Monday, July 25, 2011

Seaman's World War II uniform comes 'home' to Sitka museum

Dennis Baker knew exactly where he wanted to go when he left the M/V Oosterdam for the short boat ride to Sitka on Thursday.

SITKA -- Dennis Baker knew exactly where he wanted to go when he left the M/V Oosterdam for the short boat ride to Sitka on Thursday.

In Alaska for the first time, along with his girlfriend Norma Jean Harstvedt, Baker walked over to Centennial Hall, where a World War II Navy uniform worn by his father is the centerpiece of a new exhibit at the Sitka Historical Museum.

Owen Baker was a seaman first class who served on the USS Sitka, a navy attack transport ship.

The reunion with the service dress blue uniform, known as a "crackerjack," was an emotional one for Dennis, himself a Navy veteran.

The uniform had hung in the "military room" of his Florida home for 25 years, alongside his own Navy uniform.

But about a year ago, Baker, 57, decided to "downsize," his euphemism for getting rid of his belongings, selling his house and hitting the road in a Toyota Highlander.

He knew he had to part with his father's uniform and wanted to find a fitting place for it to rest.

He got on the Internet and quickly found the Sitka Historical Museum. Neither Baker nor his father had ever been to Alaska but Baker said his father knew of Sitka and its connection to the "attack transport" ship he had served on in the Pacific during the 1940s.

Baker made a call to Sitka. He had good timing. That day, in the summer of 2010, museum staff members were involved in a discussion about how to expand their collection. They needed a World War II Navy uniform.

He told his mother he had found a home for his father, brushed off the uniform, "molded the hat and straightened the neckerchief."

"We both knew that he was going to live on forever for many to see, his spirit within," Baker wrote in an article for a newspaper in the upstate New York community where he grew up and where his mother still lives.

The next day, Baker put the uniform in the mail, along with medals, a boatswain's pipe and a few other items.

When Jacqueline Fernandez took over as the museum curator in February she inherited the Baker project, which had hit a standstill. The World War II items were in Sitka but Fernandez was not quite sure how to appropriately display the uniform.

She started corresponding with Baker, who eventually agreed to buy a $400 mannequin for his father's crackerjack.

The mannequin arrived in town last week and Fernandez got the new exhibit up Wednesday, just in time for Baker's arrival in Sitka.

Fernandez said Baker got in touch with the Oosterdam's captain prior to the ship's arrival in Sitka, explained the situation and asked if he could be on the first lightering boat.

His request was granted and Baker made a beeline for Centennial Hall.

He said he was extremely pleased to see his father's uniform on display in a case at the entrance to the museum.

"He knew of Sitka; he was very proud of that ship," Baker said as he worked to control his emotions.

The USS Sitka, built in Mississippi, was launched in 1944 and sailed through the Panama Canal to the Pacific theater, where it was a heavily armed "liberty ship" used to transport troops and supplies to places like Pearl Harbor, Guam and Japan. The ship was decommissioned in 1946 and was a mercantile ship until being scrapped in 1976.

Owen Baker served on the ship in 1945 and 1946. After retiring from the Navy, he operated a dairy farm in New York's Catskill Mountains until his death in 2002.

Baker's mother, who is 82 and still farms, was too ill to make the trip to Alaska but Baker said he was eager to show her pictures of the exhibit.

As Baker spoke to museum staff Thursday, he revealed two items that he wanted to add to the new exhibit: his parents' original wedding bands from 1947.

Baker said his mother asked him to take the rings to Sitka and place them in the front pocket of his father's uniform. "He'll never be alone," Baker said, explaining the ring ceremony.

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://www.thenewstribune.com

No comments:

Post a Comment