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To: T-Bird45

http://www.tradoc.army.mil/pao/people_portraits/032005.htm

Vietnam, 9-11 hero honored at Benning
Rescorla’s widow unveils portrait at infantry museum

Story and photo by Bridgett Siter/The Bayonet

FORT BENNING, Ga. (TRADOC News Service, March 11, 2005) – If war heroes, like athletes, had signature moves, Rick Rescorla’s would be the “final sweep.”

That’s 2nd Lt. Rescorla featured on the cover of We Were Soldiers Once … And Young conducting a final sweep on Vietnam’s bloody Ia Drang battlefield in 1965. It was a clean sweep – Rescorla brought all his men out, all but one alive.

And that’s retired Col. Rescorla featured in what has become a familiar image of 9-11, a barrel-chested man with a bullhorn overseeing the evacuation of the South Tower of the World Trade Center. As the vice president of corporate security for Morgan Stanley, Rescorla was responsible for the safety of more than 2,700 employees. All but six made it out alive. Rescorla died making a final sweep.

“He saved 2,700 lives, only to give his own,” wrote James Stewart in Heart of a Soldier, a tribute to the man they called “Hard Core” in Vietnam because he sang soothing Cornish folk songs while the battle raged all around him.

When Rescorla’s widow, Susan, visited Fort Benning last week to unveil his portrait at the National Infantry Museum, she described a big, strong man with a big, soft heart. Doctors had diagnosed prostate cancer and gave him six months to live back in 1998, months before she met him while out walking her dog.

They fell in love soon after, and when Rescorla’s cancer went into remission, he credited Susan. He sang to her a Cornish ballad, “White Rose,” and sent her dozens of white roses every week. And he proposed. The couple had been married two years when he was killed.

Now Susan has made it her mission to erect a bronze statue of Rescorla at Fort Benning, where he attended basic training and Officer Candidate School. It would be the first of its kind, a statue depicting and honoring an individual. That would be fitting, his wife said, because Rescorla was one of a kind, “a new hero for a new millennium.”

But Rescorla’s story began more than 60 years before the new millennium, in Cornwall, England, home of the legendary King Arthur, where these days they sing “The Ballad of Ricky Rescorla.” He left home at 18 and served with the Queen’s army in Cyprus before joining the Colonial Police in Rhodesia. There he met Dan Hill, a “freelance soldier” who would become a lifelong friend.

“What now?” Hill asked Rescorla as they prepared to leave Rhodesia.

“I want to fight communism,” Rescorla said.

“Then come to America with me,” his friend replied. “We’ll fight it together.”

That’s how Rescorla came to be a platoon leader with B Company of the 7th Cavalry’s 2nd Battalion. B Co. came to the aid of 1st Battalion, which was being chewed up by 2,000 North Vietnamese forces in one of U.S. history’s bloodiest battles. And that’s how war correspondent Peter Arnett captured the photo of Rescorla conducting a final sweep, with his M-16, bayonet fixed, leading the way.

Rescorla left active duty in 1967 but remained with the Reserves and retired as colonel in 1990. By then he’d earned a law degree, owned a construction company, served as military instructor, professor and occasional writer.

But it was in his position as security chief for Morgan Stanley that Rescorla shined, using the skills and logic he’d honed on the battlefield. The employees were less than impressed when he instituted a regular evacuation drill for the company’s 30-plus floors.

“Everybody used to laugh. No one took it seriously,” one employee told Jane Pauley in a “Dateline” report last year. “He drilled it into our heads.”

That was before the truck-bomb attack in 1993. After that, Morgan Stanley employees trusted Rescorla’s instinct, and it served them well. When the first plane hit the North Tower in 2001, he ordered an immediate evacuation, despite assurance from World Trade Center officials that everything was all right and everyone should remain in their offices.

Morgan Stanley employees got an 18-minute head-start to safety. Along the way, someone snapped a picture of Rescorla with a bullhorn. He sang Cornish tunes, some later told Susan, and urged them to “be proud, it’s a great day to be an American.”

When the last of the Morgan Stanley employees passed his way, Rescorla headed back up the tower for a final sweep. It cost him his life, Susan said, but he gave it freely.

“He couldn’t have lived with himself if he made it out safe and lost someone there,” she said. “He was a Soldier on that day. He was doing what he did in Vietnam. I wouldn’t have expected anything less.”

Rescorla’s body was never recovered, a fact that Susan doesn’t dwell on.

“I don’t need a body. I don’t need a memorial at Ground Zero,” she said. “What I’d like is for people to never forget. Never forget what happened on 9-11.

“I’m proud of my husband, and I’m proud of America, and I’m proud of our Soldiers,” she said. “I want them to know this is not another Vietnam. They have our support.”

Susan would also like to see her husband awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and she’s collected 30,000 signatures petitioning Congress to do just that.

“When he was alive, he didn’t want to be honored for anything,” she said. “If he were here today, he’d be asking what all the fuss is about.

“I’m doing this for me. It’s how I deal with it. People say, ‘You know, after a while, you should get over it.’ I’ll never get over it. I’ve decided to live with my grief. I think about him everyday.”

Rescorla’s portrait, painted by Al Reid, and his medals, will be displayed on the first floor of the National Infantry Museum. Donations for his statue can be mailed to Rick Rescorla Memorial Fund, Post Office Box 128, Brookeside, NJ 07926.


11 posted on 04/04/2006 8:11:32 AM PDT by adam_az (It's the border, stupid!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]


To: All; adam_az; T-Bird45; Fintan; Yasotay; investigateworld; AmericanMade1776; peacebaby; ...

.

NEVER FORGET


9/11's...


Lifesaver RICK RESCORLA's statue joyfully unveiled - Ft. Benning GA

http://www.Freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1608896/posts

(Statue unveiling TV Coverage - The History Channel
8pm - Sept. 11th, 2006)



See where RICK RESCORLA walked in Vietnam, exactly:

http://www.lzxray.com/guyer_set1.htm



NEVER FORGET

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15 posted on 04/08/2006 6:56:54 PM PDT by ALOHA RONNIE ("ALOHA RONNIE" Guyer/Veteran-"WE WERE SOLDIERS" Battle of IA DRANG-1965 http://www.lzxray.com)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies ]

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