Gerald Munns
Iowa,  Munns/Monds,  Rock Rapids,  World War II

Gerald Munns: My Beloved Grandpa

I’m publishing this article on 4 February 2021, to mark what would’ve been my grandpa’s 100th birthday. Love you forever, grandpa.

Name: Gerald Francis Munns
Relationship to Me: Maternal Grandfather
Parents: Thomas Jay Munns & Irene Leola Crelly
Birth Date/Location: 4 February 1921, Rock Rapids, Iowa
Death Date/Location: 20 September 2012, Rock Rapids, Iowa

Primary Residence: The Munns farm where he was born, grew up, raised a family and farmed
Education: Attended country school and then town high school in Rock Rapids. Graduated high school in 1938.
Occupation: Farmer

My grandpa, Gerald Munns, was born to parents of pretty much all Irish descent. If he could take a DNA test today, there may be a small bit of Scandinavian or Scottish DNA, thanks to those groups populating Ireland centuries ago. But by and large, he was all Irish. And he was darn proud of it!

Grandpa’s parents were both born in Iowa. In fact, his mother Irene was already the second generation in her family born in Iowa when the world welcomed her in 1895. (Her parents were Patrick Crelly and Mary Ann Kelly.) It was a little different for grandpa’s father, Jay (given name Thomas Jay). His mother Mary Collins was born in Iowa, but his dad William Munns emigrated from his birthplace in Co. Sligo, Ireland, around age 5. 

Grandpa lived his entire life on the northwest Iowa family farm that his grandfather William purchased around 1887. I’m proud to say that the farm is still in our family today. (Insert many heart emojis!)

Family and His First Love: Baseball

Grandpa was a kind, somewhat quiet, a little silly and fun guy. He believed firmly in his faith, cared deeply for his family and was one of the hardest workers I’ve known. He was also obsessed about baseball, especially the Chicago Cubs. 

Gerald-Munns-Baby
Gerald Munns as a baby in the early 1920s.

Grandpa was the oldest of three kids. His brother Loren Thomas came in 1923, two years after grandpa — and their sister Coleen Bernice two years after Loren. A family of three children was quite small by Irish Catholic standards at the time. 

Loren-Gerald-Coleen-Munns
They’re a little older here: siblings Loren, Gerald and Coleen Munns
Jay-Irene-Munns-older-kids
Jay and Irene Munns with their children, Loren, Coleen and Gerald.

As a young kid, grandpa attended country school in a small town called Edna, located exactly one mile south of the farm. He went to school in town when he began high school. Grandpa once wrote down some fond memories of going to country school and playing baseball. 

Gerald-Munns-baseball-team
Gerald Munns played baseball whenever he possibly could. In this team photo, he’s in the front right.
RRHS-Baseball-Gerald-Loren-Munns
The town loyally followed the high school baseball team. In this scan of the newspaper photo from 1937, grandpa is in the back row and the closest player to the coach. His brother Loren is kneeling in front of him, but the newspaper scan blurred out his face.

When I was viewing this photo in the newspaper archives, directly below it was the “high school newspaper.” I found it really interesting to read, since I was the high school newspaper editor for the same town for two years when I was a teenager. There was a brief snippet in this 1937 edition amongst other snippets under the category “Lion Around.” (Our high school mascot was the Lions.)

“Boys too cute to be running around single: George B., Tubby, Gerald M., Paul B., and Earl R.”

Okay — that totally cracked me up. But he was a pretty handsome guy, as you can see below.

Gerald-Munns-senior-photo
I believe this is grandpa’s high school senior photo.

A Promising Young Farmer

Even though he never moved off the farm, he wasn’t afraid of travel. In fact, one of his first big trips came right around his senior year of high school (1937-38). Grandpa was awarded a trip to the International Livestock show in Chicago at the annual Lyon Co. 4-H club party. 

One of the front page articles in the Lyon County Reporter on November 18, 1937, discussed the trip and how the judges considered 4-H project results for the year, record books, meeting attendance, activities and a story. 

“Gerald Munns is a senior in the Rock Rapids high school and has been active in club work since 1931. He has been a consistent winner in his many projects attempted as attested by his prizes and records,” the article stated. 

And here’s my favorite part:

“His friends and fellow clubmen say he is a quiet, honest, capable, industrious and a conscientious young farmer. His teachers praise him for his dependability, willingness, and above all, his ability to co-operate in school activities.”

Gerald-Munns-stock-show
Gerald Munns receives 4-H award and trip to International Livestock Show. Courtesy: Lyon County Reporter, November 16, 1937.

