Herald-Tribune

Pearl Harbor survivor had difficulty seeing memorial through the memories

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He had hoisted the American flag on the lawn at ‘Aiea Heights, an area just north of the harbor, when the first Japanese planes flew overhead. He thought they were the home team arriving in Hawaii from the mainland, until the bombs began to rain down.

Survivor: Working to rescue sailors kept fear at bay

“I saw the Arizona (blow) up...and then I saw the Oklahoma capsizing and Nevada trying to take off into the opening to get out of the harbor,” said Chandler. “It was unbelievab­le. I couldn’t understand what was happening until I saw the sunburst on the (plane) wings and I knew we were being attacked by Japan.”

The USS Arizona battleship sank minutes after a bomb struck its forward magazine.

Japanese planes wreaked havoc on 19 warships and 300 aircraft and killed more than 2,400 American servicemen in less than 90 minutes, according to the National World War II Museum. Nearly half of the people killed that day were USS Arizona crewmen.

Chandler said his corpsman training kicked in, leaving little room for fear.

“Working and trying to help the sailors who were in the water is what kept us going,” Chandler said. “I was just thinking about helping people. That was my job, and it was what I was trained for.”

But on that day, the job was overwhelmi­ng.

“I wanted to save everybody, but I just couldn’t. I tried, but I couldn’t.”

What began as rescue and triage then moved to treating the wounded at Naval Mobile Hospital No. 2 — a hospital erected a month earlier when the base hospital at Pearl Harbor filled. Only when the emergency faded and quiet settled was Chandler struck by a rush of fear.

“I realized that I could have been killed or injured, but nothing happened to me,” Chandler said. “I thank the Lord for taking care of me while I was doing all of those things. He didn’t make me scared while I was helping people.”

An aspiring sailor from childhood

The uniform called Chandler early.

As a child growing up with three siblings in Holyoke, Massachuse­tts, Chandler stood out as the one who repeatedly asked his mom to buy him sailor suits. He was so eager to don the uniform that he dropped out of high school and spent the next 38 years in the military — six on active duty. (The high school later issued him an honorary diploma — in 2023.)

Those years of active duty stretched through the war and included stops not only in Pearl Harbor, but in submarine school in Connecticu­t. His first civilian job was at the propeller parts company Hamilton Standard in Connecticu­t that most importantl­y employed Ann, who would become his wife and love of his life for 55 years.

He later went into business with his brother, eventually running Highland Upholstery Company. As so many of his generation do, Chandler eventually moved to South Florida in 2016 and to the Tequesta Terrace senior living facility just over a year ago.

He didn’t tell his family members many details about his experience in Pearl Harbor until just a few months ago. His daughter Kelli Fahey, 59, and her husband, Ron Mahaffee, 62, both live in North Palm Beach and get to learn a little more about his life each time they visit him about four times a week. He keeps busy with nine grandchild­ren, 17 great grandchild­ren and 5 great-great grandchild­ren.

In December, Chandler returned to Pearl Harbor for the 82nd anniversar­y. There, he and five other survivors were honored with a parade. While he welcomed the honors, the visit brought back painful memories.

The USS Arizona memorial now sits atop the sunken battleship, and all he saw was the blown-up ship where his colleagues once worked.

“I felt like I was walking on their grave,” said Chandler.

While the memories are difficult, Chandler has remained connected to that past. He is among the thousands of veterans to take an Honor Flight to the war memorials in Washington, D.C. Back in 2016, he joined a local Pearl Harbor Associatio­n chapter, but the group disbanded when their numbers fell to only two.

With so few peers left, Chandler focuses on the people around him.

“He is everybody’s Pappy,” Mahaffee said. “People love him at Tequesta Terrace because he’s the guy who first walks up to the new resident and gets to know them. He’s got this pull…he just brings people in.”

Maya Washburn covers northern Palm Beach County for The Palm Beach Post, part of the USA TODAY FloridaNet­work. Reach her at mwashburn@pbpost.com . Support local journalism: Subscribe today .

 ?? PROVIDED BY RON MAHAFFEE ?? Pearl Harbor survivor Harry Chandler, 102, of Tequesta, leaves the 82nd Pearl Harbor Remembranc­e Day ceremony on Dec. 7 at Pearl Harbor in Honolulu, Hawaii.
PROVIDED BY RON MAHAFFEE Pearl Harbor survivor Harry Chandler, 102, of Tequesta, leaves the 82nd Pearl Harbor Remembranc­e Day ceremony on Dec. 7 at Pearl Harbor in Honolulu, Hawaii.
 ?? AP ?? In this photo provided by the U.S.
Navy, smoke rises from the battleship USS Arizona as it sinks during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, Dec. 7, 1941. In December, Harry Chandler returned to Pearl Harbor for the 82nd anniversar­y.
There, he and five other survivors were honored with a parade. While he welcomed the honors, the visit brought back painful memories.
AP In this photo provided by the U.S. Navy, smoke rises from the battleship USS Arizona as it sinks during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, Dec. 7, 1941. In December, Harry Chandler returned to Pearl Harbor for the 82nd anniversar­y. There, he and five other survivors were honored with a parade. While he welcomed the honors, the visit brought back painful memories.

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