The Patriot Files Forums  

Go Back   The Patriot Files Forums > Conflict posts > Vietnam

Post New Thread  Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 09-29-2004, 09:40 PM
David's Avatar
David David is offline
Administrator
 

Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 46,798
Distinctions
Special Projects VOM Staff Contributor 
Default Troy Liverman

Written by James Webb
Parade Contributing Editor James Webb was a Marine infantry officer in Vietnam and later served as Secretary of the Navy.


My office looks out on Arlington National Cemetery. Finishing a jog or restless with my writing, I often stroll its rolling hills and think of those who served our country during troubled times, now gathered in their final formations. Frequently, I find myself in one small corner of the cemetery where my father is buried, not far from a heroic squad leader who died under my command in Vietnam.

It was there, 10 years ago, that I first noticed Troy Liverman. He was on his knees, tending a grave that, unlike the others, was surrounded by a carefully trimmed shrub. His nearby car had a Marine Corps bumper sticker and Purple Heart license plates inscribed "45 & 68". I assumed he was a retired career solder who had been wounded in World War II and Vietnam, perhaps visiting the grave of a departed wife. But on my next visit, I went to the grave and saw that it belonged instead to his son. Marine Lance Cpl. John C. Liverman, 19, had been killed in Vietnam on December 11, 1968. I also noticed, with some amazement, that I had been wounded on what would have been his 20th birthday - July 10, 1969.

I would see Troy Liverman several times a year after that, on his knees before his son's headstone. The shrub remained neatly trimmed. Throughout the year, pots of yellow and white chrysanthemums were left in front of the marker. In December there would be a Christmas blanket, an elaborate tapestry of leaves and flowers. Over time I was taken by the power of these simple expressions of love, for in his visits I could see clearly the terrible burden borne by families that share a tradition of military service.

Johnny's grave became a landmark for me. Walking past it, I would remember the only time I saw my career-military father cry, when "Danny Boy" came on the radio as I prepared to ship out for Vietnam. Seeing Troy Liverman kneeling in the grass, I would think of my own son, growing up with a citizen-soldier legacy reaching back to the Revolutionary War, who already had told me he wanted to be a Marine. Embodied in Liverman's tragedy and its remembrance was the haunting tightrope so many American families walk every day: We teach our children that there is honor in serving our country, yet we live in dread of the price they may be called upon to pay.

It took me a long time to approach Troy Liverman, but once we met, it was only minutes before I began to think of him as a friend. He is a gruff, no-nonsense man who, at 74 bears the scars of a cancer operation and a hip replacement and still carries a knob of shrapnel in one leg from World War II. He gives his opinions bluntly yet sees humor in unexpected places.

Liverman grew up in Washington, D.C., where his father had moved from North Carolina to drive a cab. He became a soldier at 17 and in the final months of World War II was seriously wounded by a German mortar shell. Married at 20, a father at 22, he worked as a meter-reader for the Washington Gas Light Co., bought a house in the Maryland suburbs and raised three sons who became the focal point of his existence. The boys went to parochial school, played sports and listened to their father's homilies. On special days such as Easter and Christmas, there were cards and adoring notes to their dad. Troy Liverman still keeps them.

"There's no way to describe the feeling that I have for my sons," Liverman says today. "I don't know what I did to deserve this kind of love."

Like their father, when their time came, all three sons volunteered for the military. The eldest, Robert, now a corporate executive in Texas, was wounded in Vietnam in 1968 as an Army lieutenant, calling artillery onto his own position to stop an enemy attack. The youngest, James, who died five years ago of a liver ailment, served in the Marines after High School. But the middle son, Johnny, had it the hardest.

A shadowbox on a wall in Troy Liverman's rural Virginia home binds him and his sons together -- four men, three bronze Stars, six Purple Hearts. A professionally bound scrapbook recounts Johnny's life, from childhood report cards to his final days in Vietnam. Looking at his photos and notes, one meets a tough but loving kid with James Dean looks and a strong sense of family loyalty. He had lost cartilage in both knees to football, which could have excused him from the draft. Instead, he volunteered for the Marines. A picture in the scrapbook shows a smiling Johnny just after he enlisted in the summer of '67, holding a sign that reads "BEFORE."

There would be no "AFTER."

Johnny reached Vietnam in January 1968, just in time for the Tet Offensive, the worst fighting of the war. He was 18. His childhood friend and next-door neighbor, "Trippy" Streeks, had just been killed during the siege of Khe Sanh. Johnny reported to the famed "Walking Dead" -- First Battalion, Ninth Marines -- and was immediately thrown into heavy combat. In early March he was wounded in the shoulder by shrapnel. In late April he was hit again by shrapnel and suffered a serious gunshot would to his thigh. "The fighting was so fierce that they couldn't get him out for two days," Troy Liverman remembers. "He almost bled to death."

