[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 141 (Monday, September 19, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5878-S5879]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING OUR ARMED FORCES
Seaman 1st Class William Welch
Mr. BROWN. Mr. President, I rise to honor Seaman 1st Class William W.
Welch, a native of Springfield, OH--an American hero who laid down his
life for our country during the attack on Pearl Harbor.
Seaman Welch was known to his family as Billy. He enlisted in the
Navy, as so many did in those days, at 17. He left during his senior
year at Springfield Catholic Central High School, so determined was he
to serve his country. On December 7, 1941, Welch was stationed on the
USS Oklahoma, docked at the U.S. Naval Base at Pearl Harbor. The
Oklahoma was the first to be hit that fateful morning by the Japanese.
Of the more than 1,300 crew aboard, 429 perished that day--a loss of
life second only to the better known USS Arizona. The ship capsized,
and Billy Welch was among the first of so many Americans to make the
ultimate sacrifice for our Nation during World War II. Billy's grieving
family was dealt an additional blow when their son's remains were not
returned to them, and they were unable to give him a burial befitting
his sacrifice.
It wasn't until 1943 that the Navy was able to right the Oklahoma and
began trying to identify the remains. By then, with the technology
available in the 1940s, it was too late for most sailors. Billy and his
fellow sailors were buried as ``unknowns,'' and they had rested in the
National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu until last year.
In 2014, Billy Welch's nephew, Michael, contacted my office. He was
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fighting--for want of a better term--with the Department of Defense,
begging them to try to identify his uncle's remains with the new
technology available in 2014. He was part of a movement of families and
veterans trying to piece together where their loved ones were buried
and get them returned home.
In 2015, the Pentagon announced plans to exhume and attempt to
identify the fallen sailors and soldiers buried in the Pacific. DOD
began removing caskets and using dental records and DNA to identify the
remains and return those fallen heroes to their families.
Billy Welch was identified. Now, with the help of dedicated staff in
my office, next month he will finally be returned to Springfield and
buried with full military honors in his hometown. It will be my honor
to stand with Seaman Welch's family at Saint Joseph Catholic Church in
Springfield and witness this hero be shown the honor and appreciation
he deserves and his family has been denied for so long.
Billy and his fellow sailors may not have known the contribution they
were making that day on the USS Oklahoma to future generations at home
and around the world as the first to sacrifice their lives fighting
tyranny during the Second World War. That makes their actions all the
more heroic. There is a reason we call them the ``greatest
generation.''
We are losing more and more of that generation with each passing day.
Less than 700,000 World War II veterans remain with us. We lose some
430 of those heroes each day. My father, a World War II veteran
stationed in New Zealand and Iran--what he always called Persia World
War II--passed away back in the year 2000.
Projects like this one are all the more important and more timely. We
need to identify these sailors and soldiers now, while their loved ones
are still with us and still able to pay their proper respects. We owe
William Welch and all those who gave their lives for our country a
burial and, equally important, a tribute that befits their service and
their sacrifice. I will be honored to take part in that tribute for
Seaman Welch next month.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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