The Veterans' Voice © 2009
Seeing A Lady Warrior Off to Iraq

When Tanna Bia came to Aztec VFW Post 614 to celebrate a birthday and going away party she had no idea what else was going to become a part of our Post History.

Tanna is being shipped out to Iraq and her family and friends were there in the Post Dining Room to see her off. She was surprised beyond words when the VFW Officers and some Army Personnel walked to the podium and asked her to please come forward.

Commander Abe Saiz then made a few opening remarks and presented her with a New Mexico State Flag. The New Mexico State Flag has a yellow field with a red Zia Sun Symbol in the center. It seems appropriate that a state with so many Native American Warriors should have such a flag.
 
As a Life Member of Post 614 and the proponent for Mount KIA/MIA it was my pleasure to present a Mount KIA/MIA Challenge Coin to her.
 
While there are already a few of these challenge coins in circulation, we expect them to become very popular. They will be sold for fifteen dollars each and a part of the proceeds will go toward continuing efforts toward a Mount KIA/MIA Memorial, and we are hoping that there will be a memorial built in the city of Saguache. We are also searching to find a place where people can bring, or send, dog tags honoring killed or missing military personnel. Since these stainless steel tags are almost indestructible it is hoped that there will be a perpetual place of honor for them. We really don’t think they should be on the mountain, but more likely at a “memorial” to be built for this special purpose in Saguache.
 
New Mexico is proud of all its warriors and I was honored to present the Challenge Coin to one of our Lady Warriors. We wish her a safe journey and look forward to seeing her again when she returns home.

A sunny day and a clear blue sky greeted us as we memorialized Army Cpl. John Spruell. As I stood there I could not help but feel the warmth of this December day and compare it to the cold of the Korean War. The people of Cortez can be proud of the event.

On Saturday, December 06, 2008 more than 100 family members, classmates and friends gathered at the Cortez Cemetery to see the memorial for Army Cpl. John A. Spruell dedicated. It was 58 years to the day since Spruell went missing West of Chosin Reservoir while fighting the Communist Chinese Forces in North Korea.

I traveled to Cortez because of my interest in honoring our heroes, because I was invited, and because Cpl. Spruell was part of a military unit that I had been researching for over six years. He was a member of Btry. B 57th FA Battalion, 7th Infantry Division.

When I read the data on Cpl. Spruell I realized that he had been in the same unit as Sgt. Jimmie Jumbo who I have often written about. Jimmie was from Toadlena, New Mexico and he and Spruell went missing on the same day at Hagaru-Ri North Korea, at the Chosin Reservoir. Spruell and Jumbo were from the Four-Corners Area and being soldiers I believe they would have talked about home. They may have discussed Fry Bread, Mutton Stew, Home Fries and Tacos, and probably family and girlfriends were discussed.

A funeral for my friend of many years, Glen Gabehart, was being carried out in Aztec, New Mexico on the same day as Spruell’s memorial and I thought of Glen as I stood there watching the dedication. Glen and I are members of Farmington High School Class of 1949 and the last time we visited we were looking forward to our upcoming 60th Class Reunion.

As we stood beneath a bright sun viewing a clear blue sky I gave thanks for the weather. This man deserved good weather on the day his memorial was dedicated. As I watched the wonderfully performed ceremony my eyes focused beyond the Speakers and the Honor Guard and the crowd as I looked toward Sleeping Ute Mountain behind them. Surely John Spruell saw this mountain every day he lived in Cortez, and it is fitting that his memorial be within view of this famous landmark



When I visit Cortez I will always stop for a moment at the Southwest corner of the Cortez Cemetery and stand at Cpl. Spruell’s memorial stone to say a prayer for him and his buddy Sgt. Jimmie Jumbo and gaze to the West to enjoy that same Sleeping Ute Mountain that I first viewed as a five year old boy when my family moved to Cortez in 1935

I have a younger brother who lives in Cortez now and who is also a Korean War Veteran, and I am sure that George will be pleased to place a fresh red rose on John Spruell’s memorial stone now and then.

