Alex was originally buried in France. He was exhumed and reburied in the American cemetery in Luxembourg, the same cemetery General Patton was buried in. There are five Easy Company KIA members buried there, including Skip Muck. We have two burial flags—it’s possible one flag came from each cemetery. Alex was one of the many first generation Americans who ended up being buried in Europe, families who emigrated to America from Europe, then their sons went back to Europe to fight.
I told Eileen O’Hara, Skip Muck’s niece, that our families were bonded together forever that one dark night in 1945. Recently we invited Eileen and her husband, Tom, to a Penkala family reunion. The Muck and Penkala families are close even today, more than sixty years later.
What’s the one thing I’d want people to know about my uncle? All the vets I’ve talked to say these things: He was a good soldier. He always did his job. You could always count on him. Alex Penkala Jr. saw what he had to do and did it. He made the supreme sacrifice. That’s how I’d want people to remember him.
26
ROBERT VAN KLINKEN
Interview with Gariann Wrenchy, great-niece With information from Cora Bingman, niece
As a little girl, Gariann Wrenchey had always wondered about the picture on her Grandma Susie’s bedside table. She knew she would never meet the dashing young man shown in the picture. He was gone. But Gariann always felt like she had a connection with her great-uncle, Robert Van Klinken. His sacrifice to his country was something the family had never forgotten.
When she was grown, Gariann began to ask questions. At first, no one wanted to talk. But her grandmother brought out from the closet a box with the young man’s personal effects. The box hadn’t been touched in fifty years, just a pile of photographs, news clippings, certificates, and documents with some other effects at the top. Gariann went to work.
Inside the box was an old wallet with a dollar bill inside that had been signed by a few buddies, a ring with the initial “R” on it, a few foreign coins with holes drilled through them, and an address for a veteran named Bill Wingett.
There was a patch torn from green military clothing. The patch showed a swastika surrounded with a red border with oak leaves above it. Gariann found it a bit creepy. It looked like the patch had been hacked with a bayonet from somebody’s clothes. The bayonet was also still in the box.
An original set of paratrooper jump wings was there, along with a note to Gariann’s grandmother. “Susie don’t lose these, you have to realize what I went through to earn them.”
Inside the wallet was a photograph of two young women eating an ice cream sundae and grinning. On the back of the picture was written, “Hello Cake Face.”
Then there were letters. Most were still in their envelopes with post-marks from Toccoa, South Carolina, and England. They were written in clean, strong handwriting, often in pencil, and many on military stationery, now yellowed and fading. Gariann read them all.
Robert Van Klinken wrote to two sets of people. The first bunch of letters was to his parents. The information was shorter, tidier, and less revealing. The second set was addressed to Susie (Robert’s sister and Gariann’s grandmother), Johnny (Susie’s husband and Robert’s best buddy), and their young son, Walt. In this second bunch of letters, Robert spoke more freely.
What follows is the story of Robert Van Klinken, as revealed by family members and Robert’s own letters.
Letters Home
Robert Van Klinken was born October 31, 1919, in Loomis, Washington, a city close to the Canadian border known for its mining. In the early 1920s, Robert and his family moved to Twisp, another small town in Washington State, where he grew up.
He was a country boy who loved to hunt and fish. Pictures show him dressed in overalls and standing next to chickens and old barns.
His parents had emigrated from the Netherlands and become tenant apple orchardists in the United States. They were very poor and never owned their own farm, but even during the Great Depression, they always had food. Robert’s sister Susie was known to be spoiled, even though the family was so poor. Her father taught her horse how to jump fences because he didn’t think his little girl should have to get off her horse and open gates. The kids didn’t fight and got along well. Susie looked up to Robert like he was her hero.
Robert graduated from high school in 1939. There’s a picture of him with his graduating class up on the wall in the old Twisp High School. Susie graduated the next year, 1940, and immediately married Johnny Klinkert, Bob’s good friend. There was another brother in the family, Gene, but he was much younger, and Robert never addressed any letters to him.