Just a few weeks later in early December, grandpa, his dad Jay and his first cousin Paul King, left by train for the livestock show in Chicago. A December 2, 1937, report in the same newspaper stated, “Gerald was a winner of the trip sponsored by the Rock Rapids State bank, and expected to get a real thrill out of the experience.”

I first came across those articles about the livestock show trip while searching the online archives of my hometown newspaper. I shared the information with my aunt — who had never heard of the story or her dad’s experience. We both thought it was quite fitting and the description of grandpa as a high school senior — and pretty much throughout this entire life. 

After his livestock show experience and graduation, grandpa continued to work on the farm with his dad. Their goal was to continue to build stability for the family after William’s parents struggled during mid-1800s potato famines in Ireland. (William had passed away in 1930 at age 69.)

Just a few years after high school, the second World War started and being a young man, grandpa had to register for the draft. His official date of registration was February 16, 1942 — 12 days after grandpa turned 21 and exactly 71 days after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s declaration of war. 

Off to the Navy

Gerald-Munns-formal-navy
Gerald Munns served in the Navy from 1942 to 1946.

Military: US Navy, World War II

  • Service number: 620 88 55
  • Date of Entry: 18 August 1942
  • Date of Separation: 6 January 1946
  • Active number of months: 44 (17 of those months in foreign service outside the U.S.)
  • Served in the Southeast Pacific Theater
  • Military organizations where he served (according to a post-war compensation record):
    • Naval Air Station (NAS), San Diego, CA
    • Naval Air Technical Training Center (NATTC), Memphis, TN
    • US Naval Air Station (NAS), Pensacola, FL
    • Receiving ship, San Diego, CA
    • 55 Bloom Fontain
    • Fleet Air Base Unit (FABU) 4
    • Carrier Aircraft service Unit (CASU) 10
    • Naval Air Station (NAS), Jacksonville, FL
    • Naval Air Station (NAS) Lambert Field, St. Louis, MO
    • Advanced Base Aviation Training Unit (ABATU): Naval Air Maintenance Training (Namtd) (Ord)

I’m still researching more details about his military record, but what’s above is what I have for the moment. 

Although grandpa served in the Pacific in World War II, he told his family he never really fought in a battle. (Honestly, I’m not sad about that.) He went to the New Hebrides, an island chain defended by American and Australian forces because of its strategic location between the two countries. Ultimately these islands would face no threat of Japanese invasion (thus, no fighting for grandpa). 

I remember sitting in the living room at the farm and listening to him tell me about being at the naval bases in Jacksonville, Pensacola and San Diego. I also distinctly remember him saying he experienced San Francisco, even if only for a few days (and though it doesn’t show on the record above) before heading to the New Hebrides in the South Pacific.

It’s quite likely that he traveled from San Diego to San Francisco to join a large fleet headed toward the South Pacific. Based on stories I’ve read from other servicemen who went to the New Hebrides, new troops typically came from San Francisco. (You see, the multiple conversations I had with grandpa about this were etched in my brain after my husband and I moved to the Bay Area for a couple years in 2005 — and after we moved back home and I visited him again.)

During WW II, the New Hebrides was a rare colonial territory split between two powers, Britain and France. This strange and inefficient arrangement lasted from 1906 through 1980, when the island natives regained their independence as the Republic of Vanuatu

Photos grandpa took of his time in the Pacific show that he bonded with some of his fellow sailors. “It looked like he had fun there. There are a lot of pictures of him goofing off,” my mom once told me when I asked her how her dad described his time in WWII. “I think he made a lot of good friends. Some he kept in touch with after.”

Regarding his daily life in the Pacific, grandpa said all he ate was rice, which he got sick of pretty quickly. Rice was rarely on any menu at the farm for the rest of his life. He also was frustrated quite a lot by the Red Cross during the war. He didn’t feel it was right that the servicemen always had to pay for things from the Red Cross when they were stationed in the South Pacific. He was a generous man who supported many organizations with his time and treasure throughout his life, but after the war, he was intent on never donating to the Red Cross.

According to the compensation record notarized on 27 June 1949, he was due $482.50 for military service. I’m not sure if this accounted for all income he should’ve earned as part of the Navy during the way. Adjusted for inflation, that would be more than $5,200 in 2021. 

Gerald-Munns-WW2-service-compensation-record-pg1
Gerald-Munns: WW2 service compensation record
Gerald-Munns-WW2-service-compensation-record-pg2
Gerald Munns WW2 service compensation record page 2

Making a Family of His Own

Marriage: Gerald married Isabelle Antoinette Kellihan (also of Rock Rapids) on May 24, 1948, at Holy Name Catholic Church in Rock Rapids. 
Children: Michael Joseph (1949), Patrick Francis (1950-2008), Margaret “Peggy” Ann (1952-2020) and Eileen Louise (1960). 