His wounds entitled Johnny to go to Okinawa, where he could have remained for the rest of his tour. But he grew restless. Learning that a close friend from his old unit had been killed, he volunteered to return to combat. "Grandma told me for yours and Mom's sake don't go back to Nam," Johnny wrote to his father. "But like you always said, Dad, 'A job worth doing is a job worth doing right.' I'm getting straight with myself. I have to go back and finish the job."

Back in Vietnam, Johnny was assigned to the Second Battalion, Fourth Marines, in the rugged terrain near the demilitarized zone. On Dec. 11, 1968, his company fount an extended battle along infamous Foxtrot Ridge. Johnny was wounded for the third time early in the battle. As the fight wore on, a bullet hit him in the head.

Troy Liverman was managing the night shift at a McDonald's in Rockville, Md., when a Marine Corps officer came in. It was just before Christmas, and the Marines had been busy with their seasonal Toys for Tots program, so it was not unusual to see an officer in dress blues in the restaurant late at night. but when the young lieutenant asked for him by name, Liverman knew.

"You think you've had disappointments and troubles in your life," he says. "But they all add up to nothing when a man is telling you your son is dead."

Johnny was buried a few days after Christmas on a slope that looks out from Arlington toward the monuments on the other side of the Potomac River, a short walk from the Iwo Jima Memorial. Few graves surrounded his then, but over time the cemetery has filled. In the early days, Troy Liverman spent countless hours at his son's grave, working out his grief. Against cemetery rules, he brought in sprigs of shrubbery, planting them around the stone and tending them himself. "The caretakers didn't mind," he remembers today. "They all knew me. I spent more time in the cemetery than they did."

In the summer of 1969, anti-war protests were held at the Pentagon, only a mile from Johnny's grave. When Troy Liverman heard that protest leaders would be reading the names of Vietnam dead, he became incensed and staged a one-man counterdemonstration. "When they saw me, they huddled for a while. Then the leader of the demonstration came over and told me they wouldn't be bothering me." Liverman says. "I told him that was a wise decision."

On three different days, he stood in the heat across from the rallies, carrying a sign that termed the demonstrators "parasites." It made the papers, but his motivation was simple loyalty to his son. "They had a right to protest," he says, "But they had no right to use his name to undermine his cause. My son was not a victim. He died serving his country."

When it comes to Vietnam, the years have not particularly mellowed Troy Liverman. The Clinton era was especially difficult. If he had known that a man who avoided serving while criticizing those who answered the call in Vietnam would someday be elected President, he reflects, "I would have pushed my sons into the basement and locked the door." And yet, hearing him say it, one knows that he would never have done it. "One of the things I'm proudest of," he says, "is that all four of us were true volunteers."

The years go by. The old veteran moves more slowly now. The sprigs he planted more than 30 years ago have grown into a thick shrub that surrounds Johnny's headstone on three sides. An apple tree, once a sapling, overshadows the grave. but above all, Troy Liverman has remained firm in his devotion -- to his son and to his cause. And those of us who fought in the war that took Johnny's life cannot help but look at his father with an enormous sense of gratitude. What more could we have asked for, had we ourselves not survived?

Every time I pass Johnny Liverman's grave in my strolls through Arlington, I think of son and father, father and son. I am thankful I lived to bury a father who had entered his dotage, and I pray that when I am a very old man, my son may likewise bury me. But always in my heart I will honor Johnny and the others like him, who got straight with themselves, who disregarded shrapnel and gunshot wounds and went back to finish the job. Who gave us everything they had. And who, as we grow old, will always be 19.
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
Sponsored Links
  #2  
Old 09-30-2004, 02:16 AM
SEATJERKER's Avatar
SEATJERKER SEATJERKER is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 2,985
Distinctions
VOM Contributor 
Default With God's Blessing,...

...

..."Hand Salute",...

..."Tu",...



..."May He Rest in Peace",...

...
__________________
"Let me tell you a story"
..."Have I got a story for you!"

Tom "ANDY" Andrzejczyk

...
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 09-30-2004, 11:09 AM
Boats's Avatar
Boats Boats is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Sauk Village, IL
Posts: 21,822
Default

My eyes watered slightly or did they just burn while I was reading this article? I felt his pain and saw those faces of lost friends of mine and their Dad's that I knew.

The bond between soldiers run deep. The depth of the emotions is tremendous and the out pouring of grief is endless. Mr. Livermore and other's like him will always reflect on those days but for them - their kids did the right thing.

