American Forces Press Service
ARLINGTON, Va., June 21, 2012 – The
military’s top enlisted member joined a local chapter of the Sgt. Audie L.
Murphy Club here yesterday in honoring the club’s namesake on his birthday.
Marine Corps Sgt. Maj. Bryan B.
Battaglia, senior enlisted advisor to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, joined the Military District of Washington Sergeant Audie L. Murphy Club
in a wreath-laying ceremony to pay tribute to the American war hero, a Medal of
Honor recipient, who is buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
“Eighty-eight years ago today,”
Battaglia said at the event, “we see a young man like Audie Leon Murphy who
would become such a great American hero … through his life – especially the
life he served protecting our nation. [It’s] quite impressive.”
Battaglia noted that Murphy attained the
rank of staff sergeant just a year and a half after joining the Army. He
received a battlefield commission in October 1944, and rose to the rank of
major.
“[But] Sergeant Audie Murphy wasn’t
someone about awards,” Battaglia said. “He was about taking care of his men and
women and getting the mission accomplished. And that’s why I say … it’s
befitting of me to … recognize Sergeant Audie Murphy on his birthday, a very
monumental date in the history of our … armed forces. But [I’m also here to]
thank the members of his club and the loyal and dedicated soldiers that
continue to serve honorably and with distinguished contributions and
volunteerism throughout their communities and neighborhoods.”
Battaglia was joined by Army Sgt. 1st
Class Jessica Taylor, president of the local chapter, who serves in the Office
of the Secretary of Defense Mess.
“It is my honor today to honor the
leader of our charge in the Sgt. Audie Murphy Club – Audie Leon Murphy,” she
said. “Today would be his 88th birthday. We welcome you all.”
Other club members played prominent
roles during the ceremony, including treasurer Army Staff Sgt. Tanner Welch,
who recited Murphy’s biography.
“Audie Murphy was killed in a plane
crash on a mountain top in Roanoke, Va., May 28, 1971,” Welch said. “Fittingly,
his body was recovered two days later on Memorial Day.”
“Audie may have been the last American
war hero,” he added. “He was the best combat soldier in the 200-plus year
history of the United States.”
Battaglia said Audie Murphy is buried
next to “thousands and thousands of great American service men and women,” but
is special in his own right.
“I think his service in the Army goes
beyond just that in the Army,” he said after the ceremony, reflecting on what
he has read about Murphy. “I’d like it to resonate throughout all the services.
He wasn’t worried about awards and decorations. The man was there to accomplish
a mission, he was there to protect his country, and he was there to protect his
men and women. And that’s all he really cared about.”
Club member Army Master Sgt. Flora
McKnight, operations officer for the Military District of Washington, agreed
with the sergeant major.
“We do this in order to honor Sergeant
Audie Murphy,” she said. “Through his abilities as a noncommissioned officer,
he took care of soldiers, and that’s what we do – we take care of soldiers and
give back to the community.
“Through selflessness … we have an
opportunity to give back to others and to show others the correct way doing
that,” McKnight continued. “The selflessness comes from us giving back to our
community – not only the military community, but our civilian community --
because we all form a bond.”
Battaglia noted a personal connection.
He served a year-long deployment in Iraq, starting in February 2007, with one
of the 3rd Infantry Division brigades to which Murphy was assigned.
“He set a legacy that carries on today.
… I think all of our service members, not just soldiers … can use Audie Murphy
as an example to emulate,” Battaglia said.
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