Showing posts with label outrageous hero. Show all posts
Showing posts with label outrageous hero. Show all posts

3/03/2019

Julie Gallaher and B.T. Collins, Election Night 1991
I've Never Liked Any Politician More
Mark Shields
Washington Post April 3, 1993

Let me confess: I generally like politicians: they're willing to openly risk public rejection. And of all the politicians I've known and liked, I never liked any one of them any more than California Assemblyman B.T. Collins, who died much too soon at 52 after a massive heart attack last month in Sacramento.




B. T. Collins Tribute


This is a reposting of a series of blogposts I did in 2005, on the 12 year anniversary of B.T. Collin's death. It'll be 25 years this month. We all still miss him.



  • Of Better Men - Geoff Metcalf
  • The Courage of Sam Bird - by B.T. Collins - Reader's Digest
  • The California Viet Nam Veterans Memorial
  • My Friend in Need - by B.T. Collins - The Wall Street Journal
  • Burying Tradition: More People Opt for "Fun" Funerals - The Wall Street Journal
  • B.T. Collins Captain Hook Scholarship - Santa Clara University
  • Joseph Galloway's Speech at the Wall
  • B.T. Collins: A Simple Truth by Assemblyman Jim Nielsen
  • He Always Remembered Your Birthday
  • If B.T. Were Here, He'd Call Me a Candy-Assed Marine and Tell Me To Pull Myself Together


  • I've Never Liked Any Politician More
    Mark Shields
    Washington Post April 3, 1993

    As a Green Beret captain during his second tour in Vietnam, B.T. lost his right arm and right leg to a grenade. He spent 22 months in seven military hospitals. I never heard him complain about the pain that was his daily fate. Instead, he would cancel his schedule to drive hours to comfort and counsel someone he had never met who had just lost a limb.

    Loud, brash, irreverent and funny, B.T. (he was baptized Brien Thomas, named for an uncle killed at Tarawa in 1943) first won press attention - which he candidly and thouroughly enjoyed - for his controversial and successful 1979 leadership of the California Conservation Corps. Appointed by Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown, Collins enlisted high school dropouts for his boot camp, where every recruit was required to rise at 5 a.m., run two miles, work eight hours and take classes three nights a week. He even gave it a slogan: Hard work, low pay, miserable conditions.

    B.T. touched and changed hundreds of lives. One of them, John Banuelos, a reform school graduate, told the Sacramento Bee's John Jacobs, "He taught me how to live. He became and uncle to my children and a brother to me. I have tried to model my life after his."

    A mostly conservative Republican who believed passionately in public service, B.T. was an old fashioned pol who knew all the cops and elevator operators and waitresses and secretaries by their first names. In 1991, when Republican Gov. Pete Wilson appointed Collins to head the California Youth Authority, the ex-Green Beret demanded that the young prisoners put any complaints to him in writing and in English. Aware that some would see this policy as discriminating against the many Spanish-speaking prisoners, B.T. challenged, "I hope the ACLU sues me for depriving these people of their right to be ignorant."

    He practically built the breathtakingly beautiful California Vietnam Veterans Memorial on the state capitol grounds, where, last week. a crowd of 5,000 including Democrat Brown and Republican Wilson, turned out for B.T.'s memorial service. Earlier that morning, 1,000 people had attended a Mass at Blessed Sacramento Cathedral in Sacramento for Collins, who called himself an atheist but who throughout his working life gave 10 percent of his gross income to the Catholic college of Santa Clara from which he graduated.

    Only after constant urging by Gov. Wilson did B.T. run for and win a California assembly seat, defeating the organized right wing to do so. At the memorial service, ex-leatherneck Pete Wilson cried openly and remarked afterward that for such an emotional display, B.T. would have labled him a "candy-ass Marine."

    In a business where "on deep background" and "not for attribution" are the only conditions under which so many timid public figures will even comment on the NCAA basketball tournament, Collins was blunt, candid, quotable and honest. He never trimmed, and he never truckled.

    B.T. dunned me and everybody else on his bulging Rolodex to help WEAVE (Women Escaping a Violent Environment), a center to shelter and counsel battered women. Because he needed 39 pints of blood after his Vietnam wounds, he became the Sacramento Valley blood bank chairman and a regular donor. His charges at the California Conservation Corps were "encouraged" to become donors by their director who told them, "You will give blood because there's no black blood, no white blood, no Mexican-American blood. There's only red blood."

    One day over lunch, B.T. gave me his basic rules: You stand up for your people. You dig your own foxhole. You take the heat. Don't tell your best friend who to marry. Never argue with a cop. Always send handwritten thank-you notes. The best friends you're ever going to make are the ones you don't like in the beginning. The best friend that will never let you down is integrity."

    At the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Sacramento, somebody last week left his own medals and a note for B.T.: "You more than anybody made us proud to have worn these."

    B.T. Collins was 52, and when he died he left thousands much better for having known him. The world is a better, more humane and more fun place for his having been here.

    UPDATE
    I won the Sacramento Area 1 Toastmaster's Table Topics Contest last night. The question: "Who is your hero?" My answer - B.T. Collins!

    Here's info about the book

    Outrageous Hero, The B.T. Collins Story

    Washington Post article by Mark Shields from the Santa Clara University archives.

    9/10/2008

    Heroes of 9 11

    Mark Bingham

    5/25/2008

    B.T. Collins Book

    B.T.'s sister, Maureen Collins Baker, will be at the Sacramento Fair Oaks Blvd Borders on Wednesday, June 4th, at 7pm autographing her new book, Outrageous Hero, The B.T. Collins Story. See you there!

