67 Years Later, Wiggins Place Resident to Get His Purple Heart
U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown will visit Beachwood to give Donald Arnold his Purple Heart.
BEACHWOOD, OH – “I wasn’t thinking,” said U.S. Army Pvt. Donald Arnold.
“We started to get shot at very heavily, and I jumped on the hood of a Jeep and hollered for somebody to drive it to go to the wounded men.” He spoke slowly.
“And I thought, well, with the red cross on my helmet, they wouldn’t shoot at me. But it wasn’t true.” He took a long pause, staring straight ahead, then went on.
“So we drove through town, picking up what we could of wounded men to get them out of harm’s way.”
Arnold, a Cleveland Heights native who lived for several years in Shaker Heights and Beachwood, was serving in Schildgen, Germany on April 14, 1945. He was 22.
“The human mind is funny,” said Donald Arnold in his living room at Wiggins Place in Beachwood. “It blocks out the worst experiences.”
Hanging on the wall is a certificate for a silver star for valor in the face of an enemy, dated from an incident that occurred April 15, 1945.
And though a certificate below the Silver Star cites an injury Arnold suffered in that incident, he never got his Purple Heart.
“I pulled the shrapnel out, bandaged my leg and went back to work,” said Arnold.
Later, there were forms that needed to be filled out, that usually would have been done by the medic who treated Arnold, so he would be commended for his injury. But that day, when Arnold was hit, he was the last living medic in the company. Paperwork would have to wait.
“We suffered a lot of casualties that day. A lot of fellows wounded…I kept taking care of the wounded men. That’s what a medic did. Gave them emergency first aid and tried to evacuate them.”
There was a long silence, and then Arnold broke it. “I will tell you an interesting story, though.”
His eyes lit up as he told the story of delivering a baby in a village his unit had been fighting the Germans for control of. He had never performed the procedure, had only seen it done a few times.
“I was a 22-year-old, not afraid of anything,” Arnold chuckled. “I delivered a healthy little baby boy.”
Now 89, he lives in Wiggins Place with his second wife Beverly, who he met at the facility.
When they moved in together, Beverly Arnold found the certificates and asked her new husband how he got the Silver Star.
“And I said to him, how is it that you get a Silver Star with a citation mentioning that you were wounded in war … and you can’t get a medal?” she said.
The couple tried Veteran’s Affairs and the American Legion, but could not get through the red tape to prove to the federal government that he deserved the Purple Heart. Finally, they got help from U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown, who will be presenting Arnold with the award July 16.
“It’s a medal, he should have it. It’s sort of like capping his life,” said Beverly Arnold.
The ceremony will be at 10:30 a.m. at Wiggins Place.
Joe Strailey
8:31 am on Friday, July 6, 2012
Amazing story. Congrats to him, well deserved.
Steve Rosen
10:26 am on Friday, July 6, 2012
Thank you for your service Pvt. Arnold. This is yet another reason I am proud to call Senator Brown my Senator.
RPD
1:29 am on Sunday, July 8, 2012
Thank you for your service, Private Arnold. 67 years is a long time to correct an oversight by our government. But in times of war, sometimes award paperwork does fall through the cracks. The wheels of progress turn ever slowly, but thanks to Senator Brown, they do turn. Congratulations, Pvt. Donald Arnold. And thanks from another fellow former service member and a grateful nation.
dean m brayton
2:18 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
I salute you Private Arnold. In related news, thanks to the Supreme Court, dopes that never served our country, can claim they've been awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor, Silver Stars, Purple Hearts, kills over North Vietnam, and retirement as a 2 star general!
Joe Gunsenhouser
2:34 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
As a Purple Heart veteran for the OEF generation, I'm glad the gov't finally opened their eyes and realized the truth...Congratulations, Pvt. Arnold
Angie
3:03 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
As a military wife (and from a long line of military men), you deserve every bit of that medal, Sir. From the bottom of my heart, thank you for your heroism, bravery, and sacrifices. If it were not for many men like you, we could not win wars or liberate countries. You, Sir, are a true hero in my eyes.
Thomas J Burke
3:13 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
We were given a direct order not to get killed, captured or wounded. So the outfit never gave Purple Hearts as that would have meant someone broke a direct order. It was also said that they did not want to worry those at home. I guess if someone was wounded bad enough to go back to a hospital in the states then they got a purple heart. I can not understand why those who disobeyed orders and got wounded or captured are treated as heroes. Those of us who fought the war and lived in foxholes get nothing.
K Feehan
8:13 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
You got to come home, unlike others.
Bambi Luv
10:55 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
Can't you just be happy for Pvt. Arnold? This is a very touching story, please don't feel anger towards him. I mean no disrespect to you sir, I am a proud supporter of our troops and I have family that has served in WWII and Viet Nam. Thank you for your service !!! You are a hero in my eyes as well as everyone who has served this country. God bless you.
ROBERT HUNT
11:39 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
no one ever sets out to get wounded ... it just so happens that we sometimes end up in the wrong place at the wrong time. Burke I hope that you pull your out of the sand. If you cant stand behind our veterans feel free to stand in front of them.
Angie
12:43 am on Sunday, July 8, 2012
I hope you are being sarcastic and not serious. That war was not won by merely sitting in a foxhole (and I am not saying that was easy), but by going beyond what their gut told them to do and jump in the line of fire to try and save others. Don't be bitter; be happy that there are still others out there getting recognized long after the war ended. If you joined the military for the recognition, then you picked the wrong line of work, my friend. Be proud of your service just as all of us are. Be grateful you made it out alive. Whether you "lived" in a foxhole or out, you are no less of a man than he.
JOHN BRUNNER
4:55 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
Thank you for the service to our country. God save the United States and the constitution! From a disabled Republic of Vietnam combat veteran.
Lynn Wright
1:44 am on Sunday, July 8, 2012
John...'welcome home' from a Nam disabled vet also.
david slater,esq.
5:00 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
A wonderful story. Good work Senator.
R. Crowell
5:10 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
Each time I see a Military person male or female from any of the four branchs, I salute them. These men & women are why our nation is still free and we owe them more than what our Gov't gives them.
R. Hauser
5:53 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
This is a degradation of the medal thanks to blowhards like John Kerry. In WWII a minor wound that didn't require hospitalization didn't warrent the Purple Heart. How could a man insist that a wound that didn't require an overnight compare to someone who lost a limb or was paralyzed? If you weren't seriously injured, you weren't eligible for a Purple Heart.
Bandaid wound like John Kerry's weren't eligible.
Not sure why a guy awarded the Silver Star would feel the need to file a bogus claim for a Purple Heart.
LBB
6:09 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
You are an idiot. This man showed extreme valor in the face of danger, and he was shot. Bet you aren't even a vet.
THOMAS SHERIDAN
6:35 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
to R. Hauser: you meant to type "I AM GLAD HE GOT THE PURPLE HEART!"
ROBERT HUNT
11:45 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
Really Jack-wagon? He was the only living medic in the unit ... sorry he didn't take a rest overnight in the hospital. He manned up and got back in the fight. Because of men like him going overseas and fighting you can sit at home and be an armchair general. Pull your head out of your forth point of contact, if you cant stand behind ourt veterans - by all means stand in front of them!
R. Hammitt
10:15 pm on Saturday, July 7, 2012
I was wounded in Nam and never got a purple heart thaks to the civilians in that department of the Marine Corps.I contacted the two senators here in Texas with no interest taken by them. Thanks for your service ! At least you were.