Archive for May, 2011

Medal of Honor Recipients

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

As part of Evergreen Washelli’s Tribute to the Medal of Honor and Silver Star recipients in our care, we invite you to discover more about the lives and service of each brave soldier.  Below are the obituaries of each recipient, please take a moment to read their stories and sign the guestbook.  On Saturday July 16th, please join us in the Veterans Memorial Cemetery located with Evergreen Washelli to honor these medal recipients at a special ceremony.    

Lewis Albanese (Vietnam)

William C. Horton (Spanish/American)

Robert Ronald Leisy (Vietnam)

William K. Nakamura (World War II)

Orville Emil Bloch (World War II)

Harry Delmar Fadden (Spanish/American)

Vesa Juhani Alakulppi (Vietnam, SIlver Star Recipient)

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Our 85th Annual Memorial Day Service

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

Join us for our 85th Annual Memorial Day Service

 On Monday, May 30th, 2011, Evergreen Washelli will host our Annual Memorial Day Commemorative Service.  Please join us as we honor America’s fallen and salute the flags on our “Avenue of Colors”. 

Our keynote speaker this year will be COL Gustafson.  There will be performances by soloist Maria Kesovija, as well as the Seattle Pacific University Symphonic Wind Ensemble and Drum Corps.  The concert begins at 1:30pm and the ceremony will commence at 2:00pm.  

 

Memorial Day 2010 at Evergreen Washelli Memorial Park, photo courtesy of Alex Mach

Following the Memorial Day Commemorative Service, we invite you to attend a guided tour of the Veterans Memorial Cemetery and learn about the remarkable lives of the Medal of Honor recipients in our care.  

 Our guide this year will be David Bloch, son of the Medal of Honor recipient Orville Emil Bloch.  We are extremely honored and excited to have him as our tour guide. 

David will guide us through the history of the Veterans Memorial Cemetery, as well as teach us about the stories of Private William C. Horton,Captain Vesa Alakulppi, PFC Lewis Albanese, PFC William Kenzo Nakamura, 2nd LT Robert Ronald Leisy, Coxswain Harry Delmar Fadden, and of course Colonel Orville Emil Bloch.  

 Kindly meet us at the Doughboy Statue in the Veterans Memorial Cemetery at 3:15 pm. We ask for a $5.00 suggested donation for attendance, which will go to the purchase of flags for the Avenue of Flags. For more information, and to reserve a spot, please call us at (206)362-5200 or email tours@washelli.com. Tickets for the tour may also be purchased here

  

  

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Memorial Day Guided Veterans Tour

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

 

On Monday, May 30, 2011, Evergreen Washelli will host our 85th Annual Memorial Day Commemorative Service. Following the ceremony, we invite you to attend a guided tour of the Veterans Memorial Cemetery and to learn about the remarkable lives of the Medal of Honor recipients in our care. 

Our guide this year will be David Bloch, son of the Medal of Honor recipient Orville Emil Bloch.  We are extremely honored and excited to have him as our tourguide.

David will guide us through the history of the Veterans Memorial Cemetery, as well as teach us about the stories of Private William C. Horton,Captain Vesa Alakulppi, PFC Lewis Albanese, PFC William Kenzo Nakamura, 2nd LT Robert Ronald Leisy, Coxswain Harry Delmar Fadden, and of course Colonel Orville Emil Bloch

Kindly meet us at the Doughboy Statue in the Veterans Memorial Cemetery at 3:15 pm. We ask for a $5.00 suggested donation for attendance, which will go to the purchase of flags for the Avenue of Flags.  For more information, and to reserve a spot, please call us at (206)362-5200 or email tours@washelli.com.  Tickets for the tour may also be purchased here.

 

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Remembering Memorial Day

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

Join us for our 85th Annual Memorial Day Service

With Evergreen Washelli’s 85th Annual Memorial Day Service only a few weeks away, we take a moment to reflect upon 2010’s ceremony.

Steven Aanenson attended our Memorial Day services last year, and wrote this piece on what he witnessed.