    Here's info about the book


    http://tinyurl.com/3jwaz6

    12/20/2005


    A Different Christmas Poem

    *Update

    B.T.'s sister, Maureen Collins Baker, will be at the Sacramento Fair Oaks Blvd Borders on Wednesday, June 4th, at 7pm autographing her new book, Outrageous Hero, The B.T. Collins Story. See you there!

    Here's info about the book


    http://tinyurl.com/3jwaz6



    I get alot of searches from people looking for info on my dear friend BT Collins. I check back on the google or yahoo page that brought them in, and I always find very inspirational websites. Today I stumbled across Ranger 25 - The web page of the 2nd Brigade - 1st Air Cavalry Division - United States Army, Airmobile Infantry - Vietnam.

    They had a Christmas poem posted. I don't know the author.

    A DIFFERENT CHRISTMAS POEM
    The embers glowed softly, and in their dim
    light, I gazed round the room and I
    cherished the sight. My wife was asleep,
    her head on my chest, My daughter beside
    me, angelic in rest
    Outside the snow fell, a blanket of white,
    transforming the yard to a winter delight.
    The sparkling lights in the tree I believe,
    Completed the magic that was Christmas
    Eve.
    My eyelids were heavy, my breathing was
    deep, Secure and surrounded by love I
    would sleep. In perfect contentment, or
    so it would seem, So I slumbered, perhaps
    I started to dream.

    The sound wasn't loud, and it wasn't too
    near, But I opened my eyes when it tickled
    my ear. Perhaps just a cough, I didn't
    quite know, Then the sure sound of
    footsteps outside in the snow.
    My soul gave a tremble, I struggled to hear,
    And I crept to the door just to see who
    was near. Standing out in the cold and
    the dark of the night, a lone figure stood,
    his face weary and tight.
    A soldier, I puzzled, some twenty years old,
    Perhaps a Marine, huddled here in the cold.
    Alone in the dark, he looked up and smiled,
    standing watch over me, and my wife and
    my child.

    "What are you doing?" I asked without
    fear, "Come in this moment, it's freezing out
    here! Put down your pack, brush the
    snow from your sleeve, You should be at
    home on a cold Christmas Eve!"
    For barely a moment; I saw his eyes shift,
    Away from the cold and the snow blown in
    drifts.. To the window that danced with a
    warm fire's light. Then he sighed and he
    said "Its really all right, I'm out here by
    choice. I'm here every night."
    "It's my duty to stand at the front of the
    line, That separates you from the darkest
    of times. No one had to ask or beg or
    implore me, I'm proud to stand here like
    my fathers before me.

    My Gramps died at 'Pearl on a day in
    December," Then he sighed, "That's a
    Christmas 'Gram always remembers."
    My dad stood his watch in the jungles of
    'Nam', And now it is my turn and so,
    here I am. I've not seen my own son in
    more than a while, But my wife sends me
    pictures, he's sure got her smile.
    Then he bent and he carefully pulled from
    his bag, The red, white, and blue...
    an American flag.
    "I can live through the cold and the being
    alone, Away from my family , my house and
    my home. I can stand at my post through
    the rain and the sleet, I can sleep in a foxhole
    with little to eat. I can carry the weight of
    killing another, Or lay down my life with my
    sister and brother.. Who stand at the front
    against any and all, To ensure for all time
    that this flag will not fall."

    "So go back inside," he said, "harbor no
    fright, Your family is waiting and I'll be all
    right." "But isn't there something I can do,
    at the least, "Give you money," I asked,
    "or prepare you a feast?" It seems all too
    little for all that you've done, For being
    away from your wife and your son."
    Then his eye welled a tear that held no
    regret, "Just tell us you love us, and never
    forget. To fight for our rights back at home
    while we're gone, To stand your own watch,
    no matter how long.
    For when we come home, either standing or
    dead, To know you remember we fought and
    we bled.
    Is payment enough, and with that we will
    trust, That we mattered to you as you
    mattered to us.

    WE ALL NEED TO PRAY FOR OUR MILITARY
    PERSONNEL EVERY NIGHT

    11/15/2005


    Veterans Day Week

    *Update

    B.T.'s sister, Maureen Collins Baker, will be at the Sacramento Fair Oaks Blvd Borders on Wednesday, June 4th, at 7pm autographing her new book, Outrageous Hero, The B.T. Collins Story. See you there!

    Here's info about the book

    http://tinyurl.com/3jwaz6


    Last March, on the anniversary of his death, I blogged a weeklong tribute to B.T. Collins, a favorite person of mine. My good friend, former State Senate Republican Leader Jim Nielsen wanted to add his thoughts.


    Special to The Irish Lass
    B.T. Collins-A Simple Truth

    Often I remember and rejoice the life and times of B.T. Collins. Our paths crossed and my life is far richer for the twain that met.

    I was a not so worldly and only a little wise Senator then. B.T. was not yet a legend and was shaking things up at the formerly backwater California Conservation Corps. We fancied our mutual frankness. Knowing his heart I was surprised when he took the job of Chief of Staff to Governor Jerry Brown. B.T. seemed everything Governor Brown wasn’t. B.T. loved maximum challenge and that was a challenge.

