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View Full Version : Condolences to B.A.G Fuller


adampet
11-10-2008, 10:41 PM
I saw this in the Boston Globe today. I thought I'd share with the rest of the Forum. http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/obituaries/articles/2008/11/10/benjamin_fuller_90_exploits_in_wwii_launched_cia_c areer/?page=full

Benjamin Fuller, 90; exploits in WWII launched CIA career
BENJAMIN FULLER
http://cache.boston.com/resize/bonzai-fba/Globe_Photo/2008/11/09/1226286912_9068/300h.jpg
In Sherborn, Benjamin Fuller read stories to local elementary school children and folded bulletins each week at Pilgrim Congregational Church.

He told his grandsons to call him "Old Goat" and knew the names of the horses and dogs he passed on his daily walks, his family said.

Few in the town, though, knew Mr. Fuller spent 22 years working for the CIA, including an assignment in Vietnam, and was a decorated World War II tank battalion captain who survived the battlefields of North Africa.

"He was very humble. He never talked about it. He was more interested in whether the horse had his carrot," said his daughter, Ridgely of Waltham.

Mr. Fuller, who lived in Sherborn for the past decade, died Oct. 12 at Wayside Hospice in Wayland after a brief illness. He was 90.

Born in Dover, he was the youngest of five siblings. The family later moved to Milton, where Mr. Fuller graduated from Milton Academy in 1936.

He went to Princeton, where he was a "mediocre student" but an avid hockey player and, he told his family, a raucous member of the Ivy Club, an eating club dating to 1879.

After graduating from Princeton in 1940, Mr. Fuller was commissioned in the Army. Before going to war, he spent a night of revelry in Boston's old Scollay Square, now Government Center, where he got a tattoo of a skull and snake on his left shoulder.

He served with field artillery in North Africa, Italy, and France. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for "extraordinary heroism" for his actions in February 1943 while under fire in Tunisia, where he was captain of the 601 Tank Destroyer Battalion.

According to military records, he took five stranded men to safety before returning to the field in an unarmored vehicle to "ensure none of his men or useable equipment were left behind."

He also was awarded the Silver Star for action in North Africa in March 1943. He was wounded in the hip that day but kept his unit intact and refused to be evacuated. He left a foxhole to recover a disabled machine gun and capture several prisoners.

Wounded in the battle, Mr. Fuller was taken to the Ninth Evacuation hospital. He fell in love with his nurse there, Roberta Tayloe of Virginia. They married in Italy in 1944.

Before her death in 2000, Mrs. Fuller wrote about her wartime experiences in a book called "Combat Nurse."

"My father was incredibly handsome and she couldn't believe this attractive, glamorous man was interested in her," daughter Ridgely said.

All of Mr. Fuller's siblings served in World War II. In Milton, his mother had five blue stars in a window of the family's home during the war. The siblings all survived the war.

Mr. Fuller had originally wanted to be a veterinarian, his family said. But he wound up staying in the Army for several years after the war. His assignments included work with Russian prisoners of war in Germany. He studied at Columbia University and later received a master's degree in Russian from Harvard.

The Central Intelligence Agency recruited him in 1950. He was based in Fairfax and Alexandria, Va., and did work in Holland, Thailand, and Vietnam. He retired from the CIA in 1972.

In 1975, his Princeton classmates elected him class secretary. He kept the post until 2001. The class of 1940 created a scholarship fund in his name in 2000.

In 1995, Mr. Fuller and his wife moved to New England to be closer to his family. In Sherborn, he volunteered to read to pupils at Pine Hills Elementary School and was a loyal fan of Dover/Sherborn ice hockey and football.

In addition to his daughter, Mr. Fuller leaves a brother, Robert, 97, of Westwood; a son, Ben, of Cushing, Maine; and two grandsons.


Another of "The Greatest Generation" gone.


Adam

StevenBauer
11-10-2008, 10:49 PM
Thanks, Adam.
Sorry for your loss, Ben, sounds like your dad lived a long and full life.


Steven

Hughman
11-10-2008, 11:36 PM
My Condolences, Ben.

rbgarr
11-11-2008, 03:10 AM
I saw that in the Globe also. A life of service. Condolences to all the Fullers.

Concordia...41
11-11-2008, 03:46 AM
My condolences to the Fullers.

- M

paladin
11-11-2008, 04:35 AM
Condolences....a fine man....

Thad
11-11-2008, 06:20 AM
Condolences Ben, take care.

Ben Fuller
11-11-2008, 09:12 AM
Tnx folks.

Pax vobiscum

73

Ed Harrow
11-11-2008, 09:49 AM
People like B en Fuller are just so amazing. I've had the privilege of 'knowing' three.

One, piloting a B-24 over Europe, struggled to keep the plane in the air giving the crew sufficient time to bail out. 'B', too, made it out of the doomed plane, and the entire crew survived. The only time one saw even a hint of that side of 'B' was with tiller in hand and a boat in front. It was only quite late in life that his family, and thus me (not family) garnered some idea of his history.

The other, 'M', his story is even more amazing. 'M' was, without a doubt, about the most humble man I've ever known. In 1942 he was "a good little Jewish boy living in Brooklyn, who just happened to speak perfect French." W O'Donovan tapped him on the shoulder and said, "Come with me, boy, I have just the task for you." 'M' was dropped into Marsailles one dark night, where he was picked up by a member of the French Resistance. They spent the rest of their time in occupied France taking out high-rank Nazi Officers. His French 'handler' would entice the doomed party into a, um, compromising, that will do, situation, and 'M' would finish them off with a quick slice across the throat. I don't know when the two got married, but the bond between them was amazing, and his state, when his wife died, was desolate, at best, but not for long.

The last, 'H', was one of three in a small, open aluminum boat, attempting rescues of people during the Blizzard of 78. Some they saved, one they didn't, 'H' was left holding a mitten IIRC.

My sympathies, Ben. I'll be driving through Sherborn this afternoon, passing first thru Holliston, with names and flags (over 4000) of and for those who've not come back from Iraq displayed from telephone poles, and I'll quietly add your father to that list.

Bayboat
12-25-2008, 12:43 PM
Hi, Ben. I never had the honor to meet him but I would like to have. Here's to the best of us; there're damn few of us left. Sorrow. Clint.

bamamick
12-26-2008, 07:15 AM
I am very sorry to hear of this. Ben, God's peace be with you.

Mickey Lake