Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ North Las Vegas dedicated a day to a 97-year-old former military pilot.

‘An ordinary guy that got lucky,’ Parker says about military career

- By Briana Erickson

WHILE in the Air Force and the U.S. Army Air Corps, Maj. James Parker prided himself on always taking the left seat in the cockpit.

“I was always the pilot, never the co-pilot,” the 97-year-old says with a smile.

The World War II veteran has a decorated military career to show for it, with 49 years of flying experience and 23,000 flight hours under his belt. To honor his achievemen­ts, the city of North Las Vegas declared Saturday “Jim Parker Day.”

At the Sun City Aliante Community

Center on Saturday afternoon, the Veterans Club of Sun City Aliante, a representa­tive from Rep. Steven Horsford’s office, North Las Vegas Councilman Richard Cherchio, Councilman Scott Black and a roomful of his friends and family celebrated Parker’s service.

“He’s really an icon. He’s an amazing person,” said Cherchio, whose father also served in World War II. “There’s a lot of living history of service to our country right in front of us here, and I thought, why don’t we have a special day for Jim?”

The idea was carried out by Vietnam War-era veteran and Parker’s neighbor, Richard Lawhead, who organized Jim Parker Day because, he said, Parker is a “true national treasure.”

For the humble Parker, it was also a chance to match his grandson, retired Air Force Maj. Trent Arnold. The two wore their blue military uniforms to mark the inaugural makeshift holiday.

“Life experience is something, in my book, to learn and grow by,” Parker said Saturday, proudly sitting next to his wife, Joyce. “I still consider myself an ordinary guy that got lucky with all of these wonderful experience­s, and I’m still living today to talk about them.”

Parker was presented Saturday

with a glass case displaying the medals he earned during his service, including the Air Force Commendati­on Medal and the Distinguis­hed Flying Cross. Samantha Bivens from Horsford’s office awarded him with the first monthly “Horsford Hero” award for veterans. Two women from the Quilt of Valor organizati­on presented him a handmade quilt depicting ships and aircraft at Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941.

His grandson, Arnold, also received a quilt.

“This is for a man who survived the greatest world war, for a man who honored his God, his country and his family, to see him safely home each time he took flight,” the retired Air Force major said of his grandfathe­r.

“Jim Parker’s discipline has contribute­d to a family tree the size of a redwood. … Look around at the veterans around you and set the stage to tell their stories before it’s too late.”

A farm boy’s dreams

Parker, the fifth of six children, said he always dreamed of flying as he was growing up on a farm in the small town of McCaulley, Texas.

“I’d never seen an airplane, but yet here I am, backwoods on a farm, wanting to be a pilot,” Parker said in an interview Wednesday at his home in Sun City Aliante.

On March 28, 1941, at 19, Parker hitchhiked to the recruiting station with 20 cents in his pocket and enlisted in the Army Air Corps.

Parker recalls standing with about about 300 recruits at basic training. The group was asked how many of them had a high school diploma. Twenty-two, including Parker, raised their hands and were selected for pilot training.

He passed the test and entered training in February 1942.

Shortly after, he met Joyce, his wife of 76 years, at a Halloween party. He was 20, and she was 19. They were married on Oct. 7, 1942, by a judge in a Reno courthouse. Parker credits some of his accomplish­ments to his wife, because “behind every successful man is an even stronger woman.”

“I could do anything I wanted, as long as she approved of it first,” he added, jokingly.

The couple have three adult children: Jimmy, Patti and Susan. They went on to have four grandchild­ren, seven great-grandchild­ren and two great-great grandchild­ren. In their Sun City Aliante home, pictures of the happy and vibrant couple document the life they shared together. These days, Parker takes care of his wife, who was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease five years ago.

Despite her loss of memory, Joyce Parker remembers her husband well. On a recent morning, she repeatedly told him the same four words he said he hopes she will never forget.

“I love you, James.”

Reality of war

After Parker attended bombing navigator school in Waco, Texas, he had orders to go to Saudi Arabia. He flew a Grumman SA-16 “Flying Boat” and performed air rescue missions in the Persian Gulf.

Parker said that he wasn’t quite sure yet if he was ready for war when he enlisted, but a crash landing while stationed in Pergola, Italy, opened his eyes to the reality of it all.

“I grew up real fast on that flight,” he said. “I didn’t know whether I was a real man or just a baby, but combat changes that real fast.”

Parker remembers Dec. 19, 1943, vividly. His B-17 “Flying Fortress” was flying over Germany on a bombing mission when the nineman crew was attacked head on by about 40 enemy fighters, armed with rockets and a 20 mm cannon.

The plane was struck repeatedly, and its elevators, radio, interphone and oxygen systems became disabled. Carefully maneuverin­g the aircraft, Parker managed to beat off consistent attacks until they were

clear of the target. The crew is credited for destroying six enemy fighters and damaging several others.

“I had the best gunners in the world, and they took care of the situation,” he said. “They never ran

“I said, ‘I’ll tell you what, you’ve got a blank check. Just sign your signature.’ He just cracked up. He got the biggest kick out of that. I knew then he was the kinda guy that I liked.”

Parker takes things a little slower these days. He spends time with his family, and he passed his driver’s test in March with flying colors. It’s easier than flying, Parker said. All you have to do is pay attention. Plus, he said, he has a built-in GPS system in his head.

He also has some advice on longevity. He said he has never had a taste of alcohol in his life. He needed all the mind he had to get everything right, he said. But Parker still might try it when he turns 100.

“If you keep your mind alive and actively do things you’ve never done before, you’ll succeed,” he said. “Once I got in an airplane, I didn’t want anything else.”

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-Journal @bizutesfay­e ?? Former Army Air Corps and Air Force pilot James Parker, 97, talks Wednesday at his Las Vegas home about his military service.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-Journal @bizutesfay­e Former Army Air Corps and Air Force pilot James Parker, 97, talks Wednesday at his Las Vegas home about his military service.
 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-Journal @Left_Eye_Images ?? James Parker, with daughter Susan, left, and wife, Joyce, acknowledg­es the audience Saturday as the Veterans Club of Sun City Aliante and North Las Vegas honored him.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-Journal @Left_Eye_Images James Parker, with daughter Susan, left, and wife, Joyce, acknowledg­es the audience Saturday as the Veterans Club of Sun City Aliante and North Las Vegas honored him.
 ??  ?? In this 1943 photo, James Parker, right, stands in front of his Douglas A-20 Havoc, with his wife’s name painted on the side.
In this 1943 photo, James Parker, right, stands in front of his Douglas A-20 Havoc, with his wife’s name painted on the side.
 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-Journal @Left_Eye_Images ?? James Parker speaks to guests Saturday at the Sun City Aliante Community Center. North Las Vegas Councilman Richard Cherchio called him “an amazing person.”
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-Journal @Left_Eye_Images James Parker speaks to guests Saturday at the Sun City Aliante Community Center. North Las Vegas Councilman Richard Cherchio called him “an amazing person.”

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