    The farmer in me loved his Malathion cocktail as he scorned doubters during the Mediterranean fruit fly wars. We bonded in spirit January 1980 when B.T. sent me a Bill Bennett column titled “Simple Truths.” Bennett defined “Simple Truths” as those life maxims that “are simply utterly true no matter how many mental somersaults one turns to deny them and cast them as problems.” B.T. penned, “Thought of you when I read this-you are not alone!” B.T. A picture of B.T. his wry smile and a laughing senator at his side, his note and the column are treasures that grace my library wall. He lived by “simple truths!”

    Reverently irreverent-that was B.T. He took life seriously, but not so often himself or others. A master at turning the tides his way, he remained unpretentious- a leader. He conquered adversity with aplomb, with dignity even relish and reveled in his quests. His crusty demeanor belied his tender, generous heart. He was a man of quiet kindnesses, quick to lend a hand to pick up a fallen foe and he never forgot your own thoughtfulness towards him.

    His inimitable left slanted signature, B. T., adorns many memorials. His greatest memorial is in our hearts, the hearts of the many lives he enriched.
    "No whining! No crying! We are the fortunate ones. We lived when so many better men all around us gave up their lives for us. We owe them an obligation to live every day to its maximum potential; to work every day to make this country and this world a better place for our children, and their children."
    - B.T. Collins
    Full B.T. Collins Tribute

    3/25/2005

    *Update

    B.T.'s sister, Maureen Collins Baker, will be at the Sacramento Fair Oaks Blvd Borders on Wednesday, June 4th, at 7pm autographing her new book, Outrageous Hero, The B.T. Collins Story. See you there!

    Here's info about the book

    http://tinyurl.com/3jwaz6



    B.T. Collins "Captain Hook" Scholarship
    Santa Clara University

    "You must know of my love and affection for everything that embodies generosity and selflessness, and that is Santa Clara University . . . . . . . I started off at 29 years of age to remake my life at Santa Clara University."
    Brien Thomas (B.T.) Collins
    Santa Clara University, B.A. 1970, J.D. 1973

    B.T. Collins came to Santa Clara as a student after losing a leg and arm as a U.S. Army captain in Vietnam. His optimism and energy transformed many of his classmates. His good humor and generosity endeared him, and his loyalty and strength of character propelled him. He served as Director of the California Conservation Corps and Chief of Staff for Governor Jerry Brown. He also served as Deputy Finance Director, Director of the California Youth Authority, and as an elected member of the California State Assembly. He regarded public service as a privilege, and frequently urged others to "give back." His sudden death in 1993 left some challenges unmet, but also left the most important ingredients needed to meet them: inspiration and integrity.

    The B.T. Collins "Captain Hook" Scholarship provides financial aid to continuing students who are dedicated to pursuing public service careers, and have demonstrated outstanding leadership potential

    3/24/2005


    The Wake

    *Update

    B.T.'s sister, Maureen Collins Baker, will be at the Sacramento Fair Oaks Blvd Borders on Wednesday, June 4th, at 7pm autographing her new book, Outrageous Hero, The B.T. Collins Story. See you there!

    Here's info about the book

    http://tinyurl.com/3jwaz6


    Burying Tradition, More People Opt for "Fun" Funerals
    by Carrie Dolan

    For some, new rites of passage include parties, boat rides and psychedelic caskets

    Sacramento, California - In a hotel ballroom here, about 3,000 revellers float among bouquets of balloons and mingle around a trio of bars. An ice sculpture drips over the buffet. A 7-piece band, led by a vocalist in a black lace dress, blares out James Brown's I Feel Good. In the midst of the action is the party's host - lying in a flag-draped coffin.

    He was B T Collins, a popular California state legislator, who died of a heart attack in March at age 52. A former Green Beret who lost an arm and a leg in the Vietnam War, he was fond of unconventional tributes. He marked his 50th birthday with a parachute jump and once donated a urinal to Santa Clara University's school of law, his alma mater. Known for his disdain for protocol and his love of a good time, he had set aside funds to celebrate his passing. As for his attendance at the festivities, Nora Romero, his longtime administrative assistant, asks: "You don't think B T would miss his own party, do you?" Full B.T. Collins Tribute

    3/23/2005


    B.T. Collins Tribute
    *Update

    B.T.'s sister, Maureen Collins Baker, will be at the Sacramento Fair Oaks Blvd Borders on Wednesday, June 4th, at 7pm autographing her new book, Outrageous Hero, The B.T. Collins Story. See you there!

    Here's info about the book

    http://tinyurl.com/3jwaz6

    My Friend in Need
    The Green Beret had another baptism of fire
    to go through, and he couldn't do it alone
    By B. T. Collins
    Condensed from "The Wall Street Journal"


