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William F. Simpson, Sr. was born
March 6, 1923 in Duke, North Carolina ( later
renamed Erwin). He enlisted in the Navy on August 3, 1942 and entered
Navy
Pre-flight
School
in Georgia.
Upon completion of Pre-flight
School
he was commissioned an Ensign and assigned to aviation cadet training in
Pensacola,
Florida.
After successful completion of the
Aviation course of instruction and receiving his Wings designating him a
Naval Aviator on September 7, 1943, he was assigned to Pensacola Naval
Air Station as a flight instructor.
Later, he was transferred to the
Pacific Theater where he flew supplies and military personnel to
locations throughout the Pacific. On February 1, 1945 he was released
to inactive duty. He was recalled to active duty on March 26, 1946 and
assigned to Metrological Squadron # 1 in the
Philippines. This unit was known as the
“Typhoon Chasers”. The unit’s duties were monitor and fly into typhoons
relaying the information accumulated to Naval weather stations so that
Navy, other allied ships, and aircraft could be directed out of the
typhoon’s path. He was honorably discharged from the Navy on November
25, 1947 as Lt.JG.
In 1944, while home on emergency
leave he met, fell in love with and married Geraldine Stroud of
Pink Hill,
NC who was teaching school in
Erwin,
North Carolina. They had five
children; William F. Simpson, Jr., Carolyn Terry Simpson, Lina Annette
Simpson, Russell Craig Simpson, and Beverly Jo Simpson.
He enrolled at the
University
of North Carolina
and graduated with degrees in business administration and law in 1950.
He, his wife and family then moved
to Pink Hill,
North Carolina where he studied for the NC Bar Exam and
instructed Air Force cadets and foreign nationals in aviation at
Stallings Field, Kinston,
N.C. and Mrs. Simpson resumed her teaching
career at Pink
Hill
School.
After passing the bar examination
he started his law practice with the
Kinston
law firm of Wallace and Wallace and continued flight instruction at
Stallings Field. In 1957 when Stallings Field ceased operations, he
moved his law practice to Jacksonville,
and Pink Hill,
NC where he lived and worked until 1990 when he
retired. He died December 31, 1993.
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