John R. Rowe Post 17, Honolulu, Hawaii

John R. Rowe Post 17, Honolulu, Hawaii WWI Pvt John Rupert Rowe III 1st Hawaiian Ancestry KIA 31Jul1918 (aged 26 + 1 day), Nuuanu Cemetery. Col. We have a got to win this war. I hope I shall. Sen.

Soldier receives
belated tribute
A ceremony today will honor the
first isle man killed in World War I
________________________________________
By Gregg K. Kakesako
[email protected]
In a ceremony today, Pfc. John Rupert Rowe will finally get the recognition his family and others say he deserves more than 80 years after he was killed on a battlefield in France. "He was the private that no

one knew anything about," said Hawaii Army National Guard Lt. Kenrock Higa, a grandnephew and commander of the 29th Infantry Brigade's 2nd Battalion. From the battlefield Rowe wrote these words to his mother:
"Don't worry, mother dear. If I fail do not mourn for me as I will have done only my duty. All of us won't come back. However, if I do not. Always remember me as having done my duty for my country." A few days later, on July 31, 1918, a day after his 26th birthday, Rowe became the first Hawaiian killed in World War I. Through the decades his family believes he never got the recognition other veterans received. "All his grave marker at Oahu Cemetery bore was his name, his rank and his unit," said Higa, 45. Last year, Theola Silva, a niece, took her family's concerns to U.S. Daniel Akaka, D-Hawaii, seeking his help for an appropriate recognition of Rowe's service and sacrifice. The family also sought the advice of Prince Perrera, past commander of American Legion Post 17, which is named after Rowe. Akaka told Higa that "this sounds like a case of a forgotten Hawaiian" and forwarded the matter to the Department of Veterans Affairs, which manages the nation's military cemeteries. Gene Castagnetti, director of the National Cemetery of the Pacific at Punchbowl, noted that Rowe was buried at a private cemetery long before the VA was created in 1932 and before the Punchbowl veterans cemetery was established in 1949. He said the law does allow the VA to provide headstones for veterans buried in private cemeteries. This morning, a new marble headstone will be unveiled for Rowe, a member of Company H, 34th Infantry Regiment, 4th Division, who was killed by an enemy shell during an advance on the Vesle River in Chery Chartreuse, France. It will bear the inscription "First World War I combat casualty from Hawaii." Akaka, in prepared Memorial Day remarks, noted that "since annexation, Hawaii has sent her sons to fight in every one of America's wars. Today we honor the service and sacrifices made by ordinary men and women who lost their lives in defense of freedom and democracy. Their heroism and patriotism reminds us of the fundamental truth our nation has understood since the Revolutionary War, and which holds great relevance for us today: The freedom, liberty, and peace we cherish carries a dear price." Akaka recalled that Rowe left the islands more than 80 years ago with a Hawaiian singing group to seek his fortune as a musician and an entertainer. During a stop in Texas, Rowe enlisted in the Army and by mid-1918 was in France. He was killed just four months before the Armistice was signed on Nov. 11, 1918, which was also his mother's 50th birthday. "When Pvt. Rowe was laid to rest here in 1921," Akaka said, "the people of Hawaii were reminded of his sense of honor and duty to country." Akaka added: "Today, few Americans recall the horrible events or heroes of World War I, with the exception of families, generations removed, who lost a loved one in that war over 80 years ago; historians; and our nation's veterans service organizations. Today's ceremony honoring Pvt. Rowe is also a remembrance of the sacrifices made by hundreds of Hawaii's sons and daughters. Our freedom has been preserved, strengthened and consecrated because of their great sacrifices, and on Memorial Day we remember each of them with respect and gratitude. "On this Memorial Day, we honor all of the men and women who have paid the ultimate price of freedom and security throughout our country's history, Americans who helped change the course of history and helped preserve a world in which freedom and democracy could flourish. Let us also remember that today, as we honor our nation's fallen heroes, we have called upon our armed forces to stand alert to the new challenges that threaten our freedom and security in the war against terrorism." Higa said he is extremely grateful for the efforts of Akaka, Castagnetti and Harold Lewis, director of Oahu Cemetery. "Thanks to their leadership, our family has finally gotten closure and recognition." In his remarks, Akaka noted that it is most fitting that Rowe's last admonition to his mother in the event that he not return -- "I have done my full duty for my country" -- is inscribed on the back of his new marble grave marker as "an enduring reminder of his quiet courage." One hundred two men from Hawaii were killed in World War I.

We went to pick up flags we deposited on veteran’s graves before Memorial Day at the Oahu cemetery.  The sun popped out...
05/31/2026

We went to pick up flags we deposited on veteran’s graves before Memorial Day at the Oahu cemetery. The sun popped out!

We picked up our 2390 Flying Flags for Heroes at the Pearl Harbor national Memorial this morning. We can only leave them...
05/31/2026

We picked up our 2390 Flying Flags for Heroes at the Pearl Harbor national Memorial this morning. We can only leave them out there for one week before they need to mow. 

05/31/2026

On May 29, 1882, Honolulu’s Daily Bulletin noted that May 30 was “Decoration Day” in the United States, when relatives and friends of those who died during the Civil War visit graves and decorate them with flowers.

