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Patrick Henry Brady
United States Army Medal of Honor recipient

Patrick Henry Brady

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Quick Facts

Intro
United States Army Medal of Honor recipient
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Philip, Haakon County, South Dakota, U.S.A.
Age
88 years
Patrick Henry Brady
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Patrick Henry Brady (born October 1, 1936), is a retired United States Army major general. While serving as a helicopter pilot in the Vietnam War, he received the Medal of Honor, the nation's highest military decoration for valor.

Biography

Brady attended O'Dea High School in Seattle, Washington, an all-boys school run by the Congregation of Christian Brothers, where he was active in sports.

While in college at Seattle University, he initially hated the compulsory ROTC program and was kicked out. Brady realized he would probably be drafted after graduation and reentered the ROTC program in order to enter military service as an officer. After graduation, he was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the Army Medical Service Corps On March 20, 1959. On April 4, 1959, he went on active duty. He served in Berlin (Germany), from September 1959 to August 1961, with the 6th Infantry Bragade. In August 1961, he became the Motor Pool Officer of the hospital in the 279th Station Hospital in Berlin. He became the Detachment Commander in June 1962 until October 1962. In December 1963, he graduated from the United States Army Aviation School at Fort Rucker, Alabama.In January 1964, he deployed to Vietnam.

During his first tour in Vietnam, from January 1964 to January 1965, then-Captain Brady served as a Dust Off pilot with the 57th Medical Detachment (Helicopter Ambulance), where his commanding officer was the legendary Major Charles Kelly. After Kelly's death on July 1, 1964, Brady took command of Detachment A, 57th Medical's Detachment, at Sóc Trăng. The following day, a Commander tossed the bullet that killed Kelly on Brady's desk in front of Captain Brady and asked if they were going to stop flying so aggressively. Brady picked up the bullet and replied, "we are going to keep flying exactly the way Kelly taught us to fly, without hesitation, anytime, anywhere."

On his second tour of duty in Vietnam, 1967 to 68, Brady, now a Major, was second in command of the 54th Medical Detachment. It was during this second tour in Vietnam that Brady was awarded the Medal of Honor.

Brady flew over 2,000 combat missions and evacuated more than 5000 wounded during his two tours of duty in South Vietnam.

Brady retired from the US Army as a Major General on September 1, 1993 after 34 years of service.

Medal of Honor

Patrick Brady's Medal of Honor citation reads:

Medal of Honor

Rank and organization: Major, U.S. Army, Medical Service Corps, 54th Medical Detachment, 67th Medical Group, 44th Medical Brigade.

Place and date: Near Chu Lai, Republic of Vietnam, January 6, 1968.

Entered service at: Seattle, Washington

Born: October 1, 1936, Philip, South Dakota

CITATION:

For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty, Maj. BRADY distinguished himself while serving in the Republic of Vietnam commanding a UH-1H ambulance helicopter, volunteered to rescue wounded men from a site in enemy held territory which was reported to be heavily defended and to be blanketed by fog. To reach the site he descended through heavy fog and smoke and hovered slowly along a valley trail, turning his ship sideward to blow away the fog with the backwash from his rotor blades. Despite the unchallenged, close-range enemy fire, he found the dangerously small site, where he successfully landed and evacuated 2 badly wounded South Vietnamese soldiers. He was then called to another area completely covered by dense fog where American casualties lay only 50 meters from the enemy. Two aircraft had previously been shot down and others had made unsuccessful attempts to reach this site earlier in the day. With unmatched skill and extraordinary courage, Maj. BRADY made 4 flights to this embattled landing zone and successfully rescued all the wounded. On his third mission of the day Maj. Brady once again landed at a site surrounded by the enemy. The friendly ground force, pinned down by enemy fire, had been unable to reach and secure the landing zone. Although his aircraft had been badly damaged and his controls partially shot away during his initial entry into this area, he returned minutes later and rescued the remaining injured. Shortly thereafter, obtaining a replacement aircraft, Maj. BRADY was requested to land in an enemy minefield where a platoon of American soldiers was trapped. A mine detonated near his helicopter, wounding 2 crew members and damaging his ship. In spite of this, he managed to fly 6 severely injured patients to medical aid. Throughout that day Maj. BRADY utilized 3 helicopters to evacuate a total of 51 seriously wounded men, many of whom would have perished without prompt medical treatment. Maj. BRADY'S bravery was in the highest traditions of the military service and reflects great credit upon himself and the U.S. Army.

U.S. Individual decorations

  • Medal of Honor ribbon.svg  Medal of Honor
  • US-DSC-RIBBON.png  Distinguished Service Cross
  • Distinguished Service Medal ribbon.svg  Distinguished Service Medal with oak leaf cluster
  • US Defense Superior Service Medal ribbon.svg  Defense Superior Service Medal
  • Legion of Merit ribbon.svg  Legion of Merit
  • Distinguished Flying Cross ribbon.svg  Distinguished Flying Cross with silver oak leaf cluster
  • Bronze Star Medal ribbon.svg  Bronze Star with one oak leaf cluster and "V" Device
  • Purple Heart ribbon.svg  Purple Heart
  • Meritorious Service Medal ribbon.svg  Meritorious Service Medal with two oak leaf clusters
  • Air Medal ribbon.svg  Air Medal with "V" Device (52 awards)
  • Army Commendation Medal ribbon.svg  Army Commendation Medal with one oak leaf cluster

Personal honors

  • Chairman, Citizens Flag Alliance
  • Dustoff Association Hall of Fame, February 17, 2001, Fort Sam Houston, TX
  • Gold Metal Award, Fort Sam AFB, San Antonio, TX, Veterans Day November 11, 2015
    The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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