Wednesday, May 30, 2018

ANOTHER HUGE CROWD FOR CORVALLIS MEMORIAL DAY PARADE BY STEVE FULLERTON



he spectators again numbered in the hundreds, lining Corvallis' Main Street for the annual American Legion Post 91 Memorial Day Parade. A highlight of the event were the four World War II veterans in the Grand Marshal Jeeps - Bill Sperry, Carl Swanson, John Gurtner and Ken Gardner. The Corvallis High School band provided the military service themes, and politicians walked and rode the route, reminding people to vote in the June 5th primary election. A benefit breakfast started the day in Corvallis and a benefit barbecue was firing up at the end of the hour-long parade.
Kids were part of the parade, too! (Steve Fullerton, Townsquare Media)
The second half of the parade contained numerous classic cars and hot rods, which were included in the first Heroes and Hot Rods Car Show, which was held at the Hamilton Veterans Monument and Hieronymus Park during the rest of the day. Funds raised from the car show went to the Valley Veterans Service Center.


PLEASE VOTE YES FOR THE ADDITIONAL 2 MILL LEVY FOR THE RAVALLI COUNTY "VALLEY VETERANS SERVICE CENTER." IT IS THE ONLY COUNTY RUN CENTER IN THE STATE!



Sunday, May 27, 2018

Corvallis American Legion hosts 98th annual Memorial Day Parade - by MICHELLE MCCONNAHA


“Still Serving after 80 years” is the theme of the 98th Annual Corvallis Memorial Day Parade parade that is hosted by the Corvallis American Legion Post #91 and the Ladies Auxiliary.
The parade begins at 10 a.m., on Monday, May 28, on Corvallis' Main Street. 
Memorial Day Ken Gardner
The parade's grand marshalls are local World War II veterans Ken Gardner, Bill Sperry, Carl Swanson and John Gurtner.
Grand Marshals 3 of 4
Gardner, 100, was a staff sergeant in the 102nd Infantry 1944 to 1946. He arrived at Pearl Harbor right after it was attacked in 1944, then he was in the 13th Replacement Depot doing a variety of jobs.
“Then they moved me over to the other part of the island,” Gardner said.
He received the Victory medal, the Asiatic Pacific Medal and a Good Conduct Medal, and operated heavy equipment right after the war.
Sperry, 99, said being selected grand marshall was an honor.
Sperry saw eight countries through his military service in the Air Force from 1941-1945 including Africa, England, North Ireland, Algeria, Tunisia, Sicily, Corsica and Italy.
Sperry was a staff sergeant in the 52nd fighter group and is credited with 125 aerial victories, two distinguished unit citations and 14 campaigns in Spitfires and Mustangs.
Swanson, 98, said he enjoys the annual parade tradition.
“I think it is great,” Swanson said. “I think I’ve taken part in all of them. It is a great institution.”
Swanson was born on the farm in the Bitterroot Valley in 1920 and served in the U.S. Air Force 1941-1964.
“I was a mechanic and worked on B29 bombers,” he said.
Swanson was stationed on the island of Tinian in the Mariana Islands during the Pacific campaign in World War II.
“It was an experience,” he said.
Swanson and Sperry attended school together at Corvallis.
Gurtner, 94, is the youngster of the grand marshall group.
He drove tanks during basic training, served in the cadet program and the infantry then transferred to the Air Force. He started in 1943 and served for nearly 15 years.
“I went back to college for the Air Force officers training,” Gurtner said.
The hearty grand marshals will ride in vintage Army Jeeps.
Parade organizer Doug Mason said the Corvallis Memorial Day parade was started by World War I veterans after they returned from Europe. Main Street was dirt at that time but the color guard and veterans marched proudly.
“For 98 years the Bitterroot Valley has enjoyed this rich tradition of honoring those active duty personnel and veterans who have died,” Mason said. “Today, we honor all of the United States of America‘s war dead — those who died that freedom might live.”
To participate in the parade, preregister online at corvallispost91.blogspot.com. For more information call Doug Mason at 546-4244, or email corvallispost91@gmail.com.
After the parade, at noon, American Legion Post #91 will conduct its annual memorial ceremony at the Corvallis Cemetery. Post members will read the names of every veteran buried at the cemetery since the Mexican War in 1848. After the cemetery ceremony, post members will move to the Woodside Cutoff Bridge and place a wreath in the Bitterroot River to honor all military personnel who died at sea.
The ceremonies are open to the public and the community is invited to attend.
Events begin early on Memorial Day with the Corvallis Community Events Center (CCEC) serving breakfast from 7 to 9 a.m., at the Corvallis High School lunchroom, located off the Eastside highway.
The Bitterroot Woman’s Club will be selling plants and pies in front of Corvallis High School.
After the parade the Corvallis High School Performing Arts group will host food booths and games in front of the school until 1 p.m.
The Bitterrodders will have a car show after the parade at the Veterans Monument, 101 Hieronumus Park Drive, in Hamilton. To vote for your favorite car add a dollar to the bucket in front of it. All donations will be used for maintenance at the Veterans Monument.

