Quote of the Day: Feb 29 and My Papouli

 

For some ridiculous reason, to which, however, I’ve no desire to be disloyal,Some person in authority, I don’t know who, very likely the Astronomer Royal,Has decided that, although for such a beastly month as February, twenty-eight days as a rule are plenty,One year in every four his days shall be reckoned as nine and twenty.Through some singular coincidence — I shouldn’t be surprised if it were owing to the agency of an ill-natured fairy —You are the victim of this clumsy arrangement, having been born in leap-year, on the twenty-ninth of February;And so, by a simple arithmetical process, you’ll easily discover,That though you’ve lived twenty-one years, yet, if we go by birthdays, you’re only five and a little bit over!

W. S. Gilbert – The Pirates of Penzance

If he were alive today my paternal grandfather, George Lardas, would be 128 years old. He would only be celebrating his 31st birthday, though. He was born on February 29. That meant his birthday only came around once every four years. He was even cheated of one of those – the critical 8th birthday when you are old enough to anticipate the celebration and still young enough to appreciate its magic. 1900, which is not divisible by 400, was not a leap year. He, unlike Frederic in Pirates of Penzance, who did see his 21st birthday, which occurred in 1980 before finally dying in 1988, after February 29.

He saw some tumultuous changes in his lifetime. He was born on the island of Icaria, a Greek island off the Turkish coast. His mother was a Pastis, which means I am distantly related to cartoonist Stephen Pastis. He grew up on his family’s sailing barque, a three-masted sailing ship, carrying cargoes between Alexandria, Piraeus, and Constantinople. He lived to see the launch of Apollo 11. (It took off on  my birthday, a fact he noted on the card he sent that year.)

He came to the United States somewhere in the early 1910s, before World War I. He earned his American citizenship during that war, the hard way as a Doughboy in Pershing’s American Expeditionary Force. He was wounded in combat during the Meuse-Argonne battle, a scout in the the 32nd (Buckeye) Division. When I was a child, he would show my brothers and me the piece of shrapnel still stuck in his skull. (It was a thin small piece of steel flush with his bald scalp.)

He spent his career as a carpenter and a chef, depending on the market. During World War II and the years immediately preceding he was a carpenter at a shipyard. I only learned this in my late teens, when I showed him a model of the battleship New Jersey I had built. Then he told me he helped build the chart room  of the battleship. (That ship is now on display in Pearl Harbor. My middle son visited it a few years back, and he went into the chart room his great-grandfather helped build.)

So here is to you papou (Greek for grandfather) as yet another of your birthdays rolls around.

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  1. Vectorman Inactive
    Vectorman
    @Vectorman

    Seawriter: I only learned this in my late teens, when I showed him a model of the battleship New Jersey I had built. Then he told me he helped build the chart room of the battleship. (That ship is now on display in Pearl Harbor. My middle son visited it a few years back, and he went into the chart room his great-grandfather helped build.)

    It’s amazing the connections we have among the people we know. Was the New Jersey a scratch built or a plastic kit model?


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    • #1
  2. Seawriter Contributor
    Seawriter
    @Seawriter

    Vectorman (View Comment):
    It’s amazing the connections we have among the people we know. Was the New Jersey a scratch built or a plastic kit model?

    It was the old Revell “box-scale” kit.

    • #2
  3. Randy Webster Inactive
    Randy Webster
    @RandyWebster

    It’s odd that the New Jersey is at Pearl Harbor.  Ships are usually in their eponymous states.  The New Jersey is an Iowa class battleship and wasn’t around for the attack on Pearl Harbor.

    • #3
  4. Seawriter Contributor
    Seawriter
    @Seawriter

    Randy Webster (View Comment):

    It’s odd that the New Jersey is at Pearl Harbor. Ships are usually in their eponymous states. The New Jersey is an Iowa class battleship and wasn’t around for the attack on Pearl Harbor.

    It was the location of the signing of the peace treaty that ended WWII. It served almost exclusively in the Pacific in WWII as a fleet flagship, and its presence bookends the Arizona, The alpha and omega of the Pacific War, so to speak.

    • #4
  5. ShaunaHunt Inactive
    ShaunaHunt
    @ShaunaHunt

    Fascinating! My grandpa was at Pearl Harbor and I’m still looking for the other battles he was in. I have very little information to go on.

    Also, my daughter was in a high school production of Pirates of Penzance and it’s one of my favorite parts of the show!

    • #5
  6. aardo vozz Member
    aardo vozz
    @aardovozz

    Seawriter (View Comment):

    Randy Webster (View Comment):

    It’s odd that the New Jersey is at Pearl Harbor. Ships are usually in their eponymous states. The New Jersey is an Iowa class battleship and wasn’t around for the attack on Pearl Harbor.

    It was the location of the signing of the peace treaty that ended WWII. It served almost exclusively in the Pacific in WWII as a fleet flagship, and its presence bookends the Arizona, The alpha and omega of the Pacific War, so to speak.

    Forgive me @seawriter for being a little confused, but I always thought that the signing of the peace treaty that ended WWII was on the battleship Missouri, and that the battleship New Jersey was in Camden, New Jersey ( I’m not exactly an authority on U.S. Navy history, so I am willing to stand corrected if this is incorrect 🙂).

    • #6
  7. Vectorman Inactive
    Vectorman
    @Vectorman

    Seawriter (View Comment):

    Randy Webster (View Comment):

    It’s odd that the New Jersey is at Pearl Harbor. Ships are usually in their eponymous states. The New Jersey is an Iowa class battleship and wasn’t around for the attack on Pearl Harbor.

    It was the location of the signing of the peace treaty that ended WWII.

    The Battleship Missouri is located in Pearl Harbor. The Battleship New Jersey is located in Camden New Jersey, across from Philadelphia.

    • #7
  8. Vectorman Inactive
    Vectorman
    @Vectorman

    aardo vozz (View Comment):
    Forgive me @seawriter for being a little confused, but I always thought that the signing of the peace treaty that ended WWII was on the battleship Missouri, and that the battleship New Jersey was in Camden, New Jersey

    Beat me by 1 minute. I took some time to find the links on the web.

    • #8
  9. aardo vozz Member
    aardo vozz
    @aardovozz

    Vectorman (View Comment):

    aardo vozz (View Comment):
    Forgive me @seawriter for being a little confused, but I always thought that the signing of the peace treaty that ended WWII was on the battleship Missouri, and that the battleship New Jersey was in Camden, New Jersey

    Beat me by 1 minute. I took some time to find the links on the web.

    Hey,@vectorman, you snooze, you lose😜

    (speaking of snooze, what are you doing awake at this ridiculous hour of the morning (4:30 am my local time)

    • #9
  10. Randy Webster Inactive
    Randy Webster
    @RandyWebster

    Seawriter (View Comment):

    Randy Webster (View Comment):

    It’s odd that the New Jersey is at Pearl Harbor. Ships are usually in their eponymous states. The New Jersey is an Iowa class battleship and wasn’t around for the attack on Pearl Harbor.

    It was the location of the signing of the peace treaty that ended WWII. It served almost exclusively in the Pacific in WWII as a fleet flagship, and its presence bookends the Arizona, The alpha and omega of the Pacific War, so to speak.

    I always thought the treaty that ended WWII was signed aboard the Missouri.  Was that for show, and the real treaty signed aboard the New Jersey?

    • #10
  11. Seawriter Contributor
    Seawriter
    @Seawriter

    I did misremember. It was Missouri in Pearl Harbor.

    • #11
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