A donor who asked not to be identified provided seed-money to the Cortez cemetery to establish a Memorial Fund in Cpl. John A. Spruell’s name. The fund will be used for maintaining the Veteran’s Section of this cemetery. The fund will repair older headstones and provide a buffer if a family cannot afford the hundred and forty dollar cost of stone-setting. Should you desire to contribute to this fund please contact Dennis Spruell, The Cortez Cemetery, or the Cortez Journal Newspaper.

Even after 58 years, it was evident that John Spruell was a favorite with his high school friends and the younger family members who had never met him. Now they will learn about the events of late November and early December 1950 when a small American Force held off the Chinese Army “East of Chosin” just long enough that the Marines and the few surviving Army personnel were able to fight their way out to the sea, and live to fight another day.

When I arrived at home I could not help but think of the love these “Chosin Few” have for each other, so I telephoned my friend Sgt. Carson Gentry who lives in Johnson City Tennessee. Gentry was a part of that unit and had survived having been a prisoner of the Communist Chinese for years. He was the one who first contacted me with a photo and information about Jimmie Jumbo and has put me in contact with others of these brave men who survived the battle West of Chosin. When you look at the photo of Gentry and Jumbo please remember that Gentry still had this photo over 50 years after the event, and that he has fond memories of Jimmie and his other buddies.

The story of the Korean War, which is called “the forgotten war”, is the story of men who still care about each other. Those who fought in this war will never forget!

Bruce L Salisbury
© 12 December 2008



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By Bruce Salisbury



Divide & Conquer
We live in interesting times. The retired elderly and the retired military have not received their usual “cost of living raises” for three years now, and this has saved a lot of money for our struggling economy, but rather than thank us for our contributions the government is looking at more reductions in health services and benefits from these groups as well as the active military. They have not, however, planned to reduce the benefits of that massive group in America who pay zero taxes and who suck up the most benefits. How can 40% of a nation be paying zero taxes while the just over 1% of the country who serve in our volunteer military services to fight and die for what many of us believe is vital, are oftentimes denied the vote?
 
Time after time we find that many of our military member’s votes are not counted because of political maneuvering. Why are politicians afraid of this small percentage of our population? Can it be that those in the military tend to be conservative? I guess being out in the real world and involved in helping people who really do need our support tends to make our volunteer military conservative (no matter their politics).

  The latest estimate of illegal aliens among us suggests that there are around 20 million illegal aliens in America today. The truth is that nobody knows. About 3,060,000 are serving in the American military today, this includes the reserves. Our own active military are outnumbered by our increasing alien population. Does shrinking the military just now make sense?

  In the veteran/military community, too, we are politically divided and the veterans of one war are played against the veterans of another. The VA has for some years given different treatment to military veterans from different wars. For example, anyone who was, or claimed to be, or thought they might have been in Viet Nam during that war has an ever increasing list of illnesses that are considered “presumptive” while the veterans of other conflicts are hard pressed to be accepted for any service-connected disabilities.

  Every year pressure groups try to have more and more people and ships at sea added to that “Viet Nam presumptive list” so that they are able to claim “Agent Orange related disability.”

  At the same time the World War Two and Korean War Veterans are dying in ever increasing numbers. This should have caused the VA to collapse upon itself and have ever fewer patients.  They should have been able to close clinics and hospitals all across the country, but the opposite has occurred. With each passing year the VA Hospitals have more service-connected patients coming onboard. Could it be that the VA is shopping for more customers in order to keep their jobs and retire with a nice package?

  Any way you cut it, America’s politicians have played us all against each other and those who sit on their ass in front of a free TV eating government furnished food will probably always vote for more free stuff. If I read the news correctly the US Government has overspent our USAcredit card and we are becoming a “Forth World Country.” We are broke and in debt, and had better get our heads out of a dark place.