Listen To WPR online Live Streaming Page Archive Streaming Page Click here to support WPR! Return to the WPR Home Page
Explore WPR
WPR Home
Support WPR!
Support WPR's Online Community!
Contact Us
About WPR
Newsletters and Reports
Studios, Stations and Program Schedules
Station Coverage Maps, Reception and Technical Issues
WPR Program Index
The Ideas Network
The NPR News and Classical Network
WPR News
Internet Webcasting
WPR's National SHows
The Radio Store
Related Links

WPR Programs
Search wpr.org
This Month's Featured Stories
NEWS LINKS: WPR News Home | Bureaus | Reporters | Awards
FEATURES: Specials, Series & Documentaries | Wisconsin Vote | Wisconsin Life | StoryCorps
RICHARD BONG PART 4: LEGACY ON THE LAKEFRONT WPR News - Richard Bong Part 4: Legacy on the Lakefront
Thursday November 15, 2012 by Mike Simonson
(Photo by Richard Bong Heritage Center)
Enlarge

Although he was killed when he was just 24-years-old at the end of World War II, and is no longer a national hero or household name, ace pilot Richard Bong of Wisconsin has left a legacy for generations to come. 

On September 24th, 2002, on what would have been his 82nd birthday, the Richard Bong World War II Heritage Center opened on Superior's waterfront to the voices of the University of Wisconsin Barbershop Quartet. 

Bong Board Chairman Brigadier General Ray Klosowski invited the hundreds of people gathered to tour this new center.

The $5 million center is built in the shape of an airplane hangar, housing a P-38 Lightning fighter plane restored by volunteers from the Air National Guard, complete with a hand-painted picture of his sweetheart and the name "Marge" on its nose.

In a 2001 interview, Marjorie Bong Drucker said she knows most people, especially young people, have never heard of her late husband.

“If it’s taught in school, it’s really revisionist history. It may not even be politically correct to talk about Richard shooting down 40 Japanese pilots," she said.  "And we do our best. We all do our best and I think this is the major premise of the Heritage Center.”

But many young people do remember Richard Bong now.  School children have field trips to what is now the Richard Bong Veterans Historical Center, to honor all veterans.

In 1999, the U.S. Air Force Academy class of 2003 chose Major Bong as their class exemplar.  Not long after that, Bong Drucker was invited to the Air Force Academy. 

“I remember at the first dinner that we had in this huge hall, where there were like a thousand cadets seated," she said. "And the first speaker who mentioned the class of 2003, this uproar from a thousand students on their feet yelling “Bong!” We all looked at each other and said ‘What’s going on?’ And then we discovered that really is their class motto. They were such wonderful, wonderful young people.”

Finally, there is the disappearing legacy of his aging comrades from the jungles of New Guinea.  Bong crew chief Sergeant Elwood Bardon says that was another lifetime ago.

“It’s kind of like a dream. It’s a dream that you wouldn’t give anything for having, but you wouldn’t go back and do it again," he says.

Sixty years later, in a 2002 interview, Bardon could still see the face of the 22 year-old country boy from northern Wisconsin.

“He just looked like a baby kid, when he come and got in that airplane, I mean, of course you know, it don’t take you long to get old over there.”

Bardon last saw Richard Bong at a war bond rally in Mobile, Alabama.  When the Bong Heritage Center opened in 2002, he said he wouldn't miss it.

“It was important to me," he says. "I mean, I still cry. It was an experience. And he’s a great hero. And um, I loved him.”

You can also listen to this story or download it now! (3:22)



Support for WPR provided by

Shop Now!



Support WPR!


HOME | ABOUT | PROGRAM INDEX | MEMBERSHIP | SPONSORSHIPS | WPR NEWS
IDEAS NETWORK | NEWS & CLASSICAL NETWORK | RADIO STORE
LIVE STREAMS | AUDIO ARCHIVES

For questions or comments about our programming, call Audience Services
at 1-800-747-7444, email us at listener@wpr.org, or use our Online Feedback Form.
View our Privacy Policy.   Send comments about our website to webmaster@wpr.org.

©2013 by Wisconsin Public Radio - a service of the
Wisconsin Educational Communications Board
and University of Wisconsin - Extension.