Omegamen At War | Omegamen at War |
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War Against Terrorism
Brother Pete Johansen - Beta Chi Chapter
Peter C. Johansen joined Beta Chi Chapter in
Captain Johansen, (center) assumes command in Kuwait.
Dear Brothers, One of the time honored traditions of the US Navy is the Change of Command Ceremony. While the Navy may give you a set of orders that directs you to assume a new command, it does not become official until the torch is passed. The incumbent Commanding Officer says, "I am ready to be relieved" and the new CO says "I relieve you, sir". Then the outgoing CO says "I stand relieved" and the deed is done. In 2003, I stood up the Military Sealift Command Office in Iskenderun, Turkey as the US was preparing for a northern invasion of Iraq through Turkey. We had discharged 8 vessels worth of logistics gear and built a supply route to the Iraq border before the Turkisk parliament voted against allowing the US to use their country for a war against Iraq. Fraternally, Brother Pete Johansen
Brother Kevin Toner, Beta Pi Chapter
Brother Kevin R. Toner joined Beta Pi Chapter in Pompton Lakes, N.J., during the summer of 1989 and was graduated in 1993. He graduated the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1997 and remains an actice duty Army officer. He earned a Masters Degree from Columbia University and is currently a professor at West Point.
In Iraq: As Captain, Commander Delta Troop, 4th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division.
Troop was securing area outside of Ramadi, capital of Al Anbar Province. Brother Kevin is on his way to a meeting with an anti-coalition sheik at a local mosque.
Conducting training with anti-tank rockets in open desert southwest of Fallujah.
Brother Mattheus Pacheco, Alpha Phi Chapter
Mattheus C. Pacheco, is a 2006 graduate of East Rockaway's Alpha Phi Chapter. Matt played Lacrosse, was in the Key Club, SADD, the Bully Prevention Program, the orchestra and the orchestras for the Annual Musical and Rock Rivalry while at SPC Pacheco, US Army, in Afganistan Interacting with local tribesmen in
This is a wealthy home in
Brother Matt on patrol on a mountain in eastern
Brother Pacheco riding patrol in the turret of his humvee with a 7.62 mm M249 machine gun.
Omegamen in World War I
The records of Omega specifically show the wartime service of some 268 brothers out of the total of 1,300 who had been initiated by that time. It is fair to assume that the honest total would have been closer to 300. A number of Omega brothers made the supreme sacrifice in the war and there were probably a few more whose names have gone unrecorded:
Lieutenant Leslie Herbert Groser, Alpha '06 Cadet Bert Rice Smith, Alpha '08 Corporal Joseph Paxton McKinney, Alpha/Mu '14 Private Thomas O. Hokenson, Alpha '15 Corporal Henry Ingersoll, Gamma '11 Corporal Thomas F. Galwey, Delta '12 Master Engineer Thomas Jeffrey Doran, Eta '06 Corporal Eliphalet Snedecor Jr., Iota '11 Private Albert A. Klaiber, Mu '14 Lieutenant David Irving Reynolds, Omicron '14
In addition to those who died in service, several brothers made contributions of especial note:
Ensign Tedford H. Cann, Epsilon '14: First man to earn Congressional Medal of Honor in WW I.
Lt. Commander Robert MacCulloch, Beta '09: First man ever to win the Navy Cross; winner of Distinguished Service Medal.
Major Joseph May Swing, Kappa '10, served on the western front as commander of an artillery unit and then was promoted to be Aide-de-Camp to the Army's Chief of Staff, General Peyton C. March.
Lt. Commander Jeremiah A. Starr, Delta '05: Commander, USS Asushnet.
Major David Lukens Shoemaker Brewster, Eta '06, one of the first licensed pilots in the U.S. Marine Corps, commanded the First Marine Aeronautic Company on anti-submarine patrol from the Azoeres Islands, the first American aviation unit to serve overseas in WW I.
Major W. Vernol Cadmus, Beta '11
Thomas Childs, Epsilon '09: General Staff,
Joseph P. McKinney, Alpha/Mu '14: Twice personally decorated by General Pershing. French Croix de Guerre.