    The ambulance flight from the Philippines was exhausting. We stopped at Air Force bases in Japan, Alaska, Illinois, and finally Washington, D.C.
    From there I phoned my folks in White Plains, N.Y. I knew I would be flown to Fort Kix, N.J., the next day and then, after that July Fourth weekend, 1967, sent to Valley Forge General Hospital outside Philadelphia.
    Just before I hung up I said, "Ma, you'd better call Dickie." (Fifteen years later his wife would tell me, "You're the only one allowed to call him Dickie.") He would spread the word to my friends that I was home from Vietnam and had lost an arm and leg. He'd take charge.
    We met in Cub Scouts, probably in fourth grade. We have never agreed on anything since. He still says it was sixth grade.
    In the hospital at Fort Dix the following day, my mother and two sisters saw me for the first time in six months. I wasn't much to look at¡Âª102 pounds, big holes in my remaining leg, and my eyes sunk deep in their sockets. Tubes were everywhere. In short, I wasn't the six-foot-two, 180-pound Green Beret they had seen head off for his second tour in Vietnam. After my family left, the room filled with Dick Ehrlich and several other friends he had rounded up. If my appearance shocked him, he never let on. He told me a year later: "You looked like a ripple in the sheet. You looked so small." All I remember is that I burst into tears as he strode through the door, a six-pack under his arm.
    As they were leaving, one of my friends. Judy, said, "You be ready Labor Day. We're taking you to the house on Song Island." To me that was years away. All I wanted was for the pain to stop.
    Over the next two months, Dick made the 3 1/2-hour trip to the hospital whenever he could, as did the others. Not a week went by that he didn't phone. He had no idea what it meant to me to cry on his shoulder, after putting up a good front for my family and acquaintances. He was just there, and that's what meant the most.
    As Labor Day Approached, my friends would not let up on the plans for me to spend the weekend with them. I was terrified. I had yet to leave the safety of the hospital. I started making excuses, but they came and got me anyway.
    The weekend went fine. It looked as if life wasn't going to be half bad, after all. I even had the courage to ask Dick to change the dressing on my leg stump. He didn't flinch. I wonder if I could have done the same for him.
    Dick drove me back to the hospital. After four hours in Labor Day traffic, he pulled up to a restaurant near the hospital. I stiffened. Dick pretended to ignore my paranoia. "Want to eat?, I'm starved, and I've got a long drive home."
    "I'm not hungry," I replied. "I'll just wait in the car."
    He put his hand on my shoulder, his eyes directly on mine. "Look, you're my friend and I'm proud of you, even though I hate that war. Now, let's try it. You hop in the wheelchair. I'll wheel you up to a booth. You hop out, and we'll eat. Okay? If it gets too bad, we'll just leave. I promise. I guarantee you it won't be half as bad as you think."
    And it was not half bad at all. It was my baptism of fire all over again. The first parachute jump. The first firefight. I survived.
    The following summer, while still in the hospital, I spent another weekend at the beach. Now I had a new hook and wooden leg, and I painfully negotiated my way to a spot in the sand.
    Kick, remembering how much I loved the surf when we were teens, asked, "Ready to hit the waves?"
    "No, I think I'll just read."
    "Does it bother you?" he said. "Then, guess we'd better do it!"
    Off went the leg and arm, and I held on to his shoulder and hopped down to the waves. I never looked back.
    I moved to California that year to attend college, then law school. In the years that followed, whenever something "bothered" me, I simply had to do it. I learned to ski, parachuted again and went around the world for three summers.
    From 1979 to 1981, I ran the California Conservation Corps, a work program for kids ages 18 to 23. At the end of "basic training," I would always ask the corps members if they had seen The Deer Hunter. Those who know the film invariably thought it was about Vietnam. "No, I would do anything for you¡Âªunquestioningly."
    I met my deer hunter 37 years ago, though Dickie will insist when he reads this that it was 35. And I will point out that having him for a friend wasn't half as bad as I thought it would be.
    Thanks, Dickie.


    This article came from the AFN Viewer's Guide for Korea, which, according to their disclaimer is NOT an official AFN Korea / AFRTS homepage.
    We are in NO way related to or affiliated with AFN Korea(American
    Forces Network Korea) / AFRTS(Armed Forces Radio and Television Service). It does have many cool archives including No Greater Love and My Father's Greatest Gift. Check it out.
    Full B.T. Collins Tribute

    3/22/2005


    The California Vietnam Veterans Memorial
    Information provided by Veteran Ron Fulks


    The California Vietnam Veterans Memorial is located in the north-east corner of the State Capitol grounds at 15th Street and Capitol Avenue, Sacramento. It is found near the Rose garden in a quiet, lush setting. Wide, paved paths lead to the Memorial from the street as well as from the rest of the Capitol grounds. There is a large grassy area around the Memorial, with benches scattered around the area.

    The Memorial is circular in design, with full relief bronze sculptures depicting scenes from daily life during the war. The sculptures represent many sides of the war, with grunts, nurses, and POWs. The American flag waves over the Memorial. The 5,822 names of California's dead and missing are engraved on twenty-two black granite panels, arranged by their hometowns. In a ring arranged around the granite panels, there are stone benches facing the names.

    The $2.5 million Memorial was built entirely through donations. Assembly Bill 650, authored by Assemblyman Richard E. Floyd, effective in January 1984, established the California Vietnam Veterans Memorial Commission. B.T.Collins, a well-known figure in California government (and a former Special Forces Captain, who lost a leg and an arm in Vietnam), was an energetic driving force in the movement to get the Memorial built.

    A special thanks to Wayne Reddekopp for help in assembling the info for this story!

    *Update

    B.T.'s sister, Maureen Collins Baker, will be at the Sacramento Fair Oaks Blvd Borders on Wednesday, June 4th, at 7pm autographing her new book, Outrageous Hero, The B.T. Collins Story. See you there!

    Here's info about the book

    http://tinyurl.com/3jwaz6

    Full B.T. Collins Tribute

    Joseph Galloway's speech at the Wall, Memorial Day, 1997


    There are so many people here today who mean so very much to me: Some of my Ia Drang Valley brothers and sisters in this audience. Other friends from that battle and a hundred other battles are here on the panels of this Wall. I have always felt I owed my life to my Vietnam brothers, both the living and the dead. That is a debt I can never adequately repay, except by standing with you and by you until the last of us has crossed the River and all the Vietnam battalions are mustered one last time at full strength, everyone finally present and accounted for.


