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Gregorio San Nicholas Aguon
Monument

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Gregorio San Nicholas Aguon Veteran

Birth
Guam
Death
7 Dec 1941 (aged 21)
Pearl Harbor, Honolulu County, Hawaii, USA
Monument
Honolulu, Honolulu County, Hawaii, USA Add to Map
Plot
Courts of the Missing- USN- WWII
Memorial ID
View Source
During a long night of fun in Honolulu, Gregorio San Nicholas Aguon and his best friend, Henry Mesa Cruz, decided to get tattoos.

Cruz, who told the story many years later to a Los Angeles Times reporter, remembered that he got an eagle on his left shoulder, with the name of their Navy battleship, USS Arizona, and the date, Dec. 7, 1941. He could not remember Mr. Aguon's tattoo.

They caught a 2 a.m. ride back to their battleship on that Sunday morning, Dec. 7. Just before 8 a.m., Cruz was ready to head back to Honolulu, but Aguon said he was sick and couldn't make it.

A few minutes later, Japanese warplanes attacked Pearl Harbor. Augon died in the bombing of the Arizona. Cruz was able to climb aboard a rescue boat and survived. He lived to age 91.

Mr. Aguon was born in 1921 in Guam to Juan Aguon, a gardener, and Joaquina Aguon, a homemaker. He enlisted in the Navy on Dec. 2, 1938, two months before his friend.

At the time of the attack, both Aguon and Cruz were mess attendants first class. As indigenous Chamorro from Guam, mess attendant was the only initial position available to them in the segregated Navy. They could work up to be officer's stewards or officer's cooks. Messmen cooked, cleaned, and performed other services.

Another Guamanian man named Augon was at Pearl Harbor that day. Pedro Santos Aguon was a mess attendant on the U.S.S. California. In a 2010 article in the Colorado Springs News he said he was transporting goods between the California and the Arizona on the morning of the attack. He suffered burns but survived.

It isn't clear whether the two Augon men were related, but they enlisted on the same day, Dec. 2, 1938. Also, the population of Guam at the start of World War II was just 22,000. Thus it seems likely that they had a connection.

A few hundred men from Guam joined the Navy before World War II because an immobilized oil tanker, the U.S.S. Robert L. Barnes, was tied up at Apra Harbor in Guam and served as a training school for mess attendants.

Hours after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, it invaded Guam. The island was not recaptured by the United States until the summer of 1944. The occupation was brutal, with thousands of people dying in concentration camps and in forced labor.

Sources: The Los Angeles Times; Navy muster rolls; Census; "Destiny's Landfall: A History of Guam" by Robert F. Rogers; "War in the Pacific National Historic Park: Environmental Impact Statement"; the Colorado Springs News; Pigo Catholic Cemetery in Agana, Guam. This profile was researched and written on behalf of the U.S.S. Arizona Mall Memorial at the University of Arizona.
Contributor: USS Arizona Mall Memorial at the University of Ari (50022871)

Thank you SO much for this info!
During a long night of fun in Honolulu, Gregorio San Nicholas Aguon and his best friend, Henry Mesa Cruz, decided to get tattoos.

Cruz, who told the story many years later to a Los Angeles Times reporter, remembered that he got an eagle on his left shoulder, with the name of their Navy battleship, USS Arizona, and the date, Dec. 7, 1941. He could not remember Mr. Aguon's tattoo.

They caught a 2 a.m. ride back to their battleship on that Sunday morning, Dec. 7. Just before 8 a.m., Cruz was ready to head back to Honolulu, but Aguon said he was sick and couldn't make it.

A few minutes later, Japanese warplanes attacked Pearl Harbor. Augon died in the bombing of the Arizona. Cruz was able to climb aboard a rescue boat and survived. He lived to age 91.

Mr. Aguon was born in 1921 in Guam to Juan Aguon, a gardener, and Joaquina Aguon, a homemaker. He enlisted in the Navy on Dec. 2, 1938, two months before his friend.

At the time of the attack, both Aguon and Cruz were mess attendants first class. As indigenous Chamorro from Guam, mess attendant was the only initial position available to them in the segregated Navy. They could work up to be officer's stewards or officer's cooks. Messmen cooked, cleaned, and performed other services.

Another Guamanian man named Augon was at Pearl Harbor that day. Pedro Santos Aguon was a mess attendant on the U.S.S. California. In a 2010 article in the Colorado Springs News he said he was transporting goods between the California and the Arizona on the morning of the attack. He suffered burns but survived.

It isn't clear whether the two Augon men were related, but they enlisted on the same day, Dec. 2, 1938. Also, the population of Guam at the start of World War II was just 22,000. Thus it seems likely that they had a connection.

A few hundred men from Guam joined the Navy before World War II because an immobilized oil tanker, the U.S.S. Robert L. Barnes, was tied up at Apra Harbor in Guam and served as a training school for mess attendants.

Hours after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, it invaded Guam. The island was not recaptured by the United States until the summer of 1944. The occupation was brutal, with thousands of people dying in concentration camps and in forced labor.

Sources: The Los Angeles Times; Navy muster rolls; Census; "Destiny's Landfall: A History of Guam" by Robert F. Rogers; "War in the Pacific National Historic Park: Environmental Impact Statement"; the Colorado Springs News; Pigo Catholic Cemetery in Agana, Guam. This profile was researched and written on behalf of the U.S.S. Arizona Mall Memorial at the University of Arizona.
Contributor: USS Arizona Mall Memorial at the University of Ari (50022871)

Thank you SO much for this info!

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MESS ATTENDANT 1C USN-GUAM

Gravesite Details

He is also listed on the walls at the USS Arizona memorial Find a grave Memorial #7884303



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