We've all heard stories about the men and women who enlisted in the armed forces after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor and about the large number of prominent actors, such as James Stewart, Clark Gable, Jackie Coogan, and Robert Montgomery, who put Hollywood aside to serve their country (frequently in dangerous combat situations).
Phil Harris is another who volunteered for service during the war. If you've listened to the Benny Program, you know that Phil and members of his orchestra left the show in December 1942 when Phil enlisted in the Merchant Marines. I don't know how many realize that Phil was 38 years old when he enlisted - much older than most volunteers. As his first daughter had just been born, by age and by family status, he was certainly exempt from the draft. And the Merchant Marines was no easy job in the early years of the war. While I don't know much about Phil's specific service during the war, the Merchant Marines took enormous casualties during the first years of the war as they guarded our oceanic shipping against German and Japanese submarine attack.
While we justly remember Phil's musical, acting and comedy gifts, we should also recall that there was much more to Phil Harris than his work in front of a microphone.