|
CITY TO
HONOR POSTHUMOUS PURPLE HEART
TO
RESIDENT
CEREMONY TO TAKE PLACE AT CEMETERY
 |
SILVER CITY - Almost 63 years after his death, Dale Stranathan is still
alive in the hearts of many in his home town.
The American Legion’s Gordon May Post No. 439 in Silver City will honor
Stranathan at 11 a.m. Oct. 23, 2004 at Silver City Cemetery. A memorial marker
will be placed next to his mother, Myrtle StranathanStranathan was born in Silver City to C. L. “Roy” and Myrtle Stranathan
Feb. 13, 1911. He later moved to Council Bluffs and attended Abraham
Lincoln High School, but he returned to Silver City and graduated there.
At the time of his death, Stranathan was a l2-year veteran with the Navy
and was a resident of Park Rapids, Minn. |
Stranathan, a chief machinist mate in the Navy during World War II, was
officially declared killed in action Feb. 20, 1943.
Barry Hiller, Mills County commander of the American Legion, said the
following recounts what happened that led to Stranathan’s death:
Stranathan had recently celebrated his 31st birthday and was assigned to
the USS Peary, a Clemson-class Navy destroyer, which was off the coast of
Darwin, Australia.
On Feb. 19, 1942, the Peary was attacked by Japanese bombers, which sank
the destroyer. Only 52 crew members survived the assault.
Today, a 4-inch gun that was salvaged from the Peary’s grave site in the
1950s was restored and displayed for the Northern Territory’s 1992 War
Service Memorial Year.
The gun is now a memorial and points toward the Peary’s final resting
place in the harbor.
A memorial plaque lists the names of the ship’s crew who lost their lives.
Stranathan’s name is not on the plaque.
James Schoening, post commander of Gordon May Post #439, said he wasn’t
aware that Stranathan’s name was not on the memorial. Then again, he
added, he didn’t know a memorial to the memory of the crew of the USS
Peary existed until it was mentioned.
Hiller said Schoening has come up with the majority of the research on
Stranathan that he has received.
Schoening said he would begin looking into what it would take in terms of
getting Stranathan’s name of the memorial.
According to an article in the Glenwood Opinion dated Apr. 30, 1942,
Stranathan’s family members were notified by the Naval Department that he
was missing in action.
Schoening said at the time of notification that Stranathan was missing,
his mother had already passed away and his father had remarried and moved
to Glenwood, where he is buried.
Stranathan wasn’t officially declared killed in action until Feb. 20,
1943, a year after the Peary was attacked and sunk.
Schoening said he doesn’t know why it took a year for him to be declared
killed in action.
“There’s a number of reasons why it took so long for him to be declared (KIA),”
he said. “Maybe it was standard procedure, or maybe it had to do with the
United States not wanting to release certain information about certain
ships at that time.
“We just don’t know.”
Bonnie Riggins of Council Bluffs accepted her brother’s Purple Heart
(awarded posthumously) in May 1944.
Schoening said this is the first real ceremony for Stranathan. “For
whatever reason, we don’t know.., what the family did, but they probably
felt there wasn’t the need for a (military burial) marker.”
He added that back in the day it was commonplace, because of the lack of a
body, not to hold ceremonies or take part in other rituals for a dead
soldier. |