02 Dec

A Veteran Walks Among Us ~ 40 Years of Service




Senior Master Sgt. Edgar Newell, 380th Expeditionary Force Protection superintendent, thanks 2nd Lt. Sarah Rothlisberg after she presented him a plaque during a tribute at the start of the day’s first shift Nov. 8, 2008. Newell is ending his last deployment prior to his retrirement after nearly 40 years of military service.




Senior Master Sgt. Edgar Newell, 380th Expeditionary Force Protection superintendent, addressed a formation after they paid tribute to him at a shift change Nov. 8, 2008. Newell is ending his last deployment prior to his retrirement after nearly 40 years of military service.

A Veteran Walks Among Us
By Tech. Sgt. Denise Johnson
380th Air Expedtionary Wing Public Affairs
SOUTHWEST ASIA
Senior Master Sgt. Edgar Newell stood among the 380th Expeditionary Security Forces Squadron Airmen at guard mount Nov. 8, 2008. His face somber, the lines on his face filled with the shadows of two scores of deployments and military service. The sun was rising, casting the golden glow of dawn across the pale landscape.
When 2nd Lt. Sarah Rothlisberg, 380th ESFS, called him to the front of the formation, the 59-year-old veteran’s eyes seemed to snap back from the reverie of days and deployments gone by … days when the world seemed so different, yet so similar. Early days when the dawn of his career was a reflection of today’s sunrise, emerging from the blanket of night to face new challenges.
Newell was honored on the eve of his final deployment. The 380th ESFS members stood watch; ears tuned to the words of a man who was watching the dusk roll in on a lifetime of service.

“My story is not a special one,” Newell said. “I just have a lot of little special moments between the dates.”

The senior non-commissioned officer claims a humble service, not deserving of any special recognition. His flight members disagree.

“Our lives as force protection Airmen will forever be changed and enriched due to Senior Newell’s vast experience and exceptional leadership,” said Rothlisberg, the 380th ESFS assistant operations officer. “It’s been an honor and a privilege serving with him.”

Richard Nixon was held in high esteem by the American people in 1969. Neil Armstrong was about to step foot on the moon. Twenty-year-old Newell was making his way to the local recruiter’s office in Vineland, N.J.
As the decade drew to a close, the United States was in its fourth year of the Vietnam Conflict. More than 530,000 military members were facing increased resistance. The death toll was rising.
“I joined because I wanted to be a Marine,” Newell, 380th Expeditionary Force Protection superintendent, said.
Forty years ago, uniformed service members were facing a volatile U.S. public for fighting in the Vietnam Conflict. The New Jersey native was not deterred. During a period of time when young men were dodging the draft, young Edgar stayed true to his dream and became a Marine.
As President Nixon was presenting jazz musician, Duke Ellington, the Presidential Medal of Freedom on April 29, 1969, Newell was swearing his oath of enlistment with the Marines.
He was trained as an infantryman and sent to the 2nd Force Reconnaissance Company at Camp LeJune, N.C., for nine months before heading off to Iceland for his first deployment.
Iceland was a Cold War bastion that dominated the polar approaches to Europe and North America. Its sea lanes were busy thoroughfares for nuclear submarines which dominated the strategic warfare of the 1970s. Though Marines guarded the American diplomatic presence there, there was also a contingent of ground forces who were arctic-warfare trained to counter any Soviet Spetznaz guerrilla invasions.
The year in Iceland forestalled his Vietnam assignment, but did not preclude it. His boots hit the ground in May, 1971. Newell headed home in September, 1972, after 16 months in-country as a grunt.
The years of 1971 and 1972 were the final phase of Nixon’s Vietnamization program designed to provide a transition from an American-dominated conflict to a war fought by the South Vietnamese themselves. As American units drew down, responsibility for the fight was taken up by South Vietnamese regular units.
Newell, now in his mid-twenties, separated from the Marines and went to college where he earned a degree in forestry.
“I love trees,” Newell said. “I love growing things.”
Though his love for horticulture was uncontested, the satisfaction derived from military service had also taken root. Newell became a member of the Army National Guard from 1979 until 1982.
“I then rejoined the Active Marine Corps Reserves from 1983 to 1986,” Newell said.
Though it had been 23 years since his first enlistment, Newell was far from his closing act. The sun was merely reaching midday on his veteranship. In 1992, six years after leaving the Marine Reserves, he donned yet another service uniform, this time for the New Jersey Air National Guard, where he has remained until the present.
Again, Newell had a front-row seat for military transformations as the NJANG underwent a major transition in 1993.
Its fighter forces were consolidated in Atlantic City, and its KC-135E Stratotankers from the 170th Air Refueling Group moved to McGuire Air Force Base, consolidated with the 108th Tactical Fighter Wing and became the two-squadron 108th Air Refueling Wing. The 177th Fighter Group in Atlantic City transitioned from F-106s (the last unit to fly the Delta Dart) to F-16s. Atlantic City provided key defense for the entire Northeastern seaboard.
“I have performed several different jobs in the military, from a platoon sergeant to the non-commissioned officer in charge of a [Petroleum, Oil, and Lubricant] section on a guard base,” Newell explained. “I’ve never been without an agenda for the next day. Retirement will be different.”
Newell donned the military uniform at a time when black youth were fighting for entrance into the same schools as white children. Activists such as Martin Luther King Jr. were assassinated for fighting for civil rights. Woodstock was making rock ‘n’ roll history, and man walked on the moon for the first time. The first computer-to-computer link was established on the ARPANET; and on Oct. 29, 1969, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled immediate desegregation of all school districts.
He changed uniforms from era to era and branch to branch.
Newell served his country through the radical hippie era and saw America’s youth dancing Saturday Night Fever-style at discos. He carried the flag through the Reagan era and the Clinton years. He will lay his uniform to rest for the final time in the same town he started in, Vineland. Newell has come full circle.
As the sun set on Newell’s distinguished and lasting military career, the first black president has been elected; people use webcams and satellite links to establish communications. Two score of military service finds the American public once again watching a battle play out on the evening news.
Today uniformed service members are approached by strangers, too. But hands are not raised to shake a closed fist and shouts do not spew words of hatred. Instead, open hands are extended in friendship and humble words of gratitude are orated.
No less so than Rothlisberg’s gratitude, “I am truly blessed to have been given the opportunity to work side by side with this extraordinary man.”
Veteran’s Day brought a bittersweet reminder to those who’ve served with Newell as he greets the close of his career and his deployed brethren bid him farewell. For among them walked a true veteran: a Marine, Soldier, Reservist, Guardsman and Airman … he served all.


