Saturday, 21 September 2024

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griffandharry

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Think Dodge City, Kansas, and Shady Point, Oklahoma. And then think U.S. Navy.

Get the connection? No?

But these two places are the originating points of two of Lake County's surviving veterans of the Korean War.

Saturday will be commemorated as the 60th anniversary of the signing of the armistice that ended the three-year-long conflict, which according to the Department of Defense claimed the lives of more than 54,000 American service men and women.

The sailor from Dodge City is 87-year-old Harry Graves. Griff Ratterree is the veteran from Shady Point, population 1,000.

That's not all that makes the two men, both residents of Clearlake, unique. Graves is one of the last individuals on the planet who served in three wars – World War II, Korea and Vietnam.

As a member of the Lake County Military Funeral Honors Team, Ratterree has fired 21-gun salutes in ceremonies honoring the fallen military in nearly 1,000 funerals.

“Sometimes we did three funerals in a day,” he said.

In addition to their work with the honor guard – Graves also is a member – both men today remain very involved in local veterans organizations that seek to assist veterans of all ages.

They also take part in ceremonies such as the annual Pearl Harbor commemorations and the Christmastime laying of wreaths at local cemeteries as part of the Wreaths Across America event.

Graves has been a faithful supporter of Operation Tango Mike – which sends care packages to troops overseas – and recently retired as commander of the local chapter of Disabled American Veterans, an organization he's served since 1979. In 2010, Graves won a Stars of Lake County Award in the “Spirit of Lake County” category,

Ratterree, who has a granddaughter in the military, has been a repeat Stars nominee himself, and has served as commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 2015 in Lakeport. In 2011 Ratterree was honored with the “Veteran of the Year Award” by the United Veterans Council.

Graves, a chief petty officer when he was honorably discharged from the Navy in 1968, has the rare distinction of never having been in a vessel that was fired upon in his 18-year career.

His career began with a two-year hitch from 1944-46. After earning a degree at Oklahoma A&M in electronic engineering, he went back into the Navy in 1950 and remained there until 1968, when the Vietnam War ended, attaining the rank of CPO carpenter's mate.

Regarding his last four years in the Navy, which were shore duty, he said, “I worked in a carpenter's shop rebuilding a captain’s office. It was almost like a civilian job.”

But he understates his experience. He served on a destroyer with guided-missile capacity and during Vietnam was in a ship's company that was among the first U.S. ships in Vietnamese waters shooting photos of the area.

griffratterree

Ratterree, a fire controlman, served four years, from 1947 to 1951. Promotions being hard to come by in that era, he had the same rank when he left the Navy – seaman – as he did when he enlisted.

“I went into the Air Force Reserve when I got out and achieved a sergeant's rating,” Ratterree, who ended his active duty with the Navy, said bemusingly.

Ratterree's ship, the destroyer John W. Thomason, was bombarded at Yangyang Harbor and Wonsan Harbor, for which it was awarded the Korean Service Medal. Which was not much of an honor for getting in harm's way.

The writer of this article was awarded the same medal even though he served his four years after the Korean War was over.

Still another irony to the two veterans' stories is that they had never seen an ocean until they entered the Navy.

Graves, whose father was a machinist and blacksmith, moved the family 200 miles away from Dodge City to Wichita, the furthest he ever traveled before his enlistment.

He glimpsed ocean waters for the first time when he was billeted to the Naval Air Station in Jacksonville, Fla.

Graves moved to Clearlake in 1968 following several fishing expeditions to the region with his workmates in the Vallejo shipyards; Ratterree came in 2006 after becoming acquainted with the area while living in Napa County.

Ratterree, whose father, a Choctaw Indian, was a merchant in Oklahoma's coal-mining towns, had never traveled more than the 40 miles' distance from Shady Point, Okla., to Ft. Smith, Ark.

“The Navy was a new thing for me and a chance to see the world. We saw a lot of it,” said Ratterree, who got his first glimpse of the Pacific when he was whisked off to San Diego for basic training.

“I really enjoyed the Navy; it was so different,” said Graves.

“I got into the Navy when I was 17,” he added.

Is he happy he didn't serve in the Army?

“Oh, definitely,” he said. “I had an uncle who served during World War I. He said don't you ever go into the Infantry.”

Email John Lindblom at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

harrygravesandhat

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