Pearl Harbor survivor Leland Lester recalls the tragedy

Lester was 19 when he witnessed attack on Pearl Harbor

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Photo of Leland Lester at WWII Momunment in D.C.: Lester pays homage to his fallen comrades at the WWII in Washington D.C.' (Submitted photo)

Although he was not a gun operator his actions helped his gun crew prepare to strike back at the enemy forces, he even said that the same captain thanked him after the battle for “using his head.”

“I believe that our gun was the first gun to fire back,” said Lester. “I didn’t have anything to do with operating the gun, but I had headphones taking the readings from the counting tar on what to set the fuses (at). We had nothing but target practice ammunition, it wasn’t worth a damn. Wasn’t a bit good, it had to make a direct hit to do any damage. And that’s all we had to fire with.”

Even without proper ammunition the brave seamen aboard the ship fought back valiantly. Lester say’s the battle was only “about two hours” but his resolve kept him fearless until the end.

“Of course we stayed on our guns all day and all night,” he said. “And we never had anything to eat. From the morning the attack was on, but we had nothing to eat until 4 o’clock Monday morning. And the cooks brought big pots of baked beans and big platters of corn bread.”

Having survived what President Franklin Roosevelt called, “a date which will live in infamy” Lester is extremely proud of his entire 16-year military career. He donates to the American Legion and the VFW and recently received a Gold Circle Award from the VFW. And in 1995, while in his 70s, he began to give talks to elementary schools about his time in the service. Locally he has visited schools across Jasper County, the Newton Hy-Vee and a few churches. The former high school drop out who said, ‘The Navy taught me how to use my brain.’ even received an honorary high school diploma from Colfax Community High School in 2000, almost 70 years after he dropped out at 17.

Lester also recently attended a Pearl Harbor Survivors Reunion in San Diego. He estimates there probably are only about seven Pearl Harbor survivors left in Iowa.

“It’s a day I’ll never forget as long as I live,” said Lester. “The fact is I wasn’t a bit afraid all during the whole battle, until it quieted down. I looked at the structure all above my head and saw where all the bullets had been hitting us and scraping us. That’s when I started shaking like a leaf,” he said jokingly.

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