Home Back
Capt Eric Neil Fenno Capt 1966-1967
passed away Jan 12.2010. I should receive an obituary notice Monday or Tuesday.
I’ll pass the info to you so Marcy can send a card. Capt Fenno was at our
reunion in
San
Diego. His official Obituary is
below. His wife’s name is Mary Alice
CAPTAIN ERIC NEIL FENNO
Captain Eric Neil Fenno USN
(ret.) passed away on January 12, 2010, after a brief illness. He was
83.
Born in Anacortes and raised in
Dillingham
,
Alaska
, a town still not reachable by road, he
relished telling stories of his youth: riding to school on dog sled, hiking into
the bush for a week of trapping (no grownups allowed). Since Dillingham lacked a
high school, he returned to Anacortes to continue his education, he graduated
from Anacortes (
Wash.
) High School in 1943 and
completed two years at the
Univ.
of
Alaska
(
Fairbanks
) before matriculating at the U.S. Naval Academy
at
Annapolis
,
from which he graduated in 1949.
He met his future wife, Mary Alice
McGee, in
Baltimore
, where she was a nurse at Johns
Hopkins. They celebrated their 60th anniversary last June.
He liked to
joke about his entrance to Annapolis: he claimed he was 4-F (dentistry wasn't
all that advanced in Alaska at the time), but the Navy admitted him anyway,
because it had taken him two months to make the journey all the way from Alaska
they couldn't bear to make him go back. His Navy career took him and his family
across the country and back several times, from
San
Diego
to
Newport
,
R.I.
, from
Honolulu
to
Washington
,
D.C.
During the Korean War, he served on the
tanker USS Namakagan and the destroyer USS DeHaven.
In 1956, he was an
instructor at the Navy ROTC program at
Penn
State
. He next served as commanding
officer of the USS Steuben County and then as executive officer of the destroyer
USS Watts. When the
Naval
Destroyer
School
was established in
Newport
,
R.I.
, in 1961, Captain Fenno helped draft the
curriculum and procedures. He later attended the
Naval
War
College
.
In 1964, he reported to
Saigon
as Plans Officer, and served there for
15 months. He then took command of the USS Southerland, which saw action in the
Mekong Delta and the
Gulf
of
Tonkin
under him. He later was chief staff
officer of Amphibious Squadron Two.
In 1969, he became chief of the
policy section for
Southeast Asia
. He took
command of the USS Coronado in 1974. One of his final actions in the Navy was
evacuating
U.S.
citizens from
Cyprus
in July 1974 when conflict
broke out between Turkish Cypriot and Greek Cypriot forces.
He retired
from the Navy in 1975. While commander of the Southerland, he had the
opportunity to sail the destroyer into the Anacortes City Pier while heading to
San Francisco
for overhaul. The visit prompted a parade down
Commercial Ave.
and
a full weekend of activities, during which nearly 8,000 people toured the ship.
"Not often does a commanding officer of a Navy ship get to bring his ship back
to the city where he was born," he said to the Anacortes American at the
time.
He earned his pilot's license as a young man in
Alaska
, and flew for
Dillingham Air, which was owned by his brother, Dennis Fenno. A fisherman,
golfer, and sailor, he often grabbed a daughter or a grandchild to indulge one
of his interests.
Following his retirement from the Navy, he and his
wife settled in Anacortes, where he served on the Anacortes Planning Commission
and on the Board of Directors for the
Anacortes
Museum
.
Eric enjoyed collecting
material related to his extended family in Anacortes and in Chelan,
Wash.
His knowledge of
Anacortes history was extensive.
In 2001, they moved to
Panorama
City
in Lacey to be closer to their
daughters. He maintained a keen interest in everything around him, read science
magazines avidly and often pronounced current news events "ridiculous." While
hospitalized during his final illness, he demanded that he be allowed to sit in
a proper chair while he drank coffee and read the newspaper, preferably as soon
as it arrived, before dawn.
His wife survives him, as do their five
daughters, Patricia Anne Fenno of Olympia, Margaret and Richard Best of
Chesapeake, VA, Christine and Chris Fenno of Olympia, Nancy and Tom Boyd of
Olympia, and Sarah and Jon Pullen of Los Angeles; grandchildren, Eric C. Fenno,
Elizabeth Vaughan, Sharon Boone, Nathan Fenno, Katie Boyd, Jack Boyd, Hailey
Pullen, and Jackson Pullen; great-grandchildren, Samantha,, Matthew, and Abigail
Vaughan; close family friend, Lien Anderson and her family of Burbank, CA;
cousins, Donna Rawhouser and Alice Haight, both of Anacortes; and many cousins,
nieces, and nephews in Anacortes, Chelan, Anchorage, and Fairbanks, among
others.
His parents, Eric D. Fenno and Elsie Woodburn Fenno; and
brothers, Garry Fenno and Dennis Fenno; and his sister, Gloria Thiele, preceded
him in death.
Visitation will be held from 5:00 - 8:00 p.m., Friday,
January 15, 2010 at Evans Funeral Chapel in Anacortes.
A funeral service
will be held at 1:00 p.m., Saturday, January 16, 2010 at Evans Funeral Chapel in
Anacortes with Father Vu Tran officiating. Following the service, interment with
military honors will be at
Grand
View
Cemetery
in Anacortes. A
reception will follow interment at the
Croatian
Cultural
Center
,
801 5th Street
,
Anacortes
,
WA
.