Today
is Memorial Day!
The
day when we take the time to honor those who Gave Their All while serving in the
United States Armed Forces from all wars.
It is not a time to thank a veteran for his service… tough we should do
that every day. We have Armed Forces Day
and Veterans Day for that. It is,
however, totally proper to thank a family who gave a son, brother, dad, mom,
sister or kin in the defense of our great nation - even if they were not in
combat. They put on the uniform, had the
boots on the ground, flew in the air, bobbed on the sea, and lived the life
uncommon to civilians. But they did not
come home to loving arms. Or come home
at all.
Today
is a day for reflection with good memories and wondering what if…
I
will be thinking of a special group of men who died on 3 June, 1969, at a
little after 3:00 a.m. when their ship, the USS Frank E Evans DD754, was cut in
half by an Australian Aircraft Carrier.
Nothing intentional! It was just a combination of errors with only a few minutes to realize and adjust.
Seventy
four men died that night with only one body recovered. Young men, all! Three brothers from Nebraska were part of the
74. A father survived only to find out
his son did not. And I had a good friend
from my deployment who did not make it.
There
are many stories of bravery and sadness that night. Many men from the HMAS Melbourne, the carrier
involved, tried hard to find our survivors, treated them medically, fed them
and gave them a few beers, and donated their own clothes as many or our guys
were sleeping and had to get out of their berthing compartments in just jeans
or their skivvies.
Just
a few days before the accident they were on the gun line providing fire support,
day and night, and nightly illumination for a group of Marines. They were combat veterans… many only 17 and 18
year olds who had only been on board for 17 days. They were fresh out of boot camp and learning
shipboard life while working to save Marine’s lives.
Before
leaving CONUS, they had orders to leave on a certain date and join a group of
international ships (New Zealand, Australian, etc.) in training for working together
during war time. Had the accident not
happen, in a few days they would have gone to some locator (Philippines, Taiwan,
etc.) to rearm and resupply, and then head back to the gun line.
But
because they were 50 miles outside the designated war zone, the powers that be
will not allow their names to be on the Vietnam Memorial. A travesty and a slap in the face to the
families of the lost 74. But politics
and cover your ass works well in D.C.
This
past month I have been posting story boards of each of the guys on the ship’s
Facebook page and, in do so, I have thought about them and their life and what
could have been… and it hurts.
I
only knew one of them personally, but I knew them all by experience. Seaboard life is the same everywhere. I know their activities, their schedules, and
their boredom. I know the excitement of
providing fire support. I know the
procedures of being ordered to plane guard. I know how they would run up and down those
latters like monkeys and walk down passage ways with a rocking and rolling ship
under their feet.
I
have shed tears for those guys. Men who
would be in their 60’s and 70’s now.
Lives
never fulfilled, dreams never met. Families
never started, or families never finished.
But
they were bravely serving our country.
Brave
men sourly missed.
This
video (that I cannot make work) says a lot.
Lest We Forget...
Thank you for that story and the link CP. And thank you for your service.
ReplyDeleteToo many of our people died while in the service of our country without hearing a shot in anger. They are just as dead, and their service just as important. We need to remember them, too. Their loved ones haven't forgotten.
ReplyDeleteThank you for writing this, Coffey.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
Nice tribute, Coffey. Thank you for sharing this. Hugs and love sent your way.
ReplyDeleteOldNFO, you have many more years of Naval service than I ever though about. So thank you, Sir, for all you did... even if you were an officer. :)
ReplyDeleteWell Seasoned Fool, well said, Sir.
JJ and MF, you are welcome. They are on my mind a lot.