In addition, at least 12 brothers reached the rank of Captain during the war: Clifford H. Ayers, Beta '04; Samuel A. Coykendall, Alpha '07; Percy T. Edrop, Alpha '02; William Fairhurst, Beta '08; Chester L. Fordney, Lambda '10; Raymond M. Gunnison, Gamma '03; Charles W. Johnston, Alpha '04; John S. McKinney Eta '06; Joseph E. Mirandon, Beta '07; George F. Meyers, Beta '07; Harold W. Rudolph, Mu '12; Walter W. Stake, Epsilon '09.
And of course there was future Honorary Alpha Eta Brother Newton D. Baker Jr., who served as Secretary of War.
An Omegaman Who Couldn't Wait
Youth is seldom willing to wait. In both World War I and II, many young brothers couldn't wait until graduation-time to "join the colors." Some of them couldn't even wait until they reached the minimum age and joined up illegally. The New York Times for "The United States naval transport President Grant arrived yesterday from Brest after a voyage of eighteen days due partly to standing by the disabled steamship Polar Bear ...Among the heroes who returned on the President Grant was Cornelius Fiske, formerly a private in the Sixth Marines who distinguished themselves at Belleau Wood, Soissons and Chateau Thierry. He was a naval prisoner in the ship's brig because he had joined the navy when he was sixteen years old and after a short stay at a training station he had gone to France as a member of the crew of the President Grant and deserted on his return to New York to join the Marines. He was sent to the 74th Company of the Sixth Regiment and was one of 14 survivors of that company after The story went on to relate that Brother Fiske had turned himself in to the military authorities after the fighting had ended and that the arresting officer has been so impressed with the record of the young man, who was still under the legal age for enlistment, that he had obtained special permission to return with him to the United States to defend him at his Court Martial. There is no newspaper account of the outcome of that trial, but it is fair to guess that the court had much the same opinion of Brother Fiske since he was back at Boys' High School by the opening of the following school year.
An Omega's Voice on the War
Omega's Founder the Rev. Percy T. Edrop, '02, was a journalist before entering the ministry, being a reporter or editor for The
Omegamen in World War II
Omega's record of service for World War II is less clear than that of World War I because so many chapters never reorganized after the war and therefore were unable to do the research needed to provide accurate records. The number publicly recorded is 450 and it can be safely assumed that an accurate total would come closer to 1,000. Of these, the following is the list of brothers known to have given their lives in service. It is more complete than the general service list, but probably also is missing additional Gold Star Brothers. One matter of note is that two former Grand Princepses of Omega were among the dead. A third was so disabled by World War II service that he eventually died as a result.
Gunner Ronald Stewart Knaus, Beta '20. William Abram Storms, Beta '38 Robert Fischer, Delta '34, Naval Aviation Brigadier General David Lukens Shoemaker Brewster, Eta '06 Lieutenant George Waldron Petersen, Theta III '32 Lieutenant Robert G. White, Theta III '35 Martin G. Spinelli, Theta III '39, Technical Sergeant Frank A. Neu, Theta III '39 Lieutenant John E. Eichmann, Theta III '40 Lieutenant Charles Pratt Canham Jr., Iota '29 2nd Lieutenant William Masson Brick, Iota '39 Charles Francis Brennan, Kappa '25 Major Horace John Greeley, Mu '30 Morgan V. Desmond, Mu '34 Joseph Lane, Mu '34 Walter Danielson, Mu '39 Edward O'Hanlon, Mu '39 Captain Daniel Edward Kent, Rho '18 Lieutenant George A. Kain, Rho '38 Lieutenant Elmer Paul Mongarelli, Rho '40 Captain William Lewis Hoppes, Tau '22 Robert Hulbert Jr., Tau '41 Arthur Ziegler, Upsilon '27 Second Lieutenant Daniel J. Haggerty, Chi '28 Second Lieutenant Douglas C. Banks, Alpha Alpha '37 Norman Banks, Alpha Alpha John Masciolli, Alpha Gamma Ensign William T. Nessenger Jr., Alpha Iota '30 Charles Cordes, Alpha Iota '40 Sergeant Campbell T. Ames, Alpha Lambda '33 William W. Murphy, Alpha Mu '37, Army Air Force Staff Sergeant Eugene Owen Gladd, Alpha Sigma '33 Private First Class Stephen Vincent Cannone, Alpha Sigma '42 William Smith, Alpha Sigma Thomas F. Moore, Alpha Phi '37 Quartermaster Second Class John Joseph McNamara, Alpha Phi '38 Andrew Adam Dyke, Alpha Phi '38, Army Air Force Robert Mason, Alpha Phi '38 Edward C. Gibbson, Alpha Phi '41 Seaman Second Class Robert Leonard Bonagura, Alpha Phi '41 August Vogt, Alpha Phi '42 Lieutenant Owen H. Salvage, Alpha Psi '37 William Nally, Alpha Psi '38 Thomas O'Neil, Beta Alpha II '42 Private First Class Robert C. Rachofsky, Beta Gamma '41 First among Omegaman to achieve "flag" rank in World War II (and incidentally to become one of the fraternity's last Gold Stars) was Brother David L. S. Brewster who joined Omega's Eta Chapter in Washington D.C. as a student at McKinley Manual Training High School in 1906. McKinley was Washington's "technical" high school and its graduates tended to gravitate to engineering and the milatary. Brewster was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Marine Corps in 1910. He became interested in aviation and by the time the United States entered World War I was a qualified pilot in dirigibles, balloons and regular aircraft. His assignment during the war was sinking German submarines that surfaced in the Atlantic.
Over the course of the next 20 years, Brewster achieved a solid reputation as one of the Marine Corps' workhorse officers, especially during the Second to reach "star" status was Brother Joseph May Swing, Kappa '10. Born in Assigned to the Field Artillery on graduation, he participated in General Pershing's 1916 Punitive Expedition to Between the wars Swing held a number of responsible positions in the artillery forces including as Chief of the War Plans Section. As a Brigadier General, just after the opening of World War II, Brother Swing prepared the artillery of the First Cavalry Division for war-time service. Starting in 1940, the Army had been experimenting with the idea of airborne infantry troops and, in August of 1942, created two entire airborne divisions, the 82nd and the 101st. Joe Swing was one of the first volunteers for this radical departure from traditional Army doctrine and became artillery commander of the 82nd; his counterpart at the 101st was Anthony McAuliffe who won fame with his "Nuts" remark at Bastogne. Generals Matthew Ridgway and Maxwell Taylor (both future Army Chiefs of Staff) were also among the dozen leaders picked to implement the new airborne program. After six months of putting the 82nd into fighting order, Swing was promoted to Major General and given his own airborne division (the 11th) to organize from scratch. In the meantime there had been limited use of airborne troops during the North African campaign and Swing was detached from his command to become Eisenhower's airborne advisor during the
So far, General Swing had missed leading his forces into actual combat;
Following the war Brother Swing became the first Omegaman to lead the Army Command and General Staff School and then retired as a Lieutenant General commanding the In many respects the last of our trio of generals is the one who ended up having the broadest influence on the world of the
As a top graduate, Davidson had been commissioned in the Corps of Engineers, which made him a poor prospect for promotion to general in the way the Army was then structured. But it allowed him to be in charge of the Army's billion-dollar construction budget as it built-up for the coming war. From there he became Engineering Officer to General George Patton in
As one of the Army's most intellectual generals, Brother Gar was appointed President of the first
In the early part of the Korean Conflict, General Davidson commanded several United Nations combat forces and was Chief of the Korean Military Assistance Group. In the opening months of the war, Gar led the famous end run of "Task Force Davidson" that encircled large numbers of North Koreans at the so-called From Throughout his life, Gar Davidson remained actively interested in Omega. Like many other members of Pi Chapter who grew up in the "tough" parts of Gar was buried with full military honors at the On May 21, 2008, in ceremonies at the U. S. Chamber of Commerce's Hall of Flags in Washington DC, it was announced to a large gathering attended by numerous current and retired military leaders, that the U. S. Military Academy was instituting an Oral History Center at West Point in honor of General Davidson to collect first hand accounts of past and future military experience.
Omegamen in the Vietnam Conflict Colonel Paul Oswald Meder, Alpha Mu '48 Norman William Courbois, Alpha Phi '56 Private First Class Gary William Thornlow, Alpha Phi '65 Lieutenant Jon Marc King, Alpha Chi '60 Private First Class Ronald Vincent Maiorana, Beta Gamma '64 Staff Sergeant Thomas Anthony Scibelli, Beta Psi '58 Specialist Fourth Class Joseph John Grande Jr., Gamma Psi '60 Lieutenant Anthony Alfred Giretti, Iota Rho '61 Sergeant Kevin Bernard McGovern, Tau Zeta '65 Private First Class Wayne Lee Middleton, Delta Psi Delta '61
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