Dec. 20, 2005
Merchant Marine Civilian Volunteers Fight for Benefits as Veterans
By Michael Doyle and Cyndee Fontana
McClatchy Newspapers
Washington, DC -- When Fred Lewis and other merchant mariners came home
from World War II, they knew some people didn't consider them veterans. Some
still don't.
Lewis joined the all-volunteer Merchant Marine in 1944 -- at age 17 -- and
spent five years helping deliver supplies to troops around the world. During
the war, he and fellow seamen endured terrible casualties while fighting
back against kamikaze pilots, submarines and other attacks.
"They said we weren't part of the armed forces," Lewis said. "Then I don't
know what we were doing with all those guns."
For Lewis and others, the battle for veteran status and benefits has lasted
decades past the war. Now, mariners such as Lewis are again lobbying
Congress to pass legislation that would compensate and recognize them for
their service during World War II.
The legislation would give the war's Merchant Marine survivors, or their
widows, a tax-exempt payment of $1,000 a month. It would also boost Social
Security payments by giving the men credit for the time they had served
between Dec. 7, 1941, and Dec. 31, 1946.
"They put their lives on the line just as much as other veterans,"
Rep.Dennis Cardoza, D-Calif., said. "There were tons and tons of ships blown
out of the water by German U-boats, and these guys were pretty much sitting
ducks."
That is not an exaggeration. The Merchant Marine recorded that 1,554 of its
ships were sunk during World War II. While exact figures are elusive,
somewhere between 6,800 and 9,400 are thought to have died out of the
roughly 243,000 who served.
Still, while facing enemy fire and unquestionably part of the U.S. war
effort, the merchant mariners remained civilians. When the war ended, they
were left out of the G.I. Bill and other benefits accorded military service
veterans.
Even today, while acknowledging their service, politically vocal groups like
the Veterans of Foreign Wars resist extending full veterans status to the
merchant mariners.
"I don't think the bill is going anywhere," said Dennis Cullinan,
legislative director for the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
With 2.4 million members nationwide, the VFW, along with the American
Legion, is a particularly potent lobbying force. Cullinan said the veterans
groups, while valuing the wartime service of merchant mariners, want to
maintain the distinction. Merchant mariners were paid more, he said; they
could walk away from a ship once they were in port, and they were not
subject to military discipline.
"It's still fundamentally different from active-duty military service,"
Cullinan said. "They are not veterans."
The American Legion's deputy director, D. Michael Duggan, said the Legion
has not yet taken a formal position on this year's legislation. He noted,
though, that the nation's largest veterans group has evolved in its
thinking. In the late 1980s, he recalled, the Legion was steadfastly opposed
to recognition of the Merchant Marine.
"The thinking was, they didn't have it as hard," Duggan said. "They were
paid more, and they were sleeping between clean sheets, so to speak."
Since then, Duggan said, the Legion has come to support some measures like
extending honorable discharges; full-fledged health benefits, though, may
still face resistance.
Lewis' father, too, served in the Merchant Marine. Growing up in Southern
California, he shared an affinity for the sea.
"I always loved ships," said Lewis, now 78. "My dad was a sea captain, my
family was all seafaring."
With the Merchant Marine, Lewis once withstood six days and nights of enemy
attack aboard the freighter Marcus Daly. Lewis left the service with a
letter of gratitude from then-President Harry Truman and a promise he
wouldn't be drafted.
That lasted until the Korean War, which broke out in 1950. Lewis received a
commission in the Army and served in Korea before heading home for good.
Today, he's a member of the Central California chapter of the American
Merchant Marine Veterans. The group has about 40 members.
One is Gene A. Kelley, 77, who joined the Merchant Marine with parental
consent in 1944. He was then 16 and living in Southern California.
"Everybody wanted to go someplace," Kelley said in explanation. He spent a
year in the Merchant Marine, and traveled around the world at the blistering
pace of about 9 mph.
In 1942, Jack Splivalo was 21 and working at the docks around San Francisco
when he decided that becoming a merchant mariner was a better choice than
the draft. He completed its form of boot camp, spent about six months at sea
and then went through the Merchant Marine academy to become an officer.
Splivalo, who finished his service in 1945, said joining the Merchant Marine
didn't keep anyone from harm's way.
"Every time they had an invasion, the Merchant Marine were right behind,"
said Splivalo, now 84.
The three former mariners, now living in the Fresno area, say they often
were treated as second-class citizens at home and abroad. For example,
Splivalo said when he went to the ration board to ask for the standard 20
gallons of fuel given to servicemen, he was told: "No gasoline for the
Merchant Marine."