4:58 | The war was over but SeaBee Billy Bryant stayed for nine months on Okinawa building air strips and roads. There were Japanese holdouts in caves and fierce typhoons, but it was a great experience for him.
Keywords : Billy Bryant Construction Battalion (Seabee) Okinawa air strip F4U Corsair Japanese prisoner typhoon
After he volunteered for the Navy in 1944, Billy Bryant completed basic training and, along with 800 other new sailors, took a battery of aptitude tests. The Navy decided all 800 of them would be SeaBees. On the train to California, he was put in charge of the men, leading him to think they must have decided he was very smart. That wasn't it.
SeaBee Billy Bryant recalls how he was moved around California, working on different construction projects before he was shipped out to the Pacific. The aim was to expose the men to a lot of different skills. On the way to Okinawa, the first atomic bomb was dropped and the war was nearly over when he got there.