Frightened Forrestal
Witness Became War Hero
We might be going a bit
far to jump to the conclusion that the concealed witness in the death of
Secretary of Defense James Forrestal from a fall from a 16th floor
window at Bethesda Naval Hospital was sent off to the Korean War front the next
year for ulterior reasons, but the temptation is hard to resist. With some further research into the fate
of the young Navy corpsman whose daughter told us lived in fear because
of what he knew about ForrestalÕs death, we have learned that his life also
intersected with another important, but generally hushed-up event in 20th
century American history. That is
the infamous American military disaster known as the Battle of Chosin Reservoir.
Here is a description of his experience from the December 14, 1950, St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
ST. LOUISAN GETS OUT OF
KOREA TRAP, ONLY ONE OF FIVE
Navy Hospitalman
Edward W. Prise of East St. Louis made Òa suicide
march to freedomÓ with the Marines in North Korea, in which he was Òthe only
one of five of us evacuating patients that made it out alive.Ó
ÒMaybe this sounds
strange coming from me,Ó he wrote to his mother, Mrs. Clarence V. Price [sic] of the Samuel Gompers apartments, Òbut I know
that God protected me.Ó
PriseÕs feet were frozen, he
said, Òand they made me a patient after we reached Hagaru.Ó That city is about 40 miles northwest of
the evacuation port of Hungnam.
ÒWe were completely
surrounded by Reds for seven days.
It would have done me no good to write, because I wouldnÕt have been
able to mail it,Ó Prise wrote. He gave no further details of the
withdrawing action he took part in.
Prise, 20 years old, was
wounded in action last Sept. 28, a week after he landed in Korea. His father is a Navy electronic
technician at the Naval Air Station at Lambert-St. Louis Field.
The Battle of Chosin Reservoir took place from November 27 to December
13, 1950, so the dates are right for this December 14 newspaper article, as is
the description of what took place.
Here is how I describe it in the beginning of my review of the documentary film, Chosin, in 2010:
Imagine
that you were able to interview a number of the survivors of CusterÕs battle at
the Little Big Horn. Imagine further that some film had been taken of the
battle and you were able to get your hands on it. Imagine, as well, that
a very realistic Hollywood movie had been made about the battle and you were
able to get some choice footage from it. Then you locate a fine composer
who can establish just the right mood, as you weave it all together into a
documentary movie.
That
comes close to what Brian Iglesias and Anton Sattler have accomplished with Chosin, a film about General
Douglas MacArthurÕs much bigger and more recent debacle. It is known as
the Battle of Chosin Reservoir, and it took place in
the far reaches of northern Korea in the early winter of 1950, only five months
after the Korean War began. As a truly horrible experience, though, Chosin Reservoir was Little Bighorn on steroids. It
was anything but a short, sharp decisive battle. It lasted for 17 days,
sometimes in driving snow and always in bitter, sub-zero temperatures.
The American soldiers were surrounded and vastly outnumbered by several
divisions of Chinese soldiers, and, in spite of strong evidence of what was
about to happen, their leaders had been taken completely by surprise.
Listening to the compelling stories that the interviewers were able to elicit
from a truly extraordinary collection of veterans, one is, by turns,
heartbroken and inspired. Particularly inspiring, as well, was the actual
footage of the rescue of some 98,000 civilian refugees—many of them
Christians—who faced almost certain slaughter at the hands of the
Communists who suspected them of collaboration. *
A number of the
survivors interviewed for the movie display what is left of their hands or
their feet from the frostbite that they suffered. Watching the film, as I say in my
review, was a very moving experience that brought tears to my eyes on several
occasions. You can see the trailer here. I would recommend Chosin to everyone, but I think they should read my review first. The young military men who made the
movie, is seems to me, somehow manage to make this truly horrible episode into
a war-glorifying experience.
