Medal of Honor

A slow day at the office allowed for extra time on my hands this afternoon.  That and two days of rain which just set the mood for some deep thinking.  San Francisco has been on my mind a great deal lately with a trip to the beautiful city by the bay coming up in a few months.  Shortly after I was born, my mother and I moved to California to live with my father’s family while he served in the South Pacific with the Navy during WWII.  We returned to live on the West Coast in the late 1950’s but being away from New York and her family proved too much for my mother and…back we came.  That was more than fifty years ago and I’ve always wanted to visit there again.

Today, I thought back to Thanksgiving of 1958 on a tree-lined street with stately homes in San Mateo, the home of my Great Aunt Jeanette, her husband Ralph and their children, second cousins that I was excited to meet.  I recall pulling up to that house where a hot rod car was parked outside and a group of boys were gathered around the vehicle.  Smiling faces waited on the porch and eagerly greeted the three visitors from New York but the distracting sound of a revving engine interrupted the introductions and warm hugs.  Out of the corner of my eye, I spied him; t-shirt, dungarees and a blonde crew cut.  He quickly hopped into the street rod and took off  like a madman, leaving Aunt Jeanette to exclaim “oh, that Bud…can’t sit still for a minute!” as she welcomed us into her lovely home.

I can still picture the dining room in my mind; a table so elegantly set for the holiday dinner, complete with place cards.  Tall stemmed glasses held some type of a punch with fresh strawberries for the younger family members and my Uncle Ralph slowly poured wine for the adults.   As the food was put on the table, Bud came roaring back up the street, bounded into the house and I was finally introduced to who the other relatives described as my car crazy cousin.   We all sat down to eat and there were little pockets of conversation going on along with much laughter.  Bud asked me about life back in New York but I could only clumsily reply to this 18 year old asking so many questions.  That was the way back then, especially for a 13 year old who attended a parochial school where the girls were kept separate from the boys.  Not much chance for comfortable social development where the nuns were concerned.

That was the first and last time I ever saw Bud or my San Mateo relatives.  I’ve thought about all of them over the years, especially once I connected with other family in California recently and started doing my own Google searches with names I’ve found here and there.  Today, I brought up my paternal grandmother’s obituary and searched for her sister, my Great Aunt Jeanette.  In a few seconds, there it was, a lengthy piece of her life accomplishments along with the names of all her family members; one especially stood out.  That name was Paul Foster, listed in the obituary as having preceded her in death, having been killed in Vietnam.  Paul’s nickname had always been “Bud” and he was 28 years old when he died.   From there, a quick search of his name brought up many results, all linked to him receiving a Medal of Honor, posthumously, in a White House ceremony with President Richard Nixon in June of 1969. 

I posted about this on my Facebook and shared it with a friend, John Zaffino, a former Marine who proudly served our country in Vietnam and a fellow Blogger who I greatly admire.  He called my cousin a hero, a response both heartwarming as well as a reminder of the brotherhood that makes up the vital military forces who protect the citizens of the United States.

My hope now is that, through someone else’s internet search, Paul Hellstrom Foster will always be remembered both for the honors bestowed upon him and because I shared this memory of my second cousin with a big smile, crew-cut and California hot rod.

 

Thank you for your sacrifice and….Welcome Home, Bud.

           https://www.virtualwall.org/df/FosterPH01a.htm

 

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