The following day, as a result of that story, an impromptu gathering of about 40 veterans from that war gathered at the Government hotel, where the U. S. Minister Resident presided. After a prayer, all enjoyed a “sumptuous meal,” followed by toasts, speeches, and songs.

The following year, the George W. DeLong Post, an organization of Civil War veterans, observed Decoration Day with a parade up Nuʻuanu Avenue to Oʻahu Cemetery. The program included a poem entitled “The Blue and the Gray,” an address and the decoration of graves of American and British soldiers and sailors.

Photo: Army personnel on parade in Honolulu – most likely a Decoration Day Parade in the 1920s (Hawaiʻi State Archives)

We remembered those who gave the last measure of devotion on Memorial Day Service at Roy King’s WWII Memorial at the cor...
05/26/2026

We remembered those who gave the last measure of devotion on Memorial Day Service at Roy King’s WWII Memorial at the corner of South King Street and Punchbowl Street, Honolulu, HI 96813 in front of the Territorial Office Building, 465 S King Street, Honolulu HI 96813. The Young Marines & VFW will participated. Afterwards, the VFW held a service at the Korean & Vietnam Memorials between the Hawaii State Art Museum and the Capitol, on Richards Street.

We celebrated the fifth installation of a Wall of Honor in the Plaza at Pearl City, 1048 Kuala St. Pearl City HI 96782. ...
05/26/2026

We celebrated the fifth installation of a Wall of Honor in the Plaza at Pearl City, 1048 Kuala St. Pearl City HI 96782. There are about 25 Veterans in residence. The veterans, their families and all other residents attended. The Liberty Bells provided entertainment with WWII songs and dance.

05/25/2026
05/25/2026
The Other Disaster at Pear Harbor refers to the 1944 Westloch explosions in LSTs a little after 1500 on another gentle S...
05/25/2026

The Other Disaster at Pear Harbor refers to the 1944 Westloch explosions in LSTs a little after 1500 on another gentle Sunday afternoon, 21May1944. I was honored by the invitation to provide welcoming remarks before the keynote speaker last Thursday afternoon. I didn’t feel I could add more to the history books, so I shared my own astonishment and perspective on history worth remembering:

Throughout my US Navy career, I was told many times that our training, dive checklists, casualty & operating procedures were all "written in blood." I was told that we stand on the shoulders of those who came before us. Those shoulders carry not just their triumphs, but their tragedies; not just their joys, but their miseries.

Like many of you, I grew up in what we feel was a simpler time. I am from the tail end of the baby boomers. I played with my friends without a second thought about their ancestry or background. We were just kids, playing together as I pray, children always will. It was only as I grew up that I learned of the horrible events within our history. I was shocked. Shocked that people could do horrible things or treat others in ways they would never want to be treated themselves. So much for my childhood. There was so much to learn, and so much we must remember.

Having participated in many remembrance ceremonies over the years, I’ve learned that it is vital for us to remember. We must remember in the hope that knowledge, and the strength of our shared moral pillar, we may prevent these tragedies from ever happening again.

In the 1980s, in West Loch, I first learned about the OTHER disaster in Pearl Harbor. After spotting a rusting LST, I was told about what happened in May of 1944. Hundreds were killed and injured, and they were mostly African American Sailors. I was confused when I understood they weren’t trained for the job; they were never even taught what "right" looked like. I tried to imagine what their families must have felt, but in 1944, the story was classified. It was not in the news.

I later learned this wasn't an isolated event. A similar disaster took place just two months later, in July 1944, at the Port Chicago Naval Magazine in California. Again, hundreds of the dead and injured were mostly untrained African American men. In the aftermath, many of the survivors refused to handle more munitions. 50 were labeled "Mutineers" and convicted. It wasn't until 2024, that they were finally exonerated, EIGHTY YEARS LATER.
If there was any good that came from that carnage, it must be that the story got out and was used to push back against a segregated military.

This wasn't just a military problem; it was societal. We’re not done with 1944. In August, the Philadelphia Motorman’s Association went on strike to protest the federally mandated promotion of eight African American employees to become trolley operators. The strike shut down transportation for 600,000 workers, crippling WWII defense production. The President ordered 5,000 Army troops to take control. The strikers only gave up when they were told their draft deferments, because their work was vital to the war effort, would be revoked. In mid-August, trolleys resumed along with those African American trolley operators.

The disaster at West Loch, the tragedy at Port Chicago, the strike in Philadelphia, these aren't just isolated stories. They are painful reminders of a past we must never forget. They represent the blood in which our procedures were written, and they form the tragic foundation, the shoulders on which we stand today.

Let us remember the SACRIFICES of the Sailors & Soldiers of West Loch and Port Chicago. Let us remember the courage of those who fought for equality, on the battlefield and on the home front.

And let us carry their memory as a solemn promise: continue to learn from our history, to uphold the moral pillars of justice and equality. Let us ensure that such tragedies do not happen to any group.

We placed flags at Civil War, World War I, and World War II veterans Graves at the Oahu Cemetery.
05/24/2026

We placed flags at Civil War, World War I, and World War II veterans Graves at the Oahu Cemetery.

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96803

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