Remember...Clarence Robert Stewart
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U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Clarence Robert Stewart was a native of Piedmont, Mineral County, West Virginia, where he was born on May 12, 1921. The son of Harry John Stewart and Margaret Marshall Stewart, he hailed from a large family of eight siblings. Like many of his family members, he went by his middle name. "Robert" Stewart's sisters were Alma (married name: Mrs. Paul Walker) and Aolia. He had five brothers: Frank, Charles, William, Harry, and James. (Source: "S. Sgt. C. R. Stewart Dies on Tinian," Piedmont Herald, 15 November 1945.)
Carter G. Woodson, in his monograph Early Negro Education in West Virginia (Institute, WV: The West Virginia Collegiate Institute, 1921), states:
The next school of importance in this part of the State was that of Piedmont, since then designated as the Howard School. Educational efforts in behalf of Negroes began in this section about six years after the Civil War. Prior to that time the few Negroes coming into Piedmont were too migratory to necessitate any outlay for their education. Some efforts were made to effect their improvement through private instruction in the fundamentals, and a little progress therein was noted. Years later there came such substantial friends of education as the Barneses, the Masons, the Thomases, the Biases, and the Redmons. There was no organized effort to the end of establishing a real public school, however, until the year 1877, when one John Brown, being influential with Mr. Hyde, then President of the Board of Education, induced him to provide a school room and hire a teacher for the instruction of the children of Negroes. These persons, since known as Mrs. Emma Stewart (Mason), Miss Mary Thomas, Mr. John Brown, Jr., Miss Alice Brown, and Mr. Harry Bias, presented themselves as the first students of this school, with one Mr. Ross, a white man, as first instructor. The next teacher of this school was a white man, and he was followed by a member of his race.
S/Sgt. Clarence Robert Stewart died of wounds on October 13, 1945, in a Tinian Island Hospital in the Marianas. Charles E. Stewart reports that Robert's death occurred as the result of the explosion of a 500-pound incendiary bomb on a barge on October 9, 1945, when men were taking corrosive ammunition out to sea for disposal. According to the Piedmont Herald, he wrote his last letter to his wife on October 5, stating he hoped to be home that month in time to celebrate their third wedding anniversary. Although she never had a chance to really get to know her father, other family members provided Jackie with "memories" of him. In correspondence of September 22, 2016, Jackie shared the following thoughts:
The only information I have on my father is what has been told to me by my mother and other family members. They tell me that my father was one of the kindest people you would ever want to meet. Everyone that talked to me about him never had anything bad to say about him. It was all good. My mother, her sister, and her parents always talked to me about "Daddy Robert," as I always called him. They said that he was home on leave one time and would carry me around in his arms and swing me in a swing that hung in a hallway at my grandparents' home. When he went back to camp he had to have his arm reset because it had been broken.
T. J. Coleman, who has written often about the Stewart family, speaks of Robert, Bessie, and Jackie in an article that details the immense sacrifices of Robert, excerpted here:
His daughter Jackie would have the privilege of seeing her father only once, but at six months old, her young eyes would not recognize him..How excited he must have been coming home to see his newborn child for the first time. To see the woman he loved and missed so dearly. To see his Bessie..She was his high school sweetheart. At Howard High, they would attend the prom together. Their love would be one that lasted beyond the educational years and carried them into their young adult lives..
Jackie would be told, many years later, that she sometimes acts just like her father.. As a young man he loved to draw. He would use his artistic talents to draw sketches in pencil. One that his daughter Jackie remembers seeing is "The Woman with the Long Hair." No doubt it was a sketch of the woman he loved and married, Bessie Stewart..
From his rank, it was obvious that Robert advanced quickly. I can understand this by hearing the type of man he was, by hearing stories from his daughter Jackie. When she's told by her family, that she's just like her father Robert, what they're saying to her is that she's nice, giving, very concerned with others, and a loving person. Jackie takes these comments and referrals to her father as complete compliments..
[In his last letter,] with thoughts of love to her, he would tell her [Bessie] how excited he was to be coming home and celebrating their third anniversary. It was an anniversary he would never see. Young Robert was killed in an explosion on one of his last days in the military. The war had ended and his company was out at sea throwing ammunition overboard. One of the bombs hit the side of the ship and exploded. Robert was burned badly and was immediately sent to the hospital. At his side in the hospital was his friend Mr. Perry, who was also from the Piedmont area. Robert would not survive his injuries and would die in the presence of his friend Mr. Perry on October 13, 1945.
Robert had three brothers who were also serving in the armed forces during World War II: Cpl. William Stewart was in India, Pfc. Harry N. Stewart was in France, and Pfc. James Stewart was in Germany at the time of his death. Robert was the nephew of James Aubrey Stewart, who was killed in Belgium during the Battle of the Bulge. Aubrey Stewart's poignant story, suppressed for many years, came to light in 2011 in the documentary The Wereth Eleven. Thus the Stewart family paid the ultimate sacrifice not once, but twice.
Although he was originally buried near where he fell, Robert's remains were eventually brought back to the states, where he was interred in the U. S. National Cemetery at Grafton, West Virginia. |
Wilhelmina Leigh, whose father served with Clarence Robert Stewart, writes:
Family information and photos provided by Charles E. Stewart (now deceased) and Jacquelyn Faye Stewart Washington, brother and daughter, respectively, of Clarence Robert Stewart. Also contributing to this article were Piedmont natives Clifton ("Kip") Price, who shared contact information, and T. J. Coleman, chronicler of much of the Stewart family story.
West Virginia Archives and History welcomes any additional information that can be provided about these veterans, including photographs, family names, letters and other relevant personal history.