“I went to the 84th Annual Memorial Day Celebration this afternoon at the Evergreen Washelli Cemetery in North Seattle and decided to go early and walk around. It is the largest Memorial Day Celebration in the city so I wanted to get there early. The concert started at 1:30 and service at 2:00, so I had about 45 minutes to walk around the hundreds of white tombstones, each with a single American flag next to it, some with a single rose, carnation or bouquet at the base. For the past month volunteers have been at this cemetery cleaning over 5,000 gravestones and that is just a small percentage of the number of people laid to rest here. Boy Scouts were out early this morning in the rain putting 5,000 flags in the ground – just amazing! All along the driveway, leading in to this massive cemetery, there were large American flags lining the route to the service on top the hill. Along with the brilliant white marble headstones of the fallen soldiers that you saw there were also numerous unmarked headstones of soldiers from every war, rank and military service. From the Civil War, Spanish American War, WWI and WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, Iraq war, Purple Hearts and more…all mixed in with the more grandiose gravestones and grave sites of the wealthy built of marble columns, statues, and fountains.

As the rain stopped and sun finally came out, I made my way up the hill to the sitting area, and as I walked I started to look beyond the gravestones and focused on the people that came here today to be a part of this celebration. There were families with their little kids, a few teenagers who you could tell would rather be someplace else on a Monday afternoon and an older generation dressed in patriotic wear, proud and patriotic. The few that really captured my attention were four ladies who I saw all alone. Seeing them made me wonder what story they had to share…”

To read Steven’s story in its entirety, please click here.

Thank you to both Janice and Steven for sharing this moving account.

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Police Officer Fred H. Hull

Monday, May 16th, 2011

Fred H. Hull 1894 – 11/15/1945

Late Thursday night on November 15, 1945, the Seattle Police Department received a report of a man threatening patrons with a knife inside a tavern at 1012 E. Madison Street. Officer Fred Hull and his partner, Officer Osborn, were dispatched at about midnight and discovered the man had already left the tavern. They located the suspect at a nearby service station at 19th Avenue East and East Madison Street. In an attempt to elude the two officers, the suspect had locked himself inside the service station restroom. When the officers ordered him to come out, the man began firing a handgun through the restroom door’s glass window, wounding both officers. Two additional officers arrived to assist their wounded comrades and more shots were exchanged. The suspect was eventually shot and killed at the scene. His name was Eugene Moszee and he worked at the service station where he met his demise. Officer Osborn survived his gunshot wounds, but Officer Hull died a short time after the shooting. Hull had been with the Seattle Police Department for almost 19 years. He was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor in 1998.  He is buried in Washelli Cemetery Section C.

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National Peace Officers Memorial Day

Thursday, May 12th, 2011

National Police Week May 15th - May 21st, 2011

Peace Officers Memorial Day and Police Week are observances that pay tribute to local, state, and Federal peace officers.  The Memorial takes place on May 15, and Police Week is the calendar week in which the Memorial falls. For 2011, Police Week is May 15th through May 21st.

John F. Kennedy signed the Peace Officers Memorial Day bill into law on October 1, 1962. Amended in 1994, Bill Clinton, through Public Law 103-322 (which increased police presence and enhanced public safety), directed that the flag of the United States be flown at half-staff on May 15th.

Much of the holiday centers on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial wall in Washington, D.C., whose walls feature the names of the nearly 19,000 law enforcement officers who have been killed in the line of duty.

Please join Evergreen Washelli as we proudly support the Officers of our community, and honor the brave ones in our care who have died in the line of duty, such as Robert Roland Allshaw, Fred H. Hull, Arthur Brighton Luntsford, Charles O. LeGate, Robert D. Ward and many others.

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Military Families: The Shock of ‘Killed in Action’

Monday, May 9th, 2011

Photo Courtesy of Alex Mach

A Story By Kevin Quiles

One early weeknight, I accompanied military personnel to announce the most dreaded news that any family could receive. Once we arrived at the address, we walked up to the lighted front door and knocked. A few seconds later, the owner opened the door while blocking the entrance. We introduced ourselves and verified his name. Then the curious father learned that his son had been killed in action.

The gentleman stood speechless. Moments later, his wife came down the stairs. “Who is it?” she asked as her husband widened the door for the curious family member to see the two visitors in uniform. Upon hearing the report, the wife and mother fell to the ground and wept.

