ionia Avenue, and was appointed second lieutenant with assignment to Service Company, 126th Infantry Regiment, 32nd Division. The following August he was promoted to 1st lieutenant. Three years later he was promoted to captain and was placed in command of Howitzer Company and subsequently Company K, a position he held just prior to the 32nd Division mobilization for federal duty on October 15, 1940. While a company commander at the Grand Rapids Armory in 1929, Howe, along with Captain Charles Lawyer, sponsored the organization of a club for non-commissioned officers. When the post-war club was reorganized in 1950, they did not forget their old commander citing the club’s aims as “promotion of fellowship and aid in developing men who will be a credit to Brig Gen John H Schouten, the late Col Merle H. Howe, and Capt John Shirley.”
Howe mid-1930s |
When Howe and the 126th
were called into federal service for pre-war training in Louisiana, Virginia
eventually moved the family there to share the experience with her husband,
following his return from the Infantry School at Fort Benning, Georgia. In
1941, Howe attended the Army Staff and Command School at Fort Leavenworth,
Kansas. When the division moved to Massachusetts in 1942, she moved the family
there, as well. When the order came for the 32nd to move to San
Francisco for transport to Australia, she took her children and returned home
to Grand Rapids.
During the run-up to the war,
Howe served at various times on the staff of the 126th Infantry
Regiment and the 63rd Brigade, at least until the 32nd
Division was reorganized from the old “square” model to a “triangular” division
(three regiments without brigade structures).
Howe (right) and Major Henry McNaughton in Louisiana
|
Howe and possibly his mother (right) and wife (left) in Louisiana |
Grand Rapids Press 5/21/1941 - Training in Louisiana |
When the 32nd
Division embarked overseas to Australia, Howe was the Assistant G-3 with the
rank of Major, having been promoted in April 1942. A few months later he was
promoted to Lieutenant Colonel and assigned as division G-3. That September, in
his absence, Howe’s eldest child, Virginia, was married to Donald C. Gmeiner.
Howe earned the Distinguished Service Cross, at the
direction of General Douglas MacArthur, during action in the Buna Campaign that
day. Lieutenant General Eichelberger, the Commander of I Corps, paid tribute to
Howe and several other officers of the 32nd Division when he wrote
after the war: “There were many great
combat commanders among the National Guard officers of the 32nd
Division. In crises, I would like to have them again as comrades. I can mention
only a few here: Colonels Merle H. Howe of Michigan and Herbert M. Smith of
Wisconsin…” (Eichelberger, Robert L. Our
Jungle Road to Tokyo. 1950)
The citation for Howe’s DSC
reads as follows:
Howe also received a Purple Heart medal for wounds received
in action near Buna Village similar to General Waldron. But it did not keep him
out of the campaign.
On January 14, 1943, General Eichelberger put “the colorful Merle Howe” (as he called him) in command of the Urbana Force which included the 127th Infantry. He had been the 32nd Division G3 (operations officer), but in deciding that the current commander needed a break from active command, Eichelberger felt that Howe was “a stalwart fighting man” and elevated him to that role. In a report the next day to General Sutherland (MacArthur’s chief-of-staff), Eichelberger wrote: “Howe will take command of the left flank and the 127th Infantry. Howe is very competent. I will be glad to see him there for he is not a regular officer and I do not want to give the impression that I favor the regular army.”
On January 14, 1943, General Eichelberger put “the colorful Merle Howe” (as he called him) in command of the Urbana Force which included the 127th Infantry. He had been the 32nd Division G3 (operations officer), but in deciding that the current commander needed a break from active command, Eichelberger felt that Howe was “a stalwart fighting man” and elevated him to that role. In a report the next day to General Sutherland (MacArthur’s chief-of-staff), Eichelberger wrote: “Howe will take command of the left flank and the 127th Infantry. Howe is very competent. I will be glad to see him there for he is not a regular officer and I do not want to give the impression that I favor the regular army.”
