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News / Northwest

Vietnam War pilot laid to rest in Washington cemetery

Remains were recovered more than 50 years after Paul Charvet went missing in action

By Jasper Kenzo Sundeen, Yakima Herald-Republic
Published: April 15, 2023, 7:17pm

YAKIMA — Dozens of motorcycles rolled through the small city of Mabton just before 1 p.m. Friday. They wound their way up Vance Road to the Mabton Cemetery, where personnel from the U.S. Navy, U.S. Army, Prosser Veterans of Foreign Wars and Yakama Warriors Association stood at attention amidst the headstones and green grass.

The motorcyclists were accompanying the family members of a Vietnam War veteran, U.S. Navy Cmdr. Paul Charvet, for his burial. More than 50 years since he went missing in action in North Vietnam, his remains had been recovered, returned home and laid to rest beside his parents.

Charvet’s family was joined at the cemetery by friends, veterans, community members and city officials.

Several veterans spoke, honoring Charvet’s service. Personnel from the Navy presented his burial flag, and a rifle detail saluted the fallen service member while a rendition of taps echoed over the nearby hop fields and green-flecked hills.

As naval service members folded the burial flag, an older U.S. military plane flew overhead.

“To me, it’s closure,” said Lorraine Charvet, one of Paul’s younger sisters.

Lorraine Charvet and Dona Re Shute, the youngest sister in the family, both attended the ceremony and were given their brother’s burial flag. Their brother had been missing in action since March 21, 1967, when his A-1H Skyraider was last sighted near Hon Me Island in Vietnam.

In 2022, federal officials confirmed that remains they had found were Charvet’s and returned them to the family.

“We kept waiting,” Lorraine Charvet said. “Then, out of the blue, 54 years late. I mean, what? Paul’s coming home?”

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Shute said it was special to be able to share the memorial service — which had happened earlier Friday in Grandview — and the burial with friends and family.

“Each has one little interaction with Paul that’s just their own,” she said.

Shute and Lorraine Charvet grew up on a hop farm with their brother. They recalled being voracious readers and spending long days outside, biking around the Yakima Valley and playing baseball in cattle pastures.

Their brother was always the pitcher, they said. He had loved sports, the Navy and flying.

“He just flew that old World War II plane,” Lorraine Charvet said. “The Skyraider. He loved that plane.”

Paul Charvet had served three tours in Vietnam. His sisters remembered visiting him in Alameda, Calif., when he returned to the U.S. between tours. Shute recalled hearing stories of his time in the military.

Lorraine Charvet said those tours could be difficult for his family.

“He was married. He went for nine months three times,” she said. “I know other men did it, but it was hard.”

Paul Charvet went missing on the last day of his third tour in the country. His sisters said he had volunteered for the assignment.

Lorraine Charvet and Shute thanked the Navy for the attention it had shown to Paul Charvet and to the family while he was missing in action. The sisters said they had received updates on the search throughout the years.

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