GULF HIGH SCHOOLAlumni Who Died in Military ServiceThe table below shows alumni of Gulf High School who died during active military service.
Additional InformationThe 1946 Gulf High School yearbook is dedicated as follows:
Photographs of Chester McKay and photographs of his parents are on the historic pictures page. McKay attended Gulf High School prior to his enlistment in the Navy in 1928. His name appears on a memorial at the old Dade City court house. According to U. S. World War II Army Enlistment Records, 1938-1946, Goree J. Equevilley enlisted on Juy 20, 1942. His educational level was three years of high school. His civil occupation was listed as cartographer and his marital status was single, without dependents. His name appears on the memorial at the old Dade City court house. The 1930 census shows his family living in Precinct 13, Hudson. Goree was age 8. Parents: Romaine F. and Dora M. Sisters: Shirley, 15; and Astrid, 2 yrs, 10 months. According to Brenda Knowles, he was not killed in action. U. S. World War II Army Enlistment Records, 1938-1946, show Elmer W. Brady enlisted on Apr. 22, 1943. His educational level was shown as one year of high school, civil occupation was cartographer. He was shown as married. U. S. Veterans Gravesites, ca. 1775-2006, shows that Brady was interred at Barrancas National Cemetery on Sept. 13, 1949, five years after his death. This suggests that he may have been first buried overseas. The 1930 census shows Elmer W. Brady, age 9, in Hudson in the household of Clarence W., 33, and Emma J. Brady, with a younger sister, Esther, 6. Clarence is reported to be a salt water fisherman. The name Elmer W. Brady appears on the memorial at the old Dade City court house. According to U. S. World War II Army Enlistment Records, 1938-1946, Robert H. Colgan enlisted on April 17, 1943. His educational level was shown as one year of college. He was shown as a student, single without dependents. According to Brenda Knowles, he died in an airplane crash. The name of Robert H. Colgan does not appear on the memorial at the old Dade City court house. Moore died in a training accident involving a B-17 over Maryland. Nine of the ten persons on the plane perished. The New Port Richey Press of Sept. 19, 1947, reported that he had died on Monday and that he was 28 years old. He had served in World War II, participating in a number of bombing missions over Japan. A 1942 newspaper article indicated he was the son of Mrs. and Mrs. Reggie L. Moore of Elfers. John Perry was killed near Triangle Hill, Korea. Ernest Nettles was the son of David Nettles. According to a contempporary newspaper account, he died of tuberculosis at an army hospital in Denver. He had been in Italy and was returned to the U. S. because of his health. His name appears on a memorial at the old Dade City court house. Nettles may have attended Gulf High School, as he is included in the 1946 yearbook dedication. However, U. S. World War II Army Enlistment Records, 1938-1946, show his educational level as grammar school (and show his civil occupation as Physicist). He is shown as single, without dependents. He enlisted on Feb. 20, 1941. It is believed that Ralph DeCubellis did not attend Gulf High School, even though he is included in the 1946 yearbook dedication. Several Internet web pages give his date of death as Oct. 25, 1944. Maki died one day after a training accident aboard the USS Enterprise which took place on April 13, 2000. Harris died when a helicopter crashed during a training mission at Camp Pendleton, California. Harris had previously served in Iraq. He enlisted in the Marine Corps shortly after graduation, on Sept. 6, 2001. Rowe died in Iraq when an improvised explosive device detonated. Capt. John C. Workizer, who taught at Dade City High School and, according to his obituary, also at Gulf High School, died July 16, 1944, in an evacuation hospital in Normandy from wounds received in action. George Datus Raymond, who left Gulf High School to join the Navy, died at age 22 in the crash of a National Airlines DC-6 which was lost during bad weather over the Gulf of Mexico. Raymond was on leave, returning to his base in San Diego after visiting his parents. Forty-six persons died in the crash. Roger Sigmon, age 20, was one of 12 crewmen who died in the crash of an Air Force weather plane near Faribanks, Alaska, in 1957. Arthur Moody may not have attended GHS.
![]() PFC Felton R. Fussell (1950-1969) Killed in action in Vietnam June 6, 1969
Student Researches Gulf Alumni Killed in Military Service![]() YNMC (SS) Edward R. White, USN Ret from American Legion Paradise Post, and Edward Tracy Tracy was assisted by Carol Pearson, the Principal of Marchman Technical School and a Gulf alumna, and his mentor, Brenda Knowles of the Pasco County Office of Veterans Services. He visited the grave sites of the deceased veterans who are buried locally, and photographed their grave markers for part of his report.
