27 February 2007

A couple of weeks ago I received an email that originated from the office of the commanding general of my division inquiring into a soldier of mine, PFC Charley Benton. My initial thoughts were understandably, “what the hell did Benton do that the CG is involved?” Well, the following letter was sent to the general and I think it explains everything (editor’s note: all names and unit designations have been changed as releases were not obtained prior to publication):

DR. JAMES B. MORTON
5001 Main Street
Smalltown, USA

February 1, 2007

General Store
Commanding General
An Army Division

Dear General Store:

I want to thank you for having such fine and professional soldiers such as PFC Charley Benton under your command. PFC Charley Benton is the perfect example of the exemplary qualities of a US Army soldier.

On January 31, 2007, I was involved in a serious vehicular accident on I-25 near Big City. I was traveling in my 2004 Ford F-150 when I spun out of control on the ice at 70 mph. I was struck on my driver’s door, sprayed with broken glass, and sent skidding into the grassy median. The van that struck me vanished. Traffic never slowed. No one stopped to help. I sat stunned and in shock in the broken glass beside the twisted metal of my driver’s door. I remember looking up and seeing a man in a military uniform running across the highway dodging cars and sprinting to my assistance. He seemed like an angel. I was alone, scared, and in a cloudy stupor with a concussion. He climbed into the passenger seat and checked on my and calmed me. My cell phone rang, and I remember telling someone I was in an accident, but I would be alright now because the army had arrived. I felt incredibly safe and comforted.

A red sports car spun out of control and was following nearly my exact accident path heading for my vehicle but luckily stopped short. Once he knew I was alright, PFC Charley Benton immediately ran to help the young lady who was very shaken up. I called 911 and the highway patrol responded. The white van had vanished and it was reported as a “hit and run”. PFC Charley Benton mentioned he witnessed the accident and last remembered seeing the van driving across the grassy median. The officer instructed all of us to leave the area and move our damaged vehicles to a safer location at a nearby gas station. The red car, the highway patrol, and I all drove to the station and noticed that PFC Charley Benton was still back at the scene of the accident. We saw him suddenly run across the median to the far highway and disappear down a very steep ravine. He found the van that had vanished. After striking my vehicle in the west bound lanes, the white van slid through the median, crossed the east bound lanes, and rolled multiple times into a very steep and deep ravine disappearing into the trees. The driver was in the van. PFC Charley Benton summoned more emergency crews to the scene to further help with the accident. If not for the heroic efforts of PFC Charley Benton, the van might have remained hidden along with the injured driver.

PFC Charley Benton acted exactly as I would expect from any finely trained U.S. Army soldier. He was heroic, put his life in jeopardy in order to save others, acted with professionalism, valor, and of course “left no man behind.” He is a fine example of why I am continuously proud of our soldiers for what they do on a daily basis to protect us. He was the only person who stopped to help, and yet was just the person I would most expect to help others whether it be on the battlefield or just at home helping the injured and finding the missing.

Thank you so very much.

Sincerely,

Dr. James B. Morton

I just thought to share with you the caliber of young men and women serving in your Army these days. The CG himself pinned the Army Commendation Medal on PFC Benton last week. Sgt Hook out.


Posted by Hook @ 2052 zulu | | Permalink
This post is filed under: The Soldier


Mudville Gazette linked with Dawn Patrol
Tammi's World linked with OutFlippinStanding


20 Comments »
  1. What a fine young man. You must be very proud of your Soldier - I know I am.

    Comment by MaryAnn — 27 February 2007 @ 2234


  2. OUTSTANDING.

    Comment by Pixie — 27 February 2007 @ 2250


  3. WOW… goosebumps go with the pride.

    Comment by Jean — 27 February 2007 @ 2343


  4. Appreciate your sharing this with us, Hook. Like the doctor, I’d also think PFC Benton “was just the person I would most expect to help others whether it be on the battlefield or just at home helping the injured and finding the missing.” How proud y’all must be of him. It was also very thoughtful of the Dr. to write to the CG so that PFC Benton’s courage and compassion could be publicly recognized. BZ to all!

    Comment by MissBirdlegs in AL — 28 February 2007 @ 0025


  5. Once again you take the time to give Americans examples of why we do have the best military. It is not because we are the biggest, we aren’t, but is because soldiers like him care. Not only do they say they care, they show it because they ACT. This is just another awesome example. I am so proud.

    SF Wife, GA

    Comment by SF Wife — 28 February 2007 @ 0125


  6. Excellent. Thank you.

    Comment by Laurie — 28 February 2007 @ 0426


  7. You know, my dad told me something interesting just before i left for basic training. Less than 3% of the American population EVER serves in the military.

    It makes sense, though, as it takes a special calibur of person to serve and serve well. I, for one, am proud to call PFC Benton my brother.

    Uplifting as usual, Sa’art Major.

    On an unrelated note, I hope you don’t mind, but i’d like to get an email address from you… I’ve got a memorial tattoo i’m in the progress of finishing that will be a Soldier’s Cross when it’s done, and i’d really like to share it with you when it’s finished.

    Thanks again,
    Kinton (Formerly SPC Type, of Landstuhl Regional Medical Center)

    Comment by Kinton (Formerly SPC Type) — 28 February 2007 @ 0426


  8. Well done PFC Benton! Thanks for telling us about yet another of our Finest, Hook.

    Comment by gypsy — 28 February 2007 @ 0428


  9. OutFlippinStanding

    Hook has posted a letter telling of the heroics of one of his Soldiers. I’m not going to say anything other than, Please - Go Read It….

