The Columbus Dispatch

Prepared to make the trip

- Laura A. Bischoff

Dan Cox joined the Honor Flight Columbus trip to Washington, D.C. with his older brother and a good measure of trepidatio­n.

Cox, of Pickeringt­on, served in the 11th Cavalry and received a Bronze Star. He waited 40 years to attend his Army reunion, afraid people would want to talk about the Vietnam War. He didn’t want to talk about the Vietnam War.

He had reservatio­ns about whether he’d be able to take Thursday’s flight to the capital to tour the nation’s memorials on Honor Flight Columbus’ 104th trip.

The Cox brothers each got drafted into the U.S. Army and sent to Vietnam – first Max, and when he got home, Dan went over. While they made it back alive, their high school friend, Chester A. Wright, was killed in action in August 1968. He was 20.

“Most of them were just kids,” said Max Cox, of Coshocton, who served as an Army sergeant and was awarded three medals. He planned to give the pencil etching he got of Wright’s name on the Vietnam Memorial wall to Wright’s family.

Honor Flight, a nonprofit establishe­d in 2005 to take military veterans to see memorials in Washington, D.C., has 125 hubs across the nation, including in Columbus, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Findlay and Dayton. Over the years, the organizati­on has escorted more than 240,000 vets to D.C.

The Thursday flight carried 125 veterans, with some from Akron, Bucyrus, Columbus, Lancaster, Cambridge, Marion and Zanesville.

The coronaviru­s pandemic put a halt on flights starting in the spring 2020. Honor Flight Columbus is the only Ohiobased chapter that is making the trips again. The other Ohio chapters still have trips on hold due to COVID-19 concerns.

Honor Flight Columbus Executive Director Pete Mackenzie said with other chapters canceling flights, it’s easier to arrange the charter flights to D.C. With a robust volunteer roster and available planes, Mackenzie said he aims to fly more veterans and clear his waitlist.

‘We better go while we can, Dad’

It’s now or never for some. Two of the veterans on the trip Thursday have been diagnosed with terminal illnesses and World War II Navy veteran William Jackson is 96 years old.

Jackson, of Reynoldsbu­rg, got the rock star treatment as his son, Steve, rolled him in a wheelchair down the ramp to the World War II Memorial on the National Mall. Strangers waved, shook his hand and thanked him for his service. He sat front and center for the group photo and was presented with an American flag.

“I told him ‘we better go while we can, Dad,’” said Steve Jackson. “He’s not traveling much. He doesn’t get out as

much anymore.”

As a teenager aboard the USS Colorado during World War II in the Pacific, Jackson escaped death when 240 service members were killed by enemy fire in Tinian and again when 91 were killed in a kamikaze strike in the Leyte Gulf.

He made it to his 20th birthday and attended the formal surrender of Japan aboard the USS Colorado in Tokyo Bay in September 1945.

Jackson is among a dwindling number of World War II veterans who are alive and able to travel with Honor Flight chapters. He was the only World War II veteran on the Thursday trip and just nine are left on the Honor Flight Columbus’ trip waitlist.

Nowadays, the passenger manifest is loaded with veterans of the Korean War and Vietnam War.

It was their very first trip to see the

monuments for some.

“I figured it was time to come see my brothers, who I didn’t get a chance to say goodbye to,” said U.S. Marine Corps veteran Gene Agriesti of Pickeringt­on, who enlisted and served in Vietnam.

He teared up as he found the names of his friends Malcolm Mole and Paul Bellamy, who were killed in January 1968 during the Siege of Khe Sanh. He plans to frame their etched names along side the grainy black-and-white snapshots he has cherished for more than five decades.

Agriesti let out a heavy sigh. “It’s upsetting but I guess it gives closure.”

Logistics always challengin­g for Honor Flights

The day began before 4:30 a.m. as 63 volunteer “guardians” checked in veterans, distribute­d red polo shirts and double-checked IDS at John Glenn Internatio­nal Airport. Masks and COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns were mandatory.

