
Veterans Day is the day to celebrate those who put themselves forward to protect our nation and our way of life. Howard Marler was a veteran of the United States Navy during and after World War II. His service period began in April of 1944 and he reported for basic training; he was sent for training as a tail gunner on the Douglas Dauntless fighter but then reassigned as a machinist and put on the flight deck crew to arm F4-Corsair fighters as a result of the changes in his duties he spent Much of the year 1944 in schools. After being assigned to the Carrier Antietam (CV-36) he participated in submarine hunts in the Atlantic on the way south to cross through the Panama Canal for service in the Pacific. After a stop for resupply etc and liberty in California, they set sail for Hawaii. Seven days out from Hawaii word was sent to the fleet of the Surrender of Japan; the Antietam conducted air patrols over occupied Japan and the crew visited Japan and other islands. Howard did once admit to having sailed through a typhoon during his service. After returning from sea, Howard worked at the Washington Navy Yard until the reductions in force released him from the Navy when he started his Business Photos by Marler.
We should also discuss another of our veterans' forgotten subjects, those whose jobs are in forgotten or unnoticed parts of the service such as Lawrence O’Donnell. Lawrence was also a machinist in the Navy during World War II. While Howard was serving on the Antietam and being sent to the fighting edge Lawrence served on a “Jeep” Carrier; CVE-69 Kassan Bay. The “Jeep” Carriers were not intended to see combat they carried supplies and replacement crew and planes for the battle groups engaged against the Axis powers. Largely unknown in the civilian world today these are the men who kept the carriers fully equipped before and after battles like the Coral Sea. While Howard left the Navy (not entirely voluntarily) Lawrence stayed in the United States Naval Reserve.
Lawrence had a brother John. John O’Donnell served in the Army and was stationed in Hawaii. John Married Anne Rink, Anne’s Brother George was in the Army Air Corps and at some point in his service became a member of the Caterpillar Club for using his parachute to survive. While George and John returned to New Jersey to raise families Lawrence did not return until 2002 when he was buried in the family plot.
Let us also not forget the women who stepped up to run facilities and serve in jobs to free up fighting men through organizations such as the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps (later the Women's Army Corps or WAC), the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP), and the Women Accepted for Volunteer Military Services (WAVES). The WACS and the WASPS were in the Army (the Air Force separated from the Army in the fall of 1947), and there was also a branch of the Marines for women and the Coast Guard had the SPARS.
Many of these people are now deceased, Howard Marler left us in 2005, Lawrence O’Donnell in 2002, and John O’Donnell in 1985; there are each day fewer and fewer of these older veterans to pass on their stories and their love of country to us. For example, in his obituary in 2006, we learned that George Rink was a member of the Caterpillar club (he would have died if not for his parachute) but since he has passed on we cannot ask him what happened. This makes the observance of Veterans Day that much more important; it provides all of us with the reminder that the people living next door to us may very well be part of the great company of men and women who have achieved the near impossible to face down evil, death, fear, loss, and still survive to tell the tale. This weekend do not let the time pass to ask about the life of the veterans in your family or your community, if possible try to get them on the record so that their lives and experiences are not lost to history and forgotten.
A brief history of Veterans Day
On November 11, 1918, at 11:00 AM the guns went silent all along the front, and troops from both sides began to celebrate and plan their journey home, the great war had ended. It had enveloped nearly the entire world through their entanglements and alliances but with this peace, the leaders of the world believed that the horrors of this conflict would end all wars; in fact, the newspapers picked up the phrase and it was called the war to end all wars.
If they had known that the war would be back on again just a little over two decades later what might they have said or done differently in 1918 or the two decades after?
President Woodrow Wilson along with other world leaders declared the 11th of November as Armistice Day to commemorate the end of the War to end all wars; in 1938 by an act of Congress Armistice Day had been declared a national holiday. By 1954 Armistice Day had started to become sadly outdated with the end of the Second World War in 1945 and the end of active hostilities in Korea in 1953. President Eisenhower issued a proclamation officially recognizing November 11, 1954, as Veterans Day, in honor of all who had served. On June 28 1968 The Uniform Holiday Bill (Public Law 90-363 (82 Stat. 250)) was signed into law. Its purpose was to ensure three-day weekends for Federal employees by declaring four Monday Holidays: Washington's Birthday, Memorial Day, Veterans Day, and Columbus Day. The theoretical purpose of these holidays is to create new opportunities for travel and leisure activities in each quarter of the year, leading to more even economic growth. Many of the states did not comply and Veterans Day being an important day President Gerald R. Ford signed a law in 1978 restoring the observance to its place on November 11th where it remains today.
There are five points that the Department of Defense and the Veterans Affairs Administration have referenced several times that should probably be repeated here:
The correct spelling is Veterans Day since the day is not possessed by Veterans but is dedicated to them.
From 1968 -1978 Veterans Day was observed on the fourth Monday of October. President Ford returned the observance to the 11th day of the 11th month for historical reasons; as well as being pressured by states and veterans groups.
In 1954 President Eisenhower began the process of changing Armistice Day to Veterans Day.
The United States Marine Corps Celebrates the Marine Corps Birthday on N November 10, and Veterans Day on November 11 with a 96-hour Liberty. The 10th is the birthday cake celebration for those near Quantico Virginia the public is often allowed to participate and enjoy the cake several times during the day for details visit the Marine Corps Museum page Here (https://www.usmcmuseum.com/).
There was an attempt to rename the holiday Mayflower Day by a group stressing that the War to end All Wars didn’t and the Mayflower Compact signed on November 11, 1620, was more deserving of a holiday than the armistice.
https://rumble.com/v1tcnoa-some-of-the-veterans-in-our-family-from-the-howard-marler-museum.html
References:
https://www.va.gov/opa/vetsday/vetdayhistory.asp
https://www.va.gov/opa/vetsday/gallery.asp
https://www.va.gov/opa/vetsday/speakers.asp
https://www.military.com/veterans-day
Veterans Day. (2022, October 5). In Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veterans_Day
https://libguides.mnhs.org/wwii_women
https://www.usmcmuseum.com/