Wild Thing’s comment……..
There are thousands of stories of our awesome troops. What a joy there is in sharing them and a tremendous pride in each one of our troops and Veterans that have made our country free and great!!

James M says:

Thanks for the wonderful story Chrissie. Its men and women like this that make our military the greatest.

Jack says:

Awesome story Chrissie, I’m smiling because I know what that tough old bird had to put up with. Just think about the knowledge and experience he imbued on those around him, the stuff you don’t get from book learning. Priceless and lifesaving!!!
“My story is not a special one,” Newell said. “I just have a lot of little special moments between the dates.”
I reckon so Top!!! Enjoy your retirement and thank you.

TomR says:

Senior Master Sgt. Newell certainly experienced the US military from a lot of different vantage points. What a neat and interesting career.
I hope he does not find his retirement boring. Good luck Newell.

Wild Thing says:

James, yes it sure is, it is great to have someone that has been in the military a long time leading the younger ones and helping them see how making it a career can be a great thing too.
It used to be people looked up to their elders and we see so little of that. It is nice to see it happening in our military.

Wild Thing says:

Jack, you poointed out something too, the things over the years and in the various branches he served he had to put up with. He learned first hand like you said, not from a book which it would not have been in anyway. Pretty amazing.

Wild Thing says:

Tom, see I had not thought of that, thanks. When he retires from being so active it will be a real change for him.

1st Lt. Michael Frye says:

To all,
Thank you for the support you’ve shown in your postings for Senior Master Sgt. Newell and all the men and women of the military. I’ll be sure to pass this on to him.
Sincerely,
Michael Frye, 1LT
Public Affairs Officer
380th Air Expeditionary Wing
Southwest Asia

Wild Thing says:

1st Lt. Michael Frye, what an honor it is to meet you. Thank you for commenting and even more thank you for serving our country.
That would be wonderful, yes pass our thanks on to Senior Master Sgt. Newell as well.
I wish there was a way to thank all of you and in person. It is so important to me that you and the rest of our awesome troops know how much we all appreciate all you do.
Thank you again.