    All of you here today know that feeling and share it. We are all debtors, and on Memorial Day we come here to acknowledge that debt. Some who don't know any better say we are living in the past, refusing to let it go. What they don't understand is how much the names on this Wall mean to us, not just on Memorial Day and Veterans Day but on every day we live. Individually they gave their precious lives so that we, their buddies, could live. Collectively they gave their lives in hopes that their sacrifice would ensure that all Americans continue to live in freedom.


    Yes, it is true that all of us who have known war have a habit of looking back. In Vietnam, on patrol, we looked back to make sure the guy behind us was keeping up; to make sure he hadn't fallen, or fallen out with heat stroke or the fever. We also looked back because it was just another direction where the enemy might be coming in on us.


    Today we have a habit of looking back because we left something very important back there. But coming here today, or any day, has nothing to do with living in the past. It has everything to do with keeping our promises.


    None of us here today can answer the one question we have in common: Why? Why am I alive when my friends are not? We can't answer that question, but we can live up to the obligation that was spelled out so eloquently by my friend B.T. Collins of California, who came home from Vietnam missing an arm and a leg. Before he died three years ago, B.T. used to tell every Vietnam vet he met about our obligation. He put it this way:


    "No whining! No crying! We are the fortunate ones. We lived when so many better men all around us gave up their lives for us. We owe them an obligation to live every day to its maximum potential; to work every day to make this country and this world a better place for our children, and their children."

    BT's message about our debt is echoed in these words of the poet Robert Frost:

    The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
    But I have promises to keep,
    And miles to go before I sleep.
    And miles to go before I sleep.

    There are people in this country who have stereotyped the Vietnam veteran in negative and demeaning terms. They believe the worst of you, and say so. I say they are wrong; I say the Hell with them. I was there and I know who you are and what you are and what is in your hearts.


    I say you are the best of an entire generation of Americans. When the country called, you answered, just as your brothers answered in Korea and your fathers in the Good War. I say thank you for your service, on behalf of a nation that too easily forgets the true cost of war. I say, unashamedly, I love you for all that our country asked of you, and all that you have given.


    I know you. You are the people who keep your promises. You are the ones who live up to your obligations. You are the people who have always stood tall and made us proud to be Americans. You are a mighty force for good in a country that needs you now more than ever. There are three million of you who served in Indochina; there are 40 million Americans who have some direct connection to one of the names on this black granite Memorial. And that;'s just Vietnam. What about Korea? What about World War II?


    Together we can keep our promise and America's promise; together we can make a difference in the wars our nation is waging today---against ignorance, against racism, against the crime and drugs that blight our cities and touch every town in America. Against the hopelessness and despair of poverty.


    We owe that, and much more, to the 58,209 friends whose names are carved on this Vietnam Veterans Memorial; to the 54,000 who died in Korea; to the more than 300,000 who died in World War II.


    And there is one other promise we must keep; one more war we have to fight. First, before anything else, we must do everything in our power to see that our country keeps its promises to the veterans of our war, and all wars, and that it keeps its promises to the families of those who died beside us.


    I get angry when a brother calls to tell me that he's having trouble getting anyone to listen to him down at the local VA office...or that he can't get medical attention when he's suffering the agonies of old wounds, visible or invisible. I hear that much too often not to worry that the system of caring for and taking care of our veterans is broken. It makes me ashamed. I hope some of the people who work in the big buildings along this street hear these words and start keeping their promises.

    Thank you. God bless you, and God bless all our absent friends.

    (remarks delivered by J.L. Galloway at Memorial Day observance, May 26, 1997, at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, Washington, D.C.) reprinted by permission from the author.

    *Update

    B.T.'s sister, Maureen Collins Baker, will be at the Sacramento Fair Oaks Blvd Borders on Wednesday, June 4th, at 7pm autographing her new book, Outrageous Hero, The B.T. Collins Story. See you there!

    Here's info about the book


    http://tinyurl.com/3jwaz6

    3/20/2005


    Readers Digest 1989

    I didn’t learn about leadership and the strength of character it requires from an Ivy League graduate course. I learned by watching one tall captain with proud bearing and penetrating eyes.


    The Courage of Sam Bird (Readers Digest 1989)
    By B.T. Collins

    I met Capt. Samuel R. Bird on a dusty road near An Khe, South Vietnam, one hot July day in 1966. I was an artillery forward observer with Bravo Company, 2nd/12th Calvary, 1st Cavalry Division, and I looked it. I was filthy, sweaty, and jaded by war, and I thought, Oh, brother, get a load of this. Dressed in crisply starched fatigues, Captain Bird was what we called “squared away”—ramrod straight, eyes on the horizon. Hell, you could still see the shine on his boot tips beneath the road dust.

    After graduation from Officer Candidate School, I had sought adventure by volunteering for Vietnam. But by that hot and dangerous July, I was overdosed on “adventure,” keenly interested in survival and very fond of large rocks and deep holes. Bird was my fourth company commander, and my expectations were somewhat cynical when he called all his officers and sergeants together.

    “I understand this company has been in Vietnam almost a year and has never had a party,” he said.

