His
life story is depicted in the movie "To Hell and Back". He
got his sister to sign for him to enter the Army only after the
Navy, Marines, Paratroopers rejected him, as he was only 16 and
had quit school at age 12! Just before his 19th birthday
he was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor and became the
MOST DECORATED soldier in our Nation's history! A wound in
his hip ended his Army career.
Audie Murphy's
Wife...
Not many young people know
who Audie Murphy was or how big a war hero he was. Two
or three of the medals he earned would make most
service men proud, but to have earned his decorations
in battle is truly unbelievable.
Now to find
out that his widow was also most certainly a hero.
Truly fantastic. I am so grateful to have
received this email. I hope you are too.
List of Decorations for
Audie
Murphy.
Medal of
Honor
Distinguished Service
Cross
Silver Star (with oak leaf
cluster)
Legion of
Merit
Bronze Star (with oak leaf
cluster and Valor
device)
Purple Heart (with two oak
leaf clusters)
U.S. Army Outstanding Civilian
Service Medal
U.S. Army Good Conduct
Medal
Presidential Unit Citation
(with First Oak Leaf
Cluster)
American Campaign
Medal
European-African-Middle
Eastern Campaign Medal (with One Silver Star, Four
Bronze Service Stars (representing nine campaigns) and
one Bronze Arrowhead (representing assault landing at
Sicily and Southern
France)),
World War II Victory
Medal
Army of Occupation Medal
(with Germany
Clasp)
Armed Forces Reserve
Medal
French Fourrag?e in Colors
of the Croix de
guerre
French Legion of Honor -
Grade of
Chevalier
French Croix de guerre (with
Silver Star),
French Croix de guerre (with
Palm)
Medal of Liberated
France
Belgian Croix de guerre
(with 1940 Palm)
Additionally, Murphy was
awarded:
|the Combat Infantry
Badge, Marksman
Badgewith Rifle Bar,
Expert
Badgewith Bayonet Bar Isn't
it sad the media can tell us all about the BAD that
goes on, but ignores the GOOD people. If a movie star
or politician stubs their toe we have to hear about it
for days!!!
(From
the Los Angeles Times on April 15,
2010) Pamela
Murphy, widow of WWII hero and actor, Audie Murphy,
died peacefully at her home on April 8, 2010. She was
the widow of the most decorated WWII hero and actor,
Audie Murphy, and established her own distinctive 35
year career working as a patient liaison at the
Sepulveda Veterans Administration hospital, treating
every veteran who visited the facility as if they were
a VIP. Any
soldier or Marine who came into the hospital got the
same special treatment from her. She would walk the
hallways with her clipboard in hand making sure her
boys got to see the specialist they
needed. If
they didn't, watch out. Her boys weren't Medal of
Honor recipients or movie stars like Audie, but that
didn't matter to Pam. They had served their country.
That was good enough for her. She never called a
veteran by his first name. It was always "Mister."
Respect came with the job. "Nobody
could cut through VA red tape faster than Mrs.
Murphy," said veteran Stephen Sherman, speaking for
thousands of veterans she befriended over the years.
"Many times I watched her march a veteran who had been
waiting more than an hour right into the doctor's
office. She was even reprimanded a few times, but it
didn't matter to Mrs. Murphy. "Only her boys mattered.
She was our angel." Audie
Murphy died broke in a plane crash in 1971,
squandering millions of dollars on gambling, bad
investments, and yes, other women. "Even with the
adultery and desertion at the end, he always remained
my hero," Pam told me. She
went from a comfortable ranch-style home in Van Nuys
where she raised two sons to a small apartment -
taking a clerk's job at the nearby VA to support
herself and start paying off her faded movie star
husband's debts. At first, no one knew who she was.
Soon, though, word spread through the VA that the nice
woman with the clipboard was Audie Murphy's widow. It
was like saying General Patton had just walked in the
front door. Men with tears in their eyes walked up to
her and gave her a hug. "Thank
you," they said, over and over. The
first couple of years, I think the hugs were more for
Audie's memory as a war hero. The last 30 years, they
were for Pam. One
year I asked her to be the focus of a Veteran's Day
column for all the work she had done. Pam just shook
her head no. "Honor
them, not me," she said, pointing to a group of
veterans down the hallway. "They're the ones who
deserve it." The
vets disagreed. Mrs. Murphy deserved the accolades,
they said. Incredibly, in 2002, Pam's job was going to
be eliminated in budget cuts. She was considered
"excess staff." "I don't think helping cut down on
veterans' complaints and showing them the respect they
deserve, should be considered excess staff," she told
me. Neither did the veterans. They went ballistic,
holding a rally for her outside the VA gates. Pretty
soon, word came down from the top of the VA. Pam
Murphy was no longer considered "excess
staff." She
remained working full time at the VA until 2007 when
she was 87. "The
last time she was here was a couple of years ago for
the conference we had for homeless veterans," said
Becky James, coordinator of the VA's Veterans History
Project. Pam wanted to see if there was anything she
could do to help some more of her boys. Pam Murphy was
90 when she died last week. What a
lady. Dennis
McCarthy, Los Angeles Times on April 15, 2010
~ I
know you will pass this one on.....
|
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