Robert became a diesel mechanic who sometimes worked in logging. He was a good natured young man who dated a lot and dreamed of getting married someday.
When war broke out, he was in his mid-twenties and initially thought he was too old to go to war. That he went into the Army in the first place only makes his story more poignant. Right before he joined, he had a job offer with a defense industry company in Alaska. It would have meant a fortune for him, and it would have also kept him out of the war. Robert wrote:
Uncle Sam sure played a dirty trick on me when he put me in the army. I signed a contract with Deims Drake Company for 1 year to work as a mechanic in Kodiak Alaska at $450 a month. I bought a ticket for $87 on the steamship Yukon and $40 of clothes and was all ready to sail. Just about 15 hours before I was to leave, the Army called. If I’d got to Kodiak they would have given me a deferment as it was an air base for the Navy.
After being drafted, one of his first letters home was to Susie’s new husband, Johnny, with whom Robert often fished and hunted. The letter was postmarked August 19, 1942, and sent from the reception center at Fort Lewis, Washington.
John,
I’m in. Better stick to the navy yard. I’m getting a better break than I expected. Signed up for the parachute troops. Don’t write till you hear from me. Leaving here soon.
Bob
Robert made a prime candidate for the paratroopers. He was in good shape, certainly not afraid of shooting a rifle, and impressed with the fifty dollars a month extra pay.
A month later, September 28, 1942, Robert wrote again, this time from Camp Toccoa. Always the ladies’ man, Robert talked about eating a meal at his girlfriend’s house down in Georgia. He must have met her right away, because the men hadn’t been at the camp for very long.
Dear Susie, Johnny, and Walt,
What happened to the Plymouth? Did it start using oil? Sounds good to hear that Johnny got a scope on his rifle. You shouldn’t have any trouble getting a buck, you have two good guns. You should see the artillery we have here. Machine guns 30 cal. M1 Springfield Garand and carbines. I am training with an M1 now. It sure is a sweet pill squirter. I understand when we jump we will have the barrel strapped to one leg and the stalk to the other. Two fellows got killed jumping at Benning yesterday. They rolled up in their chutes when they hit the ground they were rolled up in the silk like a silkworm, so you see, jumping isn’t easy.
Toccoa has a reputation for making Supermen, and it’s not wrong. Everything is done on the double time around here. We take a run up a mountain about as steep as Twisp Pass two or three times a week along with the rest of our training. Every time I go up it gets easier. Boy I sure feel swell. Nothing to worry about, and got a swell bunch of fellows in our barracks. The last time I ran up the mountain I stood guard duty all night. I was up about 36 hours and kept up with the lieutenant, so you see I am getting in shape again.
If I wash out of this outfit, I’ll go to the infantry and maybe later to the mechanics or truck driving. You should see my jumpsuits. They have 17 pockets and are full with knives and ammunition, grenades and such stuff. Also carry a pistol. A guy can’t get any good drinking liquor, just Mt. Dew. All the girls want to do is sit at home or go to church. I had a home cooked meal last Sunday at my girlfriend’s place. Boy it sure was good.
Be sure to get that buck for me. Nothing less than 4 points.
Bob
In another letter, Robert described being in E Company to his folks: “This is the best and toughest outfit in the army. It beats the regular army and the navy. It’s like the Marines parachute troops. The definition of a paratrooper is a soldier who lands in hell in a parachute and runs the devil out with his own fork.”
He talked about being on maneuvers in the “frying pan” in Alabama. He joked with his parents about not liking his uniform (evidently they had sent him a letter saying this in the meantime). “Well, the army’s only got two sizes of clothes: too big and too small.”
