Author Archive: Editor

The Last Word—Commander’s Column

Our search for our MIA’s is an on-going effort, and at the forefront of this effort is the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC).  JPAC was officially established and activated on October 1, 2003.  The organization was created from the merger of the Army’s 30 year old Central Identification Laboratory and the 11-year-old Joint Task Force-Full Accounting (JTF-FA).  This Command was established to combine the expertise and resources of these two organizations into one so that the DOD mission could be more effectively accomplished.  Over 400 military and civilian personnel from all branches of the Armed Forces are assigned to JPAC, and their mission is to conduct global search, recovery, and laboratory operations to identify unaccounted-for Americans from past conflicts.  The Command is located at Hickam AFB in Hawaii and continues the search for the Americans who remain listed as missing.

The Command maintains four permanent detachments that provide logistics and in-country support during investigation and recovery operations.  These Detachments are located in Bangkok, Thailand; Hanoi, Vietnam; Vientiane, Laos; and Honolulu, Hawaii.  Day-to-day operations of JPAC involve researching case files, investigating leads, excavating sites, and identifying Americans who have been killed in action.

Once a recovery mission succeeds in finding some remains of an MIA and artifacts from the site, the Central Identification Laboratory (CIL) uses its state-of-the-art facilities and forensic techniques to establish the identity of the military personnel.  Based on the conclusions of the CIL, JPAC prepares an extensive report of its findings, which is given to the surviving family members of the deceased.  These comprehensive reports summarize all of the actions that had been taken to investigate the conditions and locations of the disappearance, recover the remains and artifacts, and identify the MIA.  Family members are given copies of these reports and the remains of the family member are returned to the family with full military honors.

JPAC and its predecessors have recovered the remains of thousands of MIA’s.  We salute the efforts of JPAC to bring closure to the surviving family members of our nation’s MIA’s.

Membership Dues are in the Mail

It’s an effort each year to run down folks for their annual dues.  If you haven’t opened that envelope from National and you are a continuous member (as opposed to a Life Member), please pay your dues as soon as possible.  If you are a student or active duty military and need assistance, the Post will cover your dues.  Also, if you are unable to pay your dues due to hardship, please let our Quartermaster know.  Your membership in VFW will never be denied due to your inability to pay your membership dues.

Buddy Poppies & Speakers’ Bureau

We are well into the planning stages of handing out Buddy Poppies on the 9th and 10th of November.  This is going to be an interesting year as many schools will be having their Veterans Day assemblies on those days.  We are going to need to have as many volunteers as possible to cover our obligation to provide speakers to the various schools and manning the tables at the various markets in Mukilteo and Edmonds.  So if you’ve never signed up for either event, please consider it this year.  Both projects are critical.  For those of you who have a hard time making the meetings, Bob Crawford is the chairman of Buddy Poppies and his number is 206-909-4893 and his email is [email protected].  Rock Roth is our organizer for school visitations and speaking engagements and he can be reached at 206-354-8869 or [email protected].  I think you will enjoy either or both of them if you have never done them before.  The kids in the schools are great as well as the folks you meet handing out Buddy Poppies.

National POW/MIA Day

September 21st is National POW/MIA day.  If you have a POW/MIA pin or can buy it, wear it on your lapel that day.  The Post will get an article into the newspaper, but it is up to all of us to educate the “civilians” about those who haven’t come home.

Post Celebrates 30th Birthday

Post Celebrates 30th Birthday

Post Celebrates 30th Birthday

Post 8870 turned 30 in August.  While we didn’t have any candles, we did have Jim Raymond, past Department Commander, share some of his stories of the early days of the Post.  In addition, Post Commander Fred Apgar spoke with Art Petty, the first Commander of the Post (actually, 2nd Commander but the 1st for all practical purposes).  As we had a number of new members at the meetings, it was particularly fitting that the “old timers” were able to give some history of the Post that, in turn, will be passed on in future years to newer members.

Post Donates POW/MIA Flag to Senior Center

Post Donates POW/MIA Flag to Senior Center

John Bustard, Fred Apgar, and Ferrill Fleming raising the new POW/MIA flag. 

 

Les Abel modified the lanyard and John Bustard, Post member and Commander of American Legion Post 66, Fred Apgar, Post Commander of 8870, and Ferrill Fleming, Director of the Edmonds Senior Center hoisted the POW/MIA flag now flying at the Senior Center.  Both the Legion and the Post meet there and it seemed only fitting that the POW/MIA flag should be flown.  The Senior Center has been gracious to both veterans organizations.  There is no rent or room charge plus the Senior Center allows the VFW to participate in the lunch program for a nominal fee per individual.  On the rare occasions we have exceeded our meal account they have been accommodating in finding additional meals for our veterans (sometimes I think the miracle of the fishes and the loaves is being duplicated in their kitchen).

The American Legion found itself homeless with the sale of their building and they now meet in our old meeting area, the Senior Center Library.  Just a note to all you VFW members, you are all eligible to join the American Legion.  If you haven’t, you should consider it.  Like Chicago, your vote will get counted twice when our organizations pressure Congress in fulfilling their obligation to veterans.

Stand Down at Seattle Central Community College

Seattle Central Community College Stand Down

 

Seattle Central Community College Stand Down

 

Post member David Beavers-Bair brought the Seattle Stand Down to the attention of the Post at the August meeting.  If you have any veterans you know that may need the services described above, tell them about the Stand Down.  If you any questions or wish further information, David can be contacted at [email protected].  For those of you who would just like to attend the Stand Down, feel free to stop by and look David up.

