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Pearl Harbor: Sailors Who Survived Attack 70 Years Ago Returned To Ships After Death (VIDEO)

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First Posted: 12/07/11 02:02 AM ET Updated: 12/08/11 03:01 AM ET

HONOLULU (Associated Press) -- Lee Soucy, who lived to be 90 after surviving the attack on Pearl Harbor, is finally back with his shipmates 70 years later.

Soucy passed away just last year. On Tuesday, seven decades after dozens of fellow sailors were killed when the USS Utah sank on Dec. 7, 1941, Navy divers took a small urn containing his ashes and put it in a porthole of the ship.

(Watch the ceremony at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, marking the 70th anniversary since the attack.)

The ceremony is one of five memorials being held this week for servicemen who lived through the assault and want their remains placed in Pearl Harbor out of pride and affinity for those they left behind.

"They want to return and be with the shipmates that they lost during the attack," said Jim Taylor, a retired sailor who coordinates the ceremonies.

The memorials are happening the same week the country observes the 70th anniversary of the aerial bombing that killed 2,390 Americans and brought the United States into World War II. A larger ceremony to remember all those who perished will be held Wednesday just before 8 a.m. Hawaii time - the same moment the devastating attack began.

Most of the 12 ships that sank or were beached that day were removed from the harbor, their metal hulls salvaged for scrap. Just the Utah and the USS Arizona still lie in the dark blue waters. Only survivors of those vessels may return in death to their ships.

The cremated remains of Vernon Olsen, who served aboard the Arizona, will be interred on his ship during a sunset ceremony Wednesday. The ashes of three other survivors are being scattered in the harbor.

Soucy, the youngest of seven children, joined the Navy out of high school so he wouldn't burden his parents. In 1941, he was a pharmacist mate, trained to care for the sick and wounded.

He had just finished breakfast that Sunday morning when he saw planes dropping bombs on airplane hangars. He rushed to his battle station after feeling the Utah lurch, but soon heard the call to abandon ship as the vessel began sinking. He swam to shore, where he made a makeshift first aid center to help the wounded and dying. He worked straight through for two days.

The Utah lost nearly 60 men on Dec. 7, and about 50 are still entombed in the battleship. Today, the rusting hull of the Utah sits on its side next to Ford Island, not far from where it sank 70 years ago.

Soucy's daughter, Margaret, said her parents had initially planned to have their ashes interred together at their church in Plainview, Texas. But her father changed his mind after visiting Pearl Harbor for the 65th anniversary in 2006.

"He announced that he wanted to be interred on the Utah. And my mother looked a little hurt and perplexed. And I said, `Don't worry Daddy, I'll take that part of your ashes that was your mouth and I'll have those interred on the Utah. And you can then tell those that have preceded you, including those that were entombed, what's been going on in the world,'" Margaret Soucy recalled saying with a laugh.

"'And the rest of your remains we will put with mother in the church gardens at St. Mark's.' And then my sister spoke up and said, `Yes, then mother can finally rest in peace,'" she said.

The family had long kidded Soucy for being talkative _they called him "Mighty Mouth" - so Margaret Soucy said her father laughed and agreed. "He just thought that was hilarious," she said.

"So that is what we are doing. We're taking only a portion of his ashes. It's going to be a small urn," she said.

Soucy's three children, several grandchildren and great-grandchildren - 11 family members altogether - attended the sunset ceremony on Tuesday. His wife died earlier this year.

Amid overcast skies, a Navy diver took the urn, protected by a mesh bag, and held it above water while swimming toward the Utah. The diver, who was accompanied by three supporting divers, went underwater to the porthole once reaching the ship.

An urn carrying the ashes of Vernon Olsen, who was among the 334 on the Arizona to survive the attack, will be interred in a gun turret on the ship Wednesday. Most of the battleship's 1,177 sailors and Marines who died on Dec. 7 are still entombed on the ship.

Five months after Pearl Harbor Olsen was on the USS Lexington aircraft carrier when it sank during the Battle of the Coral Sea.

"I used to tell him he had nine lives. He was really lucky," said his widow, Jo Ann Olsen.