Numerous families have received notices like these that resemble the one we’ve seen a thousand times in the movie Saving Private Ryan. As you recall, it is a sunny day when a military vehicle makes its way through the dirt road to a small home just up the hill. Inside the house, a mother is washing dishes. Looking up and out of her window, she spots the car nearing the front yard and becomes startled. You can feel tension in the silence as the mother of four boys is putting two-and-two together. When the car arrives, two men in uniform get out. As the strength in her legs gives out, the shocked mother sits down on her wooden porch awaiting the devastating news.

As a surviving family member, you may relate to the sudden alarm of this mother and of the parents I described. As a former military chaplain who has attended three Casualty Assistance Calls, conducted several funerals, and witnessed the residue that such agonizing events leave on the military population, I would like to extend a few words of comfort that may normalize your new pain.

First, articulating heavy emotions at the beginning is indeed a muddy task. Many whom I served could not find their feelings during the initial phases of grief. Second, making meaning out of chaos demands breathing space to redevelop. Later on, your existential crisis will diminish. Third, anger may seem gigantic and out-of-control, but it is not omnipotent. To put it in cliché form, “We have anger; anger doesn’t have us.” And fourth, blame is a temporary outlet that will later put into motion a lasting healing cycle. In other words, blame has a place in the grieving process.

The initial jolt from hearing the news of a loved one killed in action is unspeakable. I have seen it in the faces of fathers and mothers, sons and daughters, brothers and sisters, and relatives and friends. Lost for words, these surviving family members have no clue where their grieving hearts will take them next. In the midst of such great darkness, they do not know that the initial shock will eventually diminish and healing will surface. But it will!

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Robert Rowland Allshaw

Monday, May 9th, 2011

Robert R. Allshaw 1932 – 11/11/1968

Around 8:00 pm on Monday, November 11, 1968, 49-year-old William Ogle, a career criminal with a long record of armed robberies, and 42-year-old Elmer O’Neil, a small-time criminal, entered Seattle’s north end Pinehurst IGA Grocery Store at 11522 – 15th Avenue NE, leaving a third man waiting in a car outside the store. Three customers were inside when one of the men produced a .22 caliber revolver and the other held out a Luger-type automatic. They robbed store clerk William Tarbill and another employee, taking several hundred dollars from the store check stands, as four more customers walked in. A witness who was across the street saw what was happening and called police.

The robbers herded all nine people to the rear of the store and were backing out of the store’s front door when Seattle Officer Robert Allshaw, who had arrived alone at the scene, grabbed Ogle from behind and handcuffed him. Using Ogle as a shield, Allshaw then exchanged fire with O’Neil, whom he subsequently grazed in the face and critically shot in the abdomen. With his service pistol still drawn, Officer Allshaw continued to back Ogle into his patrol car just as rookie Officer Gerold LeBorde arrived on the scene. In the darkness Officer LeBorde saw only Ogle, who was blocking the young patrolman’s view of the other officer, and naturally assumed that Ogle was the one holding the drawn pistol. Officer LeBorde drew his own shotgun and just as he fired at the “armed” suspect, Ogle dropped to his knees, exposing Officer Allshaw’s face to the full force of the blast.

Officer Allshaw, who was taken to Northwest Hospital along with O’Neil, was pronounced dead on arrival. Meanwhile, the driver who had been waiting in the suspected getaway car drove off and led other officers who had converged on the scene on a high speed chase. He was apprehended about two miles away at Stone Way Avenue NE and NE 105th Street. It was later learned that Ogle, who had been adjudged a habitual criminal in 1959, had been sentenced to 20 years in the Washington State Penitentiary at Walla Walla, but had been released pending appeal just 11 days prior to this armed robbery.

Officer Allshaw, a lifelong Seattle resident, had been a member of the Police Motorcycle Drill Team, the Police Relief Association, the Police Officers’ Guild, and Moose Lodge 211. On the morning of his death, his drill team had performed in Auburn. The 36-year-old, who had been on the Seattle Police Force for nine years, was described as “the best example of a good policeman you would ever run across.” He was survived by his wife Suzanne, 11-year-old daughter Terri-Lynn, and 8-year-old son Daniel. His death was ruled an “excusable homicide.” Four months after the incident, Officer Allshaw’s widow accepted the Ballard Jaycees Distinguished Service Award in her deceased husband’s name. In 1998, he was also posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor. Robert Allshaw is buried in Washelli Cemetery, Section S.

