The Union Democrat

Veteran turns 105 after surviving COVID, Pearl Harbor

- By HANNAH CRITCHFIEL­D

TAMPA, Fla. -- After Bill Monfort turned 100, the cakes began to pile up.

With each annual checkup, his doctor's office made him one. So did his church. Friends and family baked.

“One year, I got nine cakes,” the longtime Tampa resident recalled.

On Dec. 17, Monfort celebrated his 105th birthday. He's survived COVID-19, kamikaze attacks and the assault on Pearl Harbor over the course of his life.

He and Forrest Gump could compare notes.

Monfort learned to drive on a Model T. He remembers getting the polio vaccine — the tasteless, odorless inoculatio­n dropped into a sugar cube and administer­ed right to his tongue. “It wasn't not like people are with COVID now,” he said. “People took it matter-offact, as something they needed to

do. And they had no problem.”

He once invited Dick Cheney, vice president at the time, to a party for Navy veterans just outside D.C. Cheney came.

Sept. 11, 2001, was three days later.

It was the second time there'd been an attack on U.S. soil in modern-day history. The first time, Monfort was out at sea, 800 miles off the coast of Honolulu.

A radio operator on the destroyer ship, he was one of the first to hear the chilling message: “Air raid Pearl Harbor. This is no drill.”

He witnessed the destructio­n four days later.

It's easier for Monfort to tell you what Pacific battles he didn't fight the ensuing world war campaign. He only missed three: Saipan, Tinian and Iwo Jima.

He can talk for hours about his time in the war.

“He's one of the most interestin­g people I've ever met,” said Don Alexander, his son-in-law.

To commemorat­e his service, Monfort dons a baseball cap. It reads “Kamikaze WWII Survivor” in capital letters.

“That hat has gotten me a lot of free meals,” he said with a twinkle in his eye.

After World War II ended was signed, Monfort returned to the United States.

He would go on to help revolution­ize care for people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es in Tampa Bay.

It was the 1960s. He and his wife, Bessie, were driving over two hours to see their first daughter Rossie, who had developmen­t disabiliti­es. At the time, the nearest state institutio­n for children like her was in Ft. Meyers.

Monfort, along with other Hillsborou­gh County families, decided to found a local organizati­on where people with disabiliti­es could live in a home-like setting. Today, the charity, Angels Unaware, boasts eight campuses and is the longest-running group home in Tampa Bay.

For his work, the Tampa Bay Lightning honored Monfort as the “Lightning Community Hero” of the 2016 -2017 season. The accompanyi­ng $50,000 prize went right back to his group homes.

At 103, Monfort contracted COVID-19. He was living alone, his wife having passed away years earlier.

It was July 2020, and vaccines were not yet available. He spent three weeks in the hospital. He recovered, and after spending time in a rehabilita­tion center, decided to move into an assisted living home.

“If I went back to my apartment in Tampa, I could live a lot cheaper than here,” Monfort said. “But at my age, it probably wouldn't be long before I'd be needing some help in the home. Here, they've got everything.”

As he enters his 105th year, Bill Monfort is content.

He isn't sure there's anything particular he'd like people to know about his life. As one of the last surviving veterans of World War II, he just wants people to remember the conflict.

“Just that it happened,” he said. “We were there.”

 ?? TNS ?? Navy World War II veteran William E. Monfort turned 105 on Dec. 17.
TNS Navy World War II veteran William E. Monfort turned 105 on Dec. 17.

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