Father Sampson praying over the dead following D-Day.Father Sampson is a native of Cherokee, born Feb. 29, 1912, but grew up in Dalles, Oregon. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1941 for the Diocese of Des Moines. Father Sampson served the parish in Neola and taught at Dowling High School in Des Moines. His parish ministry was brief as he enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1942.
Father SampsonAfter World War II, the chaplain left the military for a few short months before returning to serve as chaplain during the Korean War. Father Sampson later became an instructor for Army chaplains and was named a monsignor in 1963. During the Vietnam War, the priest was promoted to Major General and named Chief of Chaplains. The priest was known to visit wounded soldiers in hospitals and served annual Christmas Masses in Vietnam for combat troops.
Visiting soldiers hospitalized in Vietnam“The ack ack was terrific. … The green light came on and the jump master pushed our equipment bundle out and we went out as fast as we could. Father Francis L. Sampson made his first combat jump as the heat of battle was raging all around him. When he landed, he cut away his parachute, gathered his equipment and weapons and made his way to his fellow men. Sampson’s first night in France after the events of D-Day was spent in a small farmhouse caring for wounded soldiers when he was confronted by two German soldiers pointing guns in his face,” from Father Sampson’s book, Paratrooper Padre, first published in 1948. https://www.amazon.com/Paratrooper-Padre-Francis-L-Sampson/dp/1258138530