Bruce Crandall - American Hero
I went to junior high school with Bruce's son. He was very proud of his father and rightly so. You can read more here. I believe his helo was downed by an American bomber once and Bruce spent a long time in a body cast. You'll find a terrific site here that his family made to honor his service for Father's Day 2001. In the movie his part was played by Greg Kinnear.
By PAULINE JELINEK
Bruce Crandall was a soldier once ... and young. As a 32-year-old helicopter pilot, he flew through a gantlet of enemy fire, taking ammunition in and wounded Americans out of one of the fiercest battles of the Vietnam War, Army records say.
Now, a week after his 74th birthday, Crandall will receive the nation's highest military honor Monday in a White House ceremony with President Bush.
"I'm still here," he said of his 41-year-wait for the Medal of Honor. "Most of these awards are posthumous, so I can't complain."
Crandall's actions in the November 1965 Battle at Ia Drang Valley were depicted in the Hollywood movie "We Were Soldiers," adapted from the book "We Were Soldiers Once ... And Young."
At the time, Crandall was a major commanding a company of the 229th Assault Helicopter Battalion, 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile).
"We had the first airmobile division ... the first one to use aircraft as a means of transportation and sustaining combat," Crandall said. His unit was put together earlier that year to go to Vietnam and "wasn't as thought out as things are today."
He didn't have gunners for his aircraft. That's why he flew unarmed helicopters into the battlefield.
He didn't have night vision equipment and other later technology that lessens the danger of flying.
The unit had "minimum resources and almost no administrative people" — thus the lack of help to do the reams of paperwork that had to be sent to Washington for the highest medals, Crandall said.
Generals in-theater could approve nothing higher than the Distinguished Flying Cross, Crandall said in a phone interview from his home near Bremerton, Wash, so he received that award. Through the years, he was able to get that upgraded to a Distinguished Service Cross and now to the Medal of Honor.
Crandall was leading a group of 16 helicopters in support of the 1st Cavalry Division's 1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment — the regiment led by George Armstrong Custer when he met his end at the 1876 Battle of the Little Bighorn, or "Custer's Last Stand."
Without Crandall's actions, the embattled men at Ia Drang would have died in much the same way — "cut off, surrounded by numerically superior forces, overrun and butchered to the last man," the infantry commander, Lt. Col. Harold Moore, wrote in recommending Crandall for the medal.
Moore, now a retired three-star general, later wrote the book about the battle along with Joseph L. Galloway, a former war correspondent now with McClatchy Newspapers.
"This unit, taking some of the heaviest casualties of the war, out of water and fast running out of ammunition, was engaged in one of the fiercest battles of the Vietnam war against a relentlessly attacking, highly motivated, vastly superior force," said U.S. Army documents supporting Crandall's medal. The U.S. forces were up against two regiments of North Vietnamese Army infantry, "determined to overrun and annihilate them," the documents said.
The fighting became so intense that the helicopter landing zone for delivering and resupplying troops was closed, and a unit assigned to medical evacuation duties refused to fly. Crandall volunteered for the mission and with wingman and longtime friend Maj. Ed Freeman made flight after flight over three days to deliver water, ammunition and medical supplies. They are credited with saving more than 70 wounded soldiers by flying them out to safety, and Freeman received the Medal of Honor in July 2001.
Paperwork and other parts of the process delayed Crandall's medal until now, officials said.
Thinking back to the Vietnam battle, Crandall remembers the first day was "very long ... we were in the air for 14 and a half hours." He also thinks of how impressive and calm the unit on the ground remained, saying Moore and his commanders were "solid as rocks" throughout the fight.
And of course, Crandall says, he's also proud of his own performance.
"I'm so proud that I didn't screw it up," he said.
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Sounds like a hell of guy!
Comment by Florian— 2007/02/24 @ 01:31 PM — (Reply)
EB,
What a wonderful posting! It gave me goosebumps, I tell ya.
Comment by Always On Watch— 2007/02/24 @ 01:37 PM — (Reply)
Comment by Elmers Brother— 2007/02/24 @ 02:55 PM — (Reply)
Having met Bruce Crandall, I am so proud of him for recieving the Medal of Honor. 'bout time! I am only sad that the supreme "Chicken Hawk"--G W Bush was allowed to breath the same air as this wonderful man. Garry Owen!
Comment by Stan— 2007/02/27 @ 08:02 PM — (Reply)
What an honorable man, and a hero, for sure!
Comment by Brooke— 2007/02/25 @ 09:36 AM — (Reply)
Outstanding, EB!
It's so good to read of heros, and it's good for our children to hear of heros. It may inspire them to greater things in their own lives, there is something inside most of us that longs for the greater and nobler in life!
Good morning, G*D bless and Maranatha!
tmw
Remember to stop and breath before the wedding!
Comment by the merry widow— 2007/02/26 @ 02:21 AM — (Reply)
tmw thanks I will
Comment by elmers brother— 2007/02/26 @ 05:35 AM — (Reply)
"we were soldiers" is one of our favorite movies.
i watched him receive his medal from the news this morning and a excerpts from a previously recorded program with him and his pilot; they were arguing about who was the better pilot! it was touching.
Comment by nanc— 2007/02/27 @ 02:58 AM — (Reply)
Great read, thanks for posting.
Comment by Joe Gringo— 2007/02/27 @ 03:17 AM — (Reply)
Excellent movie and cool site..truly a great American!
FTGF!
Comment by daniel— 2007/03/02 @ 05:30 PM — (Reply)
"We Were Soldiers" Starring Mel Gibson is easily one of my favorite war movies. There were several people that day that deserved the Medal of Honor, not just the two helicopter pilots(although they certainly earned it themselves). It's a shame it took so long for both men to finally get the Medal of Honor.
I also thought it was one of Greg Kinnear's best roles. I watched the ceremony where he receive his award. Isn't it telling that he waited until after his buddy received the award first?
You picked a worthy topic.
Comment by American Crusader— 2007/03/06 @ 05:35 AM — (Reply)
So nice to see the right people gettin honored!
Comment by Angel— 2007/03/06 @ 08:52 AM — (Reply)
Congrats on your new son!
FTGF!
Comment by daniel— 2007/03/09 @ 05:13 PM — (Reply)
Comment by Elmers Brother— 2007/03/09 @ 06:50 PM — (Reply)
Congratulations on your new son-in-law! I hope the wedding went off without a hitch.
Comment by American Crusader— 2007/03/10 @ 05:29 AM — (Reply)