Eichelberger ordered Howe to
move up the coast on Giruwa the next day. In a phone conversation to Colonel
Sladen Bradley, he described the situation:
“This damn swamp up here consists of big mangrove
trees, not small ones like they have in Australia, but great big ones. Their
knees stick up in the air . . . as much as six or eight feet above the ground
and where a big tree grows it is right on top of a clay knoll.
“A man or possibly two men can . . . dig in a little
bit, but in no place do they have an adequate dug-in position. The rest of this
area is a swamp that stinks like hell. You step into it and go up to your
knees. That’s the whole damn area, except for the narrow strip on the beach. I
waded over the whole thing myself to make sure I saw it all. . . . There is no
place along that beach that would not be under water when the tide comes in. .
. .”
Under Howe’s leadership, the 127th
was successful, fighting its way up the coast from Tarakena to Girua.
Eichelberger again complimented him by noting that “…Howe, a National Guard officer and a former school-teacher, was the
master par excellence of the indigo phrase, and a stalwart fighting man.” By
January 21 the Papuan operation was over. The division, having taken
considerable casualties, was evacuated to Australia for recovery and
rebuilding. Howe remained in command of the 127th and was promoted
to full colonel. On January 24, 1943, Howe was awarded the Silver Star medal for his actions at Buna while commanding the
127th:
“Headquarters, U.S. Forces, Buna Area, General Orders
No. 17 (22 January 1943). Merle H. Howe, Lieutenant Colonel, Infantry,
Commanding Officer, 127th Infantry, Army of the United States. For
gallantry in action near Tarakena, New Guinea, January 16, 1943. On that date
Lieutenant Colonel Howe made a personal reconnaissance of the frontline area
across the Konombi River. With utter disregard for his personal safety, he
continually exposed himself for heavy enemy sniper fire from enemy positions
fifty yards away, and secured valuable information for future operations.
Lieutenant Colonel Howe’s actions were over and above the ordinary call of duty
and inspired his men to greater efforts.”
Grand Rapids Press 11/6/1944 |
GR Press 3/19/1945 |
On March 22nd, the
128th Infantry replaced the 127th which went into reserve,
and the 126th continued its mission along the river valleys to the
west of the Villa Verde Trail area. Five days later, the commander of the 128th
was killed in action and Howe succeeded him in command. At this juncture,
Colonel Merle H. Howe now had the unique distinction of having commanded all
three Infantry regiments of the 32nd Division.
Howe also received a second Distinguished Service Cross, in the
form of an Oak Leaf to be worn on
the ribbon of the first award, “for
extraordinary heroism in connection with military operations against an armed
enemy while serving with the 128th Infantry Regiment, 32nd
Infantry Division, in action against enemy forces on 11 May 1945 at Luzon,
Philippine Islands. During the fighting along the Villa Verde Trail, Colonel
Howe, commanding an infantry regiment, went forward to a battalion position to
observe the operations of forward elements. Shortly afterward he accompanied an
advance patrol which was reconnoitering a route for tanks along the slope of a
hill. Half of the patrol had traversed a narrow ravine when the enemy suddenly
opened fire from concealed positions and seriously wounded a man directly in
front of Colonel Howe. Taking charge of the patrol, immediately Colonel Howe
sent two men forward to evacuate the casualty, and then directed covering fire
into caves from which the enemy had fired. After directing removal of the
wounded man to safety, he organized the patrol for sealing the caves, but was
soon wounded by enemy mortar fire directed on the group. Despite the intense
enemy fire he refused first aid, continued to direct the demolition squad in
finding a route of approach to the caves, and assisted in providing covering
fire while the caves were closed with pole charges. Under his direction five
caves were sealed and over thirty enemy killed. Colonel Howe, by his quick and
heroic action and his effective employment of the few troops at his disposal,
prevented numbers casualties, extricated his men from a grave situation, and
inflicted many losses on the enemy. His outstanding leadership, personal
bravery and zealous devotion to duty at the cost of his life, exemplify the
highest traditions of the military forces of the United States and reflect
great credit upon himself, the 32nd Infantry Division, and the
United States Army. Headquarters, U.S. Forces-Pacific, General Orders No. 53
(1945).”
