[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 89 (Tuesday, June 10, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3526-S3527]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING CAPTAIN WILLIAM HALL DAVISON
Mr. ISAKSON. Madam President, on the evening of June 8, this past
Sunday, in Gainesville, GA, CAPT William Hall Davison, U.S. Navy
retired, passed away.
It was a significant day in our family for many reasons. He is my
wife's father. He is my children's grandfather. He is my
grandchildren's great-grandfather. His wife Gay, 97 years old, survives
him.
Bill Davison was 99 years old. He was a pilot in World War II in the
South Pacific, tracking submarines of the Japanese Navy and cargo ships
of the Japanese Navy to make sure our intelligence was the best it
could be.
Like so many of America's greatest generation, he sacrificed 4\1/2\
years of his life in defense of our country. He made a career of the
U.S. Navy. He never talked about it, and only rarely did he say
anything about it. But when he did, he talked about how proud he was to
be able to wear the uniform of the United States of America.
So while it was a tragic night for my wife, a tragic loss for our
family, it is a reminder to all of us as Americans that our greatest
generation is passing at a very rapid rate. Soon none will be here with
us who stormed the beaches at Normandy, flew the skies of the Pacific
or fought on the ground at the Battle of the Bulge.
But we are all here today--you and I, Madam President--because of the
sacrifice of those people--the greatest sacrifice in the history of
mankind. In fact, the most unselfish act of humanity I have ever read
about or heard about or was ever taught about was by that generation
that landed on Normandy Beach on June 6, 1944, and freed America and
freed the rest of the world from the totalitarian government of Adolph
Hitler.
So as my family pauses to mourn the loss of a father-in-law for me, a
grandfather for my children, a great-grandfather for my grandchildren,
and a father for my wife, we take joy in knowing that one member of our
family was a part of a generation that saved all of humanity for
democracy and for freedom and for liberty.
To his wife Gay, who is in morning today, at age 97, we wish her a
continued, prosperous life, and we thank her for her sacrifice, because
like so many women--the wives of the soldiers during World War II--she
kept the home fires burning. They worked in the factories. They made
sure that America worked while their husbands were off to defend us.
So while we had a tragic loss of life in our family on Sunday night,
June 8, we had a positive remembrance of all that has been done for our
family by the brave men and women who fought for the United States of
America.
May God bless William Hall Davison for his life and may God bless the
United States of America.
I yield back.
[[Page S3527]]
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
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