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THE SPECIAL WARFARE MEMORIAL STATUE

Bronze Bruce


The Special Warfare Memorial Statue, also known as “Bronze Bruce,” was the first Vietnam memorial in the United States and was dedicated in 1969. Since then, the statue has become the centerpiece of the U.S. Army Special Operations Command’s Memorial Plaza at Fort Bragg, N.C., and is symbolic of all the command’s Soldiers.

A Special Forces Soldier was chosen as the model for the statue since nearly all Army special operations Soldiers killed in Vietnam were Green Berets.


SYMBOLISM


The 12-foot statue stands upon a rare green granite pedestal that brings the total height of the statue to 22 feet tall. It is representative of a Special Forces noncommissioned officer,
wearing the rank of a sergeant first class, and is a powerful image of what U.S. Army Special Forces Soldiers stand for. The Soldier is dressed in the jungle fatigues worn in
Vietnam by U.S. troops. He carries the M-16 rifle, a tool of his profession, in his right hand. His finger is not placed on the trigger of his weapon, but is “at the ready” in preparation for any threat. His stance upon a rocky ledge with one foot crushing the snake is symbolic of tyranny in the world and the threats and dangers that will instantly bring him to action. While possessing power and extraordinary capabilities, he offers a gentle hand of friendship to the unseen oppressed of the world. He is fully able to exercise his training when it is needed, and he is also
fully willing to help those in need. He is the perfect warrior from the past, a healer, a teacher and an opponent of evil. He serves all over the world today and willingly faces any mission. His is the standard to which all Army special operations Soldiers aspire.

Inside the base of the statue is a time capsule containing an SF uniform, a green beret, a bust of
John F. Kennedy, and Kennedy’s speech presenting the green beret to Special Forces Soldiers.


COST


The cost of the statue in 1969 was $100,000. Both John Wayne, co-director and star of the 1968 movie “The Green Berets”, and Barry Sadler, composer of the song, “The Ballad of the Green Berets”, each donated $5,000 toward the creation of the statue as a symbol of the “Quiet Professionals”. Robert McNamara, the secretary of defense at the time, donated $1,000. Special Forces Soldiers from all over the world donated the remaining money needed to build the statue.

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