Lyall, Clarence Odell “Clancy”, born 14-10-1925 in Orange, Texas , the son of the late Arthur Edward Lyall
who worked on ships transporting oil from the United States to Scotland, was a Scot who worked on ships transporting oil from the United States to Scotland, was a Scot.
and Beulah, born Mitchell Lyall
was a full-blooded Cherokee Indian from Oklahoma.His father met his mother on a trip to the US after wanting to see the native peoples in Oklahoma. They married and Beulah eventually moved to Orange Texas to set up a farm. Clancy was raised for a time with his maternal Grandfather on the reservation while the farm was being built. Once the farm was completed Clancy attended a one-room school and worked on his parents’ 120 acre farm in Orange until they moved to Pennsylvania in 1939. In the summers he would also cross the Sabine river to work in Louisiana, earning some money by picking Spanish moss for use as mattress batting. The skills he learned from the Cajuns in how to survive in the swamps would prove useful in his later military career as did the hunting and tracking skills taught to him by his Cherokee grandfather.
Clancy also hunted cougar to bring in extra money for the family.
Clancy and his wife Isabel (Dasilva) Lyall; had five children, Wayne Lyall (Gloria) of Round Rock, TX, Linda Fitzgerald (Tommy) of Brooksville, FL, Tonia J. Gibson of Lexington Park, MD, Roy C. Adams of Supply, NC, and Arthur E. Lyall (Julie) of Great Mills, MD. Clancy was preceded in death by his son, Ronald Lyall.
Clancy enlisted into the American Army in 1942. He was assigned to the Second Battalion, 506 Regiment, Easy Compagny,
101st. Airborne Division.
After fighting in Normandy he was assigned to Easy Company in Aldbourne, England in 1944. In Holland for Operation Market Garden
he was involved in the liberation of Eindhoven,
the hometown of the webmaster. On 15-03-1945, the 101st. Airborne Division, under command of Major General Maxwell Davenport Taylor
received the Presidential Unit Citation.
Clancy also enlisted in the Army in November 1942 at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania. Clarence received basic training at Camp Blanding, Florida. He then moved to Fort Benning for Paratrooper training. Clancy shipped overseas to England later in 1943 where he was assigned as an instructor for A Stage of the Airborne School at Chilton-Foliat. In March 1944 he was transferred to Headquarters Company, Second Battalion, 506 PIR, heavy weapons platoon. He jumped into Normandy on June 6, 1944 as part of the Airborne component of Operation Overlord. He landed near Sainte-Mère-Église, 2–3 miles from his intended drop zone and fought with the B company, 508th PIR, 82nd Airborne, for the first few days before making his way back to the 506th. On June 13 he was bayoneted in the stomach
while fighting in Carentan, France, and was evacuated to England for recovery. In Darrel Clay “Shifty” Powers‘ biography, while recounting this incident, Clancy is described as, “a goodhearted farm boy from Texas.” In August he was officially transferred to E company, Second Battalion,506th PIR. A fellow soldier and author of his own World War II experiences, David Kenyon Webster “Web”
also took note of Clancy and described him as, “very young, likable, and chatty.” Webster also recorded their Platoon Sergeant Floyd Talbert’s view of Clancy as, “a bright and eager younger brother who….would turn into a great soldier.” Webster dissapiered on 09-09-1961 (age 39) in Santa Monica, Los Angeles County, California, USA, during the day of shark fishing.
Introduced with Clancy was Michael Vincent “Mike Massaconi,
who Clancy would call his closest buddy during the war.
Michael Vincent “Mike Massaconi, survived the war and died 11-02-1999 (age 77) in North Adams, Berkshire County, Massachusetts, USA.
In September 1944, Clancy jumped in the daring but doomed Operation Market Garden in the Netherlands. He was wounded in the leg in fighting there in October. Clancy recovered from his wound and returned to his unit now located at Mourmelon, France. In December they were moved to the front in Belgium and fought in Bastogne, Belgium into January 1945. During the fighting there he was wounded a third time. It happened on the day after Christmas—26-12-1944. He was wounded in the head. It was bandaged up and he was further treated for his wound in a building. It would be the only time he saw the inside of a building during the entire Bastogne campaign. He lost a good friend and fellow soldier Hoobler, Donald Brenton “Hoob”
to a tragic accident there.
He took part in the fighting at Hagenau, in Alsace. In Germany they liberated a Nazi concentration camp at Landsberg, near Memmingen, Bavaria. It was one of the most difficult moments of the war. Men wept at what they saw in the camps. He remained with Easy company in Austria through the end of the war. He was among those who took Berchtesgaden and Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest in the closing days of World War II
and was with the 506th in Zell am See. He reenlisted in 1945. He was transferred to the 82nd Airborne in Frankfurt, Germany. He served there through 1948. On 12-01-1946, he marched in the Victory Parade in New York City.
He married his first wife Violet that same year. He was stationed in Germany while the Nuremberg Trials took place. During this time he found and took in a former German paratrooper and his wife. He shared his own living quarters with them. He also provided a stamp book he had found in Berchtesgaden, which listed names of those who joined the Nazi party, to the judges there. In 1949, he received Recondo training, which ultimately included six weeks of Commando training in the UK.
In 1950 Clancy was assigned to the 187th Parachute Infantry Regimental Combat Team. Serving in the Korean War, he made two combat jumps—one at Suk chon in October 1950, and one at Musan-ni in March 1951. The primary purpose of the Suk chon jump was to intercept retreating North Korean forces and free American POWs.
In March 1954, Clancy saw first hand the unfolding of the siege of the French Foreign Legion in the Battle of Dien Bien Phu. He was assigned as an adviser and intelligence gatherer for the French forces positioned there. He evaded the closing ring of Việt Minh besiegers, escaping a few weeks before the French fortifications fell in May of the same year. Clancy’s escape culminated under the cover of darkness with a painfully slow belly crawl across the flood plain which took him down to the banks of the Nam Yum River. The several hundred yard crawl took a few hours to complete. The current of the river carried Lyall silently downstream to his freedom. In 1955, Clancy was reassigned back to E Company, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. Clancy retired from the service in 1959 after an injury from a training jump.[2] He had made four combat jumps in two wars.
After leaving the service, Clancy initially worked for a carpet firm. He moved to Florida where he worked for Carvel Ice Cream as a marketing director. He remarried in 1971. He eventually moved to Lexington Park, Maryland. Clancy had six children, nine grandchildren and one great grandchild. He continued to be very active in the service to his community and to fellow veterans. Among numerous positions he held, he was VFW Commander Post 2632, American Legion Vice Commander, Lions Club President, President of Veterans of the Battle of the Bulge, and member of Southern Maryland Veterans Advisory Board. In 2005, Clancy was recognized as Native American by a chief of the Cherokee Nation and given the name “Silver Eagle.”
In 2008, he traveled to Kuwait with several other fellow E/506 veterans in coordination with Valor Studios and the USO to show their appreciation for the US troops serving there.
Clarence Odell “Clancy” Lyall, age 86 of Lexington Park, Maryland died in the morning of 19-03-2012 at St. Mary’s Hospital Maryland and is buried at the Evergreen Memorial Gardens Great Mills, St. Mary’s County, Maryland, United States. 22020 Chancellors Run Road, Great Mills, MD 20634.

Message(s), tips or interesting graves for the webmaster: robhopmans@outlook.com
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