Loomis, Steven, IC3

Interior Communications Electrician
 
 TWS Ribbon Bar
Life Member
 
 Service Photo   Service Details
26 kb
View Shadow Box View Printable Shadow Box View Reflection Shadow Box View Time Line View DD-214 View Family Time Line
Current Service Status
USN Veteran
Current/Last Rank
Petty Officer Third Class
Current/Last Primary NEC
IC-4718-IC Journeyman
Current/Last Rating/NEC Group
Interior Communications Electrician
Primary Unit
1970-1971, SN-9740, Vietnamese Naval Shipyard (VNNSY), Naval Advisory Group Vietnam
Previously Held NEC
SR-0000-Seaman Recruit
SN-0000-Seaman
SN-9740-Seaman - Other Technical and Allied Specialists
IC-0000-Interior Communications Electrician
Service Years
1969 - 1983
Official/Unofficial US Navy Certificates
Kiel Canal
Order of the Rock
Order of the Shellback
Panama Canal
Plank Owner
Voice Edition
IC-Interior Communications Electrician
One Hash Mark

 Official Badges 

Battle E US Navy Honorable Discharge US Naval Reserve Honorable Discharge


 Unofficial Badges 

Order of the Shellback Order of the Golden Dragon SERE Brown Water Navy (Vietnam)

Order of the Ditch (Panama Canal) Engineering/Survivability Excellence Award


 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
National Society Sons of the American RevolutionSons of Union Veterans of the Civil WarVeterans Associated With The Department of Veterans AffairsNavy Together We Served
  1950, National Society Sons of the American Revolution - Assoc. Page
  1950, Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War - Assoc. Page
  1950, Grand Army of the Republic
  1974, Veterans Associated With The Department of Veterans Affairs
  1975, Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States (VFW), Post 1530, Thomas Rooney Post (Member) (La Crosse, Wisconsin) - Chap. Page
  1975, American Legion, Post 52 (Member) (La Crosse, Wisconsin) - Chap. Page
  2004, Mobile Riverine Force Association
  2008, Navy Together We Served
  2013, Navy Club of the United States of America
  2017, United States LST Association
  2017, Veterans of the Vietnam War - Assoc. Page


 Additional Information
What are you doing now:

I retired on the last day of June, 2011, the month I turned 61,
and took my Arizona State pension, then Social Security at 62. 
I spent my post-navy life as a photographer and media manager.
The Navy gave me gypsy feet, and I've enjoyed them all my life.
As a result, traveling was not just a bucket list item for me. 
With the way things have gone, it was a good investment.

I'm a direct descendant, tenth generation, of Joseph Loomis.
The Loomis Family arrived in the New World on 17 July, 1638. 
We have defended America ever since. 

   
Other Comments:


"Service included boots-on-the-ground in Viet-Nam"
[ One year, 365 days, 24/7 -- 7 June 1970 to 7 June 1971 ]
U.S. Naval Advisory Group, Vietnamese Naval Shipyard, Saigon RVN.
I am also a Plank Owner and Shellback, USS Harlan County (LST-1196).
During my 4 years of active duty, 3 years were credited as foreign or sea service.

 
Technically, I was on Active Duty, USN, 3 years, 11 months and 16 days. However, I was in the Naval Reserve before that and after that, both Active Reserves and Inactive Reserves. So N/TWS has credited me from April 1969 through April 1983, 4 years active USN plus 4 years USNR and 6 years inactive Naval Reserves, and that is why my profile may occasionally show three hash marks. 1983 was my final Inactive Naval Reserve discharge date. Also, because I worked overseas, I never managed to take the 2nd Class Exam. So, actually I never wore more than one hash mark on my dress blues. And yes... there is a "V" on my Navy Achievement Medal even without having a Combat Action Ribbon because that's the way it was awarded. For more information click on the NAM w/V ribbon in my ribbon rack. 

I am glad, proud, to have been born an American.
I voluntarily joined the armed forces, and for that
matter I volunteered for duty in Viet-Nam. 

What I had hoped for was to not bring the violence,
the lack of value of a human life that I experienced
in Viet-Nam, back to America.  It is that simple.

 
During my civilian career I spent over ten years as a hospital/medical photographer, two years in Saudi Arabia with Lockheed, and then two and a half decades as the media specialist and manager for a 9,000+ student public school district in Phoenix, Arizona. I feel fortunate to have retired without ever having a single unemployment or welfare check. 