Friday, May 25, 2018

World War II veterans are Corvallis Grand Marshalls - MAY 23, 2018 BY MICHAEL HOWELL



Corvallis World War II veterans Bill Sperry, Carl Swanson and John Gurtner, pictured above, have been named by Corvallis American Legion Post 91 as 2018 Grand Marshalls for the Memorial Day Parade, along with Ken Gardner.

The theme of this year’s Corvallis Memorial Day Parade is “Still Serving after 80 Years.” Four Grand Marshalls, all veterans of World War II, have been chosen to honor all the veterans who have served and sacrificed for the nation. The four Grand Marshalls to be honored at the 2018 parade include Ken Gardner, Bill Sperry, John Gurtner and Carl Swanson.
Ken Gardner is older than the Corvallis Memorial Day Parade, which was started 98 years ago. Ken is 100 years old and will turn 101 on October 4 of this year. He was born to Vern and Laura Gardner in Salem, Utah in 1917. The family moved to the Bitterroot Valley in 1952 from Idaho Falls and bought Dr. John Hall’s place. 
While his dad ran the farm, Ken started a construction business doing lots of excavation with a drag line all over the region ranging from the Big Hole to St. Regis to Seeley Lake and Ovando. He worked on the road from Lost Trail Pass to the Big Hole in 1958.

Ken was inducted into the service in 1939 or 1940, serving in the 102nd Infantry. He was inducted at Fort Douglas, Utah and did his basic training at Camp Roberts in California and then spent a few weeks at Camp Chaffee, in western Arkansas. From there he went to Fort Lewis in Washington state and then to Pearl Harbor. He spent most of his time there at Battalion Headquarters and then was sent to the Scoffield Barracks. He was discharged in 1946 and returned to Corvallis.
Back at home he continued his dad’s construction business, Gardner Construction, eventually turning it over to his son Albert, who subsequently turned it over to his son Al. The company is now into its fourth generation.
Bill Sperry, 99,  was born in 1919 in Clover, Idaho, a little town that no longer exists. He moved to the Bitterroot valley 1926 when he was six years old and grew up working on his dad’s sugar beet farm. He was inducted into the service in April of 1942 at Fort Lewis in Washington state. From there he went to Spokane and joined a B-17 outfit. From Spokane he was transferred to Alamogordo, New Mexico, and from there to Richmond, Virginia, where he was transferred into the 4th Fighter Squadron in the 52nd Fighter Group and went overseas, serving in England, Ireland, North Africa, Sicily, Corsica, and Italy, flying Spitfires for most of the time but P-51s towards the end of his duty.
After the service, Sperry returned home to Corvallis and married Lilian Schneider in 2004. He worked as a ditch rider for the state for 24 years. He’s got two sons, Darrel and John, and one daughter, Judy.
Carl Swanson was born on January 6, 1920 and is 98 years old. Born in Corvallis, he graduated from Corvallis High School and did a year of college in Ames, Iowa and another year at the college in Bozeman before enlisting in the Army Air Corps in April of 1941. War then broke out on December 6 of that year. He was stationed in Arizona but was hospitalized for four or five days and during that time his group was shipped overseas. Out of the hospital, Carl was assigned to work as an airplane mechanic and worked on B-29s, mostly stateside. He was finally shipped out to the Marianas Islands, but en route to his new assignment the Enola Gay dropped its nuclear bombs on Japan and the war came to a close. He said the guys all found their own way home, mostly on merchant ships.
Returning to Corvallis, Carl ran cattle on the homestead. His first wife died of leukemia and his second wife, Carma, died several years ago. His son Charlie took an interest in the orchard business. Charlie still runs the Mountain View Orchard and his other son, Jim, runs the Swanson Distributing company. He’s got four grandchildren and eight great grandchildren.
John Gurtner is the youngster of the group. He was born in North Carolina on August 12, 1923 and is only 95 years old. After graduating from high school and starting college he joined the Army Reserves. Then the war started and he was called up and sent to Fort Knox in 1943 where he attended Armed Forces School and was trained in using tanks. He was then sent to Fort Campbell where the 20th Armored Division was forming. 
“Word was they were going to put us in tanks and send us to China to serve in the forward artillery,” he said. Instead he signed up for the Air Corps Cadet program and was sent to college. That program was closed before he graduated and he was sent to serve in the 78th Infantry Division and was about 21 years old when he went to Europe.
Once out of the service he had the option of joining the Army Reserves or the Air Corps Reserves. He chose the Air Corps. He went to work for Boeing in 1988 and moved to Bellevue, Washington. His first wife died of Alzheimers and then he met his current wife Helen and within a few years they had moved to the Bitterroot valley.
John has outgrown his old uniform but he still fits into his dad’s so that’s what he will wear to the parade.
Congratulations to these honorees who represent the “Greatest Generation” in the Bitterroot Valley.
Corvallis American Legion Post #91 and the Ladies Auxiliary will host the 98th annual Corvallis Memorial Day Parade at 10:00 a.m. Monday, May 28, 2018. This year the parade theme is “Still Serving after 80 years.” The Parade Grand Marshalls are local World War II veterans.
After the parade, at the Corvallis Cemetery at 12:00 pm Post #91 will conduct its annual memorial ceremony. Post members will name all the veterans buried at the cemetery dating back to the Mexican War (1848). After the cemetery ceremony, post members will move to the Woodside Cutoff Bridge and place a wreath in the Bitterroot River for all those who died at sea.
Events start off early on Memorial Day with the Corvallis Community Events Center (CCEC) serving breakfast from 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. at the Corvallis High School Lunchroom located off the Eastside highway. 
After the completion of the parade there will be food booths and games in front of the Corvallis High School. This event is put on by the Corvallis High School Performing Arts. The food booths and games will be open until 1:00pm. 
For 98 years the Bitterroot Valley has enjoyed this rich tradition of honoring those active duty personnel and veterans who have died. Today, we honor all of the United States of America‘s war dead — those who died that freedom might live. 
World War I veterans started the Corvallis Memorial Day parade after they returned from Europe. The first parade consisted of a color guard and veterans, staging in the alley to the west of Main Street. 98 years ago the first annual Corvallis Memorial Day Parade started south down a dirt Main Street.
Memorial Day, originally called Decoration Day, is a day of remembrance for those who have died in our nation’s service. The holiday was first proclaimed on May 5, 1868 by General John Logan and was observed on May 30, 1868 when flowers were placed on the graves of Union and Confederate soldiers. Until World War I many people in the South refused to acknowledge Decoration Day. Memorial Day is now celebrated on the last Monday in May. To pre-register online go to: http://corvallispost91.blogspot.com/ 
For more information call Doug Mason at 546-4244, or email corvallispost91@gmail.com.
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Thursday, May 17, 2018

