by Staff Sgt. J. Aaron Breeden
21st Space Wing Public Affairs
9/10/2013 - PETERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Colo. -- For
nearly three decades, Lt. Col. Rich Operhall, 76th Space Control
Squadron commander, has fueled his love of Air Force history and
heritage by collecting patches.
A lot of them. More than 15,000 at last count.
The son of a three-war Air Force veteran, Operhall said his love of the
Air Force began in second grade. He recalled childhood memories of
drawing planes and being fascinated by the flying world.
"In junior high school I had a friend ... and he discovered that by
writing to Air Force bases, to public affairs offices and other places,
they would send him stuff," said Operhall. "He showed me how to do it
and I started writing to different public affairs offices for the
various wings and bases and they started sending me stuff."
"I'd get fact sheets and pictures and base guides and ... occasionally
they'd send stickers and things from the various units," said Operhall.
"And for a small kid, this treasure trove of free stuff was great!"
Operhall said it was a response he received from the now defunct Bitburg Air Base in Germany that began his patch collection.
"The Bitburg public affairs office sent me a stack of patches," said
Operhall. "I was like, 'Oh, this is cool.' So, as part of my request
when I would write to the different bases, I started asking for
patches."
While Operhall's initial requests were sometimes denied, he still persisted.
"If I would get turned down, I would subsequently write to the
individual units and try to get patches from them," Operhall said. "And
low and behold, after writing to them, the next thing you know I've got
100 patches and then 200 patches and it started growing and growing from
there."
His collection continued into his teenage years, as well as his interest in the Air Force.
"I joined the Civil Air Patrol when I was 13 and that actually fueled
(my collection) even more because we'd go visit Air Force bases and
literally, I would go around bumming patches from people at the
different units, including some of the air crew," said Operhall.
"The nice thing is when you're a young kid, people tend to give you stuff," he added.
Over the years, Operhall's collection grew and grew and so did the
interesting responses. Some of the more memorable letters he received
were from James Doolittle III and also a former Thunderbird who returned
a letter on Thunderbird stationary.
For Operhall, however, this passion is more than simply collecting
patches. It is about the stories behind the patches and the people who
make those stories come to life.
"The patches fuel for me a passion for Air Force history connected to
our heritage, and although it's a short heritage, it's a pretty
distinguished heritage," he said.
"The patches tie us back to our history, to the people who came before
us, to all of the giants and to all of the little people ... who make
the Air Force work day-to-day," said Operhall. "And that's really what
all of this stuff represents. It's about Airmen, it's about people."
Saturday, September 14, 2013
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