   

 Remembrance Profiles -  817 Sailors Remembered

 Tributes from Members  
Vietnam 1 posted by Mundy, Robert, RMC -Deceased 
Congratulations on your outstanding care... posted by Sanderson, Harlan G. (Sandy), AO2 -Deceased 
Bravo Zulu (Well Done) posted by McWatt, Michael (Mike), RM2 -Deceased 
 Photo Album   (More...


  The Loomis Family in America
   
Date
Jul 17, 1638

Last Updated:
Apr 25, 2023
   
Comments

The Loomis Family in America
Their ship was the SUSAN AND ELLEN, mastered by captain Edward Payne. London to Boston, April 11, to July 17, 1638.
An Abbreviated View by Clyde E. Loomis

"Land Ho!", came the cry. Excitement filled the passengers as they rushed to the rail, straining to catch their first glimpse of the "new" world. There, far in the northern distance, could be seen a thin line of green coast. Soon now, they would be entering Massachusetts Bay and would be able to see the thriving little colonies which were clustered along the shore.

It would feel good to set foot on solid earth once again. It had been a long and wearying journey. They had left the Port of London more than 95 days before. The date was 17 July, 1638.

Among the passengers, aboard the little sailing ship, "Susan and Ellen," that day, was one Joseph Loomis, his wife Mary, and their eight children: Joseph Jr. 23, Sarah 21, Elizabeth 19, John 16, Thomas 14, Nathaniel 12, and Samuel 10.

Back "home", in Essex County, England, Joseph had been a woolen draper--one who buys and sells cloth goods. There, in the village of Braintree, he had been a respected and influential member of the community and a leader in the church.

And now here he was, near the age of 50, about to begin a whole new kind of existence--far from all the comforts he had previously known.

By the year 1638, migration to America was just coming into full swing. By this early date, there was still probably less than 15,000 white people along the entire eastern coast of America. The largest group of colonists was in Virginia; the second largest group was in the Massachusetts Bay Colonies.

One of these Bay Colonies was Dorchester, and it was here that Joseph and his family settled and spent the first winter.

During his stay there, Joseph heard stories of the beautiful Connecticut Valley, lying to the west and south of Dorchester. He also learned of the three new settlements located there-Hartford, Whethersfield and Windsor. Early in 1639, he learned that these three towns had met in convention and agreed to govern themselves according to a written constitution. By this act they had united themselves into a Republic, and thus became what is believed to be the first state in the world created by a written constitution. (It is interesting to note: this constitution later became the inspiration upon which was written the United States Constitution almost 150 years later).

Sometime in 1639, Joseph gathered his family together and led them westward to the Connecticut River, thence southward along this river to the little settlement of Windsor, located near the merging of the Farmington and Connecticut Rivers. Here, in 1640, he was given 21 acres of land from the settlement. He then purchased considerable additional acreage lying along both sides of the Farmington River.

It was here at Windsor, that Joseph built his home, and it was here that the children later married. It was also here that wife, Mary, died 23 August, 1652 and that Joseph followed in death 25 November, 1658. (No monuments exist today for either--the oldest Loomis monument in America today being that of their son John who died 1 September, 1688 and is buried in the Windsor Burial Ground).

The home that Joseph built there, at Windsor, still stands today, although it has been incorporated into a much larger structure. This ancestral home has been in continual possession of the Loomis family since that early day. Loomis families occupied this home up until about the end of the nineteenth century when a group of Loomises, all of whom had lost their children, purchased the property and turned it over the "Loomis Institute." The Loomis Institute was uncorporated to serve two main purposes: 1) To insure possession of the ancestral home, and its accompanying property, throughout the foreseeable future, and 2) to provide the primary funding for the establishment of an educational institution in which Loomis descendants would have first priority.

Today, on this property, stands the Loomis/Chaffee Schools. Not one, but two schools. One for boys and one for girls.

Loomis descendants will always be grateful to those who created the Loomis Institute, for they have insured--hopefully forever more--the preservation of this, our most cherished Loomis site--the homestead.

There are today, many Loomis families living in the southwestern counties of Missouri. Virtually all of these families are descended from Joseph Loomis through William G. Loomis who came to this area in about 1874-75.

William G. Loomis's direct line of descent from Joseph and the travels of those families were as follows:
Generation No. 2-Deacon John born in Essex County, England; came with his parents to America in 1638; died at Windsor.

