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6 would follow the first-line troops inland and continue to provide directions for bombing the enemy. He served in the Pacific, mostly in the Philippine islands of Luzon, Panay and Leyte, and on Iwo Jima. He did see combat. "It was at Leyte the day before (Gen. Douglas) MacArthur arrived and made his 'I have returned' speech. We were out in the field and I was marching with a full radio pack on my back. I saw this Japanese soldier with a gun. And I had a gun. I shot and he disappeared." Gilliland recalls shooting a 20-millimeter deck-mounted gun at Japanese Zero fighter aircraft as they made kamikaze attacks on American soldiers. "You would shoot right at them as they came across. But then a lot of us were shooting. You could see our tracer bullets flying. You don't know if you hit it or someone else hit it. But you saw the plane go down." Gilliland is the son of a Baptist minister. He was born in Bridgeport, a stone's throw from the Tennessee state line. His father, N.L. Gilliland, moved to the East Lake community of Birmingham when Charles was 18 months old to attend Howard College (now Samford University). Gilliland moved often as his father transferred from church to church. "They would call him in if a church had a split or some congregational problem," he said. "When he got things back right, he would move on to the next one." His stops included Alabama City near Gadsden; Valley Head near Fort Payne; and Jasper's Westside Baptist Church. Gilliland attended Walker and Dora high schools. His two brothers were already in the Navy by the time 16-year-old Charles tried to join in 1942. N.L. initially objected but agreed to sign the papers when Charles turned 17. Boot camp took him to San Diego. His tour of duty included Pearl Harbor, Wellington, New Zealand and New Guinea, where he had the most enjoyable experiences of the war. "The natives would wave their hands and motion us to throw our dimes, nickels and quarters in the water, and they would dive while they were sinking, get them and bring them back up. It was really entertaining. It took our mind off things it didn't need to be on." Gilliland learned the politics of the military when the mother of his best friend, Henry Lima, died in Los Angeles. Lima's request to go home for her funeral was denied, while an officer was granted leave to return to the States for the birth of his child. "I wanted to give somebody a good whipping," Gilliland said. After his military discharge in February 1946, Gilliland was hired by Alabama Power's Bill Perryman as a tree-trimmer. He then became what was known as a "groundman" (before bucket trucks), running tools and supplies up ropes to linemen on power poles. Gilliland's Alabama Power career included the positions of apprentice lineman, lineman, lead lineman, crew foreman and engineer aide, taking him through Haleyville, Cordova, Dora and Jasper before he retired in 1989. • By Gilbert Nicholson OUR VETERANS Gilliland and wife, Jackie, at home in Jasper. Photo by Gilbert Nicholson