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Who Are You Remembering Today?

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Today we celebrate Memorial Day. Memorial Day wasn’t even a thing until 1971—following the Civil War we had Decoration Day, but in 1971 Memorial Day became a national holiday that we celebrate the last Monday in May. On this day, while we barbecue and picnic, we honor and remember those who died in military service.

In my family, as I searched for someone to personally honor, I could only find one person. And I’m so glad that I did. His name was Howard Albert Conner and he was my grandfather’s first cousin. My grandfather lived to be 104, dying in just 2023. I am so grateful for all those years with him, as I was able to absolutely drain his brain of everything I could get out of him! One thing he didn’t speak of much, though, was his cousin Howard. He spoke of their childhood together and how they played together and grew up together, but when he would come to speak of his death, he would choke up every time.

You see, my grandfather desperately wanted to serve his country. He had some physical ailments that made him ineligible (despite multiple attempts) and he ended up serving by joining the CCCs in South Dakota. Watching his cousin and sisters go off to war was hard on him. But when he died, never having married, never having kids or grandkids or great grandkids like Grampa did? It was a burden on Grampa’s conscience.

Grampa loved that I celebrated Howard each year on Memorial Day. He loved that Howard Albert Conner was remembered and would continue to be remembered for years and years.

Every year I post this on Facebook and this year, I’m sharing him with all of you:

Thank you, Howard Albert Conner.

Memorial Day is to honor those who have died in war. I’m lucky that many of my ancestors seem to have either missed serving or survived. But in the past couple of years I have learned about my grandfather’s cousin, Howard Albert Conner, who died in World War II in a plane crash in Panama.

Howard was born on August 23, 1918 in Huron County, South Dakota, just six months younger than my grandfather. While he was in high school in Huron, South Dakota, he worked at the theater and in the shoe store.

There was a write-up about Howard in the South Dakota World War II Memorial site. The site is, “…dedicated to the tens of thousands of South Dakota men and women who contributed to the victory in World War II. Today, we know them as our parents, grandparents and great-grandparents.”

It is my goal in this post to make sure that even though Howard has no descendants of his own to remember him, he has many of us, both in and out of the Conner family, who remember and thank him. He was and always will be important.

Front (left to right): Harriet Conner, Fern Conner (Grampa’s sisters)
Middle (left to right): Pierre Conner (GRAMPA!), Howard Conner
Back (left to right): Lucille Conner, Irene Conner (Howard’s sisters)

Left to right: Pierre Conner, Howard Conner

Left to right: William Conner (grandfather to Pierre Conner), Howard Conner, Lucille Conner, Hattie Price (grandmother to Pierre Conner)

Once posted on the South Dakota World War II Memorial site:

2nd Lieutenant
Howard Albert Conner
Huron, South Dakota
Beadle County
August 23, 1918 – March 26, 1944
Killed in Plane Crash near Cape Pacora, Republic of Panama

Howard Albert Conner was born August 23, 1918 in Huron, South Dakota. Howard was the third child of Albert and Mary Jane Conner. Howard had two sisters, Mrs. Marvin R. Murphy and Mrs. Loran R. Blackford. Howard grew up in Huron, South Dakota, attending Huron High School, graduating in 1937. While he was in school, he worked at the Huron theatre and as a clerk at Tunnell’s Shoe Store for one year.

He entered the Army in February 1941 taking his training at Fort Snelling, Minnesota and transferred to Fort Lewis, Washington and in August 1942 to Camp Gerber, Oklahoma. He served with a tank destroyer battalion until January 1943 when he transferred to the Army Air Force. On November 3, 1943, he graduated at Aloe Army Air Field, Victoria, Texas receiving a commission as a second lieutenant. From there he went to Panama where he completed a transitional course at Sixth Air Force Fighter Command School. He was assigned to a fighter squadron in the Caribbean area.

2nd Lieutenant Howard Conner perished in the Republic of Panama on March 26, 1944. His plane crashed near Cape Pacora, Republic of Panama, which is in the Panama Canal Zone. He is buried at the Riverside Cemetery, Huron, South Dakota. His name is also inscribed on a granite obelisk in front of the Huron Public Library. This memorial remembers “those who served and those who died.”

This entry was respectfully submitted by Brandi Levtzow, 9th Grade, Redfield High School, Redfield, South Dakota, May 17, 2002. Among the sources of information for this entry were an application for a SD veteran’s bonus payment and newspaper clippings.

Helpful Links
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