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Updates to California Military History Online

The California State Military Museum is proud to announce the addition or updating of the following pages:
 
The Mexican War and California
Brig. Gen. Stephen W. Kearny's Report on the March from New Mexico to California
Brig. Gen. Stephen W. Kearny's Report on the Battle of San Pasqual
Siege of Los Angeles
History of the California State Military Forces
Lineage and Honors, 1114th Transportation Company
Heraldry of California State Military Forces
79th Infantry Brigade Combat Team
The Civil War and California
I Will Call a Traitor a Traitor: Albert Sidney Johnston in San Francisco
Historic Posts, Stations and Airfields:
George Air Force Base
Norton Air Force Base
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California State Military Museum Annual Appeal

Dear friends of the California State Military Museum:

 

Once again it’s time for our annual appeal for support to the museum.

Over the past year we have accomplished a great deal.  We have increased visitation, improved our reputation, participated in major historical commemorations and have started down the road to becoming a world class museum that the people of California and the members of the California National Guard and State Military Reserve can be proud of.  This includes:

·         Implementation of the PastPerfect museum management software that includes automated artifact management

·         Completion of the Sgt. Maj. Doris Drennan Multi-Purpose room

·         The addition of four employees funded by the American Association of Retired Persons

·         Hosting of the annual State Military Museum conference and training session.

·         Management of the military living history portion of Sacramento Gold Rush.

This coming year we want to build on our success and accomplish the following:

·         Establishment of an image library for the collection, preservation and digitization of photographs.  The museum has thousands of photographs

·         A new California in the Middle East and Afghanistan exhibit.

·         A major exhibit on California in the Civil War in cooperation with California State Parks to be placed in the State Capital.

·         Upgrading of current exhibits, to include new signage.

·         Replacement of library shelving and display cases in order to meet safety, security, and Americans with Disabilities Act requirements.

 With the current state budget situation, we will be forced to depend on your support to keep our doors open.  This is not limited to monetary support, but also you time and talents.  Please contact us at (916) 442-2883

If you would like to help us move forward to become a world class museum, please go to www.militarymuseum.org/appeal.pdf.  Please print out and complete the form and mail it along with your donation to the California State Military Museum, 1119 2nd Street, Sacramento, CA  95814.

Please pass this on to your friends and fellow lovers of history.

Thank you for your support in preserving California’s military heritage! 

The California State Military Museum

1119 2nd Street, Sacramento, CA  95814

www.militarymuseum.org


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New and Updated Pages, California Military History Online

The California State Military Museum is proud to announce the addition or updating of the following pages:

California Militia and National Guard Unit Histories

The Eureka Guard Company: Company A, 10th Infantry Battalion (Including the Arcata Guard Company, Company B, 10th Infantry Battalion)

Heraldry of the California State Military Forces

Order of California

California Medal of Merit

California Commendation Medal
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California State Military Museum Launches Image Library

The California State Military Museum has launched a new program to collect, store, digitize and make available to the images of California's vast military history. This program will build upon the museums already quite sizable collection of California National Guard images. If you have a collection of photographs or a disk with digital images, please consider donating them to the museum for posterity.
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Sacramento Museum Day

e> Once again, the annual Sacramento Museum Day held on Saturday, 7 February 2009, was an outstanding event for the museum. With approximately 2,000 visitors going through the museum in a seven hour period the museum was constagtntly filled from opening to closing. Added for the first time this year was a team from the US Army's Sacramento Recruiting Battalion who set up a 16-station Local Area Network (LAN) to play the latest edition of the "America's Army" computer game as well as a weapons simulator featuring the M249 Squad Automatic Weapon, M4 Carbine, and the M9 Pistol. The following images show the highlights of the day.
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Jacques Littlefield's Collection of Military Vehicles to Remain in Portola Valley, Available for Tours

Letter from the President
Military Vehicle Technology Foundation
January 20, 2009


Portola Valley, Ca

Dear Friends of the Military Vehicle Technology Foundation,

I am sad to announce that our  long-time friend, the Foundation's founder, Jacques Littlefield, passed away on January 7, 2009.  Shortly before his final hours he indicated satisfaction with the status and accomplishments of the Foundation and its most recent project, the  just completed German Panther.

