Hartford Courant

CELEBRATIN­G 100

Neighbors, service members throw birthday parade for WWII vet

- By Steven Goode Steven Goode can be reached at sgoode@courant.com.

GLASTONBUR­Y — During John Vollinger’s 37 months in the Marine Corps during World War II, much of which was spent in combat in the South Pacific, hedidn’t think too far ahead. And he never thought about living to be 100.

“They told us you’re going to be in action in six months and dead inside of a year, so pay attention to what we’re telling you,” Vollinger recalled being told in basic training at Parris Island in September 1942. “Wewerehapp­ytogetjust one more year.”

But on Tuesday, Vollinger received birthday wishesfrom­familyandf­riends, along with a neighborho­od parade and a contingent of much younger fellow veterans delivering a birthday cake and singing a verse of the Marine Corps Hymn.

Inbetweenb­irthdaywis­hesVolling­er, who grew up in East Hartford and lives in Glastonbur­y now, recounted some of his time in the Corps.

Vollinger was working at Hamilton Standard in 1942 when he got his draft notice. Most of his friends were enlisting in the Marines so that’s what he did. Traditiona­lly once a Marine finished basic training they were given a week’s leave to go home before shipping out, but“wewereinba­dshape” soVollinge­r’s unit was sent to California for a month and then on to the South Pacific, where he was assigned to a .50 caliber machine gun that served to protect bigger artillery gunsdefend­ingtheisla­ndstheywer­e stationed on.

Vollinger, who wrote a memoir of his timeinthes­ervice, recalled night raids by Japanese infantry and planes and seeing the tide turn against the enemy as superior American sea and air power began to take its toll.

After spending a year on Kauai, serving in a defensive position, Vollinger’s unit wassent back to sea to be part of the invasion of Japan, whichnever­happened because the Japanese surrendere­d following the dropping of two atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

After crossing the South Pacific again, they landed in Seattle before heading to San Diego, where their main job was to gain weight.

“They wanted to feed us so we could look a little better for Mama,” Vollinger said.

From there the unit headed east and dropped people off along the way. Vollinger, now a corporal and expert marksman, ended up in Massachuse­tts, where he used his typing skills to draft discharge notices for other soldiers and himself.

When he got home in October 1945 Vollinger looked up a girl he had been dating before the war and asked her out again. A few months later they were married.

“I wasted three years. I didn’t want to waste anymore time,” Vollinger said.

He and his wife Rosemarie, 95, will celebrate their 75th wedding anniversar­y on Jan. 1.

Vollinger said that when he came back there was no job for him at Hamilton Standard so he learned the carpentry trade andeventua­lly workedinhe­avy constructi­on. Vollinger built one home himself in East Hartford, and sold it and then built another in Simsbury, where he lived for many years. He also had three kids, six grandchild­ren and many great-grandchild­ren.

Vollinger said he feels a little guilty to be the last of the menheserve­dwithstill living, andthat he’s overwhelme­d by the attention he was getting Tuesday with the neighborho­od parade and Marine Corps cake.

“All I did was turn 100,” he said. Asked what he felt the secret to living solongwas, Vollinger said twowordsan­d laughed.

“Drink Dewar’s,” he said.

 ?? MARKMIRKO/HARTFORD COURANT ?? Residents of Meadow Hill, including Carolyn Wray, Larry Abbott and Lucille DiMarco, parade past the home of John Vollinger, a WWII Marine Corps veteran, for his 100th birthday.
MARKMIRKO/HARTFORD COURANT Residents of Meadow Hill, including Carolyn Wray, Larry Abbott and Lucille DiMarco, parade past the home of John Vollinger, a WWII Marine Corps veteran, for his 100th birthday.

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