Most people of recent generations do not even know who
Audie Murphy was! He lived when men were REAL
men and we had patriotic hero stars in
Hollywood!!!
!
"Good government generally begins in the
family, and if the moral character of a people once degenerate, their
political character must soon follow."
~~ Elias Boudinot ~~
"In God We Trust!!!"
Rest in Peace, and thank you, Mrs. Pamela Murphy. LSS
Los Angeles Times on April 15, 2010
October 7, 1923 - April 8, 2010
Pamela Murphy, widow of WWII hero and actor, Audie Murphy, died peacefully at
her home on April 8, 2010. She is survived by sons, Terry and James. Pam
established her own distinctive 30 year career working as a patient liaison
at the Sepulveda VA Hospital, where she was much beloved. Services will be
held at Forest Lawn (Hollywood Hills) on Friday April 16 at 2:30PM
Pam Murphy, the widow of Audie Murphy, was involved in the
Sepulveda VA hospital and care center over the course of 35 years, treating
every veteran who visited the facility as if they were a VIP. Pam Murphy died
last week at the age of 90.
After Audie died, they all became her boys. Every last one of
them.
Any soldier or Marine who walked into the Sepulveda VA hospital
and care center in the last 35 years got the VIP treatment from Pam Murphy.
The widow of Audie Murphy – the most decorated soldier in World War II –
would walk the hallways with her clipboard in hand making sure her boys got
to see a specialist or doctor — STAT. If they didn't, watch out. Her boys
weren't Medal of Honor recipients or movie stars like Audie, but that didn't
matter to Pam. They had served their country. That was good enough for her.
She never called a veteran by his first name. It was always
"Mister." Respect came with the job. "Nobody could cut through
VA red tape faster than Mrs. Murphy," said veteran Stephen Sherman,
speaking for thousands of veterans she befriended over the years. "Many
times I watched her march a veteran who had been waiting more than an hour
right into the doctor's office. She was even reprimanded a few times, but it
didn't matter to Mrs. Murphy. "Only her boys mattered. She was our
angel."
Last week,
Sepulveda
VA
's angel for the last 35 years died peacefully in her sleep at age 90.
"She was in bed watching the Laker game, took one last
breath, and thatwas it," said Diane Ruiz, who also worked at the VA and
cared for Pam in the last years of her life in her
Canoga
Park apartment. It
was the same apartment Pam moved into soon after Audie died in a plane crash
on Memorial Day weekend in 1971. Audie Murphy died broke, squandering million
of dollars on gambling, bad investments, and yes, other women.
"Even with the adultery and desertion at the end, he always remained my
hero," Pam told me.
She went from a comfortable ranch-style home in Van Nuys where
she raised two sons to a small apartment - taking a clerk's job at the nearby
VA to support herself and start paying off her faded movie star husband's
debts. At first, no one knew who she was. Soon, though, word spread through
the VA that the nice woman with the clipboard was Audie Murphy's widow.
It was like saying Patton had just walked in the front door. Men with tears
in their eyes walked up to her and gave her a hug. "Thank you,"
they said, over and over.
The first couple of years, I think the hugs were more for Audie's
memory as a war hero. The last 30 years, they were for Pam.
She hated the spotlight. One year I asked her to be the focus of
a Veteran's Day column for all the work she had done. Pam just shook her head
no. "Honor them, not me," she said, pointing to a group of
veterans down the hallway. "They're the ones who deserve it."
The vets disagreed. Mrs. Murphy deserved the accolades, they
said. Incredibly, in 2002, Pam's job was going to be eliminated in budget
cuts. She was considered "excess staff." "I don't
think helping cut down on veterans' complaints and showing them the respect
they deserve, should be considered excess staff," she told me.
Neither did the veterans. They went ballistic, holding a rally for her
outside the VA gates. Pretty soon, word came down from the top of the
VA. Pam Murphy was no longer considered "excess staff." She
remained working full time at the VA until 2007 when she was 87.
"The last time she was here was a couple of years ago for the conference
we had for homeless veterans," said Becky James, coordinator of the VA's
Veterans History Project.
Pam wanted to see if there was anything she could do to help some
more of her boys.
Dennis
McCarthy's column appears Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday.
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