Undated articles probably from The Grand Rapids Herald, 1945 |
John “Jack” Carlisle,
reporter for The Detroit News, was
with the 32nd Division during the Villa Verde action and wrote about
Colonel Howe. He titled it, The Colonel
Was a School Teacher, and included it in his 1945 published book, Red
Arrow Men: Stories About the 32nd Division on the Villa Verde.
About Howe, he wrote: “Col. Howe is a
front-line leader. When I last saw him he was still limping around the front
lines with a Jap hand-grenade slug in his right leg. He refused to go to the
rear. ‘Some day,’ he said, ‘I’ll have that piece of shell cut out’” The
rest of the story focused on the tough battle faced by Howe and his men.
The Grand Rapids Press 8/28/1945 |
Details of the crash and Howe’s death were provided by General Yamashita.
The Grand Rapids Press 9/24/1945 |
Tech4 Charles P. Murdock, in his featured
story for the November 10, 1945 edition of The
Saturday Evening Post titled, “The
Red Arrow Pierced Every Line,” had this to say about Howe: “The moment of triumph was to have its
anticlimax of bitter tragedy. Col. Merle H. Howe, the forty-nine-year-old Grand
Rapids schoolteacher who became the 32nd’s most decorated officer, was killed
in a plane crash near Yamashita’s headquarters, while making daily flights
there in connection with surrender negotiations. Colonel Howe at various times
had commanded all the division’s regiments. He was a sort of living symbol of
what the division had been through.”
Howe memorial ceremony 1945 |
MERLE H. HOWE
COL 128 INF
32 DIV
MICHIGAN AUG
30 1945
APO 32, 11 September
1945
GENERAL ORDERS NO 308
The
death of Colonel Merle H. Howe, Commanding Officer of the 128TH Infantry
Regiment, who was killed in action while participating in an aerial flight on
30 August 1945, is announced with deep regret.
For many years Colonel Howe served his country with distinction. Enlisting as a private on 15 August 1917, he emerged from World War I as an Air Corps pilot with the rank of First Lieutenant. He completed more than a year of service in France during World War I.
When the 32D Infantry Division was re-activated in October 1940, Colonel Howe once again volunteered his services and was assigned to the 126TH Infantry as Regimental S-3, and later rendered invaluable services as Division G-3 during the early stages of the Division’s overseas service in World War II. Serving successively as Commanding Officer of the 127TH, 126TH and 128TH Infantry Regiments, he demonstrated exceptional ability and a devotion to duty which earned him the respect and admiration of officers and men throughout the entire Division.
The
memory of Colonel Howe’s valiant deeds, his unselfish faithful service and fine
soldierly qualities will long live in the minds and hearts of the officers and
men of the 32D Infantry Division. His was an honorable and
distinguished career and in his death the nation lost one of its finest
citizens, the “Red Arrow” Division one of its most distinguished soldiers.
ROBERT B. McBRIDE,
JR.,
Brigadier General, U.S. Army,
Commanding.
Brigadier General, U.S. Army,
Commanding.
Following the war, there were
several memorials and recognitions created to honor the life and legacy of
Colonel Howe. These are probably just some of them:
- · In May 1946, the program for the annual banquet
sponsored by the Union High School Community Council dedicated a full page as a
special memorial to Colonel Merle Howe, a member of the faculty for twenty
years.
- · The Colonel Merle H. Howe Medal for Military
Proficiency was originally awarded the best soldier in the 126th
Infantry. Later this became the top award for the 1st Battle Group
126th Infantry, then the 2nd Brigade 46th
Division, and eventually the 46th Brigade 38th Division,
each of these units headquartered in Grand Rapids and then Wyoming, Michigan.
The medal was first awarded during the annual encampment at Camp Grayling in
1949 to Sgt. Eugene J. Harmsen, Company L.
- · The Colonel Merle H. Howe Trophy was awarded annually
to the Junior Reserve Officer Training Corp company in the Grand Rapids Public
School system that received the highest rating in a federal inspection
typically held at the armory. This was created as a family memorial and for a
number of years, Mrs. Virginia Howe presented the trophy.
