Mrs. Eulalee Maion Cordice Parham – 2017

Mrs. Eulalee Maion Cordice Parham – 2017

Mrs. Eulalee Marion Cordice Parham, the wife of the late Thomas David Parham Jr, – the Navy’s first African American Captain – passed away, July 24, 2017.

Called “a woman of faith, devoted wife and mother, and career art educator” in her obituary, Mrs. Parham was born Sept. 30, 1920 in Aurora, North Carolina. She and Capt. Parham were married for 55 years before he passed away in 2007. Here she is pictured with then Deputy Commander, U.S. Fleet Forces Command, Vice Adm. Melvin G. Williams as he hands her the national ensign during a memorial service in honor of Capt. Parham. Parham was the first black man to achieve the rank of captain in the United States Navy.

During Capt. Parham’s distinguished years of service, he received 14 personal decorations including the Legion of Merit and the Meritorious Service Medal. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Cory Rose/RELEASED)

RADM Robert Toney, USN (Ret.) – 2016

RADM Robert Toney, USN (Ret.) – 2016

Rear Admiral Robert Toney, Retired, US Navy, life member and of one our NNOA visionaries passed away on Friday, November 4, 2016.

Rear Admiral Robert L. Toney was commissioned as an ensign in the United States Navy in 1957. Admiral Toney’s naval career spanned 34 years. He commanded four organizations with the Navy and received numerous honors and decorations including the Defense Meritorious Medal, the Navy Meritorious Service Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, and the Vietnam Service Medal. He completed NATO Defense College in Rome, and the National and International Security Course at Harvard University. He holds honorary doctorates from National Defense University and Golden Gate University. Admiral Toney retired from the military in 1994 and moved from a life devoted to public service to a life devoted to community service. He has served on several boards including the California State University, Chico Advisory Board and President of the Oakland Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce.

Funeral arrangements are pending. RADM Toney retired in the Northern California and was an active member of the San Francisco Bay Area Chapter up until his passing.   For funeral arrangements, e-mail CDR Adolph Keyes, USCG, RET, President of the San Francisco Bay Area Chapter at alkeyes@comcast.net.

Capt. Leon Hill, USMC, (Ret.) – 2016

Capt. Leon Hill, USMC, (Ret.) – 2016

Captain Leon Hill, USMC, Retired, member of the Norfolk Chapter, passed away on Thursday, November 2, 2016.

Captain Leon Hill was an active member of the Tidewater Chapter up until his passing. He was a former President of the Camp Lejeune Chapter NNOA in the early ’80s. He attended Warrant Officer Basic Course 1-80 Quantico, VA March-June 1980.   He was promoted to CWO-2, commissioned a 1stLT (LDO) and eventually promoted to Capt (LDO). He was a Food Service Officer in the US Marine Corps and was involved in many community activities during his career including The Young Marines; First Baptist Church Jacksonville, NC; First Baptist Church South Hill Chesapeake, VA; the Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts in the Hampton Roads/Tidewater VA area where he served as the Cubmaster, Pack 934 until his death.  Leon had a Master’s Degree and was just about to complete his PhD.

Ms. Lily Thompson – 2016

Ms. Lily Thompson – 2016

Lily Ann Thompson July 25, 1923 – Oct. 31, 2016 Resident of Oakland Lily Ann Thompson passed away on Monday, Oct. 31, 2016 at Kaiser Hospital Oakland following a brief illness. She was born in Oakland, California on July 25, 1923. She was the oldest of three children born to Ethel and Emile Aubert. She married Hadwick A Thompson on October 6, 1943 at St Columba Catholic Church in Berkeley. They raised three children, Hadwick C, Michele and Emile. Lily worked for the Dept. of Defense for over 42 years.

She spent forty of these years at the Oakland Naval Hospital first as a Medical Records Technician and later as the Quality Assurance Officer until her retirement. She returned as a Red Cross volunteer and served as chief of station until the hospital was closed. During her tenure her husband would be hospitalized there during WWII and later her son, Hadwick during the Vietnam War. After her retirement, she and her husband enjoyed traveling from Europe to the Orient and various locations in the US. They were both very active in the Oakland Chinatown Lions, National Naval Officers Association, Pearl Harbor Survivors, and Navy League. She was an active member of the Children’s Hospital Cacao Branch and served as chairperson for over 15 years.

