Papa Jake: TikTok star who fought from Normandy beaches to the Bulge dies aged 102
A Second World War US Army veteran who escaped death on Omaha Beach and went on to share his wartime experiences on TikTok and YouTube, has died at the age of 102.
Known as Papa Jake, former Staff Sergeant Jake Larson's Story Time with Papa Jake videos, in which he shares memories of his time in the US Army, have been liked more than seven million times by his 1.2 million followers.
The 102-year-old veteran's granddaughter, McKaela Larson, created a TikTok account for her him after a video she posted about his service in May 2020 went viral.
In a TikTok post, Larson said her grandfather had passed away on 17 July but was "cracking jokes 'til the very end."
"As Papa would say, love you all the mostest," she added.
A late in life viral sensation
Ms Larson helped her grandfather share his memories from the Second World War, including near-death experiences and his pride at moving ranks from an infantry soldier to joining G3 Fifth Corps and helping to plan the D-Day landings.
The TikTok star went on to appear in a YouTube video with internet sensation Mr Beast in which 100 people – from the ages of one to 100 – spent days trapped inside clear plastic boxes and competed against each other to see who would last the longest and win $500,000.
Mr Beast, whose real name is Jimmy Donaldson, was impressed that Mr Larson lasted until the second day.
While Mr Larson enjoyed the success of his videos and the adoration he received for sharing his memories, his life started from meagre beginnings.
Mr Larson grew up on a farm with no electricity or running water in Hope, Minnesota, during the Depression. His family had so little money that his parents sold moonshine to make ends meet.
At the age of 15 and tempted by the prospect of earning £12 every three months, Mr Larson and his cousin lied about their age and joined the National Guard in 1939, eventually being inducted in the Federal Service on 10 February 1941.
Initially part of 34th Infantry Division – nicknamed the Red Bull Division – Mr Larson was transferred into V Corps G3 section, a plans and training unit, where he became an operations sergeant.
Top secret: Planning D-Day
It was from Brownlow House, a base for US troops in Northern Ireland during the Second World War, that Mr Larson helped plan the D-Day landings and train 34th Infantry Division troops before they embarked on Operation Torch in North Africa.
While at Brownlow House, Mr Larson was on the BIGOT list – a group of people working at the level of security above Top Secret.
The term, chosen by Prime Minister Winston Churchill before 1942, stood for the British Invasion of German Occupied Territory.
The acronym continued being used when US General Dwight D Eisenhower took over the planning role.
Speaking in July 2020 with host Don Abernathy for the What's The Scuttlebutt Podcast, a collection of interviews with Second World War veterans, Mr Larson explained what his role was during the planning of the D-Day landings.
He said: "BIGOT – that's the highest classification you could get and we were working on the invasion.
"I was an expert typist and I was just told what to type.
"Anybody that was top secret... you didn't walk around like anybody else. You were always kept under guard.
"BIGOT was so top secret that you weren't able to be out and walk around with what you knew.
"After the war was over, I received the Bronze Star for what I did working on the invasion."
The veteran also received the Legion of Honour, or Légion d'honneur in French, France's highest order of merit.
Operation Tiger
As Mr Larson shared his memories, one thing became clear – he considered himself to be very lucky.
The veteran came close to death many times but somehow survived, prompting him to name his 2021 autobiography The Luckiest Man In The World, Stories From The Life Of Papa.
His luck came in on 28 April 1944 when he found himself at Slapton Sands in Devon.
As part of the preparation for D-Day, British and US forces undertook a top-secret rehearsal involving 30,000 men which ended in a bloodbath.
Operation Tiger was a practice run for the D-Day landings that ended in the deaths of an estimated 749 American servicemen.
The plan was for 400 men each to be loaded onto several Landing Ship, Tanks (LSTs) that were due to land on Slapton Sands.
The exercise was to include a live-firing exercise to prepare the men for D-Day itself.
As Mr Larson explained in a series of short TikTok videos, things didn't go as planned.
"I happened to be in the first [Landing Ship, Tank] to the left that headed from Plymouth to Slapton Sands," he said. "The British were preparing us with live fire.
