Paying respects: Veterans gather to remember Pearl Harbor anniversary
Veterans gather to remember Pearl Harbor anniversary
PARKERSBURG — Members of local veterans groups gathered on a cold Saturday morning at Point Park to mark the 83rd anniversary of the attack that drew the United States into World War II.
On Dec. 7, 1941, Japanese forces attacked the U.S. Naval base at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. The bombing killed more than 2,300 American servicemen, nearly half of whom were sailors and Marines aboard the USS Arizona.
“Those people were surprised by the attack, and they defended our country to make her what she is today,” said April Binkney, secretary and treasurer of the Veterans Museum of the Mid-Ohio Valley. “So we need to honor (them).”
Binkney shared information about the USS West Virginia, which sank in the attack but was pulled from the water, repaired over the course of nearly four years and was in Tokyo Harbor when the Japanese surrendered to end the war.
Harold Smith, a Marine Corps veteran and member of the local Marine Corps League Detachment 1087, said his uncle was at Pearl Harbor and survived the attack.
“It means a lot to memorialize all those who came before me and sacrificed for this country,” he said.
After the ceremony, which included a 21-gun salute and the playing of “Taps,” the detachment presented donations of $750 each to representatives of the Children’s Home Society of West Virginia and the Fraternal Order of Police Blennerhassett Lodge 79 to support their programs serving children in need during the Christmas season.