Lily was one of the last 2 surviving members of the “Mighty Few”. a social club founded in her teens. She loved life and her family and enjoyed being with her family and friends, volunteering, traveling and dancing. She never hesitated when it came to pitching in to help and always had a smile while doing it. Lily is survived by her children, Hadwick, Michele and Emile, her grandsons, Troy and Eric, her great granddaughter. Kaya Leilani and a host of nieces, nephews, cousins and friends. She was preceded in death by her husband, Hadwick A, her parents, Ethel and Emile Aubert, her sister Josephine Moise and infant brother, Emile. In the great circle of life Lily was born at the Fabiola Hospital which was later acquired as the Kaiser Oakland Hospital where she passed away. She remains a light in our hearts and memories. Services will be held at St Paschal Baylon Catholic Church at 3700 Dorisa Ave in Oakland at 11:00 AM with grave side services immediately following at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, 26320 Mission Blvd, Hayward, CA. Repass will follow in St Paschal’s Parish Hall. C. P. Bannon Mortuary (510) 632-1011 –

See more at: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/eastbaytimes/obituary.aspx?pid=182298016#sthash.NEocukBz.dpuf

Capt. Byron A. Wiley, USN (Ret.) – 2011

Capt. Byron A. Wiley, USN (Ret.)

1931 – 2011

Published in The Greenville News on Nov. 30, 2011

Captain Byron Anthony Wiley, USN (Ret.), passed away on Sunday, November 27, 2011 after a prolonged struggle with Progressive Supranuclear Palsy. Born in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, on June 29, 1931, Capt. Wiley proved to be an avid student, leader, world traveler and advocate for equality in, and access to, higher education. Capt. Wiley obtained a baccalaureate degree from Creighton University and Master’s degrees from Drake University and the University of Southern California. He was also an alumnus of the National Defense University and Harvard University‘s Senior Executives in State and Local Government Program.

During his thirty-year career as a U.S. Naval Flight Officer, Capt. Wiley was designated a “proven specialist” in human resource management and military intelligence. He spent time in service in England’s Royal Navy as part of the Military Personnel Exchange Program, and was the first African American in the history of the U.S. Navy to serve as personal aide to an admiral.

Following his time in the Navy, Capt. Wiley served in consultant and assistant positions at several distinguished institutions, including the Johns Hopkins University, the University of California-Santa Barbara (where he served as Vice Chancellor) and Pennsylvania State University. Capt. Wiley was eventually appointed as the System Director of Social Equity for Pennsylvania’s State System of Higher Education, where he served for ten years.

It was at Clemson University where Capt. Wiley realized one of his greatest accomplishments: the creation of the Emerging Scholars Program, a college outreach effort that targets high school students in economically depressed areas of the state. Since 2002, the Emerging Scholars Program has made higher education a reality for students who have not seen college in their future. To date, more than 150 students have completed this program and more than 100 are currently in training. Over 90% of the students who complete the program apply to and attend college their first year out of high school.

Capt. Wiley is survived by his wife, Carol Ann; his son, Alex; and daughters, Celeste, Adrienne, and Joanna. 

A Rosary Vigil will be held at 7 PM, Thursday in St. Andrew’s Catholic Chapel.

The Funeral Mass will be celebrated at 11 AM, Friday at St. Andrew’s Catholic Church with Father Gregory West presiding. 

In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to the Emerging Scholars Program at Clemson University. Donations can be made online at http://cualumni.clemson.edu/remember/wiley or through checks made out to Clemson University (memo: Emerging Scholars). Checks may be sent to:

Byron Wiley Memorial, 103 Bancroft Ct, Central, SC 29630

Condolences may be expressed online at www.robinsonfuneralhomes.com or at Duckett-Robinson Funeral Home, Central.