72-YEAR-OLD VETERAN SURPRISED WITH DIPLOMA Class of 2022 Graduates First Members
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t the age of 72, Albert Beyer did not expect to be receiving a high school diploma. In fact, he truly had no idea of what was about to happen. But, on January 13, he received that long-awaited recognition from his high school. In June of 1969, when Mr. Beyer, then a resident of Aspinwall, was slated to graduate from Fox Chapel Area High School, he “was right in the middle of Vietnam.”
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Mr. Beyer was invited to attend the high school’s early graduation ceremony under the guise of being part of a panel discussion on military service. Instead, he received the diploma he was unable to get from his school because of his military service. It caught him by surprise. “All of a sudden, the principal admitted he had lied to me to get me there and that the reason I was there was to graduate,” Mr. Beyer says. “That’s when I found out, and he called me up to the podium to get my diploma and my cap and gown. I was just overwhelmed. I was shocked. I just couldn’t believe it.” Unbeknownst to Mr. Beyer, about 30 family members and friends discreetly traveled to attend the special ceremony. Two of his children also presented him with a maile lei, a special gesture of honor in Hawaiian tradition given to someone to signify a momentous event in their lives.
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“It was when they stepped back, only then did I realize it was my son and daughter,” he says. Mr. Beyer, who now lives in Belleville, Ohio, also spent time living in Hawaii. He has been married for 43 years to his wife, Dayna, and has six children. They have 19 grandchildren and a growing number of great-grandchildren. Mr. Beyer has been involved with the American Legion for 12 years, many of whom attended the special ceremony, and has served as the district commander and is now a state historian for Ohio. Mr. Beyer served in the U.S. Marines from 1968-1978, and he obtained his GED while in the military.