LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – At some time before the end of this year, the Lake County Military Funeral Honors Team will preside over its 1,000th funeral.
But on Monday the team's members from all branches of the U.S. Armed Forces also will honor the county's living veterans at a Veterans Day ceremony at Konocti Vista Casino Resort Marina & RV Park.
Based on previous years, an estimated 500 Lake Countians are expected for the annual event, which will begin at precisely 11 a.m. on the 11th day of the 11th month – commemorating the exact time that Germany and the Allies signed an armistice ending World War I.
The honors team was launched in May 2001. Its framers were Rich Feiro, the honor team's commander; Griff Ratterree, a charter member of the United Veterans Council of Lake County; and A.J. Adams, its eldest member who was among the first to storm the beach at Okinawa during World War II and will celebrate his 90th birthday next month.
At the time, Feiro was four years into his retirement from a distinguished 33-year Air Force career as a Chief Master Sergeant, the highest Air Force enlisted rank attainable.
The three men concluded an honors team was necessary after observing veterans performing honor ceremonies.
At the time military burials in Lake County were accomplished by VFW Post 2015 and the American Legion in Kelseyville. The honors team today functions under the auspices of the latter organization.
“Everybody had different-colored uniforms,” Feiro recalled. “One rifle pointed one way and one rifle pointed the other. They never practiced together or anything else and I thought if I ever get the opportunity I'm going to form a team.”
Since its May 2001 formation, the honors team has honed itself into a well respected and welcome unit of about two dozen men and a woman that performs in a way that indeed honors a fallen comrade in arms.
The retired military team members rank as high as a navy captain and an army colonel, although, said Ratterree, military rank has no significance on the honors team.
“Rich put us all in one unit, so there's no distinction over rank,” Ratterree explained. “He did a marvelous job of putting the team together and making us a viable unit. It's a very sentimental, touchy thing with me.
“Rich was also instrumental in putting together the Veterans Circle in Lakeport's Hartley Cemetery,” Ratterree added. “There were about 12 or 14 of us involved in developing that circle and maintaining it. Right now I think we have about 40 burials in that area.”
The team's mission, said Feiro, “is to provide dignified military funerals to veterans of Lake County. If you ask the guys why they come out and do this they'll say, 'Just because it's the right thing to do.'”
What they do at each funeral ceremony is a standard three-volley salute by five to eight riflemen. A chaplain presides, American flags taken from atop the coffins of the veterans are presented to wives or next of kin, and two buglers play “Taps.”
The buglers, Bill Vann and Boyd Green, incidentally, will travel to Arlington Cemetery on Nov. 15 for a “Buglers Across America” event, joining thousands of other buglers.
A federal law adopted in the year 2000 mandates that military last rites must be conducted for any deceased veteran of the Armed Forces whose family requests it.
In an amendment to Section 578 of Public Law 106-65 of the “National Defense Authorization Act” it is decreed that all veterans – irrespective of length of service and when they served – are eligible for a military funeral, with the exception of those who were dishonorably discharged.
In keeping with that law's mandate to honor veterans of all eras, last month the team performed honors at a ceremony honoring Civil War veteran Lorenzo T. Adams, a Union soldier who served in the 37th Regiment of the Wisconsin Infantry, as Lake County News has reported.
Adams, whose grave recently was rediscovered at the Middletown Cemetery, is one of an estimated 164 Civil War veterans who have been laid to rest in Lake County.
In March of 2011, the team also took part in reuniting a veteran with the dog tags he lost while serving in Italy during World War II.
A souvenir hunter found the dog tags on the faraway Italian battlefield, and 60 years later they made their way to the man, who Feiro said received them back the day he died.
“When we buried him in Veterans Circle, we buried the dog tags with him,” Feiro said.
Monday's Veterans Day event is one of two annual major outings for the Lake County Honors Team.
On Memorial Day, the team honors all deceased members of the Armed Forces in Lake County in a far more comprehensive undertaking.
The team on Memorial Day makes a circuit of each cemetery in Lake County, beginning at Middletown, then moving around the lake to Lower Lake, Upper Lake, Kelseyville and finally to Hartley Cemetery in Lakeport.
“We start at 8:30 a.m. and get home at 4:30 p.m. and everybody's exhausted,” said Feiro.
The team also makes annual appearances at the Pearl Harbor commemoration event in Lakeport on Dec. 7.
But, given the 1,000 appearances the team has made, its schedule is fairly busy all year.
“We've had three burials in a day,” said Feiro.
Although most of the honor team's members have reached retirement age, they perform their solemn duties with infallible military precision.
Feiro protects the privacy of team members and would not divulge the names of the aforementioned Navy captain and Army colonel in the organization. He also withheld the names of two combat flyers who piloted P40 fighters when World War II broke out.
“They were in the South Pacific and they knew they were going to die there because they were outnumbered,” Feiro said.
It was a reasonable assumption. The Japanese Zeros in the early stages of World War II gained a legendary reputation as dogfighters, achieving the outstanding kill ratio of 12 to 1.
But, said Feiro of the two Lake County combat pilots in his story, “We buried one who lived to be 95. The other lived to be 96.”
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