In memory of Charles W. Havens
Jul 12, 1903 - May 12, 1996Location
Memorial Page of Charles Havens
Charles Havens transferred
from Colgate University to Western Maryland College in 1926 and began a decadeslong
association with Carroll County as an assistant football coach at WMC, then as
the head coach, then also as a coach of baseball, basketball, and boxing. He taught
physical education and health as well. After retirement from the college in 1956, he
went on to teach for twelve more years in the Carroll County public school system.
Charles Havens’ obituary, written by Fred Rasmussen and published in the Baltimore
Sun on 16 May 1996, included the following story of his wartime service:
After World War II began, Mr. Havens joined the Army Air Corps in 1942. Too old to fly, he
became an intelligence officer with the 486th Bomber Group in Sudbury, England. Each day he parked his jeep at the end of a runway and watched the planes taking off for bombing raids over Germany. Every time we took off, my nose gunner would say, There’s the coach,‟ Sigurd Jensen, a retired Air Force colonel, said in a 1986 article in The
[Baltimore] Evening Sun. It almost became a good-luck symbol to see him as the last man on the
ground as we left and, yes, as the first one there, waiting, when we came back.‟ On the morning of May 20, 1944, two B-24 bombers collided in heavy fog. Ignoring thedanger from 500-pound bombs and 2,000 gallons of gasoline, Mr. Havens pulled 22 men from the wreckage. Twelve of them survived. For his action, he received the Soldier’s Medal, the highest award for noncombat bravery.

