Navy Cross recipient and Vietnam veteran John Ripley
During his two tours in Vietnam, he was awarded the Navy Cross, Silver Star, two Bronze Stars with Combat “V,” and a Purple Heart . . .
He also earned the title of "Quad Body,” the distinction given to those who complete Army Ranger, Marine Reconnaissance, Underwater Demolition Team (UDT), and Britain's Royal Marine Commando training programs.
Born on June 29, 1939, in Keystone, West Virginia, John W. “Rip” Ripley enlisted in the Marines, earned an appointment to the US Naval Academy, and by 1965 was fighting in Vietnam.
On Easter Sunday, April 2, 1972, while serving as an advisor to the South Vietnam Marines, Captain Ripley was given an order he’d never forget.
With nearly 20,000 North Vietnamese troops and 200 enemy tanks poised to cross Dong Ha bridge and invade Quang Tri Province, Riley and 600 South Vietnamese Marines were told to “Hold and die.”
“I’ll never forget that order," Riley later said.
Over the next three hours, Ripley, under constant fire from enemy soldiers, dangled beneath the bridge, swinging hand over hand and repeatedly saying, "Jesus, Mary, get me there,” as he rigged 500 pounds of TNT along the span's steel I-beams.
"The idea that I would be able to even finish the job before the enemy got me was ludicrous,” Ripley recalled in a US Naval Institute interview. "When you know you're not going to make it, a wonderful thing happens: You stop being cluttered by the feeling that you're going to save your butt.”
Using hundreds of feet of timed-fuse cord to connect the explosives, he lit the charge, and with enemy fire erupting all around him, got off the bridge and ran towards friendly lines. Seconds later the TNT detonated, causing a massive explosion that sent a key section of the bridge collapsing into the river.
For his heroic actions that destroyed Dong Ha bridge, halted the enemy assault, and "saved an untold number of lives,” Captain Ripley was awarded the Navy Cross.
Postscript:
Ripley survived his time in Vietnam, returned home, and retired from the Marines as a colonel in 1992 after 35 years of service to country and Corps.
In 1999, he was appointed director of the Marine Corps History and Museums Division and the Marine Corps Historical Center. "He was the driving force behind the Marine Corps Museum,” his son Stephen remembered. "That's one of the accomplishments he was most proud of.”
John Ripley died on October 28, 2008, at the age of 69. He was survived by Moline, his wife of 44 years, whom he affectionately called his “Queen," and three children. Mrs. Ripley, described as a “gracious hostess and the consummate Southern lady," passed away a year later from complications due to Alzheimer’s disease. She was 68.
A painting of Captain Ripley dangling from the Dong Ha bridge. (PC: artist Charles Waterhouse and USNI Archives)
Major Ripley and his wife, Moline, the day he received the Navy Cross. (PC: USMC)
Pallbearers from Marine Corps Barracks Washington, DC, escort the flag-draped casket of Col. Ripley. (PC: Paul W. Gillespie)