He passed away in April at the age of 91 after a bout of pneumonia.

Pearl Harbor interment and ash scattering ceremonies began in the late 1980s, and started growing in number as more survivors heard about them.

Taylor has helped 265 survivors return to Pearl Harbor. The vast majority have had their ashes scattered. He's arranged for the remains of about 20 Arizona survivors to be placed in the Arizona and about a dozen to be put in the Utah.

"These guys are heroes, OK. Fact is, in my opinion, anybody that's ever served in the military and wore the uniform are heroes. That's why you and I can breathe today in a free country. So I just appreciate what they did," he said.

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HONOLULU (Associated Press) -- Lee Soucy, who lived to be 90 after surviving the attack on Pearl Harbor, is finally back with his shipmates 70 years later. Soucy passed away just last year. On Tues...
HONOLULU (Associated Press) -- Lee Soucy, who lived to be 90 after surviving the attack on Pearl Harbor, is finally back with his shipmates 70 years later. Soucy passed away just last year. On Tues...
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PRONESE
Somewhat Opinionated Curmudgeon
07:05 AM on 12/10/2011
I just found this entry on Huff Po this morning. I guess it did not make it to the main page on December 7th.
Bless those who perished in the attack on Pearl Harbor and those who survived to overcome, persevere, and attain Victory after this attack.
Link: http://www.navy.mil/management/photodb/photos/070409-N-4009P-281.jpg
Hand Salute! Two.
More Coffee,,,
R/ PRONESE
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thisndat
this too shall pass
01:15 AM on 12/08/2011
I wanted to see the memorial when I was visiting Hawaii. We got up at 5 am to make sur we get there on time. A long line of WWII veterans standing in the heat, no benches. You could see that for many it is a hard to come by financially, trip. Yet it is a pilgrimage they did with their families. They would not go ahead of the line. Just stood there in their USS.......whatever ship they were on caps. Lo and behold, just before the first ferry to the Arizona memorial, a red double decker bus shows up with Japanese tourists, and they get to go first. I was not born on US soil, I became a citizen. My family fought the war in Europe. But to stand there and watch the ultimate insult was more than I could bear. This was many years ago. I hope they stopped this practice.
12:42 AM on 12/08/2011
I met a retired former U.S. Navy man once who had enlisted around 1935 during Great Depression years of 1930 to 1940. His ship was at Pearl Harbor but the day before (December 6, 1941) the ship had been ordered to sail away from Hawaii so he missed the attack on December 7, 1941. But he said a lot of good men were lost at Pearl Harbor. A U.S. Navy expert thought the incoming Japanese planes were actually a fleet of American planes coming from the mainland to Hawaii. American ships were lined up one after another at Pearl,and this was a big mistake. Also, the Japanese attacked early sunday morning when U.S. Navy personnel were either asleep or just getting up. Just goes to show you should always be prepared for any sudden emergency. I didn't enlist in the U.S. Army until turning 18 on August 22, 1943....;people back then were very patriotic and flag-wavers.
12:41 AM on 12/08/2011
Wow-I couldn't find 'Tora, Tora, Tora' or 'Pearl Harbor' ANYWHERE on ANY CHANNEL yesterday here in NY...not on AMC or TCM..or the military Channel...all I found was one OFTEN repeated documentary-'Secrets Of Pearl Harbor'. I guess 70 years is not enough to waste on a true tribute...SHAME on these networks!
12:38 AM on 12/08/2011
I take care of a Pearl Harbor Survivor, he is an amazing humble man who I am honored to care for. Ralph R Holm gunners mate USS Maryland
12:35 AM on 12/08/2011
The president Frankin D. Roosevelt knew that the Japanese were going to attack Peal Harbor and he an others let it happen. Frankin Roosevelt wanted to get into the war to fight the Germans. So Pearl Harbor was attacked. Then the government said it was a sneak attack by the Japanese. The American people back Roosevelt 100% and the rest is history. No time in history has a country ever faught 2 world powers at the same time on to different fronts. But the U.S. did it in just 3 years and 9 months.
12:04 AM on 12/08/2011
Hey Huffington Post, it's been 70 years.. you can't find a way to blame America and Bush for this attack?
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jimdavis11
Protect and promote the middle class.
11:41 PM on 12/07/2011
It is hard to believe that after Pearl Harbor we sent our engineers to the drawing board to design superior new weapons, retooled industry to make them, trained and deployed 16 million armed force personnel, built the Alaska highway, developed the atomic bomb and defeated the axis powers--------- in 3 years and 9 months.
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Thaigold
Life is Fun
05:54 AM on 12/08/2011
Yet you still can't rent an Avis car at Baghdad International Airport and drive into the city without a Humvee escort and a bulletproof vest. This is 10-years, and counting. Is something missing here?
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jimdavis11
Protect and promote the middle class.
11:39 AM on 12/08/2011
Sure is. Wars are decided by 2 things; firepower and/or the will to win.
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11:15 PM on 12/07/2011
in 1961,The King contributed $54,000 to the USS Arizona Memorial
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covyzoo
here we go again......
10:33 PM on 12/07/2011
Geeeesh, more of our tax dollars wasted.
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david68574
The GOTP is the scourge of the USA.
11:26 PM on 12/07/2011
Please explain, teapot?
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sentimentiques
independent and ornery but purrfectly lovable
12:14 AM on 12/08/2011
Sounds more like a disgruntled grump, who might just possibly be a leftist/liberal. Why assume he's a Tea Party member or a Republican or a conservative? The TPs, Repubs and Conservatives are usually the patriotic citizens who would applaud this gesture.
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gfgarv
but you are Blanche! You are...
11:49 PM on 12/07/2011
.....geeesh more of our air wasted (on you breathing).
steves1709
Your bicro-mio is empty
10:24 PM on 12/07/2011
As so few of the WW2 survivors are still with us, I hope they got the respect and thanks they deserved in the last 70 years. We're running out of time to thank them properly.
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10:15 PM on 12/07/2011
God Bless their entire generation for the freedom they have given us. May we never forget!
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09:46 PM on 12/07/2011
Moderators are slow tonight and I lost my original post only because I was editing 1 word that was misspelled. Not important really. What is important is that we all Honor our Great Veterans of World War Two and Particularly Today on the 70th anniversary commemoration of the attack on Pearl Harbor. Individual stories are not important really (so glad my post was accidentally deleted by the editing even though I tried to get it back later).

