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Victor Chamberlain never seems to be far
from the water.
A veteran of the Coast Guard and the
Merchant Marine, Chamberlain, 88, spent World War II on dangerous
convoy runs to
Murmansk
, a northern Russian port
which received vital Allied shipments. He retired in 1980 as the
captain of the lake freighter George A.
Stinson.
Nowadays, Chamberlain, who is the OVH
Volunteer of the Year, stays busy by volunteering at the OVH, and
stays fit by swimming.
"I'm generally out here at 8 o'clock in the
morning. I stay three or four hours and then I go swimming," he
said.
Chamberlain, who lives in Perkins Township
with his wife, Margaret, racked up 400 hours of volunteer time in
2004 and has donated his time year after year at OVH, said Linda
Johnston, volunteer coordinator at the veterans
home.
She said OVH has more than 3,000 volunteers
in its database and that 500 are active in any given year. Last
year, volunteers contributed 42,000 hours to aid the war veterans at
the home, she said.
Asked what he does at the home, Chamberlain
replied, "I push guys around."
He meant that in a friendly way.
Many of the residents rely upon wheelchairs
to get around, and Chamberlain, a Catholic, can often be seen
helping them get to
Mass.
In fact, Chamberlain was
introduced to volunteering at the OVH by a Catholic priest after he
started going to the OVH to attend
services.
Chamberlain is also known for his service in
Russia, which
hasn't forgotten the vital role played during World War II by the
allied convoys to
Murmansk
.
In fact, he's packing his bags to leave
Sunday on a new trip to
Russia, where
Murmansk
convoy crews are being honored for the 60th anniversary of the end
of World War II, or as the Russians call it, the Great Patriotic
War. He's been to
Russia
four
times.
Chamberlain made the
Murmansk run several times, serving as the
first officer on a
Liberty
ship that toted train
locomotives, tanks, jeeps and other
cargo.
"Those convoys saved
Russia
. They know it,"
Chamberlain said.
While Chamberlain talked about attacks by
Nazi torpedo planes from
Norway
and German
submarines, there were other hazards he didn't even
mention.
Documented official U.S. Navy history said
sailors in
Murmansk convoys also had
to deal with ice, floating mines and bombing attacks on
Murmansk
itself.
"The story of the voyages to
Murmansk
,
therefore, is one of almost unbelievable horror, of matchless
courage, and of unlimited devotion to duty," says one Navy
publication.
When former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
came to The Lodge at Sawmill Creek in November 2002 to help raise
money for The Future of Russia Foundation, Chamberlain showed up,
hoping to meet Gorbachev.
Chamberlain wore a Russian medal awarded for
participating in the convoys, and Gorbachev recognized it,
Chamberlain said.
"He shook my hand and wished me a long
life," Chamberlain said.
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