Gerald and Isabelle grew up going to the same church and graduated only a year apart at the same, small high school. Grandpa got home from the Navy in early 1946, around age 25. Two years later, they married. Grandma was a town girl, so moving out to the farm was a bit foreign to her, but she was a tough, smart woman who managed just fine. 

Isabelle-Gerald-Munns-wedding
Isabelle and Gerald (center) celebrate their wedding day with family and friends.
Isabelle-Gerald-Munns-hug
Isabelle and Gerald Munns, young and in love.

Grandma and grandpa had four kids, Mike, Pat, Peggy and Eileen. When I was a kid, Grandpa and Eileen also concocted a plan one Christmas to get grandma an indoor dog (translation: non-farm dog). She was in love. The first one was Muffin (aka “Muffy”) and later they had Charlie. She loved those little black dogs — and so did grandpa, too, even though he sometimes grumbled about them. 

Munns-family-picture-couch
The Munns family poses on “the picture couch” in grandma’s formal living room we rarely entered. Front: Eileen and Peg (my mom). Back: Pat, Mike, Isabelle with dog Muffin, and Gerald. My favorite things about this photo: grandpa’s smile and Eileen and mom’s hair!
Gerald-Isabelle Pose
Isabelle and Gerald Munns: This is the “age” and how I remember my grandparents in my childhood.

My grandparents weren’t just farmers and parents. They were proud community members. They carried on a family tradition of being on the Lyon County Fair Board for decades. Working for them for the fair was my first job in third grade. Yep, that’s right, third grade. (And I didn’t realize until grandpa passed away how MANY other ways he volunteered. Wowza. He always impressed me.) 

Just a couple months before he passed — in late July 2012 — grandpa was awarded the Friend of the Fair Award. We all drove down to the fair on a hot, steamy weeknight to see him get the award. I was so proud of him. 

Gerald Munns 2012 Friend of Fair Award
Grandpa received the Friend of the Fair award in July 2012, surrounded by his loving children and grandchildren, in Rock Rapids.

Unfortunately, this was the last time I saw him before he unexpectedly passed away in September. I had planned to visit him in the hospital for what appeared to be a small health issue, but he took a turn for the worse and I never got that chance. As much as I wanted to say goodbye, I’m pretty sure he would’ve wanted the fair to be my last memory of him. 

In total, Gerald and Isabelle had seven grandchildren, and if they were around today — they recently would’ve welcomed their 10th great-grandchild. They also have one great-great-grandchild as of this writing. All of us are blessed with their strength and good humor — and many of us fondly remember holidays filled with a buffet of food, jello salad, Squirt soda, peanut M&Ms and card and trivia games. And maybe some naps and football games, too. 

Slainte!
~EPJ

2 Comments

  • Char

    Well done! I want to share a story about your grandad. In March 1977 my dad was very ill in a Sioux Falls hospital. I was living in Ames when I got the call that Dad took a turn for the worse and I should get home as soon as possible. I was 22 at the time and very much grieving because my dad’s illness was sudden. He was only 56. My husband had a friend with a pilot’s license and he said he could get us to the Sioux Falls airport. This was before cell phones and internet. I could not get in touch with any of my brothers or sisters, who I assumed were at the hospital. So, I called Uncle Gerald to see if he could come to the airport. The weather was turning bad but through a crackly connection on the phone I heard Uncle Gerald say in his booming voice “I’ll be there Charlene!” Well we got to Sioux Falls in crappy weather and learned the airport had been closed. It was late and snowing, Uncle Gerald probably risked more than he should have in that weather. When we landed, there was no one around but I could see Uncle Gerald in the airport window. My husband and friend flew back to Ames. We thought it would be a few days but my dad died a day later. Uncle Gerald made it possible for me to see my dad in the hospital. When I told your mom this story at Uncle Gerald’s funeral, she said she never knew.

  • Stephen King

    I was Rosil King’s grandson, Paul King’s nephew, and Doan King’s son. We just visited Sioux Falls and drove past the Munn’s farm. It was exactly as I remember the grove but Jay’s home was no longer there. Gerald used to come over and help with the harvesting.
    Mike was around frequently. Jerry Rucci stayed more in touch than me. I left for service during the Viet Nam war and never returned except to visit Grandma King and Pal and Matilda.