    Now, we officers and sergeants had our little clubs to which we repaired. So we stole bewildered looks at one another, cleared our throats and wondered what this wiry newcomer was talking about.

    “The men are going to have a party,” he announced, “and they’re not going to pay for it. Do I make myself clear?”

    A party for the “grunts” was the first order of business! Sam Bird had indeed made himself clear. We all chipped in to get food and beer for about 160 men. The troops were surprised almost to the point of suspicion—who, after all, had ever done anything for them? But that little beer and bull session was exactly what those war-weary men needed. Its effect on morale was profound. I began to watch our new captain more closely.

    Bird and I were the same age, 26, but eons apart in everything else. He was from the sunny heartland of Kansas, I from the suburbs of New York City. He prayed every day and was close to his God. My faith had evaporated somewhere this side of altar boy. I was a college dropout who had wandered into the Army with the words “discipline problem” close on my heels. He had graduated from The Citadel, South Carolina’s proud old military school.

    If ever a man looked like a leader, it was Sam Bird. He was tall and lean, with penetrating blue eyes. But the tedium and terror of a combat zone take far sterner qualities than mere appearance.

    “Not One Step Further.” Our outfit was helicoptered to a mountain outpost one day for the thankless task of preparing a position for others to occupy. We dug trenches, filled sandbags, strung wire under a blistering sun. It was hard work, and Sam was everywhere, pitching in with the men. A colonel who was supposed to oversee the operation remained at a shelter doing paper work. Sam looked at what his troops had accomplished, then, red-faced, strode over to the colonels’ sanctuary. We couldn’t hear what he was saying to his superior, but we had the unmistakable sense that Sam was uncoiling a bit. The colonel suddenly found time to inspect the fortifications and thank the men for a job well done.

    Another day, this time on the front lines after weeks of awful chow, we were given something called “coffee cake” that had the look and texture of asphalt paving. Furious, Sam got on the radiophone to headquarters. He reached the colonel and said,” Sir, you and the supply officer need to come out here and taste the food, because this rifle company is not taking one step further.” Not a good way to move up in the Army, I thought. But the colonel came out, and the food improved from that moment. Such incidents were not lost on the men of Bravo Company.

    During the monsoon season we had to occupy a landing zone. The torrential, wind-driven rains had been falling for weeks. Like everyone else I sat under my poncho in a stupor, wondering how much of the wetness was rainwater and how much was sweat. Nobody cared that the position was becoming flooded. We had all just crawled inside ourselves. Suddenly, I saw Sam, Mr. Spit and Polish, with nothing on but his olive-drab under shorts and his boots. He was digging a drainage ditch down the center of the camp. He didn’t say anything, just dug away, mud spattering his chest, steam rising from his back and shoulders. Slowly and sheepishly we emerged from under our ponchos, and shovels in hand, we began helping “the old man” get the ditch dug. We got the camp tolerably dried out and with that one simple act transformed our morale.

    Sam deeply loved the U.S. Army, its history and traditions. Few of the men knew it, but he had been in charge of a special honors unit of the Old Guard, which serves at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery and participates in the Army’s most solemn ceremonies. He was the kind of guy whose eyes would moist during the singing of the National Anthem.

    Sam figured patriotism was just a natural part of being an American. But he knew that morale was a function not so much of inspiration as of good boots, dry socks, extra ammo and hot meals.

    Dug His Own. Sam’s philosophy was to put his troops first. On that foundation he built respect a brick at a time. His men ate first; he ate last. Instead of merely learning their names, he made it a point to know the men. A lot of the soldiers were high-school dropouts and would-be tough guys just a few years younger than himself. Some were scared, and a few were still in partial shock at being in a shooting war. Sam patiently worked on their pride and self-confidence. Yet there was never any doubt who was in charge. I had been around enough to know what a delicate accomplishment that was.

    Half in wonder, an officer once told me, “Sam can dress a man down till his ears burn, and the next minute that same guy is eager to follow him into hell.” But he never chewed out a man in front of his subordinates.

    Sam wouldn’t ask his men to do anything he wasn’t willing to do himself. He dug his own foxholes. He never gave lectures on appearance, but even at God-forsaken outposts in the Central Highlands, he would set aside a few ounces of water from his canteen to shave. His uniform, even if it was jungle fatigues, would be as clean and neat as he could make it. Soon all of Bravo Company had a reputation for looking sharp.

    One sultry and miserable day on a dirt road at the base camp, Sam gathered the men together and began talking about how tough the infantryman’s job is, how proud he was of them, how they should always look out for each other. He took out a bunch of Combat Infantryman’s Badges, signifying that a soldier has paid his dues under fire, and he presented one to each of the men. There wasn’t a soldier there who would have traded that moment on the road for some parade ground ceremony.

    That was the way Sam Bird taught me leadership. He packed a lot of lessons into the six months we served together. Put the troops first. Know that morale often depends on small things. Respect every person’s dignity. Always be ready to fight for your people. Lead by example. Reward performance. But Sam had another lesson to teach, one that would take long and painful years, a lesson in courage.

    Enemy Fire. I left Bravo Company in December 1966 to return to the States for a month before joining a Special Forces unit. Being a big, tough paratrooper, I didn’t tell Sam what his example had meant to me. But I made a point of visiting his parents and sister in Wichita, Kan., just before Christmas to tell them how much he’d affected my life, and how his troops would walk off a cliff for him. His family was relieved when I told them that his tour of combat was almost over and he’d be moving to a safe job in the rear.