Jacques acquired his first full-sized military vehicle, an M3A1 wheeled scout car,  in 1975.  By the late 1990s as the collection became more significant, he started to plan for its longer term preservation. In 1998, he created the Military Vehicle Technology Foundation (MVTF) as a non-profit corporation.   The mission of the MVTF is to collect, preserve, restore, document and display armored fighting vehicles and their associated equipment.  The MVTF serves the interests of authors, historians, educators, the defense industry, veterans groups, model makers and the entertainment industry.

Over the last few years, Jacques and the board of directors had many discussions about the future of the MVTF.  He made it clear that he wanted the Foundation and its activities to continue after his death.  Last week, his children agreed that the Foundation should continue to develop, preserve and display the vehicles  and the current items will be named the Jacques M. Littlefield Collection.  Jacques' family, the staff of the MVTF, and the board were all greatly heartened by the expressions of interest in the future of the MVTF following the announcement of  his death.   

The Board of Directors of the MVTF met following Jacques' death and elected new officers to continue his work.    With the agreement and support of Jacques' children, the MVTF will continue to be housed at its current location in the hills above Portola Valley.  Access to the collection by interested researchers and groups remains a critical element to continuing to fulfill the MVTF charter and mission.  Therefore, many restoration projects, display enhancements and the tours will continue.

In his will, Jacques created an endowment for the MVTF that will allow us time to transition to a self sustaining organization.  The Board and the friends of the MVTF now have the opportunity and  substantial responsibility  to increase the endowment  and manage the operating costs to ensure that Jacques' legacy collection continues to be available to provide its unique contributions.

If you would like to make a donation to the MVTF in Jacques' memory and help preserve, display and have access to the Jacques M. Littlefield Collection, please consider sending a contribution to:


MVTF
P.O. Box 7390
Menlo Park, CA 94026


The MVTF  is recognized by the IRS as a 501(c)3 corporation.  Donations are considered fully tax-deductible as allowed by law.

I hope you will join us in preserving and advancing Jacques' legacy.


Sincerely,



William  A. (Bill) Boller
President
Military Vehicle Technology Foundation
MVTF website:
http://www.milvehtechfound.com/

MVTF mailing address:
P.O. Box 7390
Menlo Park, CA 94026

To make arrangements for tours:
tours.mvtf@gmail.com


To arrange access to the collection for commercial purposes:
permissions.mvtf@gmali.com


For any other issues:
inquiries.mvtf@gmail.com

The MVTF  is recognized by the IRS as a 501(c)3 corporations.  Donations are considered fully tax-deductible as allowed by law.

 

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U.S. museums find depicting current wars hard

By James Hannah - The Associated Press
Posted : Tuesday Jan 13, 2009 11:38:13 EST

DAYTON, Ohio — When the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force began looking at ways to depict the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, big obstacles loomed.

Certain missions remain classified and some equipment — such as night-vision goggles — was unavailable for display, because it was still being used by troops or might be if they are redeployed.

“We don’t want to take things away from the warfighter,” said Jeff Duford, a museum historian. “It was pretty challenging.”

The museum’s struggle underscores the difficulty facing other institutions trying to depict the wars while the conflicts are still underway.

The Air Force museum decided to focus an exhibit opening Tuesday on the experiences of the wars’ airmen. It features more than 400 artifacts, 18 fully equipped soldier mannequins, a robot demonstrating how it inspects roadside bombs and a Sikorsky special operations helicopter used to covertly enter enemy territory.

Since the history of the wars has yet to be fully written, the museum honed in on the individual Americans fighting the wars, using artifacts to tell their stories, Duford said.

“The way that people act — the heroism and sacrifice that people have — that really transcends time,” he said.

Other museums have faced similar constraints.

The Wisconsin Veterans Museum in Madison plans to open an exhibit this spring portraying the role of Wisconsin soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. Museum officials interviewed soldiers and collected uniforms, helmets, boots and other items.

But Jeff Kollath, curator of programs and exhibitions, said the Pentagon has become more restrictive about what soldiers can bring home since the Vietnam War, making it more difficult to obtain artifacts that tell important individual stories.

Kollath also said many soldiers who served in Iraq and Afghanistan are in the National Guard and Reserve and return to their civilian lives after deployment, leaving many stories untold.

“They’re not spending a lot of time thinking about their place in history,” he said.

In 2006, the National Museum of the Marine Corps in Triangle, Va., opened a temporary exhibit that included photographs and artifacts from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Spokeswoman Gwenn Adams said it took a little longer to catalog the artifacts and prepare them for display because of the ongoing nature of the wars.

“And keeping it current,” she said. “The challenge is to keep those photographs updated.”

