Two lost

| December 30, 2024 | 9 Comments
arren Upton was a sailor aboard U.S.S. Utah during Pearl Harbor attack. People talk about about lessons learned of Pearl Harbor Event on 12/6/03

 

A bit back when we talked about Pearl Harbor vets, the source article said there were a total of 16 still left. Sadly, as of Christmas that number is down to 15.

Warren Upton, the oldest living survivor of the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, has died. He was 105.

Upton’s Christmas Day death — at a hospital in Los Gatos, Calif. — followed a bout with pneumonia, Kathleen Farley, the California state chair of the Sons and Daughters of Pearl Harbor Survivors, told the Associated Press.

Beyond being the oldest living survivor of the Dec. 7, 1941, Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Upton was also the last living survivor of the USS Utah — a naval ship that sank after being hit by two torpedoes during the early minutes of the Hawaii attack, per the nonprofit.

Upton continued to serve as a radioman during World War II and later started a family with wife Gene, who Pacific Historic Parks said died in 2018.

The late veteran previously told the AP in 2020 that he was about to shave before the first torpedo struck the USS Utah. He added that nobody on board understood why the ship had shaken ahead of the second torpedo, which then caused it to capsize.

The outlet, which cites military historian J. Michael Wenger, said 87,000 military personnel were on Oahu on Dec. 7, 1941, and only 15 are still alive following Upton’s death. People

Fair winds and following seas, sir.

Our sad second half concerns Green Beret SGT Thomas “Tommy” Lazzaro.

Lazzaro, 27, a weapons expert with 2nd Battalion, 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne), died after a hunter hit him with a stray round at a shooting range on Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, on Dec. 22, Task and Purpose first reported Thursday. Lazzaro was driving to the range to help another soldier who was experiencing car trouble, the publication said, citing a spokesperson.

If the name rings a bell with you football fans, Lazarro quarterbacked the Central Michigan University to a title.

Prior to enlisting in the Army, Lazzaro was a starting quarterback at Central Michigan University, where he helped lead the team to the Mid-American Conference Championship in 2019. He received the team’s prestigious Kurt Dobronski Award that year and earned the nickname “Touchdown Tommy” for his performance on the gridiron, his father said.
After he graduated from CMU with a business degree in hand, Lazzaro returned to his home state of Colorado and took a job in sales. Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, he was unsatisfied with sitting on Zoom calls and the lack of camaraderie he experienced — and missed — on the football field.

So it was unsurprising, perhaps, when the younger Lazzaro decided to join the Army under an 18X contract — a general enlistment title for Special Forces.He passed the Special Forces Qualification Course and donned the coveted green beret as a weapons sergeant.

With several qualifications already under his belt, Lazzaro was looking forward to attending Ranger School, the Army’s competitive and highly sought-after leadership school. His father wanted to pin his Ranger tab, continuing a tradition that he himself passed in the military.

The elder Lazzaro recalled that drive in his son from a young age, always attempting to outdo his father in the gym, for example, or as a “tough-as-nails” competitor on the football field, where even in high school he saw success while leading his Colorado team to two state championships.  Military.com

Sounds like we lost a fine young man, especially due to a pointless accident.

Category: Green Beret, Navy, We Remember, WWII

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Fyrfighter

Two sad days for sure. Just goes to show that you never know when your number is up. Freak accidents like that make it hard to understand when someone says “God has a plan” because it sure doesn’t seem like it in those instances. My mom always said “just because we don’t understand it doesn’t mean there isn’t a plan”.. I’ve been repeating that to myself a lot lately, and maybe this is one more event I’ll be thinking of when I do so..

RIP to both of these warriors. they fought the good fight, and will sleep tonight in Valhalla!

Graybeard

I fully understand the questioning.
After nearly 73 years I’ve experienced things when I don’t understand what God is doing, or allowing to be done, but I’ve learned to lean on His love for His children and trust Him.

Doesn’t mean I understand any of it. And honestly I hate some of it. But I’ve learned to trust God through all of it.

KoB

Rest Easy, Gentlemen. You made the world a better place while you were here and it is a sadder place now that you’re gone.

Slow Salute!

MIRanger

The story on Lazzaro is a little confusing. Was the Hunter on the range or did he shoot Lazzaro as he was driving by where he was hunting (i.e. failed to know what was beyond what he was aiming at… and missed).
I always thought you were to maintain muzzle awareness and aim up range not backwards to the road, but I have never hunted on military property. Sounds like he was in the prime of his career, taken before he could contribute something to the military that is memorable, like his football career.

Army-Air Force Guy

If you take the article at face value, it sounds like an RSO wasn’t doing their job. It’s also likely there wasn’t one present.

Mike B

All the land around Eglin, and it’s Aux Fields is referred to as Eglin Range.

So ignoring the wording in the story, it sounds like he was headed out to the Range (Field) to help a buddy, when a round from a hunter on the same Range (Area) struck him. Possibly the hunter fired towards the road, a big no no.

I’m sure more will come out, and I honestly don’t remember shooting ranges that weren’t on base proper. But things change……

Mike
USAF Retired

Mike B

Confirmed through another news source he was killed by a stray round on Eglin AFB Range Land that is used for hunting and recreation.

So there was no shooting range involved here, more or less a tragic hunting incident.

Don’t know how long the below link will be up or accessible.

https://midbaynews.com/post/7th-group-sergeant-killed-in-hunting-accident-on-eglin

Mike
USAF Retired

Mark L.

Lazzaro, 27, a weapons expert with 2nd Battalion, 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne), died after a hunter hit him with a stray round at a shooting range on Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, on Dec. 22

What the fuck? I already gotta worry about getting shot by some asshole not paying attention to his weapon at the range, but now I ALSO gotta worry about some dipshit hunter shooting at God-knows-what hundreds of meters away from the range?