Remember 9/11

Remember 9-11

 

As you can see by the invitation, Naval Station Everett will be conducting a 9/11 memorial service.  Hopefully, we will have a representation of VFW members attending the ceremony.  This notice has also gone out to all the Posts in District 1.  Make sure that if you plan on attending the service you RSVP by September 7th.  Each member will be on their own to RSVP.  If you do attend, please wear you VFW cover to show the Navy that we are in attendance and we stand by them on a day that none of us shall forget.

Robert “Buck” Weaver: Fighter Pilot

By Fred M. Apgar

Robert Buck Weaver Fighter Pilot

Robert Buck Waver Fighter Pilot

 

Buck was born in 1918 in Cincinnati, Ohio.  He was the fourth child in a family of two brothers and a sister, who spoiled “little Buck” as they grew older.  His father, John P., was a popular dentist in town, with a growing practice.  Buck was active in sports in high school and graduated in 936.  In those days, jobs were scarce, so in October 1938, Buck enlisted in the Ohio National Guard Cavalry as a no-striper.  His three years as a mounted horseman, later proved very profitable during Buck’s Air Force career.  A World War I veteran interested Buck in acquiring dental laboratory skills, and with the help of his father, he earned enough money to attend college in a pre-dental program.  Buck pursued a pre-dental program at the University of Cincinnati for two years.

Buck’s plans to become a dentist were placed on hold when it appeared that hostilities in Europe and the Pacific would result in the United States entering the war.  As a child, Buck had an interest in flying, “building” planes with orange crates and broomsticks as well as accumulating flight time in an instructional program.  With this already established passion for flying, the Army Air Corps recruiter made an offer to Buck that he couldn’t resist.  In September 1941, he was sworn into the Corps and reported for primary training at Grider Field in Pine Bluff, Arkansas.  A month later, Buck soloed in the PT-19A trainer.  Upon completion of the primary phase of his pilot training, he was assigned to Goodfellow Field to continue his training.  It was while he was in transit to his new assignment that Pearl Harbor was hit and pilot training now took on a new sense of urgency.  Buck successfully completed the pilot training program in April, 1942.  The newly commissioned Second Lieutenant had earned his wings.

Buck’s first duty assignment was at Salinas, California, flying anti-submarine missions off the west coast.  He flew the O-47, which was a very old fixed wing aircraft, designed as an observation plane.  It had a crew of three, and Buck flew these missions for six months.  It was while Buck was stationed at Salinas that he married the love of his life, Bettina.

In January 1943, Buck was transferred to Esler Field in Louisiana to transition into the P-39.  The “Airacobra” was one of the principal fighter aircraft in service when the United States entered WW II.  Buck also trained in the P-40, Warhawk.  Training in these two planes also took place in the Mojave Desert, Mississippi, and on the East Coast.  Like the P-39, the Warhawk was a single seat fighter suitable for ground attack missions.  Upon completion of the program in September 1943, Buck found himself on a troop ship on his way to New Guinea.  It would take nineteen days for the ship to arrive at Port Moresby, headquarters for the 5th Air Force.  Buck and the other members of the 41st Fighter Squadron would beflying bomber escort, dive bombing, and combat air patrol missions in the South Pacific in support of the “island hopping campaign”.  Often times, Buck and his fellow pilots would land their planes on hastily constructed landing strips even before the islands were totally under control.  Their planes had to be refueled and rearmed for the next day’s island hopping mission.  For the next year, Buck flew 137 combat missions in his beloved P-39 and the P-40.  The conditions in which they lived were harsh, and they were always subjected to diseases such as malaria and dengue fever.  Conditions were so bad that when they were able to obtain C rations, they celebrated that as a great meal.

By the time Buck left the South Pacific in October 1944, he had been promoted to the rank of Captain.  His next assignment was as the Base Operations Officer at Brooks Field.  A little over a year later, Buck left the Army Air Corps to return to his pre-dental studies, which were completed that spring.  In the fall of 1946, he began Dental School at the Ohio State University from which he graduated four years later.  Once again, the Air Force made an offer that Buck couldn’t refuse, and he returned to active duty status, gave up his flying status, to serve in the Dental Corps.  His first assignment was as a dentist at Keesler Air Force Base in Mississippi.  Buck was no stranger to Keesler AFB, because it was at Keesler that he had taken air-to-air gunnery practice during his pilot training.

For the next 25 years, Buck would serve in a variety of leadership positions as a Dental Officer and instructor at Air Force bases in the United States, Germany, and Japan, as well at the Air Force Academy, rising to the rank of Colonel.  In 1975, after serving on active duty for nearly 30 years, Buck retired from the Air Force.  For the next 20 years, Buck and his wife, Bettina, lived in Horseshoe Bay, Texas.  In addition to pursuing one of his passions, golf, Buck frequently lectured on various dental topics and was actively involved with the Confederate Air Force.  They moved to Edmonds in 1996 to be near their four children and enjoy their grandchildren and great grandchildren.  Buck continues to play active roles in Kiwanis and VFW Post # 8870.

District School of Instruction

We had a great School of Instruction (because I was leading it) on the 25th.  It was good to have a mix of newer members and old hands at the meeting.  We tried to cover all the topics succinctly and not drag the school into long drawn out affairs covering one or two pet projects of the members attending.  Like I told the folks attending, the School, at this stage of technology, should be more of exposing folks to the important programs that VFW supports such as Voice of Democracy, Teacher of the Year, National Military Services, etc.  All the details of these programs can be found at www.vfw.org; www.vfwofwa.org; or www.vfwwadistrict1.org.  By the way, if you haven’t registered at vfw.org you should.  You can get duplicate membership cards should you lose one, change your address, or sign up for a life membership.  In addition, every form, deadline, or program can be found there.  So when you get a little time, go exploring.