Lester "Mickey" Bostian
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Lester "Mickey" Bostian spent 20 years in the U.S. Navy, retiring as a master chief petty officer in 1959. He was a prisoner of war from 1942-1945 and was stationed as a tugboat captain at Mayport Naval Station in the late 1950s. He was a 54-year resident of Jacksonville Beach.
Images
Lester Bostian (middle)
Bostian with his tugboat crew in Trinidad in the mid-1950s.
Bostian (left) at his re-enlistment ceremony in 1957.
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
Bostian spent 42 months as a Prisoner of War during World War II. He was starved, beaten and tortured and his laundry list of prison ailments included beriberi, malaria and pneumonia. He was imprisoned at the infamous Sendai No. 3 lead and zinc mine in Hosokura, Japan, before being liberated in August 1945. After his decorated military service, Bostian, a Silver Star recipient, opened the first Dairy Queen at the Beaches in 1959. He ran the 3rd Street North franchise until the late 1960s. He and his wife, Pauline, an Arkansas native like himself, were married for 65 years.
Sources
Cassandra Bostian Fredericks
"Former Mayport chief was WWII POW," The Beaches Leader, May 22, 2014, by Johnny Woodhouse, associate editor
Cassandra Bostian Fredericks
Cassandra Bostian Fredericks