Clark
V. Poling was born August 7, 1910 in Columbus, Ohio. He was the
son of Susie Jane Vandersall of East Liberty, Ohio and Daniel A.
Poling of Portland, Oregon. Clark’s siblings were Daniel, Mary and
Elizabeth. Clark attended Whitney Public School in Auburndale,
Massachusetts where his teachers remembered his maturity and
delicate side of his nature. The Auburndale days ended when his
mother died in 1918. She is buried at Greenlawn Cemetery, Uniontown,
Ohio. Clark's father was an Evangelical Minister and in 1936 was
rebaptized as a Baptist minister. Reverend Daniel Poling was
remarried on August 11, 1919 to Lillian Diebold Heingartner of
Canton, Ohio.
Clark attended Oakwood, a Quaker high school in Poughkeepsie, New
York, and was a good student and an excellent football halfback.
Clark was a council member and president of the student body. In
1929, he enrolled at Hope College in Holland, Michigan and spent his
last two years at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey,
graduating in 1933 with an A.B. degree. Clark entered Yale
University's Divinity School in New Haven, Connecticut and graduated
with his B.D. degree in1936.
He was ordained in the Reformed Church in America and his first
assignment was the First Church of Christ, New London, Connecticut.
Shortly thereafter, he accepted the assignment of Pastor of the
First Reformed Church in Schenectady, New York.
Clark was married to Betty Jung of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and
the next year, Clark, Jr. (Corky) was born. With our country now at
war with Japan, Germany and Italy, he decided to become a chaplain.
Talking with his father, Dr. Daniel A. Poling, who was a chaplain in
World War I, he was told that chaplains in that conflict sustained
the highest mortality rate of all military personnel. Without
hesitation, he was appointed on June 10, 1942 as a chaplain with the
131st Quartermaster Truck Regiment and reported to Camp Shelby,
Hattiesburg, Mississippi, on June 25, 1942. Later he attended
Chaplains School at Harvard with Chaplains Fox, Goode and Washington
after his transfer to Camp Myles Standish in Taunton, Massachusetts.
Shortly after the U.S.A.T. Dorchester was sunk on February 3, 1943,
his wife, Betty, gave birth to a daughter, Susan Elizabeth, on April
20. Chaplain Poling was posthumously awarded the Purple Heart and
Distinguished Service Cross. |
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