Phares, Don, MU1

Deceased
 
 Service Photo   Service Details
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Last Rank
Petty Officer First Class
Last Primary NEC
MU-3853-Unit Leader
Last Rating/NEC Group
Musician
Primary Unit
1954-1955, MU-3853, USS Dixie (AD-14)
Service Years
1933 - 1955
MU-Musician
Five Hash Marks

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

165 kb


Home State
Iowa
Iowa
Year of Birth
1916
 
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Contact Info
Last Address
Atlantic, Iowa
Date of Passing
Aug 05, 1967
 

 Official Badges 

WW II Honorable Discharge Pin US Navy Retired 20 US Navy Honorable Discharge


 Unofficial Badges 

Order of the Shellback Order of the Golden Shellback Order of the Golden Dragon


 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
Fleet Reserve Association (FRA)American LegionVeterans of Foreign Wars (VFW)
  1955, Fleet Reserve Association (FRA) - Assoc. Page
  1957, American Legion - Assoc. Page
  1957, Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) - Assoc. Page


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

COMCRUDESPAC San Diego, Ca   

   
Other Comments:

Current photo: Dad is in front row, kneeling at the left--COMCRUDESPAC Band.  Around Dec 1955, just before retirement. The drummer played marimbas for the Lawerence Welk show in the 50' and 60', Jack Imel,  Member Local 47 Musicians Union.


 


   

  1945-1950, MU-3853, Navy Band Great Lakes

MU-Musician

From Month/Year
- / 1945

To Month/Year
- / 1950

Unit
Navy Band Great Lakes Unit Page

Rank
Petty Officer First Class

NEC
MU-3853-Unit Leader

Base, Station or City
Waukegan

State/Country
Illinois
 
 
 Patch
 Navy Band Great Lakes Details

Navy Band Great Lakes


History

U.S. Navy Band Great Lakes celebrates 100 years of "Pride in Service" in 2011. From its first performance in July 1911, to Lieutenant John Philip Sousa's 300-piece Bluejacket Band, to today's continuing mission of representing Commander, Naval Service Training Command, the band enjoys a rich history of serving the Sailors and citizens of the Midwest with pride and distinction.
 
Beginning in 1911, U. S. Navy Band Great Lakes provided ceremonial support for boot camp graduations, as well as patriotic performances for the community on behalf of the base Commandant, Captain Albert F. Ross. The band, with bugle squad, quickly grew to 45 Musicians. Later, the bugle squad separated from the band to form its own group at the Bugle School, performing as a drum and bugle corps. 
 
By 1917, under Bandmaster Musician First Class Michaux Tennant, the band's strength grew to 241 members. Because the base had grown from 1500 to over 15,000 Sailors, Commandant William A. Moffett appointed Lieutenant John Philip Sousa, USNR, as Director of Music, Great Lakes Naval Training Station. Sousa was tasked to increase the size and scope of Navy music by creating a Music School to provide only the finest musicians for the fleet, managing Naval Station choirs, and the Great Lakes Naval Station Symphony Orchestra. The 321-member professional Great Lakes "Bluejacket Band" was the pride of the Navy and the United States. Additionally, in this same year, Alton Augustus Adams, Sr. was appointed as the first African-American Bandmaster in the Navy, at the Rank of Chief Petty Officer, leading the U. S. Navy's new St. Thomas, Virgin Island Band. Adams's marches were so good that even Lt. Sousa performed them with the Sousa Band.
 
During WWI, over 1,500 musicians trained at Great Lakes, creating 15 Regimental Bands, the 300 member Bluejacket Band, plus over a dozen Navy Bands to service the fleet. An important duty of the band was to support the Liberty War Bond drives, during which they raised thousands of dollars for the war effort. The Bluejacket Band commonly traveled in eight railroad cars reaching 26 cities to perform more than 40 concerts in 20 days. During this period they were considered the "Official Band of the Navy Department". President Wilson, while attending a concert in New York City's "Hippodrome", declared U.S. Great Lakes Navy Band as "the greatest demonstration of American spirit that is possible to conceive and certainly is the greatest band in the world", "It is America's Band". 
 
In 1942, the Navy enlisted 5,000 African American musicians, such as trumpeter Clark Terry, saxophonist Von Freeman, and composer Gerald Wilson, successfully creating some of the best jazz bands in the country, helping to end segregation in the Navy. Also of note, Musician First Class James Parsons, trumpeter, was later appointed by President John F. Kennedy as the first African American Federal Judge with permanent tenure.
 
From the "Golden Age of Bands" to today's technology-driven entertainment, U.S. Navy Band Great Lakes continues "Pride in Service" as a force for global good through community outreach, diversity, recruitment, and honoring those who serve.
 
**Compiled by MU1 Steve Carmichael


Type
Test and Evaluation
 

Parent Unit
US Navy Bands

Strength
Unit

Created/Owned By
MU Johnson, Frederick, MUSN 55
   

Last Updated: Jul 9, 2007
   
Memories For This Unit

Best Moment
Birth of son, Earl R. Phares

Worst Moment
Having to leave hospital before birth and play "Colors" at Training Center

   
   
Yearbook
 
My Photos For This Unit
No Available Photos
1 Member Also There at Same Time
Navy Band Great Lakes

Terry, Clark, PO2, (1942-1945) MU MU-3806 Petty Officer Second Class

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