Book highlights SWFL’s role during WWI, WWII

Published: Updated:

FORT MYERS, Fla.- A man who gained fame for setting a world record for giving blood, has now written a book, focusing on our local military vets.

John Sheppard’s “Impact: Six Degrees of Separation” highlights the roles of those with ties to Southwest Florida in winning World War I and II.

Sheppard holds the Guinness World Record for giving blood, doing so every 56 days, since the 1950s. His ninth book profiles 15 men who were from Lee County, or had ties here, in helping the United States win the war.

“These were people who were committed to their country, committed to protecting the liberty of this country, even if it meant, giving their life,” said Sheppard.

Every 12 weeks, a group of 20,000 men trained at Buckingham Army Airfield, and another 4,000-5,000 trained at what is now Page Field.

“Every major Army, Air Force plane with the exception of the B-29, trained right here in Lee County, Florida.”

The book has a chapter on Fort Myers native Walter Sheppard, John’s cousin.

Walter Sheppard was training gunners for the U.S. Army Air Corps in Alabama, but he itched to do more.

He approached the base commander, “And I said, ‘colonel, I need to get in the war. He said, ‘I need you here.’ I said, ‘well, the war’s not getting over, and they need me over there!'”

The Army said no, so he signed up for Naval air training, and was stationed as a rescue pilot in the Pacific.

His first action, was landing a seaplane to rescue three Marines whose plane was shot down, with Japanese fighters all around.

“We landed in those rough seas, we taxied, and drifted, and finally got alongside the life rafts and rescued all three men,” said Walter Sheppard. “I’d be lying to you if I said I wasn’t scared, of course we were scared.”

John Sheppard discovered Jimmy Doolittle also trained in Southwest Florida for his bombing raid on Tokyo, by flying low over the Gulf of Mexico.

“They had to fly into Tokyo, 50 feet off the water. So they practiced, flying from Pensacola, they flew to, it wasn’t Page Field, it was Fort Myers Airport,” said Sheppard, “then fly to Ellenton, Texas, and then back. All 50 feet off the ground.”

He says many Americans were first exposed to Southwest Florida during the war.

“Many came back, because the people were so nice, and opened their arms to them.”

You can buy John Sheppard’s book on Amazon.

Copyright ©2024 Fort Myers Broadcasting. All rights reserved.

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without prior written consent.