Generation No. 4-John, born at Windsor 28 March, 1692; moved with his father to Lebanon, Connecticut; died in Connecticut-date and place unknown.

Generation No. 5-John, born at Lebanon, Connecticut 1712; died at Lebanon December, 1755.

Generation No. 6-David, born Lebanon, Connecticut 9 April, 1738; left Lebanon while still young for some other town in Connecticut; left Connecticut about 1787; went up the Hudson River to the Mohawk Valley, Montgomery County, New York; moved to near what is now Auburn, New York in about 1793-94. .He was one of the first settlers there; here he died 2 May, 1806.

Generation No. 7-Samuel, born Connecticut 19 August, 1765; moved with his father to Mohawk Valley and then to near what is now Auburn, New York; there he died 23 September, 1807.

Generation No. 8-David, born probably in the Mohawk Valley, New York 26 December, 1790; near Auburn, with his father; married Celia Grover 29 March, 1814; moved to Springwater, New York sometime before 1820; resided there until about 1832 when he moved to Conneaut, Ohio; after the death of Celia in 1841-43, David moved to Huron County, Ohio where he died 1844.

Generation No. 9-William G., born at Springwater, New York, 27 February, 1820; moved with his father to Conneaut, Ohio about 1832; married Emiline/Katherine Stevens at, or near Conneaut, 1 January, 1841; they later lived in Erie and Ottawa Counties, Ohio where were born their seven children: Morgan, Charles, Hiram, H. (?), Mary Jane, Cecillia and Arretta/Annetta. The family then lived for a short time at Benton County, Iowa and then on to Stone County, Missouri in 1874-75. All of William and Emiline's children are believed to have come to Stone County with them.

William and Emiline's descendants, the family having now lived for well over 100 years in this area-are greatly inter related with other family groups who came, both early and late, to Southwestern Missouri.

When one studies the history of the Loomis family in America, it at once is apparent--the history of the Loomis family is, at the very same time, the history of a great nation in the making.

It was estimated, in 1908, that those who could trace their ancestry, in a direct line, back to Joseph and Mary Loomis of Windsor, Connecticut numbered well over three and one half million persons.

And now 75 years and more than three generations later, who (?) can say what that number might be? It is certain, that a very significant percentage, of the total United States population can now trace their lineage back through this single pioneer couple.

Footnote:
During the course of my research into the descendants of William and Emiline, I have been continually frustrated by the seemingly, total lack of interest shown by family members. Dozens of letters have been sent out, without a single response. it is my hope, and desire, that the above brief family history will demonstrate to those family members-both known and unknown-that this is a family of whom we can be extremely proud. In order to become a part of this family's recorded history-we first must have individual family member histories. You can have your Loomis family con nection made a permanent part of the record by writing: Clyde Loomis, P. O. Box 17, Denair, CA 95316.

The surname Loomis, is of Saxon Extraction. The Saxon place name, from which the original surname came, originated sometime around the 11th century. The site of its origin, was near the village of Bolton, located in Lancaster County, England.

The name, as originally used, was "Lumhaulgh." It described a specific area of low lying, level ground, next to a deep pool of water, and also near a bend, in the River Tange.

It is fairly certain that members of the Loomis family lived in this area, even at that early time. However, it was not until the 12th or 13th century that surnames became firmly enough attached to individuals so that the name could be used to identify specific family groups.

The surname, Loomis, is an American Modernization of Lomas, the original form of which was "Lumhalgh," "Lumhaulgh," "Del Lumhalgh," "Lumhales"-pronounced without sounding the letters "H" or "G".

The reader will be reminded in these early times (and indeed, somewhat at least, right up to the present time) the spelling of names was under constant fluctuation. The Loomis family was no exception.

As a matter of fact, the surname Loomis has been spelled 421 different ways just since 1600.

Today in England, there are two distinct branches of the family-one spelling the name "Lomas," and one spelling it "Lomax."

Today in America--although there were at least four different early Loomis migrants-the name is most usually spelled "Loomis." Some specific family lines, do use variations of this spelling.

ADDITIONAL NOTES. JOSEPH LOMAS AND THE FAMILY MOTTO: NE CEDE MALIS, Yield not to Misfortune.

