Growing up in Japan
My
memories of Japan start on May 1, 1958 when our ship pulled into the port of
Yokohama and seeing all these red flags waving and signs that said “Go home
Yankees” . I ask my dad about it and he told me that some of the Japanese
didn’t like Americans but I didn’t need to worry about it, but as a seven
year old that made me wonder if we should go back to Kansas the next day on
another ship.
The
place we would call home for the next 4 years was Tachikawa Air Base which was
about 18 miles from Tokyo and we made the trip that first day in a very small
taxi which took over 2 hours. I remember my mother was very worried that we
would all be killed on the way because of all the traffic and so many people on
bicycles on the road, but we made it.
What
a place “Tachi” as it was called was to grow up at. The base was divided into 2
parts with the airplane hangars and runway dividing it, the west side which
included the main housing area and east side that had the largest military
hospital in japan.
For
a family you had anything and everything you could want located on the base,
two schools, kindergarten and grade school thru Jr high with the high school
located at Yamato Air Station a few miles away. The base also had 2
theaters, 2 Base Exchange, 3 clubs for the military and 1 club for the civilian
personnel, a commissary, 3 swimming pools, 2 football fields, hobby shop, 8
baseball fields, tennis courts, an event service center where you could take
all kinds of classes or weekend trips. The base buses ran every 15 minutes
going in opposite directions around the base.
I
would finish up the first grade upon my arrival and complete the 5th grade
before we would leave to go back to the states in June 1962 heading for
Westover Air Force base in Massachusetts. Little did I imagine then that I
would be going back to Tachikawa Japan again, but in May 1967 my father
accepted a Civil Service position as the 6100th Support Wing Historian at
“Tachi”.
My
family arrived at Tachikawa Air Base Japan for the second time in May 1967 and
I would attend my junior and senior years at Yamato High School, Home of the
Warriors where I would graduate from on June 6, 1969.
Growing
up at Tachikawa Air Base was a wonderful time in my life and my memories and
adventures of being there are still fresh in my mind. As they say: If I
could do it all over again….I would in a heartbeat.
Mike
Skidmore Broken Arrow Oklahoma: Tachikawa Air Base Japan Military Brat:
1958-1962 and 1967-1969. mskids001@aol.com
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