Sunday, May 27, 2012

In Memory....


May you
Rest In Peace!
VanT. Barfoot 
died at the age of 92 on 2 March 2012.

Remember the guy who wouldn't take the 
flag down?

You might remember a news story several months ago 
about a crotchety old man who defied his homeowners association 
and refused to take down the flagpole on his property 
and the large flag that flew on it. 

Now you can find out who, exactly, that old man was.

On June 15, 1919, 
Van T. Barfoot was born in Edinburg 
-- probably didn't make much news back then. 


Twenty-five years later, on May 23, 1944, 
near
 
Carano, Italy , Van T. Barfoot, 
who had enlisted in the US Army in 1940, 
set out to flank German machine gun positions 
from which fire was coming down on his fellow soldiers. 

He advanced through a minefield,
took out three enemy machine gun positions 
and returned with 17 prisoners of
 
war.




If that wasn't enough for a day's work, he later took on 

and
 
destroyed 

three German tanks sent to retake the machine gun
 
positions.



That probably didn't make much news either, 
given the scope of the war, 

but it did earn Van T. Barfoot, 
who retired as a Colonel 
after also serving in Korea and Vietnam , 
a Congressional Medal of
 
Honor.








What did make news...
 
was a neighborhood association's quibble 
with
 
how the 90-year-old veteran 
chose to fly the American flag 
outside
 his 
suburban Virginia home. 

Seems the rules said a flag could be
 
flown 
on a house-mounted bracket, but, for decorum, 
items such
 
as Barfoot's 21-foot flagpole 
were unsuitable.






He had been denied a permit for the pole, 
erected it anyway and was
 
facing court action 
if he didn't take it down. 



Since the story made
 
national TV, 
the neighborhood association has rethought its position
and agreed to indulge this old hero who dwells among them.



"In the time I have left I plan to continue to fly the American flag 
without
 interference," 
Barfoot told The Associated Press. 

As well he should.

And if
 
any of his neighbors still takes a notion to contest him, they
might want to read his Medal of Honor citation. 
It indicates he's not
 real 
good at backing down.



Van T. Barfoot's Medal of Honor citation:



This 1944
 
Medal of Honor citation, 
listed with the National Medal of Honor Society,
 
is for Second Lieutenant Van T. Barfoot, 
157th Infantry, 45th Infantry:




WE ONLY LIVE IN THE LAND OF THE FREE

BECAUSE OF THE BRAVE! 
AND, 
BECAUSE OF OLD MEN LIKE 
VAN BARFOOT!

Obviously he is not related to anybody in congress!

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