- · Also, in 1948 the Earl R. Stewart American Legion Post
voted to change the name of their club to the Stewart-Howe Red Arrow Post.
Stewart was a former commander of the 126th and Michigan’s 63rd
Brigade.
- · In August 1949, the Michigan National Guardsman reported the organization of a board of
officers to name roads, camp areas, or landmarks at Camp Grayling as memorials
to officers and men of the Michigan National Guard who have given their lives
in the service of their state or country. While no follow-up articles have been
located to determine the process and results, the August 1951 edition of the Guardsman carried a map sketch of the
main camp that indicated the Upper Lake Road was now named Howe Road. This was
the first year the road carried that designation.
Main road at Camp Grayling renamed "Howe Road" (red arrow) |
- · The old Union High School football field was named in honor of Colonel Howe.
Postscripts
Virginia Mullen Howe never
remarried after the death of her husband, Merle, and according to her obituary,
she finished the job of raising her
children, sending them to college, seeing them married, and welcoming
grandchildren. During her many years of widowhood, she devoted herself to her
family, to travel, and to good works in the Grand Rapids community. She served
for more than a quarter century as a Red Cross volunteer in family service
work. She…was an honorary member of the American Legion (Stewart-Howe Post) and
the Red Arrow Club. At her death on May 2, 1997, Virginia and her late
husband were survived by a daughter, Virginia Howe Gmeiner of Key Largo,
Florida; son, John Tomas Howe of Los Altos, California; and son, Joseph Wehner
Howe of Annandale, Virginia.
Their youngest daughter,
Marion Howe Alquist of Grand Rapids, passed away in 1994, a victim of polio she
had contracted in 1953. After graduating from South High School, she had earned
a bachelor’s degree from Western Michigan University. Despite her disease, she
served as a tutor in mathematics for a number of years and an at-home employee
of the Red Cross for 22 years. She and her husband, Robert, had two daughters
and four grandsons at the time of Marion’s death. In September 1954, she had
been in Marquette, Michigan when doctors at that location prescribed treatments
available back in Grand Rapids. However, the doctors had ruled out any long
auto or train trip, so arrangements were made with the Michigan National Guard
to use the Adjutant General’s plane to fly her home.
Eldest daughter Virginia Howe
Gmeiner passed away on April 14, 2000 in Key Largo, Florida.
Son, John Thomas Howe enjoyed
a career in engineering and the sciences in the Palo Alto region of California.
Although he would be 91 at this writing, it is not known whether he still
survives.
Their youngest son, Joseph W.
Howe, was the top graduating student in Central High School’s class of 1950,
and as a result he earned a one-year scholarship to Princeton University. He
was a National Honor Society student and a member of the JROTC program all four
years of high school. At Princeton, he received the Paul C. Martin 1898
Memorial Scholarship over his final three years which enabled Joseph to
graduate in 1954. It is not known at this writing if he still survives.
The Grand Rapids Press 2/2/1973 |
-->
Sources:
126th Infantry Association Archive, Grand Valley
Armory, Wyoming, Michigan
Ancestry.com
Britten, David G, Lieutenant Colonel (Retired). Courage
Without Fear: The Story of the Grand Rapids Guard. Xlibris, 2004
Eichelberger, Robert L., Lieutenant General. Our Jungle
Road to Tokyo. 1950
Blakeley, H. W., Major General. The 32nd
Infantry Division In World War II. 1957
Carlisle, John M. Red Arrow Men: Stories About the 32nd
Division on the Villa Verde Trail. Detroit, 1945
Tuscania, an American History; on Rootsweb http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~carmita/history/Regiment/158thAero.html
Various editions of The
Grand Rapids Press and The Grand
Rapids Herald
Various editions of the Michigan
National Guardsman
Dunbar, Willis F. Michigan Through the Centuries.
Volume IV, Family and Personal History. 1955
Official National Guard Register, 1943 (Active)
Howe, Merle H. – TracesOfWar.com
Others as noted within the text