Tim Clarke, spokesman for the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington, D.C., said the museum had to avoid interfering with military operations while collecting artifacts on military medical care in Iraq.

Last month, the museum opened an exhibit depicting a former Air Force tent hospital in Balad, Iraq. The museum stepped in after learning that the hospital’s emergency room and trauma bay, where the most seriously wounded soldiers were taken, were to be demolished. Artifacts from the hospital were shipped to the museum in April.

Museum spokesman Tim Clarke said museum officials took the time to learn all they could about the wounded soldiers who are depicted.

Duford, of the Air Force museum, said his institution benefited from the generosity of the depicted airmen, who donated their artifacts to the museum unconditionally and permanently.

Among them is Ramon Colon-Lopez, who took part in search-and-rescue missions in Afghanistan and provided security to Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

Colon-Lopez, 37, donated a blanket he used to blend in with the Afghan population as well as a pink and purple stuffed Cheshire cat he took on his missions as a good luck charm.

“I thought about it for awhile. But looking at preserving the history of what we’ve done, there couldn’t be a better place,” he said. “As far as the declassified aspect of things, I think it does a great job of depicting what we have done so far. We’re not done.”

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Jacques Mequet Littlefield Tank Scholar and Collector

Jacques Mequet Littlefield, who assembled one of the largest private collections of military vehicles in the world and championed open space in the mid-Peninsula, has died in Portola Valley, CA on January 7, 2009. He was 59 years old and had battled cancer for the past decade. Jacques' fascination with armored vehicles began in his childhood when he started building plastic models of tanks. While in college, he built his first scale model, radio-controlled tank. He acquired his first full-sized vehicle in 1975. In 1998 Jacques set up the Military Vehicle Technology Foundation to manage his collection of over one hundred fifty vehicles and restore new additions. The collection ranges from a World War II era U.S. Army M3A1 wheeled scout car, the first acquisition, to a Soviet-era mobile Scud Missile launcher, and includes such famous tanks as the U.S. Sherman and Patton class; U.K. Centurion, Conqueror and Chieftain; German WWII vehicles including a Panther; and Soviet-era Russian tanks. The complete inventory is available at www.milvehtechfound.com.

Jacques was considered a scholar and expert on the history of armored warfare and the foundation helps serve the interests of authors, historians, educators, the defense industry, veterans groups, model makers and the entertainment industry. The collection is housed at Pony Tracks Ranch in the hills above Portola Valley, which the family acquired in the mid-1970s. Pony Tracks was the country estate of former SF mayor and California governor James "Sunny Jim" Rolph, Jr. Over the years, Jacques restored many of the old buildings on the ranch, such as the stables, and acquired additional property helping to maintain open space in the hills above Portola Valley. Jacques was the son of the late Edmund Wattis Littlefield and Jeannik Mequet Littlefield. He was born Nov. 21, 1949 in San Francisco, CA. His father was CEO of Utah International and served on many corporate boards during his career. He is survived by his mother, a strong supporter of the arts and a member of the Chairman's Council of the San Francisco Opera; his brother, Edmund Littlefield, Jr.; and sister, Denise Littlefield Sobel. Jacques also is survived by his wife, Sandy Montenegro Littlefield, and five children: David, Scott, Allison, Jacques Jr. and Jeannik, and one grandson, Kingsley. Jacques grew up in Burlingame and attended Cate School in Carpinteria, CA before studying at Stanford University where he received his Bachelor's degree in 1971 and an MBA two years later. He worked for Hewlett Packard as a manufacturing engineer before focusing solely on building his museum and restoration facility.

Jacques served on the boards of the George S. Patton Museum in Fort Knox, Kentucky, the Cate School, the Coyote Point Museum for Environmental Education, the Hoover Institution, the California Academy of Sciences, and the Filoli Center. He was a member of the Bohemian Club and Captain of the Sempervirens camp. A viewing will be held at Roller Hapgood & Tinney Funeral Directors, 980 Middlefield Rd in Palo Alto, on Saturday, January 10, 3:00 to 6:00, and a public memorial service for Jacques will be scheduled for the near future. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests a contribution to one of the organizations Jacques supported: The Patton Museum, Cate School, the Coyote Point Museum for Environmental Education, the California Academy of Sciences, the Hoover Institution or the Filoli Center.

