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Oldest US Pearl Harbor veteran dies at 106

Ray Chavez (centre) at a Pearl Harbor 75th anniversary commemoration in Hawaii in December 2016.

Ray Chavez (centre) at a Pearl Harbor 75th anniversary commemoration in Hawaii in December 2016. Photo: Getty

The oldest surviving US veteran of the Pearl Harbor attack that plunged the United States into World War II has died in California.

Ray Chavez, 106, died in his sleep early on Wednesday, US time, at a hospice in Poway, a community north of San Diego, his daughter Kathleen Chavez told the San Diego Union Tribune.

Chavez frequently attended commemorative events around the US, including a visit to the White House on Memorial Day weekend, the newspaper reported.

The bombing of Pearl Harbor took place at 7.55am Honolulu time on December 7, 1941, famously dubbed “a date which will live in infamy” by US President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

The attack killed 2390 Americans and the US declared war on Japan the following day.

Chavez was a member of the crew of the USS Condor, a minesweeper, at Pearl Harbor on the morning of the attacks. He went to bed at his home in nearby Ewa Beach after Condor swept the east entrance to the harbour earlier that morning, the San Diego Union Tribune reported.

“My wife ran in and said, ‘We’re being attacked,’ and I said, ‘Who’s going to attack us? Nobody.’ She said that the whole harbour was on fire and when I got outside I saw that everything was black from all the burning oil,” he once said, according to the newspaper.

Heavy damage is seen on the destroyers USS Downes and USS Cassin at Pearl Harbor, after the Japanese attack. Photo: Getty

Chavez was on continuous duty in and around Pearl Harbor over the next nine days. He then served four years in the US Navy, helping deliver tanks and Marines to shore in eight Pacific battles, the newspaper reported.

He later attended Pearl Harbor events more than a dozen times, his daughter told the newspaper.

“We went last year and if he was still alive, we were going back again next month,” Kathleen Chavez said.

“I think he enjoyed the experience but he never saw himself as any different from the other men he served with. He’d always say, ‘I’m no hero. I just did my job’,” she said.

-AAP

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