Providing service to others in USS Cleveland Legacy Foundation CEO’s bloodline

Published: October 10, 2024

By Marah Morrison

When Peter Collins retired from the U.S. Marine Corps after serving for 30 years, he still had the desire to pursue something that would provide service to others.

This desire gave Collins the opportunity to step up as the CEO of the USS Cleveland Legacy Foundation this past spring.

The foundation has been organizing to host an unveiling for Cleveland’s Lone Sailor Statue, which has been housed at the Great Lakes Science Center since 2021. The statue will be unveiled at 10 a.m. Oct. 12 at its new home at The Lone Sailor Plaza at Voinovich Bicentennial Park in Cleveland.

The monument is intended to provide a location for special military ceremonies. It will feature two Honor Walls and Memorial Wall, which will include personalized plaques with the names of men and women who have served in the nation in America’s Sea Services, as well as significant donor names.

Additionally, the event will outline forthcoming plans to commission the USS Cleveland, a Naval ship, in September 2025.

The Oct. 12 ceremony will feature 3rd Battalion Marines and 25th Marines, who will provide the color guard. The Warrensville Heights High School band and Shaw High School marching band will also perform.

A 72-person color guard of veterans will also be in attendance.

According to the USS Cleveland Legacy Foundation, the new plaza aids their mission to support positive civil-military relations by creating and maintaining a strong, meaningful and direct bond between citizens of Northeast Ohio and the crew of the new USS Cleveland.

“It’s an honor to have one in Cleveland,” Collins said. “Growing up in Lake County in Kirtland, and then being in the Marine Corps for 30 years, there are a lot of folks who would crack a lot of jokes about Cleveland. Now, we have something that’s basically telling the world ‘hey, Cleveland supports the armed forces.’ ”

To have the Lone Sailor in Cleveland is also an opportunity to showcase the city, as well as having the ship commissioned in Cleveland, Collins said.

“I think having the ship commissioned in Cleveland will help showcase Northeast Ohio and give residents an opportunity to see something that’s a once in a lifetime experience — the commissioning of a Navy warship,” he said. “Everywhere that ship sails, it’ll be advertising Cleveland, which is important. When that ship comes back, it’ll be a showpiece.”

Northeast Ohio citizens may also be reminded of the importance of military service, Collins said, and the importance of having a strong military to help defend freedoms and citizens’ way of life.

“Right now, 77% of our kids between the ages of 18 and 24 are not eligible to serve due to obesity, criminal records, education, drug abuse and those types of things,” Collins observed. “We need to find a way to turn that around and maybe this will help.”

Upon retiring from the Marine Corps in 2011, as a lawyer, Collins said he could have done a variety of things. However, he pursued an executive vice president position with a nonprofit in Washington, D.C., that provided support to sailors, Marines and their families.

When he stepped down from that in 2020, Collins moved back to Cleveland with the intention of just sitting on boards. It was in 2021 that he started working with the USS Cleveland Legacy Foundation as an honorary director and then a director prior to becoming the CEO.

For Collins, it’s all about taking care of the sailors assigned to the USS Cleveland.

“Shortly after the Secretary of the Navy announced the naming of the USS Cleveland, a nonprofit stood up to support the commissioning ceremony, however, that changed and they decided to do a multi-phase, multi-decade mission,” he said. “The first phase being to support the ship and start creating a relationship between the community, the ship and the Navy.”

It was then that the 18th Lone Sailor Statue was obtained.

“There are 19 in the world now,” Collins said. “Cleveland has the 18th one. The reason we obtained the statue was to start building that relationship between the citizens in Northeast Ohio and the USS Cleveland.”

Starting with his great-great-grandfather, Thomas Collins, who served as chief of police in Ashtabula in 1889, it’s gotten into the blood of the family to serve others, Collins said.

Via The News-Herald

Emily Oh