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California Military History Online: New and Updated Histories

The California State Military Museum is proud to announce the addition or updating of the following pages (1 Jan 08):
 
Historic California Posts, Stations, and Airfields:
Huron Auxiliary Field
Indian Auxiliary Field
Madera Municipal Airport
New Jeruselum Auxiliary Field
Stockton Field
West Auxiliary Field
Willows Municipal Airport
California Militia and National Guard Unit Histories:
Shields Guard (Placer County)
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Californian Lt Gen Victor H. Krulack (USMC Ret) dies

From today's Los Angeles Times:

Nicknamed 'Brute,' Krulak was a decorated World War II hero and the author of a history of the Marines titled 'First to Fight.'
By Tony Perry

December 31, 2008

Retired Marine Lt. Gen. Victor H. "Brute" Krulak, celebrated for his leadership in World War II, Korea and Vietnam and for his authoritative book on the Marines, "First to Fight," died Monday at Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla. He was 95 and had been in declining health for several years.

In a career that spanned three decades Krulak displayed bravery during combat and brilliance as a tactician and organizer of troops.

"Brute was very forgiving of young Marines who made mistakes," said retired Col. G.I. Wilson, a combat veteran. "But he was hell on senior officers who preferred careerism and bureaucracy over decisive action. He detested those who lost sight of looking after their enlisted Marines and young officers."

Born in Denver on Jan. 7, 1913, Krulak was a 1934 graduate of the Naval Academy -- where he picked up his nickname, a jest on the fact he was 5 foot 4. As a junior officer he served in Marine actions in Central America, where his views on counterinsurgency were formed.

In World War II, as a lieutenant colonel, he led a battalion in a weeklong battle as a diversionary raid to cover the invasion of Bougainville. Although wounded, he refused to be evacuated. For his bravery he was awarded the Navy Cross.

Under heavy fire from the Japanese, the Navy sent patrol boats to evacuate wounded Marines. Krulak befriended one of the young commanders, John F. Kennedy. Decades later the two shared a drink of whiskey in the Oval Office after Kennedy was elected president.

After World War II, Krulak held several key jobs, including commander of the 5th Marine Regiment and later chief of staff for the 1st Marine Division during the war in Korea. Later he served as commander of the Marine boot camp in San Diego and, from 1962 to 1964, as special assistant for counterinsurgency to the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

As commanding general of Fleet Marine Force Pacific he made 54 trips to Vietnam.

His ideas about mining Haiphong Harbor and relying on small unit actions in South Vietnam to win the support of the populace clashed with the strategy of Army Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of all U.S. troops from 1964 to 1968. He opposed Westmoreland's decision to establish an outpost at Khe Sanh, which resulted in one of the bloodiest sieges of the war.

Krulak had hoped to become Marine Corps commandant, but President Johnson in 1968 nominated Gen. Leonard Chapman Jr. Krulak retired and began a second career as an executive for Copley newspapers and as a columnist. He retired as an executive in 1977 but continued to write.

In 1984, his book "First to Fight: An Inside View of the U.S. Marine Corps" was published, examining the history and culture of the Marine Corps. It remains on the official reading list for Marines and has been said to carry the DNA of the organization that prides itself on being the worst enemy that a foe of the United States can imagine.

"The Marines are an assemblage of warriors, nothing more," Krulak wrote. He called on Marines to maintain a "religious dedication" to being ready to "go and win -- and then come back alive." He disdained Pentagon bureaucracy and, even as he celebrated the Corps' history, he called for Marines to "remain on the cutting edge of the technology that will keep its specialty effective."

Bing West, former assistant secretary of defense in the Reagan administration and author of books on Marines in Vietnam and Iraq, said Krulak "was legendary for the depth of his intelligence."

In a 2007 speech to the Marine Corps Assn., Defense Secretary Robert Gates praised Krulak for "overcoming conventional wisdom and bureaucratic obstacles thrown in one's path." Among other things, Krulak advocated that the Marines form a special forces unit when other Marine leaders opposed the idea.

All three of Krulak's sons served in Vietnam: Charles and William as Marine infantry officers, Victor Jr. as a Navy chaplain. After retiring from the Marines, William followed his brother into the Episcopal clergy.

Charles, as a general, served as Marine commandant from 1995 to 1999, and followed in his father's footsteps as an innovator and champion of the enlisted man. Along with his sons, Krulak is survived by four grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren.

Krulak's wife, Amy, died in 2001. Funeral services are set for 2 p.m. Jan. 8 at the chapel at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar.

