Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

WWI Navy hero may get Medal of Honor 52 years after death

- By Rick Neale

MELBOURNE — Frederick Riefkohl was the first Puerto Rican to graduate from the U.S. Naval Academy. A World War I hero who led a successful showdown with a German submarine. And a World War II ship commander who retired as a rear admiral — he even has his own Wikipedia page.

But Riefkohl did not receive the Medal of Honor, America’s highest award for valor in combat, to commemorat­e his WWI gallantry.

Why? The former Merritt Island resident may have been unfairly discrimina­ted against by military brass because of his island heritage, a team of Great War researcher­s says.

Riefkohl is one of 214 WWI minority veterans identified thus far by the Valor Medals Review Project, a Congress-authorized study spearheade­d by Park University near Kansas City, Mo.

Park University officials say this is the first such systematic review of minority veterans of the Great War. Research will continue until 2025, when documentat­ion supporting Medal of Honor nomination­s will be forwarded to the Department of Defense for possible action, including posthumous awards.

“Obviously, a huge example was Melvin Morris when he was awarded — what was it, 30 years later, 40 years later? — the Medal of Honor for his heroic actions in Vietnam,” he said.

“All veterans — regardless of their race, color or creed — do service and sacrifice. And all need to be recognized — without reference to their race, color or creed — for that service and sacrifice,” he said.

Melvin Morris waited for 44 years

Morris, a Black retired Army sergeant first class who lives in Port St. John, waited more than 44 years to receive his Medal of Honor.

Back in September 1969, Morris charged into machine-gun fire and destroyed four enemy bunkers with hand grenades while retrieving the body of a fallen team commander near Chi Lang. He was shot three times in the process, but he survived.

President Barack Obama awarded the Medal of Honor to Morris during a March 2014 ceremony in the East Room of the White House. Morris had previously been bestowed the Distinguis­hed Service Cross, the Army’s second-highest commendati­on.

In 2015, a life-sized bronze statue of Morris was unveiled at Riverfront Park in Cocoa. The Civilian Military Community Foundation raised funds for the statue.

The Valor Medals Review Project is studying WWI African American, Asian American, Hispanic American, Jewish American and Native American service members who may have been unfairly denied the Medal of Honor because of their racial or religious background.

To qualify for the review, WWI minority veterans must have received the Army’s Distinguis­hed Service Cross or Navy Cross, which rank one level below the Medal of Honor; the Croix de Guerre avec Palme, France’s highest award for valor; or an archivally documented Medal of Honor recommenda­tion.

“Minority veterans who exhibited the highest acts of valor during WWI deserve to be recognized with the Medal of Honor,” Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., said in a 2019 news release announcing the review.

“We cannot erase the discrimina­tion minority service members faced, but we can make sure their heroic deeds are acknowledg­ed and honored,” said Blunt, who co-sponsored the bill with Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md.

Fond of adventure, weakness for jolly

Unlike most of the minority troops in the Valor Medals Review Project, Weber said Riefkohl is relatively famous.

Born in 1889 in Maunabo, Puerto Rico, Riefkohl became the first Puerto Rican to graduate from the Naval Academy in 1911.

“Fritz is from Puerto Rico and Boston, but his ideas and accomplish­ments are not confined even to these limits,” said an entry in Lucky Bag, the Naval Academy yearbook.

“He has the Southerner’s fighting blood, held in check by New England conservati­sm, the Westerner’s fondness of adventure, and the American college man’s weakness for all that’s jolly,” the entry said.

After WWI, he served aboard an array of ships and held a variety of posts. He was commanding the cruiser USS Vincennes when she was sunk by Japanese naval forces during the 1942 Battle of Savo Island in

World War II.

Riefkohl retired from the Navy as a rear admiral, then moved to southern Merritt Island in 1947 with his wife, Louise, to spend their golden years.

The Cocoa Tribune reported that the couple purchased a grove of mango, avocado and citrus fruit trees, then built a beautiful estate there off South Tropical Trail. Their home was filled with furnishing­s gathered from around the globe during his Naval career. He also served as an officer with the Indian River Yacht Club.

Riefkohl died in September 1969 at age 80 at Patrick Air Force Base Hospital. He did not have any biological children, Weber said.

A breakdown of the 214 WWI troops qualified for review by the Valor Medals Review Project from the Army, Army Air Corps, Marine Corps, Navy and Navy Air Corps:

105 Jewish Americans 73 African Americans 23 Native Americans 12 Hispanic Americans One Asian American

Medal nomination downgraded

George S. Robb, a 1912 Park University graduate and namesake of its WWI research center, was a white U.S. Army first lieutenant who led the 369th Infantry Regiment during the Great War. Nicknamed the Harlem Hellfighte­rs and the Harlem Rattlers, this Black regiment was comprised of New York Army National Guardsmen from Harlem.

Robb later received the Medal of Honor for leading his platoon while severely wounded. However, Westcott said Robb’s nominating form in the National Archives also included a nomination for 369th Infantry Regiment Sgt. William Butler of White Plains, Md.

Butler rescued five captured American troops in August 1918 by counter-attacking a group of 25 Germans, killing four of them, near Maison-deChampagn­e, France.

“Butler’s (Medal of Honor) nomination was downgraded

to a Distinguis­hed Service Cross. George Robb is Caucasian. Mr. Butler is an African American,” Westcott said.

New York University history professor Jeffrey Sammons discovered the Robb-Butler nominating form a few years ago while researchin­g the Harlem Hellfighte­rs, helping prompt the Valor Medals Review Project.

Butler is now one of the 214 WWI troops up for review.

“America has a sacred bond with those who swore to defend her, and there is no more powerful manifestat­ion of that covenant than the Medal of Honor,” the Valor Medals Review Project website says.

“The gravity of these awards means their rarity must be jealously safeguarde­d; they can never be allowed to be diluted in the name of making a political point,” the website says.

“Every hero from the Great War whose deeds warrant the award receives it, regardless of the circumstan­ces of their birth or the color of skin.”

 ?? ?? Ret. Army Sgt. 1st Class Melvin Morris of Port St. John waited 44 years to receive his Medal of Honor. Frederick Riefkohl, the first Puerto Rican to graduate from the Naval Academy, is one of 214 WWI minority veterans identified as possible Medal of Honor recipients.
Ret. Army Sgt. 1st Class Melvin Morris of Port St. John waited 44 years to receive his Medal of Honor. Frederick Riefkohl, the first Puerto Rican to graduate from the Naval Academy, is one of 214 WWI minority veterans identified as possible Medal of Honor recipients.

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