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Every
so often, a person comes along whose life is a model of distinction
and whose accomplishments are truly inspiring and extraordinary.
On so many levels, Vice Admiral William Lawrence is just that
kind of example: a true American hero.
A native
of Nashville, VADM Lawrence graduated first in his class at
West High School and was President of the Student Body. He
was ranking officer in the ROTC, All-City in football, All-State
in basketball, a member of the state championship basketball
team, state boy's tennis champion and a recipient of the coveted
William Hume Award.
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Lawrence
attended the U.S. Naval Academy, where he played three varsity
sports and ranked 8 out of 725 academically. He also served
as Class President, Commander of the Brigade of Midshipmen,
and led the establishment of the present-day Brigade Honor
Concept.
Upon receiving
his Naval Aviator Wings in 1952, he was deployed twice to
the Middle East. VADM Lawrence became the first Naval Aviator
to fly twice the speed of sound in a Navy airplane, was among
the final 32 candidates for the Project Mercury astronaut
program, and was called the "ablest flyer, all things
considered, that Pax River (Naval Air Test Center, Patuxent
River, MD) ever produced."
While
Commanding Officer of Fighter Squadron 143, he was shot down
over North Vietnam in June 1967 and held as a Prisoner of
War until March 1973. He was awarded the Silver Star for his
selfless courage and the Distinguished Service Medal, the
country's third highest military award, for his inspirational
leadership of fellow POWs while under constant pressure and
mistreatment from his captors. During his imprisonment in
North Vietnam, VADM Lawrence composed a poem entitled "Oh
Tennessee, My Tennessee" which was designated by the
state legislature as the official poem of the State of Tennessee.
VADM Lawrence's military decorations include: Distinguished
Service Medal (4 awards), Silver Star (3 awards), Legion of
Merit, Distinguished Flying Cross, Bronze Star with Combat
V, Purple Heart (2 awards), Air Medal (3 awards), Joint Service
Commendation Medal, and Navy Commendation with Combat V (2
awards).
Among
his many honors, the Nashville Chapter of the National Football
Foundation and College Hall of Fame established the William
P. Lawrence Award, given annually to the outstanding football
scholar-athlete. In 1979, he received the National Football
Foundation and College Hall of Fame Gold Medal, the foundation's
highest honor. And in 1982, the Naval Academy established
the Vice Admiral William P. Lawrence Award, a sword given
annually to the most outstanding woman athlete. In 1984, he
received both the NCAA Theodore Roosevelt Award (the association's
highest honor) and the Liberty Bowl's Distinguished Citizen
Award.
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