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Anchorage veteran recalls Pearl Harbor attack
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December 7, 2013 |
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U.S. Army World War II veteran Norman Hogg. To hear him
recall the attack on Pearl Harbor with Senator Lisa
Murkowski,
click here. |
Anchorage resident Norman Hogg carries with him an Army-issued
Bible received during his service time in World War II, bearing
an inscription from then President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
He also carries a remarkable abundance of stories, observations
and an authentic Alaskan brand of optimism.
As the nation remembers the December 7, 1941, attack on Pearl
Harbor that brought the United States into the Second World War
– a “date which
will live in infamy” in Roosevelt’s words – Senator Lisa
Murkowski has released her 19th
Veteran Spotlight interview, focusing on the military
service of WWII veteran Norman Hogg.
Hogg was just 19 years old when he recalls hearing of the Pearl
Harbor attack on the “wireless” radio. He would join the U.S.
Army just a few months later at age 20.
During his interview, Hogg recounts being assigned to the Signal
Corps, where he would put his Eagle Scout training to good use
teaching his fellow soldiers how to survive in life-threatening
water combat operations. Though he remained in the United States
throughout his military carrier, Hogg recalls losing his
childhood friends to the WWII battles overseas and the impact it
had on the rest of his life.
“Americans were killed by a foreign country and I knew we were
going to war,” Hogg said. “There was this comradeship between
soldiers that I remember. We became family. Those 400,000 people
who died, they sacrificed their lives, and I am very grateful to
them, because otherwise there would have been tyranny.”
In October, Hogg was one of 29 Alaskan World War II veterans who
traveled Washington, D.C. to visit the WWII memorial as part of
the inaugural Last
Frontier Honor Flight.
Hogg brought his Bible with him as a link to the past that he
says brought him and his service in the military full circle.
“As you get older, memories become more important,” he said. “I
remember times from the war and my childhood and the early years
in Alaska. All these memories are mixed up in you, and they are
you. Life has been good to me. Life is magnificent!”
“Norman Hogg’s story is one of an American hero,” said Senator
Murkowski. “He stepped up and served our country during one of
the most trying times in our nation’s history. His memories and
his legacy should not be forgotten. We owe it to veterans like
Norman to honor them through sharing their stories, and we owe
it to the rest of us to learn from the high levels of
patriotism, commitment and service they demonstrate for us.”
The “Veteran Spotlight” project is Senator Murkowski’s monthly
focus on an Alaska veteran of American conflicts worldwide to
honor and draw well-deserved attention to Alaska’s men and women
who served.
Today’s installment is the 19th in the series that began on
Memorial Day weekend of 2012. Every month, Murkowski posts a
biography and an interview with an Alaskan who served our
country abroad in conjunction with the
Library of Congress’ Veterans
History Project.
You can watch them all by
clicking here.
Senator Murkowski invites all Alaskans to nominate a veteran
from the 49th state to be featured in the Veteran Spotlight
project. If you have a family member or friend in the community
you think has a story to share, email
Spotlight@Murkowski.Senate.Gov. |
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