Compton, Lynn Davis “Buck”, born 31-12-1921, in Los Angeles, California,
United States, he gave himself the nickname “Buck” due to feeling that Lynn was a name better suited to a girl. His father was Roby Franks Compton (1894–1939). His mother Ethel worked for movie studios and a young Compton worked as an extra in films. He was thrown off the set of Modern Times movie
after angering the film’s star Charlie Chaplin. Buck was an athlete at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA),
being named an all-conference catcher and All-American selection in 1942. Among his baseball teammates was Jackie Robinson.
Compton
was later inducted into the UCLA Baseball Hall of Fame.
He majored in physical education, with a minor in education. Buck joined the Phi Kappa Psi
fraternity in 1940. He also started at guard with the UCLA football team in the 1943 Rose Bowl game on 01-01-1943.
At UCLA, Compton participated in the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps under Cadet Commander Major General John Kirk Singlaub.
Deployed to Europe for special operations, Singlaub was dropped behind German lines in France in August 1944, as part of Operation Jedburgh. As a member of a three-member team (codenamed “JAMES”), he worked with Maquis groups that swelled the ranks of the French Resistance after D-Day. He passed away 29-01-2022 (aged 100) Franklin, Tennessee..
In early 1943, advanced ROTC, or the Reserve Officer Training Corps, was suspended for the duration of the war, with Compton and his fellow infantry cadets completing their training by attending officer candidate school at Fort Benning, Georgia.
In December 1943, Compton deployed overseas with E (“Easy”) Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment
in the 101st Airborne Division.
During Operation Overlord, Compton participated in Easy Company’s action at Brécourt Manor under the leadership of Major Richard Davis “Dick” Winters.
Operation Overlord was during World War II the codename for the large-scale landing by the Western Allies on the Normandy coast with the aim of recapturing Western Europe occupied by Nazi Germany. Compton and his fellow paratroopers assaulted a German battery of four 105 mm howitzers firing on Utah Beach, disabling the guns and routing the enemy. During the battle, he threw a hand grenade that was said to have had no arc and hit the German soldier on the back of the helmet. Compton was awarded the Silver Star
for his action in the battle.
Later in 1944, Compton was shot through the buttocks while participating in Operation Market Garden, the Allies’ ill-fated attempt to seize a number of bridges in the Netherlands and cross the Rhine River into Nazi Germany. The bullet traveled sideways, through one side of the buttocks and out the other side. After a partial recovery, he returned to Easy Company in time for the siege in the frozen Ardennes; the Battle of the Bulge.
During the battle of the Bulge,
Compton was evacuated for severe trench foot. Stephen E. Ambrose concluded that Compton had been “unnerved” by witnessing two of his closest friends, Joseph “Joe” Toye
and William Joseph “Wild Bill” Guarnere,
badly wounded by German artillery. Compton wrote in his autobiography, “…although I was affected by the horrors of Bastogne, I do not believe I was clinically shell shocked, as the series portrays me. In real life, while I was hollering for the medic, trying to figure out what to do, I remember two distinct thoughts: How are we going to help the wounded guys?…Maybe this is the time the Germans are really going to get us all.” In December 1945 he was discharged from service and returned home to California.
In 1947, he joined the Air Force Reserve, serving in the Office of Special Investigations
and eventually Judge Advocate General Corps
before retiring as a lieutenant colonel in 1970.
In 1946, Compton returned to UCLA to complete his degree; he turned down an offer to play minor league baseball, choosing instead to concentrate on his continued public service aspirations. Compton married Donna Fay Newman
in October 1947 and the couple adopted two daughters.
Compton became employed as a police officer with the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD)
in 1946, also attending Loyola Law School. Compton quickly rose through the LAPD ranks, becoming a detective in the Central Burglary Division.
He left the LAPD for the District Attorney’s office in 1951, serving as a deputy district attorney. In 1964, LA District Attorney Evelle J. Younger
appointed Compton to the position of chief deputy district attorney.
In 1968–69, Compton led the successful prosecution of Sirhan Bishara Sirhan
for the murder of Robert Francis “Bobby”. Kennedy.
In 1970, then-Governor Ronald Reagan appointed him an associate justice of the California Courts of Appeal. He retired from the bench in 1990.
In the 2000s, Compton’s World War II exploits were portrayed in the HBO miniseries Band of Brothers.
Compton’s memoirs, entitled Call of Duty
and written with Marcus Brotherton,
were published by Berkeley Publishing in May 2008. A celebration of Compton’s 90th birthday was held in January 2012 with nearly 200 in attendance including Band of Brothers actors Michael Cudlitz, James Madio, Neal McDonough,
and Richard Speight, Jr. McDonough, the actor playing Compton, developed a friendship with the real Compton while making the miniseries and kept in touch afterwards. McDonough’s son Morgan is nicknamed “Little Buck” in honor of Compton.
Death and burial ground of Compton, Lynn Davis “Buck”.
Colonel Jeffrey M. Silver, 173rd Fighter Wing Vice Commander, and his wife Theresa take a photo with both Donald George “Don” Maklarkey
and “Buck” Compton following their presentation to the 173rd Fighter Wing 31-08-2011 at Kingsley Field, Klamath Falls
In January 2012, Compton suffered a heart attack. On 25-02-2012, Buck died at a daughter’s home in Burlington, Washington. His wife Donna died previously in 1994.
Today, Loyola Law School honors Compton with the Lynn D. “Buck” Compton Veterans Law Association, promoting “social interaction amongst military and Coast Guard veterans, active duty, National Guard, and reserve personnel at Loyola Law School while encouraging public interest in, and pro bono work on, issues relating to the welfare of military personnel and veterans.
His memoirs “Call of Duty: My Life Before, During and After the Band of Brothers,” was published in 2008. Lynn Davis “Buck” Compton was cremated.















Leave a Reply