Joseph Loomis (he spelled it Lomas), the pioneer, was the son of John and Agnes Loomis and was born, probably before 1590, in England; married in Messing, Essex Co., Eng., June 30, 1614, Mary White who was baptized Aug. 24, 1590, died Windsor, Ct., Aug. 23, 1652. Joseph died Nov. 25, 1658. He was a woolen draper in Braintree, Essex Co., England; sailed from London April 11, 1638, tarrying about one year at Dorchester, Mass., it is thought. He went to Windsor, Ct., in 1639, bringing 5 sons and 3 daughters. In 1640 he was granted from the plantation 21 acres adjoining the Farmington River on the west side of the Connecticut River, this 21 acres including the site of the first English settlement made in Connecticut; also several large tracts of land on the east side of the river, partly from the town and partly by purchase. His house was near the mouth of the Farmington River on "The Island, so called because at every great freshet it became temporarily an island. This homestead has ever since been owned by Loomises until within a few years when it was deeded to the Loomis Institute - the first deed ever given on the place. The Loomis Institute is a corporation formed to maintain a free school on the old homestead and has an endowment of upwards of $1,000,000 for that purpose. Early in 1639 the people of the three towns of Windsor, Hartford and Wethersfield met in convention and agreed to govern themselves according to a written constitution. By this act they united themselves into a republic, the first in the new world and which was finally called Connecticut. This republic of Connecticut is believed to be the first state in the history of the world which was created by a written constitution. Moreover, in the state thus formed, there was no restriction of suffrage to church workers.

"The Loomis Family in America," published by the Loomis Family Association (Burdett Loomis, Hartford, Ct., president), records Joseph's ancestors in England back to 1550 and shows that the seat of the family was around Bolton, along the river Tong, near Manchester, Lancaster County, in the north of England, the evidence being conclusive that the family was of Saxon origin. (The Saxons undoubtedly were closely related to if not in fact a tribe or clan of the Norse - Northmen, Vikings - of the Leutonic stock). At least one branch of the Loomis family in England had a coat of arms, the motto being "Ne Cede Malis," - Yield not to Misfortune.

The Loomis coat-of-arms is as follows:
Arms : Argent (silver), between two pallets gules (red) three fleur-de-lis azure ; a chief of the last.
Crest: On a chapeau a pelican vaulting its breast, proper. Motto: Ne cede malis (Yield not to misfortunes).

The Loomis Crest, pelican piety, dates to at least 1513.

My LOOMIS FAMILY TREE:
Steven Dennis Loomis, myself: Viet-Nam Veteran, Saigon, 1970/1971
Dennis William Loomis, my father, (U.S. Army Infantry WWII), son of:
Harry George Loomis, son of:
Joel Woolsey Loomis, (Civil War, Michigan 11th Infantry, Co.B), son of:
Woolsey Melancthon Loomis, son of:
Eber Loomis, son of:
Jonathan Loomis, (Revolutionary War, 7 years, Stevens' Co., Mass), son of:
Nathaniel Loomis, son of:
James Loomis, son of:
Joseph Loomis II, first son of:
Joseph (Lummys) Loomis, (ARRIVED IN BOSTON 1638) son of:
John Lummys (Braintree Essex), son of:
John Lummys, Jr. (died 1567, Thaxted Essex) son of:
Thomas Lummyus (died 1551, Thaxted Essex) son of:
Helias Lumhals, Jr., son of:
Helias (Lumhals) Lomas.

They trace the name to Oliverus de Lumhalghes, who held lands in Lancaster County, England, in 1435.

The name also appears as "del Lumhalghe," in records of the time of Henry VI. Radus del Lumhalghes was a landowner in Bury, Lancaster, about the middle of the fifteenth century.

The supposition is that this name, which looks so ponderous, was pronounced in two syllables; "h" is only an aspirate and the final "e" is silent. This gives a word Lumalg or Lumalgs, and it is the easiest thing in the world to pronounce this Loomis, is it not? Perhaps not at the first attempt, for there are other variants of the name in old records-Lomax, Lomas, Lommes, Lommas and Lomatz being examples.

...............................

MAY 30TH is LOOMIS DAY: Mahlon Loomis received a US patent on wireless telegraphy on this day in 1872, two years before Marconi was born.

   
My Photos From This Event
 (More..)
S. LOOMIS BOOKPLATE: NE CEDE MALIS; family crest, coat of arms
LOOMIS FAMILY CREST -- MY RING
LOOMIS BOOKPLATE: NE CEDE MALIS; crest, coat of arms
Loomis Family Homestead, since 1640

Copyright Togetherweserved.com Inc 2003-2011