However one might
interpret the movie, it is also well worth seeing for anyone interested in
gaining some appreciation of what the young Edward Prise
must have gone through. What with
losing a man he had come to know well and no doubt admire, James Forrestal, to
murder by nefarious people connected to the state the year before, and watching
how everyone was fed the cock-and-bull story that it was a suicide, his Korean
War experience would have been like a haymaker to the head after getting a kick
to the groin.
Considering all that he
went through just after having reached adulthood and the fear that he felt
throughout his life over what he knew about ForrestalÕs fall from that window,
perhaps we should be surprised at his longevity when we learn that he was 61
years old when he died rather than thinking that he died at a relatively early
age. Then again, in view of the
number of powerful people who must have been able to rest more easily once he
was dead, we would like to know what the actual proximate cause of his death
was, which we have not been able to find out. We have heard nothing further from his
daughter since that first email. This photo of the war veteran Prise
with President Harry Truman did not come from her but from Hugh TurleyÕs
research.
Young Edward PriseÕs anguish in Korea might have been even greater if he
had known how unnecessary that war was and how the Communists would probably
have never gained a foothold on that peninsula after World War II had his
friend James ForrestalÕs advice been followed. One can read all about that in my ÒForrestal Ignored: China Lost to Reds, Korean
War Fought.Ó
The NurseÕs Notes
To appreciate a little
bit of what Prise, who would have been only 18 or 19
years old at the time, experienced as one of ForrestalÕs guards—and I use
the term advisedly—during ForrestalÕs seven-week treatment/imprisonment/medical
torture, I heartily recommend ÒMark HunterÕsÓ explication of the NurseÕsÕ Notes of the NavyÕs Willcutts Report.
Here is a brief excerpt of his commentary:
ItÕs
worth repeating: Forrestal quickly recovered from his exhaustion and only
became temporarily sick during the so-called insulin treatments and then
permanently after the highest dosage ones. Also, probably the sedatives
(barbiturates) he was given after the initial period did more harm than good.
It must be stressed that this sickness was a physical malaise, and quite
different from clinical depression.
Observe
the increasingly claustrophobic prison atmosphere as the Notes progress. Things
start off well enough but reading between the lines, relations do not seem so
friendly after the higher doses of insulin begin about three weeks into his
stay. And imagine being confined to a room, however VIP-like, for seven weeks,
going on eight. After a month or so Forrestal was like a lion pacing a small
cage, watched like a character out of Kafka.
Hunter has put together
a very good schematic in which one can see that Prise
began attending Forrestal on April 6, five days after the patient was committed
to the hospital and stayed on that job until the night of May 21. He began on the 8 am to 4 pm shift, moved
to the midnight to 8 am shift on April 19, and to the 4 pm to midnight shift on
May 4.
Notice that the name of
the man who had the midnight to 8 am shift before the pinch hitter, Robert
Wayne Harrison, came on the night before Forrestal went out the window was C.F.
Stuthers.
Townsend Hoopes and Douglas Brinkley say that
Harrison was brought on the job because the regular guy, whom neither they nor
the newspapers at the time name, had gone AWOL on a drunken bender. I rather doubt that. Hunter, as I do as well, thinks that
Harrison is likely to have been part of the murder plot.
We have learned that Prise was Catholic, and we can imagine conversations that
he might have had with Forrestal similar to this one recorded in the nurseÕs
notes by J.C. Woods on April 4:
During relief watch Pt
asked this corpsman ÒWhat religion are you?Ó After reply –
ÒCatholicÓ – he said ÒDonÕt lose it.Ó
After a few seconds elapsed, corpsman asked ÒAre you
Catholic.Ó [Patient replied] ÒI was, but I lost it. I would
appreciate it if you would say a few prayers for me the next time you go to
church.Ó
And this is from
HunterÕs conclusion:
Why Suicide
There is only one reason to think that Forrestal committed suicide. The contrary, that Forrestal was murdered, is bizarre.
That is the only reason, and considering that Forrestal had powerful enemies,
not a very good one.
Once someone is labeled ÒsuicidalÓ the stigma has a force of its own.
Why Murder
Suicide is at least as bizzare as murder.