"Well, before the British got to us, two German E-boats came in [Allied term for the German navy's Schnellboot, or S-Boot].
"They sent out two torpedoes.
"They sunk the two ships to my right and they shot up our armed guard on top of us and shot out our air, so we were breathing the fumes from this raw diesel.
"Four hundred of us were laying on the floor vomiting and breathing through our wet handkerchiefs."
When the few who survived reached the shore, Mr Larson said they found themselves defenceless against "[the Germans'] ammunition and stuff" as they carried the M1 Garand which, in the veteran's opinion, was "like a pea shooter".
To keep up the morale of troops and not give Germany an advantage before D-Day, the failed operation was kept a secret.
Mr Larson said: "When we got out of that landing ship, a full bird colonel came up and swore us to secrecy that we wouldn't say a word.
"We couldn't talk about this, even to our commanding officers when we got back, under penalty of court martial.
"Over 40 years this was a secret. My family didn't even know about it."
D-Day Landings
Five weeks later, on 6 June 1944, 21-year-old Mr Larson landed on Omaha Beach with the 1st Division, nicknamed Big Red One.
Once again, Mr Larson's good luck came up trumps – because he was one of the first to be loaded onto the LST, he was one of the last off.
As Mr Larson explained, he and his fellow soldiers knew the beach would be full of landmines, saying: "Every once in a while you'd see a spurt of water shoot up from some guy stepping on a landmine.
"I made sure that I was walking in the steps of the people in front of me."
And then the soldier experienced a horror he said he would never forget - but one that encouraged him to make it to safety.
He said: "They were shooting in front of me, and man I was kind of nervous. I was smoking cigarettes then and I had a waterproof cigarette holder and I reached in and got out a cigarette - and dang I reached in again and my matches were wet.
"Not three feet behind me there was another soldier, so I turned around and said 'Hey buddy, have you got a match?'. I got no answer.
"I turned around, looked again, there was no head under the helmet and to this day I thank the spirit of that boy for me getting up and running.
"I must have came in at the time when they were reloading their machine guns and I ran and then they started shooting at me, and part of the way there I looked up and I said 'god, what the hell am I doing here?'.
"I can't see anybody to shoot at and they can shoot at me.
"But I made it to the cliff and I thank god to this day for guidance from the soul of that soldier that lost his head."
Battle of the Bulge
Mr Larson ended up fighting six actions – Omaha beach, Saint-Lô, the Falaise Gap, Paris, Luxembourg and the Battle of the Bulge.
In his words, he came out "without a scratch" and a good memory of the events.
Papa Jake's last dalliance with death during the Second World War was the Ardennes campaign, better known as the Battle of the Bulge.
At 2am on 16 December, Mr Larson was on duty and received intelligence that German paratroops were dropping in nearby.
Immediately, a staff sergeant woke up senior officers Colonel Hill and General Giraud, who alerted First Army.
He said: "By alerting those people at that time, they expected the Germans to be coming in at daylight which they did.
"At 5.30am the next morning, the tanks broke through and by alerting those people, we saved a few 100 lives, probably maybe 1,000 or so."
Mr Larson and his colleagues quickly prepared to destroy all their top-secret documents in case of capture, but instead the Germans cut them off from First Army.
This led to Papa Jake being assigned to Field Marshal Montgomery's 21st Army Group, which is where he spent the majority of his time.
He said: "How many people do you know that was also part of the British forces? The whole 5th Corps?
"We had two divisions on the other side on the line, the First and the 29th,and when Third Army finally got there to relieve, the 101st Infantry Division, and we put the squeeze on them from the top and that's when the Germans finally had to lay down their arms and march out of there."
Papa Jake turned 22 years old during the Battle of the Bulge.
More than three-quarters of a century later, Papa Jake continued to share stories from his military career and other highlights of his life.
These included fond memories of his late wife Lola, visiting Brownlow House eight decades later, paying his respects to the fallen at Omaha Beach and his delight at how many people had watched his videos.