    Two months later, in a thatched hut in the Mekong Delta, I got a letter from Sam’s sister, saying that he had conned his commanding officer into letting him stay an extra month with his beloved Bravo Company. On his last day, January 27, 1967—his 27th birthday—the men had secretly planned a party, even arranging to have a cake flown in. They were going to “pay back the old man.” But orders can down for Bravo to lead an airborne assault on the North Vietnamese regimental headquarters.

    Sam’s helicopter was about to touch down at the attack point when it was ripped by enemy fire. Slugs shattered his left ankle and right leg. Another struck the left side of his head, carrying off almost a quarter of his skull. His executive officer, Lt. Dean Parker, scooped Sam’s brains back into the gaping wound.

    Reading the letter, I felt as if I’d been kicked in the stomach. I began querying every hospital in Vietnam to find out if Sam was still alive. But in June, before I could discover his fate, I was in a firefight in an enemy-controlled zone. I had thrown four grenades. The fifth one exploded in my hand. I lost an arm and a leg.

    Nearly a year later, in March 1968, I finally caught up with Sam. I was just getting the hang of walking with an artificial leg when I visited him at the VA Medical Center in Memphis, Tenn. Seeing him, I had to fight back the tears. The wiry, smiling soldier’s soldier was blind in the left eye and partially so in the right. Surgeons had removed metal shards and damaged tissue from deep within his brain, and he and been left with a marked depression on the left side of his head. The circles under his eyes told of sleepless hours and great pain.

    The old clear voice of command was slower now, labored and with an odd, high pitch. I saw his brow knit as he looked through his one good eye, trying to remember. He recognized me, but believed I had served with him in Korea, his first tour of duty.

    Slowly, Sam rebuilt his ability to converse. But while he could recall things from long ago, he couldn’t remember what he had eaten for breakfast. Headaches came on him like terrible firestorms. There was pain, too, in his legs. He had only partial use of one arm, with which he’d raise himself in front of the mirror to brush his teeth and shave.

    He had the support of a wonderful family, and once he was home in Wichita, his sister brought his old school sweetheart, Annette Blazier, to see him. A courtship began, and in 1972 they married.

    They built a house like Sam had dreamed of—red brick, with a flagpole out front. He had developed the habit of addressing God as “Sir” and spoke to him often. He never asked to be healed. At every table grace, he thanked God for sending Him Annette and for “making it possible for me to live at home in a free country.”

    In 1976, Sam and Annette traveled to the Citadel for his 15th class reunion. World War II hero Gen. Mark Clark, the school’s president emeritus, asked about his wounds and said, “On behalf of your country, I want to thank you for all you did.”

    With pride, Sam answered, “Sir, it was the least I could do.”

    Later Annette chided him gently for understating the case. After all, he had sacrificed his health and career in Vietnam. Sam gave her an incredulous look. “I had friends who didn’t come back,” he said. “I’m enjoying the freedoms they died for.”

    I VISITED Sam in Wichita and phoned him regularly. You would not have guessed that he lived with pain every day. Once, speaking of me to his sister, he said, “I should never complain about the pain in my leg, because B.T. doesn’t have a leg.” I’d seen a lot of men with lesser wounds reduced to anger and self-pity. Never a hint of that passed Sam’s lips, though I knew that, every waking moment, he was fighting to live.

    On October 18, 1984, after 17 years, Sam’s body couldn’t take any more. When we received the news of his death, a number of us from Bravo Company flew to Wichita, where Sam was to be buried with his forebears.

    The day before the burial, his old exec, Dean Parker, and I went to the funeral home to make sure everything was in order. As dean straightened the brass on Sam’s uniform, I held my captain’s hand and looked into his face, a face no longer filled with pain. I thought about how unashamed Sam always was to express his love for his country, how sunny and unaffected he was in his devotion to his men. I ached that I had never told him what a fine soldier and man he was. But in my deep sadness I felt a glow of pride for having served with him, and for having learned the lessons of leadership that would serve me all my life. That is why I am telling you about Samuel R. Bird and these things that happened so long ago.

    CHANCES ARE, you have seen Sam Bird. He was the tall officer in charge of the casket detail at the funeral of President John F. Kennedy. Historian William Manchester described him as “a lean, sinewy Kansan, the kind of American youth whom Congressmen dutifully praise each Fourth of July and whose existence many, grown jaded by years on the Hill, secretly doubt.”

    There can be no doubt about Sam, about who he was how he lived and how he led. We buried him that fall afternoon, as they say, “with honors.” But as I walked from that grave, I knew I was the honored one, for having known him.
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    *Update

    B.T.'s sister, Maureen Collins Baker, will be at the Sacramento Fair Oaks Blvd Borders on Wednesday, June 4th, at 7pm autographing her new book, Outrageous Hero, The B.T. Collins Story. See you there!

    Here's info about the book

    http://tinyurl.com/3jwaz6



    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    B.T. Collins recovered from severe war wounds to become the highly acclaimed director of the California Conservation Corps and later chief of staff to the governor of California. He is presently California’s deputy state treasurer.
    Full B.T. Collins Tribute
  • Of Better Men - Geoff Metcalf

  • The Courage of Sam Bird - by B.T. Collins - Reader's Digest

  • The California Viet Nam Veterans Memorial

  • My Friend in Need - by B.T. Collins - The Wall Street Journal

  • Burying Tradition: More People Opt for "Fun" Funerals - The Wall Street Journal

  • B.T. Collins Captain Hook Scholarship - Santa Clara University

  • B.T. Collins: A Simple Truth by Assemblyman Jim Nielsen

  • He Always Remembered Your Birthday

  • If B.T. Were Here, He'd Call Me a Candy-Assed Marine and Tell Me To Pull Myself Together



  • 3/19/2005


    B.T. Collins - Irish American Hero

    Twelve years ago we lost an American patriot, Assemblyman Brien Thomas Collins. The irascible Irishman was much loved in Sacramento. I hope to host a week long tribute with some commentary by others who loved him as much as I did.

