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Onto Rugged Shores: The Voyage of LST 534
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When Henry Norman
Alvers contracted Alzheimers Disease, his daughter, producer Linda Alvers, began
investigating her father's life, focusing on his service in World War II. The fruits of
Alvers research is the documentary, Onto Rugged Shores: The Voyage of LST534.
The "Landing
Ship Tank" or LST was a flat-bottomed floating warehouse designed to transport tanks
and other heavy vehicles and equipment to France for the Normandy invasion. (Indeed, D-Day
could not have occurred before its invention.) Onto Rugged Shores chronicles the
path of one of these boats, LST534, from its manufacture in an Evansville, Indiana,
shipyard through its perilous convoy crossing over the North Atlantic, its circuitous
travels among English ports in the build-up preparatory to D-Day, and its role in the
invasion itself. After D-Day, its crew assumed their part of the war was over, but in fact
LST534 was slated for service in the Pacific.
Upon its return
Stateside, the ship underwent refitting while its crew received a well deserved (and
apparently memorably decadent) leave in New York City. When the ship was once again ready
for action, it sailed through the Panama Canal to the Pacific where it took part in the
landing at Okinawa. After the surrender in Tokyo Bay, LST534 was making its way home for
good when a typhoon beached it on a coral reef. The good ship, finally damaged beyond
repair, was scuttled in the Pacific.
Only a few
photographs were ever taken of LST534, but this loss was compensated for by some priceless
film footage taken by a crew member. Two significant events in the ship's life that were
captured for posterity are included in Onto Rugged Shores: the initiation rites
administered to some fresh recruits, and the shipboard fire that ensued from a kamikaze
pilots hit at Okinawa.
Venerable journalist
and narrator Howard K. Smith fills in the historical details about LST534, but the heart
of Onto Rugged Shores lies in its interviews with her former crew. These men
recount their experiences many of which are alarming in their peril and horror
in understated tones, while their eyes gleam with pride and surprise that they once
took part in such momentous, dramatic events. These gentle, self-deprecating heroes seem
like throwbacks to another age in the way they modestly recognize their place in history,
and they too seem conscious of how our culture has changed since their youth. So often in
the show do they preface their comments by saying, "But you have to
understand
," that perhaps their quiet heroics do require translation for the
brasher times we live in.
Photographs of the men during their service years underscore what we
know but often forget: the soldiers who fought and won the largest military confrontation
in history were nothing more than boys. As one of the crew members puts it, "It was a
growing up experience I wouldnt take a million dollars for it. I
wouldnt want to do it again for a million dollars, but I wouldnt take a
million dollars for my experiences there."
Like the vessel that
is its subject, Onto Rugged Shores: Voyage of LST534 is a durable, no-frills
vehicle that travels to its destination with a scornful disregard for fuss or pretense.
And, at the end, when we finally get to see some of its surviving crew members seated
together, and we hear them telling the old stories while lifting both feet up off the
floor in amazement or laughter, its plain that the war was a formative experience
that has never lost its hold on them.
- Tom Block