Sterling man saw action as paratrooper

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John "Jack" McMillin
John "Jack" McMillin
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Note to readers: This is the third in a series of Sauk Valley Newspapers articles on some of the World War II veterans who are going to Washington, D.C., Nov. 10 on the Whiteside County Honor Flight.

STERLING – John “Jack” McMillin, 85, of Sterling, remembers Tokyo Rose, serving in the Philippines and Okinawa, and parachuting into the midst of gunfire.

He will be among the 37 World War II military veterans from Whiteside County traveling via Honor Flight to Washington, D.C., on Nov. 10.

McMillin was a buck sergeant with three stripes during World War II. He says he recalls the good times more than the bad.

“The Japanese people were really duped,” he said. “They didn’t know how big the world really was, and their leaders weren’t about to tell them. Once they were scattered out, we took care of them.”

Not a bad feat for troops who initially trained with broomsticks because they didn’t have rifles, McMillin said.

The former paratrooper enlisted in the Army in 1943 and left the military in 1947. He joined the Army Airborne, led a platoon and made 17 jumps during his military career, but only two were into combat situations.

“I heard I could earn $50 more a month as a paratrooper, so I said ‘why not,’” McMillin said. “What they didn’t tell me was that first I had to go through basic training and then I had to make five practice jumps before I started getting the extra pay. It took about six months before I started seeing that money.”

There were a lot of casualties among the troops, but mostly from malaria and dysentery, he said.

Some of his fondest memories were of listening to the music played by the Japanese-American radio star, Tokyo Rose.

“She played all of the music the U.S. military personnel liked,” he said. “I liked listening to her show.”

She often surprised them with her knowledge of their movements.

“We were sent into New Guinea to fight the [Japanese],” McMillin recalled. “No one was supposed to know where we were, but she comes on the radio and says, ‘Welcome 11th Airborne.’ We don’t know how she did it, but somehow, she knew.”

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