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Charles E. Miller, Jr.

No. 196502 October 1932 - 11 November 2003

Died: Temple, Texas

Charles Ernest Miller, Jr. was born on 2 Oct 1932 in Springfield, Greene County, MO, to Charles Ernest Miller and Ruby Nell Dick. As a teenager during World War II, he learned about military service from news reports and was influenced by the experi­ences of two uncles, one in the Navy at Pearl Harbor, and the other in the Army in Europe with GEN Patton. At Lafayette High School, Charlie’s leadership traits resulted in his being elected student body and senate president. He also excelled in ROTC. Graduating in 1950, he received an appointment to West Point from Representative Phil J. Welch and was admitted as a member of the Class of 1954.

  

At West Point, Charlie was on the Cadet Rifle Team and participated in the Dialectic Society, Radio Club, and Skeet Club. He also loved intramural sports. He was always in great shape athletically, with broad shoulders and really strong arms. At 5’9” he could stare down some pretty big players on the playing field, where he acted as if he had never heard of the term “friendly strife.” A favorite two-on-one wrestling game with his two room­mates during the New York winters always ended with Charlie on the winning side, even when he was the one-man team. Among the other members of Company H-1 and his classmates, he was known for his positive atti­tude, high standards, and willingness to help others. He graduated 120th in his class of 633 cadets. Charlie met Miss Lorraine Lynne Long at home on graduation leave in June of 1954. Their friendship blossomed, and, in June of 1955, they were married in the Cadet Chapel at West Point. The couple would make ten moves over a period of 25 years and welcome two sons and three daughters.  

 

After graduation, Charlie entered the Signal Corps. Then, he transferred to the Armor branch and had assignments at Ft. Benning, GA, Ft. Knox, KY, Europe, Viet Nam, and Ft. Leavenworth, KS, where he attended the Command and General Staff College. He earned a master’s degree in histo­ry at Duke University in Durham, NC, and was subsequently assigned as professor in the Department of Military Art and Engineering at West Point. Next, he served at Ft. Hood, TX, Korea, Ft. Hood again, and The Presidio in San Francisco, CA. As Charlie’s promising career progressed, he also excelled as a loving husband and endearing father. At the zenith of his career, with unmistakable potential for general officer rank, the needs of his fam­ily became paramount. At the conclusion of his assignment at The Presidio in June 1980, Charlie retired.  

 

Charlie then earned a master’s degree in federal taxation from Baylor University in Waco, TX, and joined the firm of Greenstein Logan in Temple as a tax specialist. In 1994, he joined the corporate tax department of the McLane Distribution and Logistics Company and worked there for nine years.  

 

Some 23 years later, his death occurred on Veterans Day 2003. The following reflections on Charlie’s life were submitted by friends and family—  

 

From oldest son Charlie III:

“Dad prepared the family for what we needed in life. Among other things, we each developed qualities of duty, integrity, and ‘stick­-to-it’ness. I can still see him in the living room at Ft. Leavenworth as he left for Viet Nam say­ing, ‘You’re in charge now.’ It was his way of setting me with a sense of responsibility.”  

 

From a daughter-in-law:

“What I remember most about ‘the Colonel’ is his laugh; so many kinds of laugh­ter: a sing-song ‘ha-ha,’ his trademark chortle, a side-splitting guffaw. He laughed so hard at times he wiped tears from his eyes. And the stories … they came tumbling out of him like boulders down a mountain. Each story infused with solid heartfelt values. This is his legacy to us: the stories and his laughter.”

 

From his youngest son:

“Dad was always teaching me little les­sons. What you might call a ‘Let me spare you the hardship I suffered’ which I took as ‘safety lecture #12382’—definitely one to tune out. However, I’d let him do his speech, nod my head and say ‘yes, sir.’ Sometimes, of course, he’d let me find out the hard way, al­lowing me to rub whatever limb I hurt and then proceed to explain the law of physics and why I can’t defy gravity. Those were Life Lessons. Sometimes I understood, sometimes I didn’t—every time he’d laugh and call me a klutz. Having become a father myself, I now get to teach my son Life Lessons.”  

 

From associates after he retired from the Army:

“Charlie was never too busy to teach, counsel, or listen. He used his blue reviewing pencil to gently correct our errors, his patient manner to teach, and his powers of observa­tion to cut through the unimportant and help us see things as they truly were. He brought his West Point code of honor, combined that with our corporate values in honesty, integri­ty, and high Christian principles, and taught us all how to be better human beings.”

“My favorite story about Charlie personi­fies the intense dignity with which he lived his life. In the rain one day, everyone was running, squealing, and splashing through the parking lot except Charlie, who strolled in as if it were a sunny day. ‘Where is your umbrella,’ I asked. ‘Colonels don’t carry um­brellas,’ he replied with a smile. Illness and ad­vanced age have a way of stealing the dignity from even the toughest of us. Charlie did not want that. We found a measure of comfort in knowing that he escaped that fate.

 

Charles Ernest Miller, Jr. was buried with full military honors in Bellwood Memorial Park, Temple, TX, on 15 Nov 2003.  

 

From Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, Lorraine treasures Charlie’s memory as “He was a verray parfit, gentil Knyght.”  

 

Well done, Charlie. Be Thou at Peace.

 

—Family and classmates

 

 

 

 

 

Originally published in TAPS, MAY/JUNE 2007

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