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Facing the Decisive Year for the Presidio of San Francisco as a National Park

From presidioassocation.org:

2009. What lies ahead? A large hotel and a contemporary art museum in the center of a national park and a national historic landmark? The path open for more wealthy donors to build their personal dreams in a park that belongs to all of the people? The present proposals and the revisions we are told to expect in January will continue to endanger the Presidio's status as a national park. If it to continue as a national park, it must be managed to the standards of a national park. Every action that the Presidio Trust Board takes that impairs the historic resources of the Presidio is one step closer to the Presidio's losing its status as a national park and national historic landmark. There are people in San Francisco and in Washington who would be delighted to see that happen. Some don't want the Presidio to be governed by national park rules, but to be a gorgeous vacant lot upon which they can build their fantasy of the moment. Others probably think that they could profit from such a development. Still others think that they can manage the park functions of a national park better than the men and women of a Park Service that has nearly 100 years of experience and proud tradition as custodian of America's national parks.

All the public - even those who admire Mr. Fisher's art collection- cannot find a single reason why the Fisher Museum has to be in a national park rather than in the thriving, arts-loving city nearby. That is because a contemporary art museum is alien to the values of the Presidio. It expresses the values of a modern city. It makes the Presidio someplace that is fundamentally different than when it was designated a national historic landmark.

So, how can we continue to keep the pressure on to save the Presidio? Write now to Congresswoman Pelosi to express your outrage that this struggle is still going on. Ask on what authority the Presidio would be a part of the only national park in the nation with a newly built contemporary art museum, when no other national park would have such an alien activity forced upon it. Ask her why the Presidio believes that it is not required to follow the laws concerning the protection of national park resources that guide all other other national parks. Does she support that position? Was the intent of Congress in the Presidio Trust Act for the Presidio to be in the parks system, but not follow the rules that define what a national park is? Is or is not the Presidio a national park? Send a copy of your letter to mainpost@presidiotrust.gov .

Write! Continue to monitor this blog and presidioassociation.org.
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California Military History Online: New or Updated Webpages

The California State Military Museum is proud to announce the addition or updating of the following pages (30 Dec 08):
 
California Militia and National Guard Unit Histories:
City Guard (San Francisco)
Volcano Blues
Heraldry of California State Military Forces:
140th Aviation Regiment
Coast Artillery Companies, California National Guard
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Hunt is on for Phony POWs

CHICAGO - The story that Richard Barr Cayton has told of his Vietnam War service features a torturous march through the jungle in January 1971, his arms tied to a branch across the back of his neck and shoulders. He was a prisoner of war, he said, until a bombing distracted his captors, and he and a fellow soldier escaped.

Cayton recounted the episode for a Texas newspaper in 2002, saying that he and the other Army Ranger, David Meyer, traveled by night and hid during the day until they were found.

For all its drama, Cayton's story of captivity and a flight to freedom is not supported by military records or interviews with his fellow soldiers. Records show that Cayton was a soldier but never a prisoner of war, and he admitted that in an interview with the Chicago Tribune.

"I made a mistake," Cayton said. "I did something wrong and apologized for it."

Cayton's tale is perhaps one of the more dramatic examples of someone who falsely maintains that he was a prisoner of war. Such claims are so common that a cottage industry of sorts has emerged to expose phony POWs, Navy SEALs, Green Berets and others falsely claiming that they served in elite military units.

A recent Tribune investigation highlighted a similar problem that is just as pervasive: false claims of earning the military's top medals for valor, a lie that also is now a criminal offense.

The private watchdogs who investigate such claims are vigilant and aggressive. This summer, an Oklahoma newspaper published the story of a man who claimed he was a former SEAL who, during Vietnam, was held in a bamboo cage for four years. Former SEAL Steve Robinson, who wrote a book about exposing phony SEALs, immediately suspected the man was a fraud. He checked a database of real SEALs to confirm his suspicions, then wrote the newspaper to say it had been hoodwinked.

"When I read the story," said Robinson, "right away I'm thinking something is up."

Less than a week later, the man admitted to the newspaper that he had lied.

The POW watchdogs who exposed Cayton are retirees who work out of their home in the tiny Missouri town of Skidmore.

By their count, Mary and Chuck Schantag of the P.O.W. Network have exposed close to 1,900 impostors since 1998, when they began to check POW claims. They say they have exposed another 2,000 men who claimed they were in elite units.

"It's taken over our lives," said Mary Schantag. "We check reports of phonies when we get up in the morning and before we get to bed at night."