It truly was the The Greatest Generation and the presence of our Great Veteran Heroes that are still alive today was the Best Tribute to the memories of their fallen brothers one could see! God Bless them All and may God Bless America!!
09:36 PM on 12/07/2011
I remember visiting the momorial and there were more Japanese visiting the site than Americans. One old sailor was so discusted with seeing so many of them that he walked away swearing. I really feel sorry for the old soldiers and sailors who fought in that war. It was so full of carnage and suffering. I'll never forget their sacrifice, and I think it should be taught in schools like it was in my school to respect these men, the flag, and everything it stands for. If it weren't for them, we would not be here today to enjoy our freedom as it is. God bless all of them...
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DDL13
11:28 PM on 12/07/2011
I've been there twice myself and as you saw many, many, japanese visitors, but what all of us also saw and was disgusted with was during the film before the ride to the arizona they all were laughing and talking so loud and not paying attention, we couldn't hear the film so all 9 of us walked out. I was outraged and disgusted, I couldn't even imagine behaving that way if I were to visit a Hiroshima memorial. If they can't pay their respects properly then they should not go. This happened both times we visited, I still can't get past that, stays with you.
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Thaigold
Life is Fun
06:08 AM on 12/08/2011
They were probably laughing because the film they show in the visitor's center has been so sanitized that it's hard to tell who the bad guys are. As a long-time Hawaii resident, this film really infuriated me. The silly political correctness of this film was an affront to any American who remembers those difficult years.
As a point of interest, Russian kids know who was the bad guy in WWII. Not ours.
I did processing interviews of college grads in Honolulu and I couldn't believe the historical void in their accumulated knowledge base. Sad.
09:16 PM on 12/07/2011
THANKS PAL.....