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I had heard the light was originally a beacon for guiding ships into the
bay. They could see it out many miles. 300 or so sticks in my mind. Looked out, but with the weather, did not see it from my house in Pleasanton. Bill "Curtis CCR" wrote in message om... (Curtis CCR) wrote in message . com... (Gould 0738) wrote in message ... We're beginning to run out of living reminders of WWII. A kid just old enough to enlist in 1941 would be in his early 80's today. Most of the officers who served in WWII as young men in their mid-20's or 30's are gone, as are probably all the senior officers and commanders. My father in law was a freshly coined Navy Lt. He's still among us at 87, but sadly enough most of his lifelong friends have passed on. My wife and I attended a Pearl Harbor cermony last night at the summit of Mt. Diablo (Northern CA). There were 100 or so people there. One of the speakers mentioned that the membership in the local chapter of the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association (I don't recall if that is the actual name of the organization) was less than half what it was when they started holding the cermony about 40 years ago. And judging by the appearance of the survivors that were introduced, I'd say that we are very close to losing all the living links we have to that event. (These are military people... I am sure there are those among us that were even younger civilians that witnessed the attack). The ceremony was for the annual beacon lighting. The bright white, rotating beacon was placed on Mt. Diablo in 1928 as an aid to naviagtion for aircraft. It was turned off, with numerous other beacons on the west coast, after Pearl Harbor for fear that it could be used by the enemy. It remained dark for years and was eventually turned back on. But then it was soon turned off again for lack of funding to maintain it (it wasn't really needed with arrival of radar and radio navigation) and keep it running all the time. I think some local organization(s) fund it now. But it is only lighted on December 7th, for one night. It was cold and windy at the summit last night. In the 30s and the wind was blowing the fog at about 20 mph. But a lot of people came up anyway to be a part of it... Seniors, veterans of other wars, kids... my pregnant wife ![]() We took a couple of pictures with the digital camera while we were there. It got so foggy that the flash made a mess of things. There are a couple of web sites around with daytime photos of the beacon - you can google on something like "mount diablo beacon" to see them. This is photo my wife took of the light running in the fog... best we could get for the cold, wet conditions. |