Friday, July 10, 2009

Forget Pop Stars, Athletes and Actors -- Here's a Real Hero

Thanks to Ralph & Linda for sending this over. It comes from an e-mail that's been circulating for almost a year now. But it is an accurate rendition of what happened...and a soul-stirring one at that. I print here the message just as the Aldrich's sent it over. But, following that, I then give a bit more info about Ed Freeman from the local newspaper story last August.

You're a 19 year old kid.

You're critically wounded and dying in the jungle in the Ia Drang Valley, LZ X-ray, Vietnam on December 14, 1965. Your infantry unit is outnumbered 8 - 1 and the enemy fire is so intense, from 100 or 200 yards away, that your own Infantry Commander has ordered the MediVac helicopters to stop coming in.

You're lying there, listening to the enemy machine guns and you know you're not getting out.
Your family is 1/2 way around the world, 12,000 miles away, and you'll never see them again. As the world starts to fade in and out, you know this is the day.

Then - over the machine gun noise - you faintly hear that sound of a helicopter. You look up to see an unarmed Huey! But, it doesn't seem real because no Medi-Vac markings are on it.


Ed Freeman is coming for you.


He's not Medi-Vac so it's not his job, but he's flying his Huey down into the machine gun fire anyway. Even after the Medi-Vacs were ordered not to come. He's coming anyway.


And he drops it in and sits there in the machine gun fire, as they load 2 or 3 of you on board. Then he flies you up and out through the gunfire to the Doctors and Nurses.


And, he kept coming back.


13 more times.


He took about 30 of you and your buddies out who would never have gotten out.


Medal of Honor Recipient, Ed Freeman, died last Wednesday at the age of 80, in Boise, Idaho.


May God Rest His Soul.


And now from the Idaho Statesman of August 21, 2008.

As Ed "Too Tall" Freeman lay ill in a Boise hospital over the past few weeks, many came to pay their respects to the 80-year-old national war hero and former helicopter pilot.

One unexpected visitor offered a very personal thank you to Freeman, a veteran of three wars and recipient of the highest military award -- the Congressional Medal of Honor -- for his actions on Nov. 14, 1965, at Landing Zone X-Ray, Ia Drang Valley, Vietnam. As one of Ed's son's, Mike, recalled it, "A guy came into the hospital and said, 'You don't know me, but I was one of those people you hauled out of the X-Ray,Thanks for my life.'"


Freeman died Wednesday.


His Medal of Honor citation credits him with helping save 30 seriously wounded soldiers in 14 separate rescue missions in an unarmed helicopter...

The heroics of Freeman and the others involved in the Ia Drang campaign are immortalized in the Mel Gibson movie "We Were Soldiers," which is based on the book "We Were Soldiers Once ... And Young." A sequel, "We Are Soldiers Still," was released this month.


Freeman, a Mississippi native who married an Idahoan, began his military career at 17 with a two-year stint in the Navy during World War II. "He joined the Navy and hated it. The ocean thing was not his bag," Mike Freeman said. So he joined the Army, serving four years in Germany before getting deployed to the Korean conflict.


The 6-foot-4 tell-it-like-it-is Sou
therner got the name "Too Tall" because he was told he was too tall to be a pilot. That didn't stop him from pushing to fly. "He was tenacious about getting into flight school. He drove them insane until they let him in," Mike Freeman said.

He proved his mettle by becoming one the Army's most heralded helicopter pilots. Two streets at Fort Rucker, Ala., where Freeman trained to be a helicopter pilot, were recently named in honor of Freeman and Maj. Bruce P. Crandall, his commanding officer in the Ia Drang campaign.


In the early 1960s, Freeman served as aviation adviser to the Idaho Army National Guard. "He was a super instructor. He was not one of these guys who get excited very easily," said retired Maj. Gen. Jack Kane, former commanding general of the Idaho National Guard. Kane, a second lieutenant in 1963-64, got his first helicopter lessons from Freeman. Decades later, Kane attended the 2001 Medal of Honor ceremony for Freeman at the White House. "It was, really, a super-moving moment," said Kane, who was in a meeting at the Pentagon when Freeman called to invite him to the ceremony.

Freeman retired from the military in 1967 and a few years later moved to Idaho with his wife, Barbara, and sons, Mike and Doug. But he didn't give up flying. He went to work for the Department of Interior's Office of Aircraft Services. Mike Freeman said his dad made sure that helicopter pilots contracted by Department of Interior agencies were up to snuff. "Anyone who flew for the government had to get past him," he said.


Freeman retired from flying in 1991 with more than 25,000 hours of flying time, including 18,000 in helicopters, according to his family and a 2002 newsletter published by the Idaho Military Historical Society and Museum. That's nearly three years in the air.


Freeman became a highly sought-after speaker, and he still gets hundreds of letters each year from admirers of all ages. He rarely missed Friday lunches at Boise's Din Fung Buffet, where a group of Purple Heart veterans met each week for the past seven years. "We're a bunch of loose cannons. We have our own opinions, but everything is in jest," said Dick Bengoechea, 84, who was a U.S. Army tank driver in Germany during World War II.

On Friday, a miniature helicopter and Medal of Honor book will be placed at the head of the group's table in memory of Freeman.


Freeman, a Republican who his son says was anything but politically correct, was much more than a great patriot. He was a devoted family man whose many passions included Volkswagens (he had many over the years, including The Thing) and fly fishing with his grandson, Scott.


In the past year and a half, Parkinson's disease ravaged Freeman's body. With the help of his sons, he was able to live at home until he became gravely ill three and a half weeks ago. "He was a caring guy who cared about his family," Mike Freeman said. "I'll miss that a lot."