Lawrence Colburn dies; helped end Vietnam’s My Lai massacre

I met Larry Colburn in 1998 when he and Hugh Thompson returned to Viet Nam for the first time since the war. They met with victims of the My Lai Massacre, including survivors whose lives they helped to save during those awful hours of March 16, 1968.  They were welcomed and embraced by villagers who shed tears of gratitude for their intervention that day, when they turned the guns of their helicopter against American soldiers to halt the carnage, at least temporarily, and allow life-saving evacuation of some of the victims.  The meeting was emotional.  Larry and Hugh wept as villagers thanked them for their actions that day.

At a time when the term “heroes” is misused and cheapened, Larry and Hugh, and their fellow crew member Glenn Andreotta, were true heroes in the finest sense of the word.  More importantly, they were decent human beings who clearly understood the difference between right and wrong.

Chuck Searcy

MILITARY TIMES

December 16, 2016

Lawrence Colburn dies; helped end Vietnam’s My Lai massacre

By: Chevel Johnson
The Associated Press

Lawrence Manley Colburn, a helicopter gunner in the Vietnam War who helped end the slaughter of hundreds of unarmed Vietnamese villagers by U.S. troops at My Lai, has died. He was 67.

Lisa Colburn, speaking with The Associated Press on Thursday evening, said her husband of 31 years was diagnosed with cancer in late September and died Tuesday.

“It was very quick,” she said by phone from her Canton, Georgia, home near Atlanta. “He was a very peaceful man who had a great desire for there to be a peaceful world.”
larrycolburnLarry Colburn and My Lai villager.  (Photo Credit: Chitose Suzuki/AP)

She also called him “a compassionate person who was a hero in many people’s eyes.”

Colburn was the last surviving member of a U.S. Army crew that ended the My Lai massacre of March 16, 1968. According to accounts, pilot Hugh Thompson landed the helicopter between unarmed villagers and American troops and ordered Colburn and crew chief Glenn Andreotta to cover him.

Thompson then persuaded members of Charlie Company to stop shooting. The company’s soldiers had begun shooting that day even though they hadn’t come under attack, authorities later said. They added that it quickly escalated into an orgy of killing that claimed as many as 504 civilians — most of whom were women, children and the elderly.

In an initial Facebook post, Lisa Colburn confirmed the death and wrote: “As most of you know, Larry has been very ill for a while but his suffering ended today, 12/13/16/.” She added: “Your friendship meant a lot to him.”

She added the she and their son, Connor, “appreciate your love and support during this difficult time.”

Trent Angers, the biographer for Thompson, who wrote “The Forgotten Hero of My Lai: The Hugh Thompson Story,” said Colburn played an indispensable role in stopping the massacre at My Lai.

“He stood up, shoulder to shoulder with Hugh and Glenn, to oppose and stand down against those who were committing crimes against humanity. Without his assistance, Hugh might not have done what he did,” Angers said.

Colburn and Thompson were nominated for the Nobel Peace prize in 2001 for their actions and received the Soldier’s Medal, the highest U.S. military award for bravery not involving conflict with the enemy.

Thompson, who lived in Lafayette, Louisiana, died in 2006. Andreotta was killed in the Vietnam War three weeks after My Lai.

A memorial service for Colburn is planned for Jan. 7 at the Darby Funeral Home in Canton, Georgia, according to the funeral home. It said that in addition to his wife and son, Colburn is survived by three sisters.

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