Dozens of vehicles crawled down Courtland Street in Jackson, their drivers and passengers honking and waving to Herb Elfring, a World War II Pearl Harbor survivor who sat in a high-back padded chair on the sidewalk outside First United Methodist Church. It was Elfring’s 100th birthday.
Other military veterans later stood in a line saluting Elfring as he rang a bell to honor survivors of Japan’s Dec. 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor that drew the U.S. into World War II. Elfring also fired artillery as part of a cannon salute.
![](https://americanmilitarynews.com/wp-content/uploads/20220402-AMX-US-NEWS-PEARL-HARBOR-SURVIVOR-CELEBRATES-100TH-25-MLI.jpg)
The Jackson community came out on the chilly Saturday afternoon to celebrate Elfring century on Earth with food consisting of sliders, pies, cookies and cupcakes that were arranged to form a “100.” The Kiwanis Club pitched in milkshakes for the crowd, since they were invented the same year as Elfring was born: 1922.
![](https://americanmilitarynews.com/wp-content/uploads/20220402-AMX-US-NEWS-PEARL-HARBOR-SURVIVOR-CELEBRATES-100TH-28-MLI-682x1024.jpg)
Lastly, no birthday would be complete without dancing. Single Squares brought out a dance floor and got Elfring moving with square dancing, one of his favorite hobbies. Elfring smiled and danced with his partners, seeming to have the time of his life.
![](https://americanmilitarynews.com/wp-content/uploads/20220402-AMX-US-NEWS-PEARL-HARBOR-SURVIVOR-CELEBRATES-100TH-26-MLI.jpg)
“You only get up this way one time,” he said. “And who knows what to expect with that.
“I thought it was just another birthday, but I guess it isn’t. It was more than that.”
___
© 2022 Advance Local Media LLC Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC