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RIP Soldier: Four-Decade Vigil For MIA Vietnam Veteran Ends



May 16, 2011 6 Comments ›› Angelia

(CBS News)

MONTEVALLO, Ala. – In Alabama this weekend, closure came in a flag-draped coffin. After 43 years missing in Vietnam, the recently identified remains of an elite Army Green Beret soldier finally made it home.

“We thank you today Lord, that James Leslie Moreland has returned to the land where he came from,” the preacher said Saturday.

CBS News correspondent Steve Hartman reports the service marked an end to four decades of uncertainty for Moreland’s friends, family and one totally devoted, total stranger: Kathy Strong.

Strong never knew James Moreland – but will never forgot him either. “I made a promise and I wanted to keep it,” she says.

It was a promise she made Christmas day 1972 when Kathy, then 12 years old, got a metal bracelet in her stocking. It was one of those MIA-POW bracelets which were a popular fad in the 1970s. Each bracelet bore the name of a soldier who was either still a prisoner in Vietnam or missing in action. The idea was to wear the bracelet until your veteran came home.

Strong took the commitment more seriously than most. As her photos can attest – long after the other kids had moved onto bell bottoms and moon rocks, Kathy was still wearing her bracelet.

In fact when we first met her in March – there it was, same place it’d been every second of every day for 38 years.

She says she’s never taken it off. “Nope, had an MRI, had to keep my arm out of the machine, that was difficult,” she added. She was determined to only take it off for him.

“They showed footage back in the day of the soldiers coming off the planes and I always thought ‘I’m going to be there and have him put it on his arm,’ and that’s how I always pictured it,” Strong says. “But that wasn’t meant to be.”

Over the years Strong has really gotten to know James Moreland through, his 2 surviving sisters — who invited her to sit with them at the funeral. Strong also got special recognition Saturday from Col. Paul Longgrear, Moreland’s commanding officer – and perhaps Kathy’s biggest fan.

“This is quality that we just don’t hardly find in America anymore,” Longgrear says. “A commitment to her word even though she was a child.”

For too many of us, “supporting the troops” is nothing but lip service. Patriotism nothing but what we wear on our sleeve. Strong, however, with her bracelet, has shown us what being a truly proud American entails

And finally, as for that bracelet, Kathy did with it what she always said she would. The morning before the funeral she took it off and slipped it on the sleeve of Moreland’s uniform.

“It’s going to be hard. It’s going to take some getting used to,” she says. But I’ve come to learn that whether I’m wearing his bracelet or not, he’ll always be with me every day of my life.”


  • mike3481

    Wow, that caught me by surprise, Kathy Strong, God bless you.

    I found this about Moreland, may he rest in peace.

    James Leslie Moreland: A soldier remembered

    LAST UPDATED: FEBRUARY 22ND, 2011 07:50 AM (PST)

    James Leslie Moreland

    Born: Sept. 29, 1945, Bessemer, Ala.

    Killed in action: Feb. 7, 1968, at Lang Vei, South Vietnam,

    Education: 1963 graduate of Western High School, Anaheim, Calif., where he played varsity football and baseball and was an All-Orange County linebacker; attended Fullerton (Calif.) Junior College.

    Army career: Enlisted Oct. 1, 1965. Began tour in Vietnam on July 4, 1967. He was a combat medic assigned to Detachment B-16, Company C, 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne), 1st Special Forces.
    From his commander: “He was a neat guy. He was about 6-foot-1, about 185 pounds. He was a good-looking kid. And he had that Green Beret swagger back when we were 10 feet tall and bulletproof,” said retired Army Col. Paul Longgrear, who commanded Moreland while a first lieutenant in South Vietnam. Longgrear, now an ordained minister, will officiate at Moreland’s funeral in May.

    About the battle: On Feb. 6-7, 1968, during the Tet Offensive, North Vietnamese soldiers overran the Lang Vei Special Forces camp just east of the Laotian border. They came with tanks, cannons, satchel charges, tear gas grenades, flame throwers, automatic rifles and other weapons, according to accounts of the battle.

    A night of heroism: American losses were extreme. Nineteen men, including Moreland and Longgrear, were awarded the Silver Star – the nation’s third-highest military honor for heroism in combat – for their courage under fire that night. One soldier received the Medal of Honor; two others received the Distinguished Service Cross. Many of the medals were posthumously awarded. The Army citation for Moreland reads in part: “Braving withering cannon, mortar and machine gun fire, Specialist Moreland moved through a hail of bullets and shrapnel to treat the wounded.” He later helped fellow soldiers destroy a tank in the face of heavy fire and “with bullets striking all around him” went to resupply ammunition, the citation says. “He was seriously wounded when the position received a direct hit and was neutralized.”

  • amy

    “This is quality that we just don’t hardly find in America anymore,” Longgrear says. “A commitment to her word even though she was a child.”
    What a special and wonderful woman. :beer:

    • amy

      Welcome home Soldier, may you truly be able to rest in peace now.

  • Tom in CO

    :beer:

  • Kirk

    Honor, is certainly exemplified by these two people, as well as those listed here:
    http://www.langvei.com/

  • http://sweetface24.blogspot.com/ danie

    This seriously brought tears to my eyes. Welcome home!