Posted on 07/05/2005 5:50:02 PM PDT by in the Arena
NEWS RELEASE from the United States Department of Defense
No. 679-05
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Jul 05, 2005
Media Contact: (703)697-5131
Public/Industry Contact: (703)428-0711
Department of the Navy Announces the Death of Retired Vice Adm. James B. Stockdale
Retired Navy Vice Adm. James B. Stockdale, Medal of Honor recipient, former Viet Nam prisoner of war (POW), naval aviator and test pilot, academic, and American hero died today, July 5, 2005, at his home in Coronado, Calif. He was 81 years old and had been battling Alzheimer's disease.
Born Dec. 23, 1923 in Abingdon, Ill., and a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy Class of 1947, he is best remembered for his extraordinary leadership as the senior naval officer held in captivity during the Vietnam War. As commanding officer of Carrier Air Group Sixteen flying from the aircraft carrier the USS Oriskany, he was shot down while leading a mission Sept. 9, 1965.
During his 7½-year imprisonment, he was tortured numerous times, forced to wear vise-like heavy leg irons for two years and spent four years in solitary confinement. While imprisoned, he organized the prisoner culture in defiance of regulations forbidding prisoner communication and improvised a cohesive set of rules governing prisoner behavior. Codified in the acronym, BACK U.S. (Unity over Self), these rules gave prisoners a sense of hope, which many credited with giving them the strength to endure their ordeal.
Upon his release in 1973, Stockdale's extraordinary heroism became widely known and he was awarded the Medal of Honor in 1976. A portion of his citation reads: "Stockdale...deliberately inflicted a near mortal wound to his person in order to convince his captors of his willingness to give up his life rather than capitulate. He was subsequently discovered and revived by the North Vietnamese who, convinced of his indomitable spirit, abated their employment of excessive harassment and torture of all prisoners of war."
"Vice Adm. Jim Stockdale's legendary leadership and heroic service to the cause of freedom has been an inspiration to our nation," said Secretary of the Navy Gordon England. "His courage and life stand as timeless examples of the power of faith and the strength of the human spirit. Our thoughts are with his devoted family. America and our Navy are eternally grateful and will always remember him."
Upon his retirement from naval service, the secretary of the Navy established the Vice Admiral Stockdale Award for Inspirational Leadership presented annually in both Pacific and Atlantic Fleets. Stockdale held 26 combat awards including two Distinguished Flying Crosses, three Distinguished Service Medals, two Purple Hearts and four Silver Star Medals. He is a member of the Navy's Carrier Hall of Fame, The National Aviation Hall of Fame and an Honorary Fellow of the Society of Experimental Test Pilots. He held 11 honorary doctoral degrees.
"Our Navy is saddened by the loss of Vice Adm. James B. Stockdale, a giant among heroes and a patriarch of ethical leadership," said Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Vern Clark. "Adm. Stockdale challenged the human limits of moral courage, physical endurance and intellectual bravery, emerging victorious as a legendary beacon for all to follow. Our thoughts and prayers are with Sybil, his devoted partner in love and life, and the rest of the Stockdale family."
Stockdale will be honored at a memorial service on board the USS Ronald Reagan in his hometown of Coronado, Calif. The service will take place Saturday, July 16. He will be buried with full honors at the U.S. Naval Academy Saturday, July 23. He is survived by his beloved wife Sybil of Coronado, Calif., and his four sons: James of Beaver, Pa.; Sidney of Albuquerque, N.M.; Stanford of Denver, Colo.; Taylor of Claremont, Calif.; and eight grandchildren.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions should be made to:
U.S. Naval Academy Foundation, 291 Wood Rd., Beach Hall, Annapolis, Md., 21402, telephone: (410) 295-4116.
Monmouth College Fund, 700 E. Broadway, Monmouth, Ill., 61462, telephone: (309) 457-2316/17
Stockdale's biography and additional photos are located on the following Web site: http://www.admiralstockdale.com .
Note to media:
For more information concerning the memorial service in San Diego, Calif., contact Capt. Jacquie Yost at (619) 532-1430.
For information concerning funeral services at the U.S. Naval Academy, contact Cdr. Rod Gibbons at (410) 293-1521.
Of course, his first words at the Pearly Gates will be "who am I?" "Why am I here?"
A salute to a hero. Alas, such people are forbidden from the pages in the newspaper, lest the people find inspiration for their lives.
ALSO POSTED HERE:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1437186/posts
An American hero. Prayers for him and his family.
ping
Wow, I had no idea Stockdale was such a hero. I only remember the caricature of him on Saturday Night Live, where he was portrayed as mentally incompetent. He didn't come across well as a VP candidate, but a man like that doesn't deserve that treatment.
Wow. Do people like that even exist anymore? R.I.P., Admiral.
A hero in the true sense of the word. God bless him.
A true American Hero...RIP
Whoops...I checked, must have taken too long in formatting...
Admin, feel free to lock this thread...
Hey, let's give the man two threads. What might happen...too many people appreciate his service?
Just thought people might want to see both...different images, etc.
Hell of a man. The kids coming behind you Admiral, in Iraq and Afghanistan, are showing the world that they follow in your footsteps. Rest easy, America is in good hands.
He will be missed.
Stockdale once said that he had never in his life had a political discussion with H. Ross Perot.
Stockdale also was a staunch advocate for abortion: he told Jim Lehrer that if he were not for abortion, he imagined his four daughters-in-law would be livid with him!
Hmmm ... he was pro-murder because his daughters-in-law wanted to preserve their right to kill his grandchildren in the womb? Something's not right there. For all his heroism in war, that just sounds like political cowardice to me.
We have to keep abortion legal, because that's what women want. Phooey!
I met Admiral Stockdale during the Perot campaign. He was a kind and gentle man, a true American
Thank you, Admiral, for your service to this nation.
Had he not joined with an idiot to allow the election of a buffoon, he would be remembered as a dignified, honorable man, instead of a shill who let himself and his background be used. A good man who did one bad thing that hurt us all, and whose memory is thereby besmirched for it.
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