The Poppy is the memorial flower of The American Legion Family

The tradition of wearing a poppy dates back to 1920, when it became the memorial flower of The American Legion Family.
The red poppy came to symbolize the blood shed by those who fought and those who continue to fight for our country following World War I. It was popularized by the publication of the wartime poem In Flanders Fields.Written by Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae, M.D. while serving on the front lines in World War I, the poem honors soldiers killed in battle.
The American Legion led the charge of having Congress designate the Friday before Memorial Day as National Poppy Day®, a tradition found in many countries around the world. National Poppy Day® encourages all Americans to wear a red poppy to honor the fallen and support the living heroes who have worn our nation’s uniform.
On May 25, join us by wearing a red poppy to remember those who made the ultimate sacrifice and support the future of veterans and their families for generations to come.
Sincerely,
The American Legion

Wednesday, May 2, 2018

2018 Corvallis Memorial Day Parade Registration Form

Instructions:

1) Copy and Paste this form to your email compose page.
2) Fill out the parade registration form 
3) Type: "Parade Registration," your name or organization's name in subject line
3) Email the completed form to: corvallispost91@gmail.com

This year's theme is:
"Still Serving After 80 Years"



2018 Corvallis Memorial Day Parade
10:00 a.m., Monday, May 28th
Staging begins at 7:30 a.m.

PLEASE COMPLETE ALL SECTIONS
Name of entry / sponsoring organization:____________________________
Contact Name:_________________________________________________
Address:______________________________________________________
City, State:________________________________Zip:_________________
Phone:________________________________________________________
Email Address:_________________________________________________

INDICATE THE CATEGORY YOU WISH TO ENTER:
100 – Horse Drawn,   200 – Single Riders,   300 – Group Riders,  
400 – Other Animals,   500 – Novelty (clowns & politicians),  
600 – Clubs & Organizations,   700 – Antique Machines,   1000 – Vehicles

Please give a specific description of your entry, individual who is responsible for the entry, who will be siging release form, the approximate number of people involved, vehicles that will be used, etc…
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Special announcement that you want mentioned as you pass the announcer:
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

All entries must report to the registration booth between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m. on the day of the parade to sign liability release and to get their parade number.