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Oldest Pearl Harbor Survivor passes in San Diego at 106

RIP. I saw him at the Memorial Day ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery earlier this year.

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Our next door neighbor growing up was a Pearl Harbor survivor. He joined the Navy in the mid 30’s.

During the attack he was mustered to his post in an AA battery. Shortly thereafter a bomb went off and blew him into the water. Sailors in one of the [wooden] harbor launches picked him up a few minutes later, ignoring the mayhem all around.

He was brought to shore, triaged, and then quickly reassigned to a Marine Infantry Company. They believed an invasion was imminent. He was reassigned to a heavy cruiser some time later.

Despite decoded diplomatic messages, an uptick in spy reports on shipping, and a major fleet going radio silent, we got clobbered. We lost about the same number of people as in 9/11, but the nation was only 1/3rd the size it is today.

My mother grew up in Chicago, and I asked her where she was when she heard the news. She was riding a street car when the first radio reports came in. She said the response was anger, and a will for vengeance.
 
My father graduated from Wakefield HS in 1940. He was recruited by Holy Cross as a Fullback, and sent to Marionapolis, a Catholic boarding school in CT to be redshirted for the 1941 season.

Before the Thanksgiving break (11/27/1941), the school’s headmaster gathered them all together in the Chapel and told them, “Boys, when you go home for Thanksgiving, I want you to think about joining the Navy. Because we are going to war very soon, and if you don’t join the Navy, you are probably going to get drafted into the Army, and you probably won’t come back.”

My father heeded this advice and enlisted in the Navy December 1, 1941. He was at the Great Lakes Naval Training Center in Chicago when the Japanese attacked. He spent part of 1942 and 43 as a mechanic/gunner on a PBY flying boat out of Iceland. He was part of the original crew of the USS Wasp CV18 (CV7 was sunk at Quadalcanal) and was on her until late 1946. He attributes surviving the war to being too big to fit into the gunner’s station of the Curtis Helldiver, which replaced the SBD Dauntless. He told me he fired “about a quarter million” rounds “and never hit anything.”

It’s hard to overestimate the impact of the Japanese surprise attack at Pearl Harbor on the world, then and now. And I for one find it hard to forget that 40% of American POW’s died at their hands, though I don’t blame the Japanese people of today.
 
You guys are probably aware of the USS Arizona internment for Dec 7th vets that were aboard her on that day. Aparently there are only a few left and most will be burried with their relatives here. Here is the last one that will go to Pearl for his service.

 
Remember the Arizona and POW's before you enter a Honda or Toyota dealership.
 
106 meant he was no youngster at Pearl. Modern day you think of military as 18-24. Not so much back then. And I believe they took older men when the draft ramped up in WWII

My grandfather, 25 at the time, was in Basic on Dec 7. Sent right out to the pacific. He didn’t join for patriotism as much for food and a job to send money back home to his momma.
 
Another one gone.
Odd Instagram claim, he wasn't on the Arizona.

RIP, Sir. [halfmast]


View: https://www.instagram.com/p/CpasXXaStAY/



Pearl Harbor survivor Jack Holder dies in Arizona at age 101​

Jack Holder, a Pearl Harbor survivor who went on become a decorated World War II flyer, has died in Arizona

PHOENIX -- Jack Holder, a Pearl Harbor survivor who went on become a decorated World War II flyer who flew over 100 missions in the Pacific and European theaters, has died in Arizona. He was 101.

Darlene Tryon, a close friend and the executor of Holder’s estate, said he died at Friday at a hospital in the Phoenix suburb of Chandler. The Pearl Harbor National Memorial also announced the death. Born to a farming family in Gunter, Texas, Holder joined the Navy in 1940 when he was 18.

He was on duty at Ford Island within Oahu’s Pearl Harbor when Japanese aircraft bombed the U.S. naval base on Dec. 7, 1941.

“The first bomb that fell on Pearl Harbor was about 100 yards from me,” Holder said, adding that he “saw guys swimming through burning oil in the water.”

Holder recalled diving into a ditch to avoid gunfire.

Hunkered down behind a fortress of sandbags, “I wondered if this was the day I would die,” Holder told the Arizona Republic in a 2016 interview. “That morning I watched as Japanese dive bombers devastated Pearl Harbor. I knew that we would no longer sit on the sidelines of the war ravaging Europe.”

Holder said he spent three harrowing days manning a makeshift machine gun pit, a ditch lined with sandbags, in the aftermath of the attack.

About 2,400 servicemen were killed in the Pearl Harbor attack, which launched the U.S. into World War II. The USS Arizona alone lost 1,177 sailors and Marines, nearly half the death toll.

Holder went on to fight in the Battle of Midway and flew missions over Guadalcanal and the Solomon Islands before being transferred to England and flying missions along the French coast and the English Channel.

The Pearl Harbor National Memorial said Holder was awarded two distinguished flying cross medals, six air medals, a presidential citation and six commendation medals in his Navy career before being honorably discharged in 1948.

Holder then flew for 25 years as a corporate and commercial pilot, took up golf and moved to an Arizona retirement community. He also became an avid WWII educator and became a regular at Pearl Harbor commemorations and museums and schools, according to Tryon.

In December 2021, a nonprofit company took Holder on an honor flight out of Mesa’s Falcon Field to celebrate his 100th birthday. Asked at the event to tell his secret to a long life, Holder said “good heart exercise and two scotch and sodas every night.”

Tryon said an early April memorial service is planned for Holder in Phoenix and he will be buried at Arlington National Cemetery near the nation's capital at a later date.

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs doesn’t have statistics for how many Pearl Harbor survivors are still living.
 
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RIP.

I hadn't opened this thread before... how come all these people are "last survivors of the Arizona?"

ETA: Oh. I get that the thread was started for the "oldest" guy and this latest sailor (Conter) was the last Arizona sailor, but who was the Holder fellow?
 
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