Simmons’ Creek
by Bill Beigel
Walking the beach at dawn is a habit. There are many places where I can find a crescent ring of tiny shells.
The shells are embedded and enmeshed in a tangled mass of sea grass and feathers and dark, coarse sand. They are nearly hidden. But when the sun is just right, the shells shine out to me. I have picked up many handfuls, but usually end up tossing them back into the ocean. I enjoy the small splash they cause, and the ripples that tickle the surface for a few seconds.
The dark sand is carried into the ocean from creeks which start at the palm-covered springs in the mountains. The creek I know the best (my grandfather called it Simmons’ creek) emerges from a sandstone cliff, at the end of a trail, a few hundred feet from the top of a ridge.
When it has been a wet year, the creek bursts forth with so much strength that it erodes the surrounding rock face. It stings when I put my face against the sparkling water, but God, it makes me smile. When I was last there, in the spring, I watched the water pour and pour into the pond, and the water was always clear. How do the rocks that sparkle at the bottom of the pond maintain their place in the sand, and their solidity, their very being, against the onrushing flow?
When it rains in the hills above Simmons’ creek, the water can evaporate and return to the sky, or it can percolate into the bedrock and join the aquifer. Or it can choose to be part of Simmons’ creek. There is more than one path it can take. Nothing is planned in advance.
It only rains in the spring. This spring, it rained in March and early April; after that, not a cloud and not a drop. Now it is late summer and Simmons’ creek is lower than I have ever seen it. That bothers me some. The change from blue and green water to dry rock bed does not meet with my idea of the fitness of things; it does not agree with the way I have been taught and what I have been told. Today, a child can step across the creek, carefully balancing on rocks that have not been dried by the sun for decades. I watched her, and she smiled most of the time, with just one quick look of fear when one of her feet nearly slipped. Then she was on the other side of Simmons’ creek.
This child will learn a different lesson than I have been taught about Simmons’ creek.
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Hi Georgia: So sorry for this slow response. I'd love to connect with you some time. I suspect that there is information on your great-uncle that is unknown to you. Rather than write up a lengthy e-mail, I suggest that we get on the phone for a brief discussion of our research options. Please use this link: https://calendly.com/ww2research/30min to my calendar to schedule a phone meeting. There is no cost for this research consultation with me; I look forward to talking with you. Best regards, BillSix B-24s From Baker Box Downed
Hello April: Sorry for this slow response. I'd be happy to trade some history with you. You can reach me at bill.beigel@ww2research.com. I might even be able to locate some information that is new to you. Best, BillFive From the 464th Bomb Group
Hi Janice: I apologize for my late replay to your note! We can certainly re-create your father's service with the 454th Bomb Group. Rather than write up a lengthy e-mail, I suggest that we get on the phone for a brief discussion of our research options. Please use this link: https://calendly.com/ww2research/30min to my calendar to schedule a phone meeting. There is no cost for this research consultation with me; I look forward to talking with you. Best regards, BillThe Murder of WAC Private Byrl Babcock
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So you know how I feel about my cousin, 2Lt A.D. (Alvis Deryl) Noble, I know that he was born on my grandfather's farm in Hopkins Co. Texas, where my father and his and 5 other brothers and 4 sisters were born, then the next information I have is the casualty report after his death as his records were lost in the St. Louis fire. I was born in 1956, 12 years after his death. But I want to thank you once again for your help with what I do know about 2Lt Noble. Sincerely A .D. ( Alan Dale ) NobleSSGT Morris Meyers: The Man My Dad Never Stopped Waiting For
WOW. Great job Something like that for the crew of the B2 nine Salvo Sally that bombed Masaki yes Japan on April 28, 1945. The flight engineer Fred MacDonald was my first cousin husband. The plane went in the ocean. Most likely the gunners are got out and got in parachutes, but only one survived and I found him in St. Louis Missouri Japan held a huge memorial for the crew on April 28, 2018. The survivor was Jack B Cannon. He died. I think he was 94.

























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