Comments & Curiosities -- Peter Buffa
Sad news this week. Col. William Barber passed away on April 19. If
you ever met Bill Barber, consider yourself lucky. If you knew him,
consider yourself honored. If he was a friend, consider yourself
privileged.
Bill was a friend and a mentor for many years and supported me every
time I ran, which was early and often. It sounds like a cliche straight
out of Reader’s Digest, but Bill Barber really was one of the most
extraordinary people I’ve ever met.
The official file reads something like this: “William E. Barber, Col.,
USMC (Ret.) -- career officer who served with honor in World War II,
Korea and Vietnam. One of the best known and most respected Korean War
veterans, Col. Barber received the Congressional Medal of Honor for his
extraordinary heroism at the Battle of Chosin Reservoir in 1950.”
But as remarkable as his record of military service was, it just
doesn’t tell you enough about Bill Barber.
He was a true Southern gentleman, born in West Liberty, Ky. in 1919,
though he looked and sounded much younger than his years.
When you’re training to be a military officer, you spend a lot of time
studying something called “command presence.” To a large degree, it’s
what makes a leader a leader, but it’s hard to define. It’s a certain
something in how someone looks and sounds and acts that makes other
people willing to follow them.
I’ve had the privilege of chatting it up with presidents, generals,
billionaires and a veritable boatload of big shots -- from Mickey Mantle
to Maggie Thatcher. Very impressive, but Bill Barber had more command
presence than all of them combined.
The one thing for which Bill Barber had no talent whatsoever was
talking about himself, which is typical of combat veterans. People who
have a lot of stories about what they did in the war usually didn’t do
much. And people who saw and did the things that no one should ever see
or do usually have no stories to tell. Bill Barber followed that model,
almost to a fault.
Ironically, in Bill’s case, it didn’t matter. If Bill Barber had spent
his life running a small coffee shop in the smallest town in Kentucky,
instead of being one of the most respected military veterans in our
history, everyone who met him would be just as bowled over. It wasn’t
Bill’s rank or his medals that made people want to follow him. It was
Bill. When people run across his name in the history books now and
forever, they won’t find much under “Bill Barber,” but they’ll find
plenty under “Col. William E. Barber, USMC.”
Col. Barber enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1940. He received a
commission as a second lieutenant in 1943, was promoted to first
lieutenant in 1944, and was soon in the thick of it of the Pacific
campaign as a platoon leader in the Battle of Iwo Jima.
When his company commander was wounded, Bill took over and led his men
through one of the fiercest battles of the war in the Pacific. While
trying to rescue two wounded men under heavy fire, Bill was seriously
wounded himself, for which he received the Silver Star and a Purple
Heart. But it would be six years later, in Korea, that Col. William
Barber’s place in American military history would be secured.
By November of 1950, Capt. Bill Barber was commanding Company F, 7th
Marine Regiment 1st Marine Division. The Battle of Chosin Reservoir --
“Frozen Chosin” -- was underway, just south of the Yalu River that
separates North Korea from China.
Frozen Chosin was one of the most hostile environments that American
forces, or anyone else’s, had ever endured. The cold was brutal and
unrelenting, with air temperatures from five to 20 degrees below zero.
Just moving and breathing required enormous effort, let alone fighting.
On Nov. 27, more than 120,000 Chinese troops came roaring across the
Korean border in one human wave after another. Col. Barber’s Fox Company
was ordered to push forward and secure a narrow pass that would be the
only escape route for the thousands of Marines around Chosin Reservoir
had they been overrun.
Col. Barber and his 220 riflemen withstood five days and nights of
relentless assaults by Chinese regulars, even though they were
drastically outnumbered and miles from the nearest friendly force. When
the situation seemed hopeless, Col. Barber ignored repeated orders to
fall back and continued to rally his men, which is when a bullet tore
through his thigh and shattered a bone in his leg.
Bill had two of his men strap him to a stretcher and pull him from one
position to another so he could direct his men in the firefight, during
which he continued to fire his own weapon.
When the fight was done, only 82 men in Fox Company walked away, but
many military historians feel that thousands of Marines around Frozen
Chosin might have been lost without their heroism and Col. Barber’s
leadership.
Not long after, President Truman draped a Congressional Medal of Honor
around Bill Barber’s neck. Bill was proud and appreciative and, of
course, embarrassed by the attention.
Col. Barber answered the call again in the Vietnam War, and was
awarded the Legion of Merit for his service there before retiring from
the Corps in 1970.
On Friday morning, many of us gathered to say goodbye to Bill Barber,
most importantly his family, and the other Medal of Honor recipients in
the area, like Walt Ehlers of Buena Park, all of whose stories of heroism
and self-sacrifice deserve to told time and time again. There you have
it. That gives you just a small idea of who Col. William E. Barber was.
God speed, Bill. We are all in your debt. Forever.
* PETER BUFFA is a former Costa Mesa mayor. His column runs Sundays.
He may be reached via e-mail at PtrB4@aol.com.
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