Posted on 11/27/2017 4:24:35 PM PST by markomalley
Marine Corps Col. Wesley Fox, who received the Medal of Honor for successfully leading his company through an enemy attack during the Vietnam War and retired decades later at the mandatory age of 62, died the evening of Nov. 24 in Blacksburg, Va. He was 86.
The Congressional Medal of Honor Society confirmed his death Monday but did not provide a cause.
As a boy growing up in rural northern Virginia and watching his older cousins leave to fight in World War II, Fox always planned to join the military, he said in an interview preserved by the Library of Congress. He left his family farm near Herndon and enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1950 at the start of the Korean War.
Fox served as a young corporal in Korea and later, as a first lieutenant, led a company in Vietnam that would suffer 75 percent casualties during a three-month operation. The unit, Company A, 9th Marines, was among the troops fighting in Operation Dewey Canyon, the last major Marine offensive during the Vietnam War.
The company came under intense gunfire from the North Vietnamese on Feb. 22, 1969, which Fox remembered as a foggy, rainy day in the jungle of the northern A Shau Valley. Realizing they wouldnt be able to move the injured men and retreat, Fox led an assault against the larger enemy force. Though Fox was wounded, he refused medical attention and successfully directed the responding attack, coordinated air support, and then supervised the medical evacuation of injured and dead Marines.
His indomitable courage, inspiring initiative and unwavering devotion to duty in the face of grave personal danger inspired his Marines to such aggressive action that they overcame all enemy resistance and destroyed a large bunker complex, read Foxs citation for the Medal of Honor.
Former President Richard Nixon presented the Medal of Honor, the militarys highest award for valor, to Fox on March 2, 1971. Fox and six soldiers received the distinction in a group ceremony at the White House.
In the interview for the Library of Congresss Veterans History Project, Fox reflected on the attack and recalled one brief moment when he had to motivate his men: I had the opportunity to look em in the eyeballs and say, This is what we do.
Why did my Marines go forward? Cause they knew thats what I wanted of em, Fox said. They knew we were moving to the sounds of the enemys guns, and until somebody told em something clearly, differently, a Marine isnt going to lose his focus. I had some great Marines.
Fox went on to serve 43 years in the Marine Corps and left only when he hit the mandatory retirement age of 62 in 1993. He worked his way up through every enlisted rank from private to colonel.
For eight years after that, he worked as a deputy commandant of cadets for the Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets and continued to speak about his military service to students and civic leaders.
Fox is survived by his wife, Dottie Lu, and other family.
In an announcement Monday, the Marine Corps called Fox a legend and a true Marines Marine.
Fox, who always wanted to join the military, told the Veterans History Project interviewer that he had no regrets about choosing a career in the Marine Corps.
To tell you how proud I am to wear the Marine uniform, my first four years as a Marine I didnt own one stitch of civilian clothes everything I did was in a Marine uniform, Fox said. Id go home on leave, working in the hay fields or whatever, I wore my Marine utilities. Go in town to see the movies, I wore Marine dress.
Fox was also proud to wear the Medal of Honor, he said.
Im pleased and proud to wear it for the Marine Corps and for what my Marines did on that particular fight, Fox told the interviewer. I feel a little bit of an emptiness in knowing that there were others deserved in that fight that were not awarded.
RIP.
I had the privilege of knowing very well another Marine who started as a private and ended up a General. HIs name was Harold Glasgow.
These guys and thousands like them are awesome and what makes this country. Indeed, guys like them are the backbone of this country.
Thanks for posting.
And semper fi
Rest well, Colonel.
i happened to run into a guy similar to this in Kroger this weekend. He was wearing a veteran hat with Air Force retired and when I got IFO him I saw all the scrambled eggs on his hat. As a veteran myself (not even remotely as high as him), I brought up, “isn’t it a shame they keep rotating the same guys over and over back and forth between Iraq and Af. He said, kind of forcibly, “they need to bring back the draft.”
RIP Marine
1/9 Walking Dead. S/F Col Fox!
Fox reflected on the attack and recalled one brief moment when he had to motivate his men: I had the opportunity to look em in the eyeballs and say, This is what we do.
Why did my Marines go forward? Cause they knew thats what I wanted of em, Fox said. They knew we were moving to the sounds of the enemys guns, and until somebody told em something clearly, differently, a Marine isnt going to lose his focus. I had some great Marines.
In the AF we don’t call the braid on a senior officer’s hat scrambled eggs. Since the braid is a silver color we call it bird sh**.
A true Marine’s Marine! I had the great opportunity to meet him several years ago at a local gun show.
Rest in peace, Colonel Fox. Thank you for your very honorable service to the Corps in a world of too many office politicians.
Rest in peace General Fox.
Thanks for the ping. May he rest in peace.
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