Remember...William Garnett Christian
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Baker Second Class William Garnett Christian was born in Gary, McDowell County, West Virginia, on October 30, 1916, to George Washington Christian and Bessie Crutchfield Christian Aycock. As was customary of many men of his time, Christian went by his middle name. William Garnett Christian had an older brother, Stanley. After living in West Virginia for less than four years, he moved to Claiborne, Tennessee, where the 1920 U.S. Federal Census enumerates Garnett and Stanley in the household of James Pridemore, presumably an uncle. The family eventually settled 80 odd miles to the southwest at Harriman, in Roane County, Tennessee, with his mother and stepfather, James Aycock. They would eventually have three more children, according to the 1930 census: Geneva, Bernice, and James.
Growing up in Tennessee during the Great Depression was not easy. At this time, Tennessee's economy was not very industrialized, and many were farmers. President Roosevelt's New Deal programs provided unemployment relief to millions of people, but farmers were not as much of a priority as wage earners during the New Deal era. William Garnett Christian grew up in an area that happened to be in close proximity to the Tennessee Valley, which was the epicenter of the Tennessee Valley Authority, an infrastructure project commissioned by FDR to put people to work in the region. This economic stimulus made the area in which he lived generally more prosperous than the very rural areas of the state. Tennesseans also began to have access to electricity at higher rates due to dams built by the TVA. This may have been part of the reason Christian was sent from McDowell county to Tennessee. William was reportedly described by his only living sister later in her life as someone who was always joking and who loved to play guitar.
Christian married his wife, Bertha Louise Howard, on June 13, 1936. They would go on to have one son, Wendell Garnett Christian (listed as Gary in the 1940 census). William enlisted in the Navy in 1936, and the couple moved from Tennessee to Long Beach, California. By 1936, tensions with Japan and the other aggressive regimes in Europe were boiling high, and the Roosevelt administration, while preferring neutrality to conflict, began to realize it might have to adopt a firmer stance to curb the imperial ambitions of the Japanese.
As of the 1940 census, Garnett was still living in Long Beach, but between then and December 7, 1941, he was stationed at Pearl Harbor in Honolulu, Hawaii. He was a petty officer second class, specifically a baker second class. Bakers in the Navy did exactly as their title prescribed:they baked and operated ovens on the ship, feeding the fighting men.
Upon recovery of his body, William was returned to the state he grew up in to be buried. He was laid to rest in Willard Park Cemetery in Harriman, Tennessee.
Sources Consulted
"Battleship USS West Virginia (BB-48)." Accessed 16 May 2017. http://www.usswestvirginia.org.
East Tennessee Veterans Memorial Association. "William G. Christian." Accessed 16 May 2017. https://etvma.org/veterans/william-g-christian-10552.
"William Garnett Christian." Battleship USS West Virginia (BB-48). Accessed 16 May 2017.
http://www.usswestvirginia.org/veterans/personalpage.php?id=619.
Article prepared by Atticus Hatfield, George Washington High School Advanced Placement U.S. History
2017
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.