National Post

Survived bombing of Pearl Harbor

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• Richard C. “Dick” Higgins, one of the few remaining survivors of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, has died, a family member said Wednesday. He was 102.

Higgins died at home in Bend, Ore., on March 19 of natural causes, granddaugh­ter Angela Norton said.

Higgins was a radioman assigned to a patrol squadron of seaplanes based at the Hawaii naval base when Japanese planes began dropping bombs on the morning of Dec. 7, 1941. He recounted in a 2008 oral history interview how he was in his bunk inside a screened-in lanai, or porch, on the third floor of his barracks when the bombing began.

“I jumped out of my bunk and I ran over to the edge of the lanai and just as I got there, a plane went right over the barracks,” he said, according to the interview by the National Museum of the Pacific War in Fredericks­burg, Texas.

He estimated the plane was about 15 metres to his side and 30 metres above his barracks. He described “big red meatballs” on the plane, in reference to the red circular emblem painted on the wings and fuselages of the Japanese aircraft.

“So, there was no doubt what was happening in my mind, because of the things that had been going on,” he said.

Norton called her grandfathe­r a humble and kind man who would frequently visit schools to share stories about Pearl Harbor, the Second World War and the Great Depression. Norton said he wanted to teach people history so they wouldn’t repeat it.

“It was never about him,” Norton said. “The heroes were those that didn’t come home.”

Higgins was born on a farm near Mangum, Okla., on July 24, 1921. He joined the navy in 1939 and retired 20 years later. He then became an aeronautic­s engineer for Northrop Corporatio­n, which later became Northrop Grumman, and other defence contractor­s. He worked on the B-2 Stealth Bomber, Norton said.

His wife, Winnie Ruth, died in 2004 at the age of 82. They had been married for 60 years. Not long after he went into hospice on March 14, he told his granddaugh­ter, “I’m ready to go see Winnie Ruth.”

Higgins is survived by two children, two grandchild­ren and four great-grandchild­ren. The family planned to hold a memorial service at a church in Bend followed by a ceremony with full military honours. Afterward his body was to be flown to California to be buried next to his wife.

 ?? ?? Richard C. (Dick) Higgins
Richard C. (Dick) Higgins

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