    Trackback by Tammi's World — 28 February 2007 @ 1143


  10. As always, very moving. Thanks Sgt Hook… :)

    Comment by Jackie — 28 February 2007 @ 1454


  11. Dawn Patrol

    Welcome to the Dawn Patrol, our daily roundup of information on the War on Terror and other topics - from the MilBlogs and other sources around the world. If you’re a blogger, you can join the conversation. If you link…

    Trackback by Mudville Gazette — 28 February 2007 @ 1509


  12. outstanding.

    and this is why I work with those men and women as much as possible.

    Comment by rsm — 28 February 2007 @ 1532


  13. The PFC Benton’s of the world give me hope!! Thank you!

    Comment by Flag Gazer — 28 February 2007 @ 1651


  14. I just wondered, isn’t this the kind of thing for which they used to Award the Soldier’s Medal? I think that’s still available, although there’s no shame or diminishment of PFC Benton’s accomplishment to receive an ARCOM…

    Comment by dadmanly — 28 February 2007 @ 1715


  15. Dadmanly, you took the words right out of my fingers. The Army gives away AAMs and ARCOMs these days like they’re candy. I should know, because I have two each… and honestly, I’m not really sure what even for!

    If this isn’t Soldier’s Medal material, then what is? Maybe if he’d performed an emergency appendectomy on Dr. Morton while simultaneously delivering the other woman’s baby via C-section?

    Who knows, perhaps there’s a drawn-out submissions and approval process for the Soldiers Medal, a la the CMH. That would make sense, actually.

    Comment by Buck Sargent — 28 February 2007 @ 2211


  16. Outstanding. That PFC understands LDRSHIP.

    Comment by Jen — 1 March 2007 @ 0034


  17. Outstanding work. I am very proud of PFC Benton, of course nobody in the MSM thought to report this it would make the military look too good! I will certainly link this from my Blog.

    Comment by Chuck — 1 March 2007 @ 2107


  18. This does not surprise me…but I am so very proud of him and of ALL of them….”once in, never out…Airbourne all the way!”

    Comment by Brian W. — 2 March 2007 @ 1859


  19. Awesome!! But then I would expect nothing less knowing the men I know who proudly wear the uniform! Bravo Pfc Benton!!

    Comment by sue — 3 March 2007 @ 1001


  20. What a perfect example of how these young soldiers operate. The courage and bravery taken to find that third victim is awesome. Most would not take the time to look for the other victim. By practicing what was learned in training, while in everyday life, this was the perfect story of what Americans should be.

    Comment by Sheila — 3 March 2007 @ 2155


RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment




Pin Ups for Vets



Proud Sponsors




Orderly Room


Baghdad

About Hook
Contact Hook



Obligatory Disclaimer


This site is a collection of my writings, thoughts, and ramblings and in no way reflects the official positions of the United States Army or the Department of Defense. OPSEC trumps everything.


Current Ops



Hook Publishing


Jackie O'Shea
Jaffy Chronicles
No Tears in Heaven


Hook Productions


I Dreamed It
The Soldier's Silent Night
Here Comes The Sun
You Raise Me Up
One of Those Great Stories
American Soldier
Would You Know My Name


Rules Of Engagement


Copyright © 2003 - 2008. All original content is copyrighted by Sgt Hook. Limited use of said material is authorized given proper attribution provided. Plagiarism is considered a serious breach around these parts and violators will face a firing squad. Any comments left or emails sent become the property of Sgt Hook and are subject to publishing herein. Writing "Confidential" in the subject line of your email will preclude publication of said email.


Proud Sponsors


Visit these Advertisers

♦ Veterans - Use your VA Benefits to Refinance your home loan with VA Loan Refinancing from VLC.


♦ Allured by a cheap car insurance and other cheap deals. Many tend to overspend on their credit card. This leads them to loans and eventually a debt. If you are planning to work at home, you will have to be careful about all this and more.


Sound Off


Cup and Flower


Fall In


ARMY
COAST GUARD
MARINE CORPS
NAVY
AIR FORCE


NOTAM


In view of a recent tendency to identify characters in fiction with real people, it seems proper to state that there are no real people in this volume: both the characters and their names are ficticious. The names or designations of any military units are ficticious. There are no living people nor existing military units presented in this book. -Ernest Hemingway


Band of Brothers



Prev | List | Random | Next
Join
Powered by RingSurf!

Recent Dispatches


Twelfth Night Month, Or What You Will
Checking In
Update
Soldiers’ Angel
Humble Apologies
The Underwater Cable Guy
Tales from the Sandbox
Second only to Combat
Operation Browning
Remember Fallujah?
It Is Safe Here
Cleaning House and Digging In
Mourning Heroes
Terror at Wali Dar
Caption This


Rank and File



My Ecosystem Details



View My Milblogging.com Profile


Ongoing Ops





Fiddler's Green


Halfway down the road to hell,
In a shady meadow green,
Are the souls of all dead troopers camped
Near a good old-time canteen.
And this eternal resting place
Is known as Fiddler's Green.
-Author Unknown


The Blog of War


"Grab it before the Pentagon orders it burned..." - Vanity Fair

"...nonpartisan patriotism is the common thread tying together these reflections, love letters and stories of combat. They make for riveting reading." - The Washington Post

Winner of the 2006 Gold Medal for Anthologies - Military Writer's Society of America

"This collection is an excellent introduction to an emerging form of war reporting." - Booklist


Annals

September 2008
July 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
November 2005
October 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004
September 2004
August 2004
July 2004
June 2004
February 2004
July 2003
June 2003
May 2003
April 2003
March 2003


Giving Credit

Powered by:
WordPress v. 2.3
Blog Design:
E.Webscapes
Hosted by:
Blogs About Hosting

Other

login
register


Meta

RSS
Comments RSS
WP


0.304 || Powered by WordPress