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BLAZ-VICENTE

VICENTE  TOMAS "BEN" BLAZ

Rate/Rank
BGEN
Service Branch
USMC 00/1951 - 00/1980
Born 02/14/1928
AGANA, GUAM
SERVICE MEMORIES

FIRST  PERSON  FROM  GUAM  TO  BECOME  GENERAL

IN  U.S.  ARMED  FORCES

 

Excerpts from article published in Washington Post on 1/23/2014:

 

Vicente Tomas “Ben” Blaz, who survived a Japanese prison camp during World War II and later became a Marine Corps Brigadier General and Guam’s representative in Congress, died January 8, 2014, at Inova Fair Oaks Hospital in Fairfax County, Virginia.  The cause was acute respiratory failure, his son Tom Blaz said.  Blaz was 13 when he was captured by Japanese forces who overran the U.S. territory of Guam on December 8, 1941, one day after the Japanese attack on the American naval base at Pearl Harbor.  He was one of many native Chamorros, as natives of Guam are often called, held in a detention camp and pressed into forced labor, building airfields for the Japanese.  He was later held in a Japanese prison camp, where he saw fellow inmates beheaded.  “As a boy I stood behind barbed wire,” he told The Washington Post in 1977.  “There was a pervasive sense of personal insecurity.  That probably is more damaging to your feeling of well-being than hunger.”  In 1944 he was freed when U.S. Marines reclaimed Guam from the Japanese.  He asked a young Marine how he could go to the United States.  “The first thing you have to do is learn to speak English,” he recalled the Marine saying.   Blaz spoke primarily the local Chamorro language at the time. “He taught me a few words and told me to listen to the radio and talk as they do.”

 

After graduating in 1951 from the University of Notre Dame, in Indiana, Blaz joined the Marine Corps.  He served during the Korean War and was an artillery officer in the Vietnam War, where he was awarded the Bronze Star Medal.  He held several jobs with the Joint Chiefs of Staff and once served under General Lemuel C. Shepherd Jr. who led the U.S. forces that recaptured Guam in 1944.  When he was promoted to Brigadier General in 1977, Blaz became the first person from Guam and the first non-white Marine to reach flag rank.  At the time he was Director of Information for the Marine Corps, in charge of rebuilding the image of the Marines after the Vietnam War.  After retiring from the military in 1980, BGEN Blaz returned to Guam to farm and to teach.  He made an unsuccessful bid as a Republican for Guam’s non-voting congressional seat in 1982.  Two years later he won a closely contested election.  BGEN Blaz, who was a member of the Armed Forces and Foreign Affairs committees, was the only retired general serving in Congress at the time.  He had few legislative victories in his limited role in Congress, but he was instrumental in reorganizing the judicial system on Guam and was a strong advocate for improved educational benefits for veterans.  BGEN Blaz served four terms before losing a reelection bid in 1992.

 

Vicente Tomas Blaz was born February 14, 1928, in what is now Hagatna, the capital of Guam, and grew up in a farming community.  In 1947, Blaz received a scholarship to attend Notre Dame.  After a 22-day boat trip he arrived in San Francisco and told a cabdriver to take him to Notre Dame.  He was dropped off at a Catholic girls’ school with a similar name, where he presented his papers to the nuns.  They put him on a train to Indiana.  While serving in the Marine Corps he received a master’s degree in public administration from George Washington University in 1963.  He had a home in Fairfax County since 1969 and was a member of St. Mary of Sorrows Catholic Church in Fairfax.  His wife of 58 years, Ann Evers Blaz, died in May 2013.  Survivors include two sons, two brothers; a sister and five grandchildren.  After Congress, BGEN Blaz wrote a memoir and books about Guam and also made a series of historical and cultural television documentaries about his native island.  In Congress and later in life, he became known for a rueful description of the people of Guam, U.S. citizens who serve in disproportionate numbers in the military but do not have full representation in Congress: “Equal in war, unequal in peace.”

 

AWARDS & MEDALS

Legion of Merit

Bronze Star w/valor device

Navy & Marine Corps Commendation Medal w/1 award star

Combat Action Ribbon

Navy Presidential Unit Citation

National Defense Service Medal

Korean Service Medal

Vietnam Service Medal w/3 service stars

Vietnam Gallantry Cross w/gold star

Vietnam Gallantry Cross Unit Citation

United Nations Korea Medal

Vietnam Campaign Medal

 

NOTE:  BGEN Blaz has been laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery.

 

Submitted by CDR Roy A. Mosteller, USNR (Ret)