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Amazing Medal Of Honor Story About A Hero Hidden In Plain Sight at the Air Force Academy | |
2022-12-18 | |
![]() In Pueblo, Mr. Crawford learned to box to defend himself. He was nondescript and a bit shy. Mr. Crawford did his job sweeping and mopping floors, emptying trashcans, and cleaning bathrooms. The cadets were polite of course. They would say “hello” and perhaps make small talk with the janitor, but they were studying aeronautics, trigonometry, physics, and learning to fly supersonic war machines – there was little to be learned from Mr. Crawford. He was a janitor after all. In 1976, Crawford was an older man, but at 58 he wasn’t at “retirement” age either. He was still in pretty good shape. Trim and fit looking he might sweep floors for another decade or more. To the cadets, Mr. Crawford was just another face in the crowd of a lot of faces on campus. You saw him. You passed him in the hallways and you might say “good afternoon.” There were more important people to pay attention to. Also in 1976, James Moschgat was a cadet in his third year at the academy. That year, he was studying the Allied campaigns in Italy during WWII. The battle to secure mainland Italy was a long and bloody slog. Moschgat was reading an account about an attack on Hill 424 and specifically about a man awarded the Medal of Honor on 13, September 1943. The fighting was intense in the hilly county near Altavilla, about 30 miles north of Salerno. The Medal of Honor winner Moschgat was reading about was a private named William Crawford. The account said Crawford was presumed KIA and the Medal of Honor was given to his father, posthumously. In Moschgat’s history book, he saw a photo of Crawford. Moschgat did a double-take. He thought that the photo looked a lot like the man he knew as Mr. Crawford, the janitor. Moschgat shared his discovery with other cadets and they, as a group, approached Mr. Crawford. When the janitor was asked if that was him in Italy and if he won the Medal of Honor, Mr. Crawford admitted that it was him. “Yup that’s me,” Crawford said. After his heroics fighting Germans soldiers, his final act of heroism was to stay with a wounded comrade, rather than leave him alone. Crawford was captured and spent the rest of the war as a POW. While a prisoner, Crawford’s boxing skills came into play. A Nazi guard picked a fight with Crawford, and Crawford knocked the guard into unconsciousness. He was asked why he never mentioned that he was a war hero. He shrugged it off. “It was one day in my life,” he said, “and it happened a long time ago.” Because Crawford was presumed dead and the Medal of Honor was awarded “posthumously,” Crawford had never been honored with a ceremony. In 1984, that changed. President Reagan gave the commencement speech to the 1984 graduating class at the Air Force Academy, and Crawford was finally honored. President Reagan put Crawford’s Medal of Honor around his neck. Crawford was in uniform too. It turns out that Crawford served 25 years in the Army and retired in 1967 as a Master Sergeant. Moschgat, the cadet who discovered the janitor’s “secret,” went on to serve over two decades flying several fighter types including the F-4 and F-16 with 60 combat missions. He retired as a full colonel. Moschgat turned President Reagan’s leadership comments into leadership points. Here is the 10th and final point Life is a Leadership Laboratory. All too often we look to some school or PME class to teach us about leadership when, in fact, life is a leadership laboratory. Those you meet everyday will teach you enduring lessons if you just take the time to stop, look and listen. I spent four years at the Air Force Academy, took dozens of classes, read hundreds of books, and met thousands of great people. I gleaned leadership skills from all of them, but one of the people I remember most is Mr. Bill Crawford and the lessons he unknowingly taught. Don’t miss your opportunity to learn. Here is President Reagan’s speech to the graduating class of 1984. Mr. Crawford’s Medal of Honor ceremony begins at minute 19.
For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at risk of life above and beyond the call of duty in action with the enemy near Altavilla, Italy, 13 September 1943. We should never “judge” people by what they do for a living. Take the time to know them. You might find a hidden hero. | |
Posted by:NoMoreBS |
#5 Working late at the office a young hispanic couple would come in, empty the trash cans, vaccum the carpet, then leave. The wife appeared ashamed when I watched them. So each time I worked late and after they finished their tasks I thanked them both. From that point on she worked side by side with a sense of pride. |
Posted by: Mad Eye Omeretch7959 2022-12-18 20:30 |
#4 ^ and comfortable in whom he knows who he is. A great place. The most impressive people rarely need to explain themselves |
Posted by: Frank G 2022-12-18 19:43 |
#3 Great inspirational story. Crawford is a modest and humble man. |
Posted by: JohnQC 2022-12-18 17:36 |
#2 I've met several Medal of Honor recipients. They are all the most stunningly ordinary guys you could find. The one thread that they have/had is they all once said "Nope, not today" and then did something special (or stupid, according to which ones you talk to). |
Posted by: ed in texas 2022-12-18 09:41 |
#1 Excellent story, back when we had a President. |
Posted by: Besoeker 2022-12-18 04:20 |