Per an observation of Medford Evans: Men hang themselves or they jump out
sixteenth-story windows, but they donÕt hang themselves out sixteenth-story
windows.
Men donÕt sleep for half an hour, wake up, and immediately kill themselves.
Civilized men leave a suicide note. Forrestal had friends and a family, yet
there was no suicide note, no statement, nothing.
Calling part of a Greek play copied by some anonymous person months or years
before, of unrevealed provenance, ForrestalÕs, then calling this shabby thing
his substitute for a suicide note, is a candidate for the most brazen fraud of
the century. There is no question, not the slightest, that this is part
of a cover-up. And what is there to cover up?
Per the research of Cornell Simpson: The day of his death Forrestal had
an appointment with his brother to leave the hospital and complete his
convalescence in more congenial surroundings.
Per the NurseÕs Notes, and despite the insufferably pompous Dr. (psychiatrist)
RainesÕ Òdouble wave-likeÓ claptrap
testimony before the Willcutts board, Forrestal never
acted suicidal or clinically depressed. Even under the waves of neurological
assaults caused by artificially induced insulin shock he was never suicidal or
clinically depressed.
Per the research of David Martin: Two days before Forrestal was taken to
Bethesda, Stuart Symington, Secretary of the Air Force, communicated to
Forrestal – judging from his reaction – a threat of an extreme
nature.
Forrestal was, and had good reason to be, suspicious, and suspicion is a
consequence of self-preservation, not self-destruction. Even if one were to
believe that Forrestal was paranoid – irrationally suspicious
– paranoids do not kill themselves, they are afraid others might.
Going to HunterÕs analysis of the Willcutts Report proper, we find this interesting tidbit about Prise and another person working at the Bethesda Naval
Hospital as well:
Obscured Witness I
One witness, Edward William Prise,
has his unusual surname, a British variant of ÒprizeÓ and the root of
ÒsurpriseÓ (suráprize = overátake),
misspelled throughout the report as Price. You can determine that it is Prise from his signature on a phone reception note and on
the Òwatch assumedÓ and Òwatch relievedÓ entries of various NurseÕs
Notes in the exhibits. (Also he was wounded in Korea a year or so later and the
militaryÕs typed casualty report of October 9, 1950 reads ÒPrise.Ó)
During the proceedings he says his surname twice, Robert Wayne Harrison says it
once and Regina M. L. Harty three times. If he
pronounced it price the misspelling might have been a mistake, if prize
almost certainly it was intentional.
Obscured Witness II
Another witness, nurse Hardy, has her name misspelled
throughout the report as Harty. Furthermore, unlike
other witnesses, her name is never given in full. Among fellow workers she used
the name Margie (a nickname for Margaret, Margret or Marjorie, presumably one
of her middle names), but in her testimony – according to the report
– she gives her name as Regina M. L. Harty.
During the proceedings the following witnesses say her name: herself, Robert
Reynolds Deen and Dorothy Turner. (The fact that her
name was Hardy rather than Harty and that she was
called Margie, is from the late Connie Riggs, a nurse at the time of
ForrestalÕs death stationed at Quantico who knew some of the nurses stationed
at Bethesda, including Margie Hardy. The two exchanged Christmas cards for
several years, so there is no question Ms. Riggs had the correct name.) Because
the name Harty is pronounced differently from Hardy
and because Harty is an unusual name and Hardy a
common one, and considering that how Americans tend to slur their speech any
confusion would go in the direction of Hardy rather than Harty,
almost certainly the people responsible for the report misspelled the name on
purpose.
One must wonder what it
was that Nurse Hardy might have known that was a danger to the authorities and
if she, like Prise, lived the rest of her life in
fear on account of it.
* This amazing Hungnam evacuation
is also known as the Miracle of Christmas.
The future parents of the current president of South Korea, Moon Jae-in,
were among those rescued. Ship
of Miracles is the apt title of an extraordinary documentary movie on
that event.
David Martin
October 19, 2017
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