His letters were written on different camp stationeries to addresses with no streets or zip codes, often as simple as to “Mrs. W. Van Klinken, Pateros, Washington.” He often wrote folksy, newsy notes home to his sister and brother-in-law. In one, postmarked October 12, 1942, from Toccoa, he wrote:
Dear Johnny, Susie, Walt, and Sleepy [Sleepy was Robert’s dog]
Haven’t anything to do tonight, so I’ll write you a letter. I got stymied out of a pass tonight so I feel pretty ornery. After doing 7 miles marching last night and 13 miles of double time today I got a little blister on my foot. The C.O. sent me to the dispensary. The medical officer dumped a bucket of paint on it and gave me hell for bothering him. So I didn’t get my pass.
I can’t get used to this darned weather. It’s hotter than hell in the day and frosty at night.
The nuts and persimmons are getting ripe and dropping. I and Dick—[probably PFC Dick Garrod, who was good friends with Van Klinken along with PFC Bill Wingett] he got hooked on his pass, too—and are going out and getting a sack full tomorrow.
What do you think of the snapshot of my lady friend? She is going to be madder than hell at me because I didn’t go to see her and go to church. I sho cain’t figure out these Southern folks. All they want to do is go to church. If a soldier goes to church he gets more invites out to dinner than he can keep in a month.
So long,
Bob
More folksy letters followed with more news of training.
Dear Johnny, Susie, Walt
Hi, you kids look like you got the breaks deer hunting. Sure wish I could have been with you. I sure miss the steaks. Say, could you guys make up a couple of pounds of jerky and send it down.
You’re not the only ones getting the breaks. First I get a PFC rating, then I am in the group of the 10 best men of Co E to run the qualifying course against the battalion. Then I get picked out as 1 of the 5 men in our company for demolition training. Boy, I am working like a cat on a tin roof and really enjoying it.
Robert’s parents were known to be reserved and strict, people who didn’t show affection around each other. They spoke Dutch to each other when they wanted to have private conversations. Robert’s father was twenty years older than his mother. His mother was a very religious and stoic person who dug her own basement, canned her own food, and worked hard around the farm.
Two letters described the march from Toccoa to Atlanta, both before and after, one to his parents, one to Johnny and Susie:
Dear Folks,
Just received your letter. I got 2 days before we start marching to Atlanta on our way to Fort Benning. I just got off a 3 day march which covered about 50 or 60 miles. The day before yesterday I walked 31 miles with 20 pounds of T.N.T. on my back. Guess I haven’t told you I am on the demolition squad.
I finished up my training here today and am leaving for Benning Monday. That’s going to be a march of a hundred miles. I am dog tired now, so I’ll be dead on my feet when I get there.
You asked if you could send me something. You could send me a box of oatmeal cookies, but wait till I write you from Benning.
Bob
Dear Johnny and Susie,
Just received your letter, was glad to hear from you. Just got the kinks shook loose in my hind legs after that march. You probably heard about it over the radio or through the newspapers. They sure gave us a write up about it. If you was in this outfit, you’d do more squawking than you do in the Navy Yard. We really catch hell down here. The first night was sure tough. It was raining when we went to bed and it cleared up so we had to climb into frozen clothes and shoes with 2 inches of mud in them. When we got into Atlanta, the “ole man” let us go in town and get cleaned up. You should have seen me and Dick drinking hot brandy while sitting in a hot bath of water.
Believe it or not but I have only been drunk once since I left home. I haven’t anything to worry about and am getting fat on GI chow.
About Christmas the general will pin a set of silver wings on me.
We are having a hell of a lot of trouble with the other outfits. They are jealous as hell that the city of Atlanta gave us a big pennant. Every time someone yells “currahee” there’s hell a popping and the MPs make themselves scarce. Wish you were down here to join the excitement. I won’t be home for Christmas. Don’t expect me until you see me.
So long,
Bob
Right before Christmas 1942, Robert wrote his folks a short letter, which was inserted into a Christmas card, then wrote Johnny and Susie a longer letter describing his jumping and some information about a girlfriend he was becoming serious about.