Their motivation is simple. "The lies are changing history. It's wrong. It causes the real heroes to be grouped with the phonies and frauds," she said. "The integrity and honor should be given to those who really earn it."

 

Their job is made easier because, compared with World War II, the Vietnam War produced relatively few American POWs - 766 - and the military has thoroughly documented them, said Larry Greer, a spokesman for the Department of Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office.

Consequently, it takes only a few keystrokes to determine whether someone claiming to be a POW is telling the truth; the names of prisoners from the Vietnam and Korean Wars are posted online.

On their Web site, the Schantags detail the cases they make under the heading "Phonies & Wannabees," with stories of the frauds and, sometimes, apologies from soldiers and sailors who lied.

Similarly, online sleuths in recent years have sought to expose people claiming to be Navy SEALS.

 

Recently the Tribune did its own analysis to gauge the frequency of such fabrications. Whether found in Who's Who, obituaries or news articles, nearly half of the 89 people identified as having served in the Army's Special Forces or the Navy's SEALs had no association with those elite warriors, according to their official military files.

In addition to barring false claims to medals awarded for bravery, the broadly worded federal law known as the Stolen Valor Act prohibits claiming, either orally or in writing, a false entitlement to any "decoration" or "badge" worn by the Armed Forces. According to the FBI, people have been prosecuted under the act for falsely claiming to have served as a SEAL or a Green Beret.

Making a bogus boast of POW status, however, is not against the law, though many in the military consider it equally offensive.

"They can brag all they want. They can say that they were held in the worst possible conditions," Greer said. "But that's not a crime. Those people, well, they're just bigmouths."

 

The Schantags first heard about Richard Cayton in 2002, after an article in the Killeen Daily Herald in Texas detailed how victims of various hardships survive. One of those victims was Cayton.

"They did degrading, inhumane things to us," Cayton said of his purported captors.

Cayton was a decorated soldier who retired in 1995 with the rank of command sergeant major after more than three decades in the Army, according to his military records.

But the Schantags, who have come to know many POWs, did not recognize Cayton's name. They checked online; Cayton was not listed, so they wrote to the Army.

That prompted an investigation by the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Army's Criminal Investigation Division and a review by federal prosecutors. That investigation, according to documents and interviews, found probable cause for the belief that Cayton had falsified his military documents to show he was a POW.

As part of a pretrial agreement in September 2006, Cayton agreed to stop making those claims and to correct his military records, according to Army documents.

In fact, during the time Cayton claimed to the Killeen newspaper that he and David Meyer were POWs, their Ranger unit was involved in a jungle firefight and rescue that resulted in the death of Meyer and another soldier, Barry Berger.

When the Rangers returned to the base, some of them went to their commanders - Richard Epting, the platoon leader, and Mark Hansen, company commander - to complain. Several Rangers believed Cayton's actions had unnecessarily provoked the firefight, according to interviews and military records.

Epting and Hansen, in separate interviews with the Tribune, said that because Cayton's men were refusing to work with him, they called him in and asked about the soldiers' concerns.

"He never once said, 'Wait a minute, sir. Someone is lying on me,'" said Epting, who retired as a colonel after 26 years in the Army. "He never objected."

Shortly after the firefight, Hansen shipped Cayton out of the unit "because he lost the confidence of his fellow soldiers and leaders," according to Hansen's interview with military investigators. Hansen, a West Point graduate who retired from the Army as a colonel in 1998, and his fellow officers concluded that Cayton "had manipulated the situation during (the) firefight so as to appear heroic to his comrades," a military investigative report said.

"This was a shameful event," Hansen said in a recent interview.

Cayton declined to discuss the firefight and what happened in the unit.

Two days after the firefight and rescue - during the time Cayton claimed he was a POW - soldiers gathered for a memorial service for Meyer and Berger.

All the soldiers who attended signed a sheet of paper, a copy of which was sent to the families of Meyer and Berger. Meyer's sister, Patricia Heddens of Charles City, Iowa, has a copy.

Cayton's name is on it.

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New Webpages on California Military History Online

The California State Military Museum is proud to announce the addition or updating of the following pages:
 
California Militia and National Guard Unit Histories:
Company "H"
California Volunteers
Butte Mounted Rifles
Amador Mountaineers
Santa Clara Light Infantry (Santa Clara Guard)
San Bernardino Rough and Ready Cavalry
San Bernardino Rangers (San Bernardino Mountain Rangers, San Bernardino Mounted Rifles)
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