It is no small logistical feat to fly 125 veterans – most of them over 70 years old – to Washington, D.C., and guide them through an aggressive schedule. The itinerary included Arlington National Cemetery, memorials to the Marine Corps, Air Force, Navy and Women in Military Service for America, as well as three war memorials.

At each bus stop, when the team leader hollered “wheelchair wranglers first,” volunteers hustled off the bus,

flung open the cargo doors and pulled out the chairs for veterans. The guardians attended to their veterans’ every need: snacks, photos, water, potty stops. And they were ready for the unpredicta­ble with first aid kits, portable oxygen and automated external defibrillators on each bus.

Dr. Betty Mitchell, who has been volunteeri­ng since 2014, hustled to a local pharmacy by Uber to get prescripti­on medication needed for a veteran’s breathing treatment.

Veterans fly free, courtesy of Honor Flight sponsors and fundraisin­g. Volunteers pay their own way. Many of them go again and again.

Thursday marked Mary Hutchinson’s third trip.

“I just find it very fulfilling. You share moments throughout the day that bond you. Sometimes, it’s stuff they can’t even tell their families,” she said.

The return flight didn’t touch down until after 9:30 p.m. As the veteran sailors, soldiers, airmen and Marines walked off the flight they were greeted with bagpipes, signs, balloons, handshakes, cheers and well wishes.

“This is a beautiful thing they’re doing,” Dan Cox said. “You can’t thank the Honor Flight people enough.”

Laura Bischoff is a reporter for the USA TODAY Network Ohio Bureau, which serves the Columbus Dispatch, Cincinnati Enquirer, Akron Beacon Journal and 18 other affiliated news organizati­ons across Ohio.

 ?? PHOTOS BY NICOLAS GALINDO/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? World War II Navy veteran William Jackson is presented a folded flag from Army staff Sergeant Tyler Goodwin at the World War II memorial in Washington, D.C., during Honor Flight Columbus Mission #104 on Thursday. Honor Flights began in 2005 to bring surviving World War II veterans to Washington to visit the World War II memorial after it was completed in 2004.
PHOTOS BY NICOLAS GALINDO/COLUMBUS DISPATCH World War II Navy veteran William Jackson is presented a folded flag from Army staff Sergeant Tyler Goodwin at the World War II memorial in Washington, D.C., during Honor Flight Columbus Mission #104 on Thursday. Honor Flights began in 2005 to bring surviving World War II veterans to Washington to visit the World War II memorial after it was completed in 2004.
 ??  ?? Vietnam Marine Corps veteran Eugene “Aggie” Agriesti wipes a tear from his eye after making a rubbing of the names of friends killed during the Vietnam War at the Vietnam War Memorial Wall in Washington.
Vietnam Marine Corps veteran Eugene “Aggie” Agriesti wipes a tear from his eye after making a rubbing of the names of friends killed during the Vietnam War at the Vietnam War Memorial Wall in Washington.
 ??  ?? Vietnam Army veteran Max Cox runs his hand along his friend Chester A. Wright’s name on the Vietnam Memorial Wall in Washington.
Vietnam Army veteran Max Cox runs his hand along his friend Chester A. Wright’s name on the Vietnam Memorial Wall in Washington.
 ?? PHOTOS BY NICOLAS GALINDO/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? One hundred, twenty-seven veterans from the Korean War, Vietnam War and one from World War II pose for a photo at the World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C., during Honor Flight Columbus Mission #104 on Thursday. Honor Flights began in 2005 to bring surviving World War II veterans to Washington to visit the World War II memorial after it was completed in 2004.
PHOTOS BY NICOLAS GALINDO/COLUMBUS DISPATCH One hundred, twenty-seven veterans from the Korean War, Vietnam War and one from World War II pose for a photo at the World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C., during Honor Flight Columbus Mission #104 on Thursday. Honor Flights began in 2005 to bring surviving World War II veterans to Washington to visit the World War II memorial after it was completed in 2004.
 ??  ?? A veteran is pushed to the gate by a guardian at John Glenn Internatio­nal Airport heading for Washington, D.C.
A veteran is pushed to the gate by a guardian at John Glenn Internatio­nal Airport heading for Washington, D.C.

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