So it's fitting the awards were presented to the humble Tulsa-area man last evening during an informal ceremony in a waiting area at the Tulsa International Airport, with family and fellow veterans in attendance and little pomp and circumstance.
There, the 94-year-old received the Prisoner of War Medal, Bronze Star and the Combat Infantryman Badge from Maj. Gen. Rita Aragon, Oklahoma Secretary of Military and Veterans Affairs. Coon and his son, Michael, had just returned from a trip to Japan that was aimed at promoting an understanding and healing between that country and the US.
"I've been blessed to come this far in life," he said, a tear streaming down one cheek. "I thank the Lord for watching over me."
Aragon said many veterans like Coon were more focused on reuniting with their families than chasing after military ribbons once they returned home after the war and rightfully so.
Coon, who now lives in Sapulpa in northeastern Oklahoma, served as an infantry machine gunner in the Army. He survived a POW labor camp and the brutal Bataan Death March in the Philippines in 1942, the 105-kilometer trek the Japanese military forced tens of thousands of American and Filipino soldiers to complete with little food or water in blazing heat. As many as 11,000 soldiers died along the way.
"He was entitled to the medals but never received them," said Jake Heisten, press secretary for US Sen. Jim Inhofe, whose office contacted the military three weeks ago about the missing medals. "Unfortunately, our office comes across instances where members do not actually receive the awards they are eligible for or have already been awarded."
Tulsa veteran David Rule, who served in the Vietnam War, helped the Coon family in its push to find out why the medals were never issued. For the past 10 years or so, Rule has helped recognise about 150 area veterans by memorializing their names, ranks and branches of service on granite plaques that are presented to them and their families.
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