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John Wayne Heard A Gold Star Father Denied His Son’s Medals In Oklahoma 1965 — He Wrote One Letter

John Wayne Heard A Gold Star Father Denied His Son’s Medals In Oklahoma 1965 — He Wrote One Letter

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March 1965, Muskogee, Oklahoma. The Veterans Administration Hospital lobby. A father’s son died at Chip Young Ni in February 1951. His medals never came. For 14 years, Walter Hoyt has come to this office. Today is his ninth visit. >> [music] >> The records clerk shuffles paperwork and does not look up. John Wayne sits [music] four seats down on a green vinyl bench.

He has come to visit a wartime friend on the surgical ward, a Marine staff sergeant who lost a leg at Saipan and who has been waiting on a new prosthetic since November. Wayne is 58 years old. He is wearing a dark wool blazer and a clean white shirt. He is not in a hurry. Walter Hoyt is 67. He is a retired railroad mechanic from Sallisaw, Oklahoma, 50 miles east.

He grips a manila folder against his coat. Inside the folder is a copy of a Western Union telegram dated February 14th, 1951. Inside the folder is a Purple Heart citation from 1953. Inside the folder is a recommendation for a Bronze Star signed by a battalion commander who died of cirrhosis in 1958. The Bronze Star itself has never arrived. Here is the story.

The waiting room is half full. Two younger men in dungarees who look like welders, a woman in a wool coat with a child asleep on her lap, an older black gentleman with a cane and a folded newspaper. The clerk calls names from a [music] list. Each name takes between four and seven minutes. Walter Hoyt has been here since 10:00 in the morning.

It is 2:15 in the afternoon. He has not eaten. The clerk calls his name without looking up. Walter Hoyt stands. He walks to the counter the way an old man walks to a counter he has walked to nine times, slow, square, quiet. “Sergeant Daniel Hoyt,” he says, “7th Cavalry, killed at Chipyong-ni, February 14th, ’51.” The clerk turns a page.

“Bronze Star recommendation. Yes, ma’am.” “Mr. Hoyt, your son’s file is still under review at the Department of the Army. It has been under review since 1953.” “I understand, sir. The Army takes its time on these.” Walter Hoyt does not move. He was 22 years old. He carried a wounded sergeant out under fire for half a mile in 8° below zero.

The man who wrote that recommendation is dead. The clerk closes the folder. She has had this conversation with him before. She knows the next words. “Mr. Hoyt, I have your address. When the file is processed, the medal will be mailed to you.” “You said that in 1958 and 1961.” “I am very sorry, sir.” “My wife died in 1962. She wanted to live long enough to hold it.

” The clerk does not respond. There is no form for that. Walter Hoyt waits. 1 second, 2, 3. He picks up his Manila folder. He puts on his brown felt hat. He turns toward the door. John Wayne watches him go. Engagement break. Where are you watching from tonight? Drop your state in the comments.

I want to see how far this story reaches. Pin a flag for Walter Hoyt while you’re at it. And engagement break. Wayne sits a moment longer. He looks at the empty seat where Walter Hoyt sat. He looks at the door swinging closed behind him. Then he stands. >> [music] >> He walks to the counter. The clerk looks up and her hand goes flat against the stack of forms.

Some clerks recognize him and some do not. This one does. “Ma’am,” Wayne says, >> [music] >> “Sergeant Daniel Hoyt, 7th Cavalry.” Chip Young Lee, 51. “Sir, I cannot release another man’s file to file number.” She finds it. She reads it to him. “Officer who approved the Purple Heart in ’53, name.” She finds that, too.

>> [music] >> “Battalion commander on the citation.” Lieutenant Colonel Earl Reese, deceased 1958. “Office of the Adjutant General, current name.” She looks at her index card. “Major General Walter D. Cleveland, sir.” Wayne writes none of it down. He nods once. He turns and walks out of the lobby.

He does not visit his Marine friend on the surgical ward today. That visit will keep. He finds Walter Hoyt in the parking lot, sitting in a faded green 1953 Ford pickup truck with the door open. The truck has a Sallisaw, Oklahoma license plate. Walter is folding the Manila folder closed across his [music] knees. He is not crying.

He is not anything. He is a man at the end of a thing he has done nine times. Wayne walks up. He does not introduce himself. The old man knows. Most older men in Oklahoma know. “Mr. Hoyt, sir, I need an address.” Walter Hoyt looks up. “Sir, you don’t” “An address [music] where the package should go.

” Walter looks at him a long moment. Then he gives him an address. Sallisaw, Oklahoma. Route 4, mailbox 11. The mailbox is a tin one his son helped him put up in the summer of 1948, the year before Daniel left for Korea. Wayne nods. He walks to his own car, a dark sedan rented out of Tulsa. >> [music] >> He gets in.

He drives toward downtown Muskogee. Walter Hoyt sits in his pickup for a long time before he starts the engine. The folder is on the seat beside him. The folder is empty of new paper. It always [music] is. The Severs Hotel sits on Broadway in downtown Muskogee. It is a six-story brick building from 1912. Wayne parks the rented Tulsa sedan on the street, walks past the brass-trimmed doors, and signs the guest register under his given name.

The desk clerk looks at the signature twice. Wayne asks for a room on the third floor. He asks for hotel stationery and a hotel envelope brought up. Room 307 has [music] a brass bed, a small wooden writing desk by a tall sash window, and a print of a Charles Russell painting over the dresser. Wayne hangs his blazer on the back of the chair.

He rolls his sleeves to the elbow. He sits down. He takes the cap off a fountain pen. He could have walked away. He could have gone to the surgical ward and visited his friend and driven back to Tulsa and flown home to California. He could have left it where the army left it. He could have left it where the clerk left it.

He could have given Walter Hoyt a hundred-dollar bill and a handshake and a story to tell at the VFW. Those were the easy versions, but instead he writes a letter. The letter is one page. It is addressed [music] to Major General Walter D. Cleveland, Office of the Adjutant General, Department of the Army, The Pentagon, Washington, D.C. Wayne and Cleveland served on the same Pacific bond tour in 1944.

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