![]() Edward Tracy with Reenie Hadsock, sister of William Hadsock, and members of her family
![]() Tim Fussell, Edward Tracy, Jackie Mathison, and Faye Shorter, siblings of Felton Fussell
A Family Remembers Their MarineThis article appeared in the St. Petersburg Times on May 20, 2000.By MATTHEW WAITE NEW PORT RICHEY -- He was Roger to anyone who knew him. He went to a far-off place to fight for his country, and he didn't come back. So history will remember him by his full name. It is on the Pasco County Veterans Memorial, five names down on the south-facing panel. Etched in stone. FELTON R. FUSSELL His family will be at the west Pasco Government Center at noon today, when the memorial is dedicated. They will feel a sense of pride, and a sense of loss, for an all-American boy from Elfers. In June 1968, 18-year-old Felton Roger Fussell and his friend Jack Mathison had just graduated from Gulf High School. Mathison was Fussell's nephew, the son of his oldest sister, Jackie Mathison "They just came home one day and said "Hey, I joined the Marines,'" recalled Roger's younger brother, Tim. "Mama was quite surprised." It was 1968, and America was in turmoil. The war in Vietnam was nearing its peak, and so were the anti-war demonstrations. The two young men had talked about joining the service when they got out of high school. They believed it was the right thing to do. Their enlistment was front-page news in the twice-weekly New Port Richey Press. They joined up on what was known as the Buddy System, with a guarantee they would be together. "The two young men were to have been sworn in at Jacksonville Friday where they went for their physicals," the story said. "They will go on active duty at Parris Island, S.C., in September for eight weeks intensive boot camp training." Fussell's parents, two of his sisters and his brother Tim made the trip to Parris Island for his graduation from basic training. "We were proud; we were all proud," Faye Shorter said of her brother, who received a marksmanship award at boot camp. "I remember Daddy watching him up on that stage." Fussell and Jack Mathison were sent to Camp Lejeune in North Carolina. Mathison was stricken with spinal meningitis there, so Fussell had to go to war without his friend. But first he came back to Pasco. Tim was 14 then, and he remembers the homecoming. "That was the last time I saw him," said Tim, now a district chief for Pasco Fire-Rescue. A year to the day after his high school graduation, Pfc. Fussell was part of the 3rd Marine Division, operating in the central highlands of Quang Tri Province. His squad came under mortar fire. The 19-year-old rifleman dived for cover, but he didn't make it. "The first thing you think about is a bit of selfishness because you lost your brother," Tim Fussell said. "Anger was one of the biggest feelings I had. Angry that he went over there and didn't come back." Shorter said she was never prepared for the news. "I thought if anyone could make it back, Roger and Jack could make it back," she said. "They were tough. I really did think that." After recovering, Mathison followed Fussell to Vietnam and was wounded twice before coming home. He is now a firefighter in South Carolina. More than 30 years later, Fussell's sisters, Jackie Mathison, Shorter and Myra Gulbrandsen, and his brother, Tim, still live in Elfers. Roger is buried nearby in Meadowlawn Cemetery. A few miles away sits the memorial, 72,000 pounds of concrete, granite and steel, with Fussell's name on it. There are 71 other names as well, all Pasco residents killed in the nation's wars. Nine are from Vietnam, five from Korea, 39 from World War II and 19 from World War I. Jack Kinney, chairman of the Pasco County Veterans Memorial committee, said three years have gone into gathering donations and building the $120,000 monument. The last two months were for construction. Today's dedication ceremony will include a military bugler, a rifle salute and a speech by Rear Adm. Thomas W. Steffens, director of the Navy's Intelligence and Operations Center at MacDill Air Force Base. "It's something that the county owed the veterans of this county who died," said Kinney, a Vietnam veteran himself. "You've got something that is sitting in front of the county building being seen by hundreds of people every day. It's a county's salute to its own." "I'm glad they've got something," said Shorter, Fussell's sister. "We don't want him to be forgotten." Just below Roger Fussell's name on the memorial is another name familiar to the family: Arthur R. Moody III. He was the uncle of Jody Fussell, recently divorced from Tim. Moody, a sergeant in one of the most celebrated units of the Vietnam War, the 1st Air Cavalry, was killed by ground fire at the age of 22. Everybody knew Moody as "Butch," said Jody Fussell, and not a day goes by that she doesn't think about her uncle, who died when she was 7. "He has been my hero all my life," she said. "I remember him like it was yesterday." Jody Fussell wears her uncle's unit patch on her jacket. In 1975, she followed her uncle into the Army. "He was a hero, and I wanted to be just like him," she said. The memorial being dedicated this weekend makes her proud, Jody Fussell said. "We never forget," she said. "It's nice that somebody else remembers too."
PASCO RESIDENTS KILLED IN ACTIONWORLD WAR I: Wylie Arnett, John G. Bekeart, Raymond L. Boone, Solon L. Brown, Jessie D. Cochrane, William R. Craig, John P. Davidson, John Olin Hay, Joe Holmon, Dan Jackson, Vaden Kobbs, Elijah J. M. McMorris, John M. O'Berry, William R. Smith, Milfrid S. Streblow, Homer B. Sumner, Wambolt Sumner, Cassie R. Thomas, Eugene D. Tucker WORLD WAR II: Theodore Barthle, George R. Baxmann, Elmer W. Brady, Cecil A. Braxton, Luie L. Clements, Robert H. Colgan, Goree J. Equevilley, Hiram T. Fisher, Cecil E. Gaskins, Joseph W. Goodbred, Leonard E. Gude, Paul S. Hodges, Willis W. Jones, Roy R. Land, Francis G. Lemacks, Garold C. Lessig, Harold L. Lessig, Lawrence A. Madill, Mark H. Mayo, Daniel P. McClain, Chester R. McKay, Earnest Nettles, Clyde B. Oakley, Hicks R. Phillips, Ernest E. Pierson, Jack E. Pinholster, Louis H. Rachel, Frederick A. Rausch, Richard D. Sanders, Fred D. Sessions, Carmen A. Sirico, Will Stanford, Jake W. Stephens, Carmon C. Thompson, James E. Thornton, Warren E. Trottman Jr., Jesse E. Walker, Francis E. Woods, John C. Workizer KOREA: William Barfield, Willis Blakely, Francis M. Egemon, Harold J. Eiland, John C. Perry Jr. VIETNAM: Steven K. Brooks, Louis C. Goi Jr., Joseph Gordon, William A. Hadsock, Felton R. Fussell, Arthur R. Moody III, Johnny Lewis, Donnie M. Stokes, Harry L. Thain
Note on the Above List of NamesThe above list of Pasco residents killed in action was part of the newspaper article. A memorial at the old court house in Dade City has these additional names: Robert Cehtemer, Robert Holt, Lyman Williams, and Lynn Williams. The memorial does not have these names which appear in the article: Robert H. Colgan, Francis G. Lemacks, and Fred D. Sessions. |