There's something special about a family you grow up in whose grand-fathers, and father's before them would reflect on issues when they were once soldier's. What happens as we grow up is that they provide us kids an opportunity to look into their eyes while hearing their comments about the things they did during the great wars.

To hear them talk about their memories of the events which are everlasting in their minds, evetually pours over into their kids (like me) and allows us to strengthen our patriotic values a little more than most. Note: Never once did they ever tell me not to go into the service.

Military values transcend from one generation to another. They build up an inner strength and a courage from which when the call is needed there is no hesitation.

No thoughts about should I - or shouldn't I - we walk in - we sign up and we go. That's all thats to it. No second thoughts - no hesitation's - we just go.

It's like we are waiting our whole life to do what our fore-fathers have done before. Are we brave? I don't think so - I think its something else - its to be expected - its the inner thoughts you get as you grow grow up with x-military men around - and the stories that you took to bed at night. Its like preparation for that day - that you (me) get ready to enlist.

It completes the families moral responsibilities of sort. To make oneself complete as a man (or women), by serving your country and giving something back. We know that some will not return and that those families will suffer the agonies of that day.

But families that come from prior service related backgrounds also know the honor that is bestowed upon the memory of that fallen soldier and that his or her sacrifices will live for generations within the remaining family circles.

If you've come full circle and now your home - what normally happens next is that another family member steps forward to take your place within the military ranks. Never has anyone ever been forced or asked to join. It just happens. This ends up becoming a family tradition of sorts for those past and present members who've served.

I've struggled to find the words for this piece as I'm not a very good example of stoic vocabulary - but it came out after reading the piece above.
__________________
Boats

O Almighty Lord God, who neither slumberest nor sleepest; Protect and assist, we beseech thee, all those who at home or abroad, by land, by sea, or in the air, are serving this country, that they, being armed with thy defence, may be preserved evermore in all perils; and being filled with wisdom and girded with strength, may do their duty to thy honour and glory; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

"IN GOD WE TRUST"
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 09-30-2004, 11:42 AM
DMZ-LT DMZ-LT is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Atlanta , Ga
Posts: 5,599
Distinctions
VOM Contributor 
Thumbs up

Ya done good Boats , I thought you were Hardcore for a minute My Oma told me a long time ago that losing one of your children before you die is the hardest thing she has ever endured. I pray every day I never find out.
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 09-30-2004, 11:45 AM
Boats's Avatar
Boats Boats is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Sauk Village, IL
Posts: 21,822
Default

Amen to that but my Dad watched my brother die slowly from complications from agent orange and he said the same thing.
__________________
Boats

O Almighty Lord God, who neither slumberest nor sleepest; Protect and assist, we beseech thee, all those who at home or abroad, by land, by sea, or in the air, are serving this country, that they, being armed with thy defence, may be preserved evermore in all perils; and being filled with wisdom and girded with strength, may do their duty to thy honour and glory; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

"IN GOD WE TRUST"
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 09-30-2004, 11:46 AM
Gimpy's Avatar
Gimpy Gimpy is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Baileys Bayou, FL. (tarpon springs)
Posts: 4,498
Distinctions
VOM Contributor 
Default I'll

Just say what the LT said.

Plus................thanks David & Boats!
__________________


Gimpy

"MUD GRUNT/RIVERINE"


"I ain't no fortunate son"--CCR


"We have shared the incommunicable experience of war..........We have felt - we still feel - the passion of life to its top.........In our youth our hearts were touched with fire"

Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 09-30-2004, 03:19 PM
frisco-kid's Avatar
frisco-kid frisco-kid is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 2,574
Distinctions
VOM Contributor 
Default

I know you are resting in peace Johnny Liverman, because you "got straight with yourself" and are deeply loved by a Dad as only Dads can love..........and you know it.

SEMPER FIDELES, MARINE


Thanks for bringing this to us David.
__________________
Tom
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 09-30-2004, 05:29 PM
Jerry D's Avatar
Jerry D Jerry D is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Nahunta,GA
Posts: 3,680
Distinctions
VOM 
Default

God Bless the Livermore Family who gave all for their country
__________________
[><] Dixie born and proud of it.
sendpm.gif Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Task Force Troy or OPERATION TROY G.E.Kernaghan Gulf War 0 07-27-2004 11:50 AM
Marine From Troy Arrested,... SEATJERKER General Posts 3 10-22-2003 06:55 AM
South Troy against the world... SEATJERKER General Posts 0 12-16-2002 07:11 AM

All times are GMT -7. The time now is 07:19 PM.


Powered by vBulletin, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.