Bio: Thoma, Rick - Honor Flight Experience (Oct 2019)

Contact: Dolores (Mohr) Kenyon
E-mail: dolores@wiclarkcountyhistory.org 

----Surnames: Thoma, Reagan

----Source: Clark County Press (Neillsville, Clark, Co) 11/13/2019

Neillsville Veteran Shares Honor Flight Experience (Thoma – 21 October 2019)

After patiently waiting for two-and-one-half years, Rick Thoma finally got to go on a flight of a lifetime.

He enjoyed the entire trip but was most impacted not by the memorials he saw, but by the reception he got when he came back home.

“I’d never seen this kind of welcome in 48 years,” he said.

Thoma is a Vietnam veteran and Neillsville resident. Thoma was part of the Army’s 101st Airborne. He served in Vietnam from Dec. 5, 1969 through Feb. 9, 1971. He worked in the battalion unit and ordered ammunition for the 105-millimeter howitzers.

Over two years ago, Thoma applied to go on the never Forgotten Honor Flight, which takes veterans from 13 counties in northern Wisconsin to see the memorials built in their honor in Washington D.C. On June 10, he received a call that he was picked to go on Honor Flight No. 38 on Oct. 21.

Thoma said he was grateful to the Neillsville Gun Club. The club raised $5,000 in an April fundraiser, which was enough to send 10 veterans to D.C.

“They should be very proud that they raised that much in one day,” Thoma said in a written record of his experience. “[The Honor Flight staff] tell us that the cost of these flights is about $85,000 each, but it is no cost to the veterans.”

Everything began the day before the veterans took off on their flight. Veterans stayed at the Hilton Garden Inn in Wausau free of charge.



Rick, Bonnie and Dallas Thoma pause for a photo at the veterans’ recognition banquet at the Hilton Garden Inn in Wausau. (all submitted photos)

Each veteran had a guardian to report to that they could ask for help throughout the trip if needed. Most guardians were assigned to veterans.

Thoma’s guardian was his son, Dallas.

I was proud to have him with me. His birthday is on Veterans Day,” said Thoma.

The guardians had a two-hour class the Sunday before the flight. During that time, the veterans watched the Packer game in the hotel bar at the Hilton.

We were given yellow shirts and jackets, with green lettering. The guardians were given green shirts with yellow lettering. So, we all had Packer colors,” Thoma wrote.

At 4:20 p.m. the veterans, their spouses and guardians enjoyed a banquet and program. The Wausau American Legion presented the colors. Songs were sung for all branches of the military. The Center Stage Singers and Trillium Singers performed tunes from the 1960s. After dinner, the Wausau American Legion played “Taps” and retired the colors. The veterans then could go out in the hall and have their pictures taken with the Trillium Singers, as they were dressed in Army, Navy and Air Force Uniforms.

Monday morning, the veterans got up bright and early at 4 a.m. and rode buses from the hotel to the Central Wisconsin Airport in Mosinee. From 5 to 5:30 a.m., the veterans and guardians checked in and the spouses were ushered upstairs to watch the plane leave.

At 6 a.m., everyone boarded the aircraft, the 52 veterans in wheelchairs boarded first.

“Our flight included four Korean veterans, 107 Vietnam veterans, four medics, two doctors, 52 guardians and the Honor Flight staff,” Thoma wrote.

The veterans’ Sun Country flight departed at 6:45 a.m.

At 9:45 a.m. the veterans touched down at Reagan National Airport in Arlington, Virginia. They were greeted to a warm welcome as they walked into the terminal.

“All the people were lined up along the walls behind yellow ribbons waiting to thank us. They all waited for us to pass through,” Thoma said in an interview later. “It was hard to guess how many [people] there were, all saying, ‘thank you for your service’ and ‘welcome home.’ It was just awesome and overwhelming.”

The veterans departed the airport in motor coaches at 10:50 a.m. They had a police escort wherever they went.

The veterans arrived at the Lincoln Memorial at 11:05 a.m., where a group picture was taken on the memorial steps. Then they got to view the Vietnam Wall and Korean Memorial.

At 1 p.m., the veterans boarded the buses and received box lunches donated by Arby’s. They were given a bus tour of the capital, Navy Memorial and the White House.

The veterans arrived at the World War II Memorial at 1:25 p.m. The memorial has a pillar for every state and the water in the fountain is taken from the Pacific and Atlantic oceans.

At 2:35 p.m., the Honor Flight group departed the World War II Memorial for the FDR Memorial. While there, they saw a long line of motorcycles and vehicles.

“We saw this motorcade go by and one vehicle had two American flags on it. It came and did a U-turn right in front of us,” said Thoma. “We thought at first it was for the president but found out later it was for Vice President Pence.”

The group left the FDR Memorial at 3:25 p.m. By 4 p.m., they were at Arlington National Cemetery to see the changing of the guard ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. They also witnessed high school students laying a wreath at the tomb. Thoma said the ceremony was one of the most memorable moments from the trip.

“That was very impressive to see the inspection of the guard coming on duty, his uniform and weapon. We saw placing of a new wreath and were told there is a year-and-a-half waiting list for family of high school students, to do this,” Thoma wrote. “All of this is performed in complete silence-no cell phones, no smoking and no gum chewing – out of respect for the dead. You could have heard a pin drop it was so quiet.”

At 4:30 p.m., the Honor Flight attendees left the cemetery and went to the Iwo Jima Memorial. There they saw the U.S. Marines Drill Team give a drill demonstration.

The veterans left the memorial by 5:40 and drove by the Pentagon and the 9/11 Memorial. Their last stop was the Air Force Memorial. They again were treated to a box dinner, compliments of Arby’s.

The veterans arrived at Reagan National Airport around 7:30 to check in and load the plane. The flight left at 9 p.m., with the same pilots and staff as when the group arrived.

“On our way home we were surprised by a ‘mail call.’ The mailbags were postmarked 1968. I had more than 70 letters and cards. They were from family, friends, companies, businesses and kids from schools – some people I didn’t even know,” Thoma wrote.



Rick Thoma looks at a thank-you letter received on the Never Forgotten Honor Flight.

The most emotional part of the day was yet to come though.

“I told my son, just wait until we hear the cheers when we get back to the airport,” said Thoma.

“Again, a lot of the people from American Legions, VFW’s, high schools and family and friends greeted us with a ‘Welcome home’ and ‘thanks for your service,’” Thoma wrote.

“When I arrived back from Vietnam, I got here at night, so I didn’t experience it, but I knew a lot of people who were swore at, spit at or whatever when they returned from Vietnam,” said Thoma. “It was very different, the welcome we got [now] compared to Vietnam.”

Thoma will not soon forget his Honor Flight experience. He mostly feels a lot of gratitude for what he was able to do and see. He extended appreciation to the Neillsville Gun Club for sending him, the people who wrote letters or made cards for him, and his kids, wife, sister, cousin, brothers-in-law, sisters-in-law, son-in-law and relatives that were all waiting at the airport when he got back.

“It was very emotional for me and I enjoyed it very much,” Thoma said of the trip. “I would encourage anyone who served and is thinking of going on this trip to go for it. It truly is the ‘trip of a lifetime.’”



Rick Thoma is greeted by a fellow veteran after arriving back to Mosinee following the Honor Flight.



While on the Never Forgotten Honor Flight Oct. 21, Neillsville veteran Rick Thoma was interviewed twice by TV station WSAW.










(Place photo of Rick being interviewed by TV station WSAW)

While on the never Forgotten Honor Flight Oct. 21, Neillsville veteran Rick Thoma was interviewed twice by TV station WSAW.

 

 

 


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