Home > Honorees > Walker, James W. (803rd)
Walker, James W. (803rd) Print E-mail
People - Honorees

James-W-Walker-1James W. Walker

Biography:  James W. Walker was born on January 4, 1918, in Hall County, Georgia.  He was the son of James Harris Walker and Margaret Melvinia Stallings. After leaving school, James worked as a farmhand.

Service Time:  James entered the service on August 25, 1942 at Fort McPherson, Georgia. He was initially assigned to Company D, of the 29th Infantry Training Battalion, before leaving for Camp Hood and assignment to B Company of the 803rd Tank Destroyer battalion. The 803rd departed the U.S. in June 1943 on the Queen Mary and arrived in England on July 6th.  After additional training, the unit crossed the channel and landed at Omaha Beach, on June 13, 1944.  Their initial engagement was at St. Clair, France  but only a month later, they would see heavy resistance at the now famous, St. Lo.  It would be during this action that James would distinguish himself by pulling his tank destroyer into an intersection to knock out an enemy tank.  Even after the TD received a direct hit, he managed to leave the vehicle and guide it to a covered position.  He was awarded the Silver Star for Gallantry.  Sadly, it was during this same action that his commanding officer was killed.

Silver Star Certificate

The 803rd went on to the Siegfried Line and operations in Aachen and the Hurtgen Forest and then back to the Siegfried Line again and were committed to the Ardennes just before the German offensive.  They helped capture Trier and joined in operations at the Ruhr pocket, ending up in Czechoslovakia.  The 803rd, as well as James, received credit for campaigns in Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, the Ardennes and Central Europe. 

James left Europe on November 6, 1945 and arrived in the U.S. on the 13th.  He was discharged 7 days later at Camp Gordon, Georgia, at the rank of Sergeant.  Among the items that he brought home was a German P38, a pair of 10 x 50 binoculars and a Zeiss Ikon camera.  He also had a few of the Nazi armbands and several uniform insignias.

Honorable Discharge

James-Walker-2James-Walker-3


James went back to work at what he knew best, farming, and would turn those skills he had learned into a career in a USDA Research Station.  In May of 1948, James married the former Janette Fambrough.  She was the daughter of Herbert Fambrough and O'Ree Robison.  The couple resided in Watkinsville, Georgia and had one daughter, Joyce Walker Baugh.  James passed away on March 8, 2002 and was buried at the Antioch Christian Church in Watkinsville, GA.

I want to thank both James' daughter Joyce and her husband Charlie for providing the information and photos for this article.

In addition to the above information, Joyce and her husband have done extensive research on James' time in the military through various official documentation.  They have compiled a spreadsheet timeline which applies to both James and the 803rd.

Walker and 803rd Military Timeline

Last Updated on Thursday, 16 August 2012 17:33
 

DonateNowBtn
Please consider a donation to keep our efforts going.