    Of Better Men
    Geoff Metcalf
    Memorial Day 2002

    Memorial Day was originally called Decoration Day. It is a day of remembrance for those who have died in our nation's service, securing the blessings of liberty for posterity.
    In March of 1993 I wrote and read a eulogy to a unique solider who survived extraordinary hardship and sacrifice and died not on the battlefield in combat (although he came close to that and the price of his survival was an arm and a leg). His name was B.T. Collins. I have updated it only slightly.

    B.T. Collins was a genuine rarity. He was a man of myriad subtleties. He was a true Renaissance man in every sense; he was a warrior, a leader, and a compassionate and loyal friend. He had a crusty curmudgeon exterior, which was a thin veil for a sensitive, caring humanist.

    As a Special Forces Officer he wore a unit crest on his uniform, which contains the Latin motto: De Oppresso Liber. More than a unit motto, it became his lifelong credo: "To Free the Oppressed."

    He lived that motto in the humid jungles of Vietnam and in the hot Sacramento summers in the constant skirmishes he fought in the halls of the State capitol.

    I have often quoted "The Warrior Creed" of the late Dr. Robert Humphrey as crystallized by Jack Hoban:

    "Wherever I go, everyone is a little bit safer because I'm there.
    Wherever I go, everyone in need has a friend.
    Whenever I return home, everyone is happy I'm there."

    B.T. never knew Dr. Humphrey or Jack Hoban, but in ways subtle and stark he lived that creed.

    I really liked the guy. Despite his considerable accomplishments, he was unique in many ways: He was a politician who clung to the truth despite whatever negative impact it might bring to him personally. He was painfully, and consistently HONEST.

    And he never attempted to protect himself by shrouding the truth or positioning himself in a more attractive light. He was a conservative republican but before being elected to the California Assembly he worked for California Governor Jerry Brown as his Chief of Staff.

    Dr. Robert Jarvick once wrote: "Leaders are visionaries with a poorly developed sense of fear and no concept of the odds against them. They make things happen." THAT was B.T. Collins.

    Once upon a time, before health reasons compelled him to stop, he used to drink a bit ... OK, perhaps more than a bit. He could and did put the booze away. His language, in private, and sometimes in public, was occasionally excessively colorful ... okay, so he could and would be obscene ... often funny, and not infrequently brilliantly candid.

    I cried the Friday night his death was announced.

    B.T. was an original: honest, funny, compassionate, loyal, and both simple and complex. I know B.T.'s one regret might have been that HE didn't get to deliver his own eulogy.

    He and I were supposed to get together in April of '93 for dinner. We had been looking forward to trading Special Forces stories and swapping lies about guys we knew who wore the funny hat. That never happened ... but the date remained on my calendar.

    One clear summer day I drove up into the Sierra and pitched a camp on a hill overlooking a secluded lake. B.T. wasn't with me, but his memory certainly was. In his memory I took the cap off a bottle of what he called 'brown tea' and threw it into the fire.

    Alone in the wilderness I shared the bottle with B.T.'s memory and toasted the things that remain important: Duty, Honor, Country ... friends, family, and fallen comrades ...

    I drank to Chris Christianson, Rich Kelly, Bull Simons, Rocky Versace, the names on the black wall, and of course, the guy who lived the motto De Oppresso Libre … B.T. COLLINS.

    Many years later I had occasion to speak to a class of newly commissioned Army ROTC graduates. I suggested to them, and now I suggest it to you, that you read what B.T. wrote for Reader's Digest about "The Courage of Sam Bird." Especially today, it is worth reading.

    B.T. said, "I didn't learn about leadership and the strength of character it requires from an Ivy League graduate course. I learned by watching one tall captain with proud bearing and penetrating eyes."

    Charles M. Province wrote a poem called "The Soldier."

    It is the soldier, not the reporter,
    who has given us freedom of the press.
    It is the soldier, not the poet,
    who has given us freedom of speech.

    It is the soldier, not the campus organizer,
    who has given us the freedom to demonstrate.

    It is the soldier, not the lawyer,
    who has given us the right to a fair trial.

    It is the soldier,
    who salutes the flag,
    who serves under the flag,
    and whose coffin is draped by the flag,
    who allows the protester to burn the flag.

    I told that group of new Army officers, DUTY, HONOR, COUNTRY are not just words. They are a gift that will be part of you regardless of whether you become a career officer and command a Ranger Regiment, or serve in the Reserve Components as a weekend warrior. We who have taken the oath are ALL warriors.

    Copyright Geoff Metcalf

    *Update

    B.T.'s sister, Maureen Collins Baker, will be at the Sacramento Fair Oaks Blvd Borders on Wednesday, June 4th, at 7pm autographing her new book, Outrageous Hero, The B.T. Collins Story. See you there!

    Here's info about the book


    http://tinyurl.com/3jwaz6

    Full B.T. Collins Tribute