
Also there is the last man vehicle. He lets the leader know when the pack is all on the highway, or made a turn. Keeping the pack together.
From Sif the TG from 5th Platoon. We talked the other day about one of my riders and his grandkids donating to Rainelle. My rider’s names is Jeffrey Alan Crawley. He has been sharing with them our ride and one of his grandkids lines up his cars like we ride. When he shared the story of Rainelle with his family his grandkids wanted to help. They each gave me an envelope as did his wife. He told me that they were donating from their vacation money and it may only be a couple dollars. I told him it did not matter how much they gave. It was the fact that they were giving that was incredible. When I opened the envelopes, his wife had donated $100 and each of the grandkids donated a $50 bill.
They have been married for 53 years. I admire all the women who have stayed with their husbands from the Vietnam War (or any war). They too have suffered. Many of our soldiers have changed and have problems with coping yet the spouses have stayed with them. Thanks ladies. This goes also for any women that served. Thanks, guys, for sticking with your wives.
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Gold Star wall in Charleston.
It is the first Gold Star Families Memorial Monument. It is beautiful.
There are 4 panels:
The Homeland panel features images representing the wild and wonderful state of West Virginia. It is home to many Gold Star Families. It is our people, it is our home. It is our Freedom.
The Family panel represents the uniquely brave spirit of our military families who provide support to their Loved Ones serving in our Armed Forces of the United States of America.
The Patriot panel shows the raising of the American Flag on Iwo Jima, which symbolizes those who vigorously support and defend our great Nation through selfless service in our Armed Forces.
The Sacrifice panel represents the sacrifices made by our Gold Star Families by the loss of their Loved One while in service to our country.
At the center of the tribute is a silhouette of a saluting service member, which represents the void created by the loss of the loved ones who have paid the ultimate sacrifice for our freedom.
There is a second monument:
RFTW has a POW that was with her: Joseph Hudson, AKA Gump. He rides with southern route.
Goodle:
The mission was simple, at least on paper: Follow a convoy north to Baghdad, then split off to two designated positions. Lynch’s unit had GPS devices, radios and maps. But by the second day, nearly everything went wrong.
Her convoy got lost outside the city of Nasiriyah, and her unit was 19 hours behind the main force. Lost and cut off, they drove straight into an ambush.
“Lori was driving the Humvee. We were hit, and then an RPG (rocket propelled grenade) slammed us into the back of a truck,” said Lynch, who blacked out after the impact. When she finally came to, she was no longer a soldier in battle — she was a captive.
Lynch later learned 11 of her comrades in her unit were killed, including Piestewa, who died on March 23, 2003, at Saddam Hussein General Hospital. She was the first Native American woman to die in combat for the U.S. military.
In captivity, Lynch’s injuries were staggering: a broken back, a shattered arm, a crushed foot. She was starved, filmed for propaganda and moved from room to room in a hostile hospital.
“They told me they would amputate my leg,” she said. “I had no idea if I would survive.”
On April 1, 2003, U.S. Special Forces stormed the hospital, which shook with explosions and gunfire. Lynch thought the building was under attack until a soldier burst into her room and tore the American flag from his uniform.
“He told me, ‘We’re Americans, and we’re here to take you home,’” she recalled. “I said, ‘I’m an American soldier too.’”
Weighing just 76 pounds, Lynch was evacuated by helicopter, flown to Kuwait, then to Germany. The rescue was broadcast worldwide, her frail body carried on a stretcher and her survival a symbol of hope amid the chaos of war.
Her rescue was the first successful recovery of an American prisoner of war since World War II and the first ever of a woman.
Life after Iraq
The road to recovery was was long and grueling: eight surgeries, metal rods, a body that still carries the scars of Iraq. Malnourished, broken and barely 20, Lynch had to relearn how to walk, how to trust, how to live. She said therapy sessions did not work.
“What worked was being with my family and friends, and people who understood me,” she said. More than anything, her fellow POWs kept her grounded. Their group text, she added with a grin, “is hysterical. We bust each other’s bubbles constantly. That’s our therapy.”
Lynch was medically discharged in July 2003 but refused to stop where the Army left her. She returned to school, earned degrees in education and communication, and today works both as a substitute teacher and as the women veterans program director in West Virginia.
Two decades removed from that dusty road in Nasiriyah, Lynch continues to tell her story not to relive the trauma, but to share its lesson.
“No matter what you’re faced with in life, just don’t give up,” she said. “You’ll get there. Keep fighting. Keep persevering.”
She thanked us for what we do and said: We will not stop until all come home.
Group picture by the capital building and we are off.
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Some riders even had the kids sign their shirts.
Here, the lady on the right was 14 in 1989, the first year. Her grandmother welcomed the riders into her home to help anyway she could. She has 6 kids and 12 grandkids and they all know about the veterans. The lady on the right is one of her kids.
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As I was leaving, I stopped to thank these ladies for coming out. Turns out that most of the were the mothers of the students in 1989. They try not to miss any year when the Run comes thru. What a great legacy.
Temps: 53-68
Route: I-64E, Rt 60
Miles: 121
Quote: The Price of Freedom is Written on the Wall





Due to circumstances beyond our control, Midway Route Photos from previous runs are no longer available.