Family seeks help with WW 2 photos
From Dana Perkins
BIDDEFORD – When Army veteran Richard Perkins died in 2014 at the age of 92, he left behind a treasure trove of hundreds of photos he took while stationed in Hawaii after the attack on Pearl Harbor.
Perkins was a radio operator who was stationed at Fort Shafter in Honolulu, and he worked at an underground base inside of Diamond Head. Except for a few brief stories, he never talked much about his service to his family.
While cleaning out his house after he died, his daughter, Alice, and son, Dana, came across a large tin container full of rolls of film negatives that had been developed, but never converted into photographic prints.
Dana painstakingly scanned the negatives into his computer and converted them into hundreds of never-before-seen historical photos. The people in the photos include veterans of the Army, Navy and Marines, as well as USO performers, civilians and children who lived in the area around the Army base of Fort Shafter.
Alice and Dana have spent the last few years learning as much as possible about the people and locations in the photos.
They have received a tremendous amount of help from Milton Migita, a curator at the Army Museum in Hawaii, as well as from the general public through online social media groups.
Their goal is to make all of the photos available to the public by compiling them in a book or through a website. The original negatives, photos, and three photo albums will then be donated to either the Army Museum or the National Park Service in Hawaii.
Many people in the photos remain to be identified, and Alice and Dana hope that someone in Maine will recognize their father, grandfather, uncle, mother, grandmother, aunt, or some other friend or relative in the photos.
The photos can be viewed online at: ‘
If you recognize anyone, please contact Alice and Dana through the website, or by writing to them at: World War 2 Pacific Veterans Project, PO Box 789, Biddeford, ME 04005.