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Evergreen Washelli’s Liberty Bell

Friday, May 6th, 2011

Photograph Courtesy of Stan Matsui

Of all the patriotic symbols Americans hold dear, there are none that express the American spirit quite like the Liberty Bell. So, how did a defective bell that was supposed to be scrapped become such an iconic symbol of our nation’s independence? The answer is, quite by accident.

The bell was originally custom ordered from Whitechapel Foundry by the Pennsylvania Assembly in 1751, possibly to commemorate the 50-year anniversary of Pennsylvania’s original Constitution. The bell arrived from England on September 1, 1752, but was not rung until March 10, 1753, whereby it had been hung from temporary scaffolding and proceeded to crack the very first time it was tested. It was then given to two foundry workers, John Pass and John Stow, who melted it down and recast the bell with additional copper to make it less brittle. The recast bell, which everyone agreed had a terrible sound, was hung on March 29th in the steeple of the Pennsylvania State House, our nation’s first capitol building. Known simply as the “State House bell,” it was rung on many special occasions, much to the consternation of nearby residents.

It was long thought that the bell was rung on July 8, 1776, to announce the reading of the Declaration of Independence. Many bells did ring throughout the city on that day, but historians now believe that the State House steeple, noted in 1774 to be in need of repair, was in no condition to ring the 2,081 pound bell, which probably remained silent until it was rehung in the newly rebuilt steeple in 1785. When the 75-year-old bell was replaced with a new one in 1828, the original was supposed to be disposed of, but the $400 fee to haul it away was more than the bell was worth, so the new bell replaced the clock bell and the unwanted State House bell continued to be rung on special occasions.

It is not clear when or how the recast bell received its first crack. Some say it happened in September 1824, when announcing Lafayette’s triumphant return to Philadelphia, but others believe it happened in 1835, when tolling in honor of George Washington’s birthday. Unlike the first crack, the occurrence of the final and most famous crack in the bell is not in dispute. In 1846, the seemingly tone-deaf bell rang its last clear note when it “received a sort of compound fracture” during its toll for Washington’s Birthday, perhaps for the second time. In 1852, the defective bell was carefully moved to nearby Independence Hall, where it remained for the next 150 years, until the newly built Liberty Bell Center opened across the street on October 9, 2003.

By the early 1900’s, after the bell’s actual history was interlaced with legend, its long-held association with our country’s independence had made it evermore a symbol of patriotic pride. Evergreen-Washelli’s replica of the Liberty Bell, one of just three replicas cast in the same pit as the original, was used as part of a 30-city tour around the United States to celebrate our Bi-centennial. Like the original Liberty Bell (albeit minus the crack), it stands to remind us of our country’s many freedoms.

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Seattle Police Officer Charles O. LeGate

Thursday, May 5th, 2011

Charles O. LeGate 1872 – 3/17/1922

It was Friday evening on St. Patrick’s Day 1922. Even during Prohibition, it should have been a night that was festive and fun. Instead it turned into tragedy. Seattle Police Officer Charles O. LeGate, who was on duty that night, had gone missing. LeGate’s sergeant was E.W. Pielow, who suggested where to look. Sure enough, Officer LeGate’s body was found inside his personal vehicle, which was in a locked garage in the 1200 block of Main (now Jackson) Street. Manipulation of the scene had led detectives to initially rule the death a suicide, but evidence later convinced investigators that Officer LeGate had been murdered. The 15-year veteran of the police force had been beaten about the head with the butt of a gun and shot twice. He was survived by his wife Anna, son Charlie, and daughters Florence and Agnes. He was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor in 1998.

Shortly before Officer LeGate’s murder, Sergeant Pielow had returned from a two-week suspension for “neglect of duty” for failing to keep his district free from prostitution. Some suspected that he was involved in Officer LeGate’s death. Less than a year after the murder, Sergeant Pielow was arrested by U.S. Customs for smuggling liquor from Canada. He was dismissed from the police force. No official suspects were ever found in Officer LeGate’s murder. Officer LeGate is buried in Evergreen Cemetery, Section 1.

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