by Staff Sgt. Mike Meares
Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam Public Affairs
12/10/2012 - JOINT BASE PEARL HARBOR-HICKAM, HAWAII -- For the final time, Senior Master Sgt. (Ret.) Raymond Lee Perry has returned "home" to Hickam Field.
Seventy-one years to the day, Dec. 7, 2012, Perry's family culminated a
journey which began with the attacks on military installations around
Oahu by bringing his remains back to Hickam one last time to attend the
Dec. 7, 1941 Remembrance Ceremony, and then say their final goodbyes as
they spread his ashes in the waters of the Pearl Harbor Channel near the
Hickam Officer's Club. The Federal Fire Department also performed the
Fireman's Last Call, a toll of the bell 15 times in honor of Perry. This
is the first time a Hickam Field survivor has had his ashes spread at
Hickam.
"It's very good, I don't have words to express this moment," said
Elizabeth Perry, wife of the late Perry. "I'm sure he's proud, very
proud of the service today. He was very brave during his last journey.
He was alert to the last."
Perry first arrived in Hawaii in 1937, then a private first class with
the Army's 29th Car Company, Perry was on temporary duty at Fort
Armstrong in downtown Honolulu when the first wave of attacks began.
Soldiers at Fort Armstrong scrambled to get away from the antiaircraft
shells that rained from the sky. The contact fuses on the shells would
explode when they hit the ground, since some of them didn't make contact
with any aircraft.
"They were going up and coming back down and exploding in our
motorpool," Perry said in a Stars and Stripes interview in December
1991. "I went over to our first sergeant and said, 'I'm volunteering.'
He said, 'You don't even know what I want volunteers for.'"
"I said, 'I don't care. I just want to get out of here."
Perry was "tired of getting shot at" and Hickam was getting pounded by a
barrage of bullets and bombs, and was in desperate need of
transportation for the wounded. Hickam's brand new clinic had only 14
beds and couldn't handle all the dead, dying and wounded. The hallways,
sidewalks and grounds were littered with men, some covered in white
sheets with red silhouettes marking their places underneath. Most of the
wounded were being taken to Tripler (Army hospital), which was 14 or 15
buildings across the street from Fort Shafter. Two military policemen
on motorcycles escorted their convoy of five trucks to Hickam Field.
"We drove down Hangar Avenue, dodging debris, then pulled in and circled
our trucks like we were protecting ourselves from Indians," he said in
the interview. "There were a lot of wounded waiting. One guy had one arm
blown off at the elbow and his other hand blown off. We were getting
about 12 wounded into each truck and then about 8:35 or 8:40 a.m.
somebody shouted, 'Here they come again!'"
Parked in the area between Hangar 9 and Hangar 13, everyone took cover
in the closest hangar door well. After the explosions and firing
subsided, they went out and found all their trucks completely
demolished. Of the 17 men they had picked up, only three were still
alive. Earlier, someone had taken a bed sheet, painted a large red cross
on it, and attached it to the top of the center truck; but all it
proved to be was a target for the attackers.
"I saw that somebody had made up a big red cross with mecurichrome on a
sheet or something," he told the Stars and Stripes reporter. "That just
made us a better target. The trucks were destroyed. We then tried to
commandeer a flatbed truck to carry a couple more of the guys to the
hospital, but the driver said he couldn't leave. One of the guys pulled
out his pistol and pointed it at him and said, 'What do you mean you
can't go?' (The driver) decided he could take them to the hospital."
Perry, a husband, father, grandfather and great grandfather, carried on
his Air Force career and was most proud of his role in helping develop
the pararescue specialist career field. He participated in numerous
jumps and rescue missions as far north as Ellesmere Island, Canada and
Thule, Greenland. His daughter, Lani, said her father was a "master
parachutist" and always prepared his parachute himself, never relying on
someone else for his safety. He retired following a 22-year career of
faithful service.
"The Air Force did take good care of the man," Elizabeth said. "Every
time people would ask him, 'How long were you in the Air Force?,' he
would tell them 22 years, so many days and so many hours. He had down to
the hour, though I can't remember the number of hours."
Following his military career, he worked with Civil Air Transport, based
in Taipei, Taiwan, from 1961 to 1965. He joined the FAA at Wake Island
until 1970, and finally retiring from Civil Service at Hickam Air Force
Base in 1989 where he worked with the fire department as a fire safety
inspector.
Chief Master Sgt. (Ret.) Joel Shaw, now with the 647th Air Base Group,
was a former Pacific Air Forces inspector general team member when he
first met Perry during the 1980s. Shaw remembers answering a knock on
his door where Perry was making the first of many visits to perform an
in-home fire safety briefing.
"He said he was there to do a fire inspection of the houses on the
installation," Shaw said. "So, he came in and did his check in the
house. He was a real friendly guy and I had no idea that he was a Hickam
Field survivor until now. He wasn't the type of individual to come out
and say, 'I did this, or I did that.' I would have loved to hear his
story when I knew him."
In his passing, just as in his life, his family said he was tough to the
end. Because of the care he received at the hospice center, he made
sure to shake the hand of the caregiver before he passed.
"He hadn't eaten for a week when he reached out his hand to shake the
man's hand," Elizabeth said. "It's very hard. I knew he would go away,
but it's still very hard.
The Perry's have been married for 47 years. During the ceremony,
Elizabeth hugged the flag presented to her as tears streamed down her
cheeks. She said her final goodbye to her husband as his ashes were
spread into the waters of Pearl Harbor. "I will see you soon," she said,
choking back her sobs.
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
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