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CDR Lawrence St. Clair “Larry” Myers

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CDR Lawrence St. Clair “Larry” Myers Veteran

Birth
Malaga, Fresno County, California, USA
Death
4 Apr 2017 (aged 96)
Marietta, Cobb County, Georgia, USA
Burial
Canton, Cherokee County, Georgia, USA Add to Map
Plot
SECTION 11 SITE 435
Memorial ID
View Source
Commander Lawrence St. Clair Myers, U.S. Navy (Ret.), died peacefully in his sleep on April 4, 2017 at Sterling Estates in Marietta, Georgia. He was 96 years old.

Born on July 22, 1920 in Fresno, California, the son of Lawrence Darius Myers and Ruby (St. Clair) Myers, he spent his early years clerking in his father’s businesses, delivering newspapers in high school and studying shorthand and typing. He attended college for one year before gaining employment as a stenographer in a San Jose, California business office.

In 1940 he qualified to become a stenographer in the Navy Department in Washington, D.C. but immediately enlisted in the U.S. Navy after Pearl Harbor as a Yeoman, 2nd Class, based in the 12th Naval District Intelligence Office in San Francisco.

Transferred to the Navy Japanese Language School at the University of Colorado in Boulder in December 1942, he pursued an intensive course in the Japanese language before receiving his commission as an ensign in June 1943 and graduating with the other “Boulder Boys” in March 1944.

The father of six children through his marriage in 1947 to Sara Jane “Sally” Trask, a native of Mexico, Oxford, Maine and a Captain in the U.S. Army Nurse Corps, Myers launched his long and distinguished career as a naval officer and codebreaker with his assignment in 1944 to the Navy Security Group (Op-20G) in Washington, D.C., formed to break Japanese Navy codes and read encoded messages. His team succeeded in thwarting the rescue of Japanese military elites by their government. Thus began his twenty-three-year-long mission as a Navy cryptologist in the top secret field of signals intelligence.

During the Korean War in 1950 he learned to read Chinese messages in two weeks of self-study and later became fluent in Russian.
After retiring from the Navy in 1966 in the rank of Commander, he served for fourteen years as a Chinese cryptolinguist for the National Security Agency until his retirement in 1982. His wife Sally died tragically in an automobile accident in 1981.

During his years of government service, Larry and Sally lived and labored abroad with their growing family in Japan, Cyprus, Morocco, and South Korea.

They resided stateside in Silver Spring and Annapolis, Maryland and in Sonoma (Skaggs Island) and Santa Rosa, California. Myers moved from Knoxville, Tennessee to Marietta, Georgia after the death of his second wife Nella Mae Broome of Greene County, Tennessee, in 2014.

At the age of 95, Myers published his first book, Gravity, the Source of the Earth’s Water. His lifelong curiosity about the world and how it has developed drove him in his retirement years to write this provocative book positing his theory of an expanding planet and how the world’s oceans were formed. It culminated years of independent study of world and regional maps, plate tectonics, geophysics and earth science. He concluded that the onslaught of meteors and space dust over the eons added gradually to the earth’s gravitational mass (and that of other planets) and ultimately produced all the water on earth from the earth’s center. Dedicated to his parents, wives and children, he presented the book in 2015 “as a gift to the billions of humans on the planet who can now know the source of the earth’s volcanism that produces their water and weather.” Admitting he was not a scientist, he attributed his ability to think outside the box of current paradigms of scientific thought to his knowledge, skills and ability as a Navy code breaker.

Myers is survived by daughters Ruby Jane Cantrell of Jasper, Georgia, Barrett Elaine Bilkowski of Bisset, Manitoba (Canada), Lauren Kathleen Carter of Lovingston, Virginia, Miki Marie Compson of Severn, Maryland and Judith Lynn Fitanides of Nevada City, California; son Lawrence Edward St. Clair Myers of San Diego, California; and their spouses, seventeen grandchildren and fourteen great-grandchildren.
Commander Lawrence St. Clair Myers, U.S. Navy (Ret.), died peacefully in his sleep on April 4, 2017 at Sterling Estates in Marietta, Georgia. He was 96 years old.

Born on July 22, 1920 in Fresno, California, the son of Lawrence Darius Myers and Ruby (St. Clair) Myers, he spent his early years clerking in his father’s businesses, delivering newspapers in high school and studying shorthand and typing. He attended college for one year before gaining employment as a stenographer in a San Jose, California business office.

In 1940 he qualified to become a stenographer in the Navy Department in Washington, D.C. but immediately enlisted in the U.S. Navy after Pearl Harbor as a Yeoman, 2nd Class, based in the 12th Naval District Intelligence Office in San Francisco.

Transferred to the Navy Japanese Language School at the University of Colorado in Boulder in December 1942, he pursued an intensive course in the Japanese language before receiving his commission as an ensign in June 1943 and graduating with the other “Boulder Boys” in March 1944.

The father of six children through his marriage in 1947 to Sara Jane “Sally” Trask, a native of Mexico, Oxford, Maine and a Captain in the U.S. Army Nurse Corps, Myers launched his long and distinguished career as a naval officer and codebreaker with his assignment in 1944 to the Navy Security Group (Op-20G) in Washington, D.C., formed to break Japanese Navy codes and read encoded messages. His team succeeded in thwarting the rescue of Japanese military elites by their government. Thus began his twenty-three-year-long mission as a Navy cryptologist in the top secret field of signals intelligence.

During the Korean War in 1950 he learned to read Chinese messages in two weeks of self-study and later became fluent in Russian.
After retiring from the Navy in 1966 in the rank of Commander, he served for fourteen years as a Chinese cryptolinguist for the National Security Agency until his retirement in 1982. His wife Sally died tragically in an automobile accident in 1981.

During his years of government service, Larry and Sally lived and labored abroad with their growing family in Japan, Cyprus, Morocco, and South Korea.

They resided stateside in Silver Spring and Annapolis, Maryland and in Sonoma (Skaggs Island) and Santa Rosa, California. Myers moved from Knoxville, Tennessee to Marietta, Georgia after the death of his second wife Nella Mae Broome of Greene County, Tennessee, in 2014.

At the age of 95, Myers published his first book, Gravity, the Source of the Earth’s Water. His lifelong curiosity about the world and how it has developed drove him in his retirement years to write this provocative book positing his theory of an expanding planet and how the world’s oceans were formed. It culminated years of independent study of world and regional maps, plate tectonics, geophysics and earth science. He concluded that the onslaught of meteors and space dust over the eons added gradually to the earth’s gravitational mass (and that of other planets) and ultimately produced all the water on earth from the earth’s center. Dedicated to his parents, wives and children, he presented the book in 2015 “as a gift to the billions of humans on the planet who can now know the source of the earth’s volcanism that produces their water and weather.” Admitting he was not a scientist, he attributed his ability to think outside the box of current paradigms of scientific thought to his knowledge, skills and ability as a Navy code breaker.

Myers is survived by daughters Ruby Jane Cantrell of Jasper, Georgia, Barrett Elaine Bilkowski of Bisset, Manitoba (Canada), Lauren Kathleen Carter of Lovingston, Virginia, Miki Marie Compson of Severn, Maryland and Judith Lynn Fitanides of Nevada City, California; son Lawrence Edward St. Clair Myers of San Diego, California; and their spouses, seventeen grandchildren and fourteen great-grandchildren.

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