BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Two veterans from New York - one who served in the Korean War 63 years ago, the other who served in Vietnam 46 years ago- have been honored by their congressmen in separate services ahead of the Memorial Day weekend.
Eugene “Bob” Pernatt was presented with a Purple Heart and other medals by U.S. Rep. Brian Higgins on Friday in Buffalo, while former Army Staff Sgt. Lauren Dates, who served in Vietnam, was presented the Bronze Star, a Purple Heart and 10 other awards by U.S. Rep. Dan Maffei in a ceremony in Syracuse.
But both men accepted the honors reluctantly.
“A lot of my comrades never had this, never had this time or opportunity,” Dates told The Citizen of Auburn (https://bit.ly/THibvY ), noting that after he returned from service, he was busy raising and supporting a family and didn’t think about obtaining the medals he’d earned.
Pernatt, who spent seven months recuperating from gunshot wounds to his legs in 1951, was reluctant to seek recognition at all, but his brother George insisted and contacted Higgins’ office.
The Buffalo man, who was discharged from the Army in 1954, went on to work at National Fuel Gas.
Maffei said Dates, a retired judge from Victory, earned his awards for keeping his platoon from being separated from the company while wounded during a fierce battle in the Dak To area of Vietnam on Nov. 11, 1967.
The paperwork behind the dozen awards, which included an Army Commendation Medal, wasn’t completed until recently, after Dates started exploring how to obtain the decorations after his retirement last year, Maffei said.
Before he was awarded the honors, Dates orchestrated a legislative effort to rename Route 38 the “Vietnam Veterans Memorial Highway of Valor,” which then-Gov. David Paterson signed into law in 2009.
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