Remembering a legacy
D-Day paratrooper from Fairchance researched by great-nephew
Brett Hickleâs father loved reading about World War II as a child. So when heâd go to visit extended family, it would have been natural for him to ask a family member who served what it was like.
But the people whoâd seen the kind of combat that would excite a young World War II buff are often the most reluctant to speak about it.
The family directive was âno one ask Uncle Bill about the war,â said Hickle, of Parkersburg, W.Va.
So it wasnât until the obituary for Bill P. Straitiff came out that Hickle and his father learned that Straitiff had served in the Armyâs 101st Airborne Division, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment â the same regiment as the group famously profiled in the book and miniseries âBand of Brothers.â
That led to Hickle digging into the history of the Fairchance native, and even meeting some of his comrades who, like Straitiff, jumped into Normandy on D-Day.
He started search the internet for Straitiffâs name. It popped up in an account in 101st veteran Donald Burgettâs memoir, âBeyond the Rhine.â Straitiff, a body builder, punched out an SS officer in a fistfight and threw him into the river.
âI shared that with my dad, and he said, âThat sounds like Uncle Bill,'â Hickle said.
Straitiff entered the Army in December 1942. He was discharged in November 1945, receiving the Ruptured Duck lapel pin for honorable service.
A news article from the time said Straitiff was the only paratrooper from Fairchance to serve in World War II, Hickle said.
In those three years, Straitiff earned a number of medals and commendations, including a Bronze Star. He received a Parachute Badge with an arrowhead â denoting a combat drop â and two stars.
Straitiffâs Purple Heart came after being wounded in Noville-lez-Bastogne in Belgium, where the Americans were holding off a German siege during the Battle of the Bulge.
Still a private when he jumped into Normandy, he became a sergeant by the end of the war.
Looking to learn more about his uncle, Hickle began writing to Burgett and other veterans whoâd served in the 101st when he was in high school.
One responded to him, eventually inviting him to a reunion of the 101stâs 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, A Company, in 2005.
âI was actually the first non-veteran they put in their company photo,â he said.
Hickle got to hear the memories of those whoâd fought alongside him. Heâs also pieced together more of Straitiffâs history from his cousins, including a story about D-Day, when Straitiff landed in Ravenoville, a Normandy village near Utah Beach.
As the battle in the town was dying down, Straitiff was one of the soldiers tasked with kicking in doors to clear buildings.
Entering one, Straitiff heard a noise off to his side.
He pointed his rifle in the direction of the noise, then lowered it.
In the corner, he saw a group of women and children cowering, scared from the battle outside.
âHe said that was the only time he was scared of the war â not what would happen to him, but what would happen to them,â Hickle said.
At the dedication of the memorial, Hickle was told, a woman who lived in town told a story of sheltering in a home where a soldier had lowered his rifle once he saw them â though Hickle canât be sure it was the same one.
Straitiffâs legacy endures in other ways. When Hickle was in basic training at Fort Sill, an Army post in Oklahoma, they would recite a cadence called âDown By the River.â
The words (âWe took a little walk/Ran into the enemy/Had a little talk/We didnât like their attitudeâ) supposedly drew inspiration from what Straitiff did to the Nazi soldier.
After the war, Straitiff moved to Claymont, Del., with his wife, Nevada, whoâd served in the Womenâs Army Corps. He got a job at a manufacturing plant. Straitiff would remain in Delaware until his death in 1999, when he was 77.
Hickle celebrates what Straitiff and the others of the 101st accomplished during the war.
And even if Straitiff and his fellow servicemen were circumspect about their accomplishments, they still took pride in them, Hickle said.
Straitiffâs grave lists his status as an Army sergeant during World War II, his Bronze Star â and his place in Company A, 506th Parachute Infantry, 101st Airborne.
âThey were proud of what they did,â Hickle said. âThey didnât want to be in combat, but they knew they had to in order to protect everyone.â


