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Edward E. Roderick

 

No. 19722Nov 18, 1932 - Apr 19, 2014          

Died in Allen, TX

Interred in Old Providence Cemetery, New Bloomfield, MO

 

Edward Earl Roderick was born in Patterson, MO on November 18, 1932 to Cecil Vernon Roderick and Virginia Arlene Miller. The oldest of three children, Ed was a born leader.

Anxious for an outstanding education following his 1950 graduation from Hickman High School in Columbia, MO, Ed pursued an Academy appointment from Missouri Senator Forrest C. Donnell.

At West Point, Ed excelled in academics, especially in Electrical Engineering on which he tutored fellow classmates. Soon after graduation, Ed married his OAO, Carolyn Francis English, in Columbia, MO.

Commissioned in Armor, Ed’s first assignment following the basic branch course was in Germany with the 14th Armored Cavalry Regiment.

Upon returning to the United States, Ed attended graduate school at Purdue University in 1961, receiving his master’s degree in electrical engineering with an emphasis on information theory and servomechanism.

Ed then returned to USMA and the Electrical Engineering Department. After one year as an instructor teaching communication electronics, he was made an Assistant Professor. The following two years, he also supervised the teaching activities of 10 other instructors for over 200 class hours weekly. He was responsible for all course preparation and communication as well as electronic instruction content. He also assisted in preparing a new basic electronic textbook.

From 1964 to 1965, Ed served as battalion logistics officer and operations officer in the 1st Armored Division at Fort Hood, TX, planning and supervising tactical and training operations.

Ed served the next year as Deputy Province Advisor in the Quang Tin Province in South Vietnam, advising the Deputy Province Chief on economic, organizational and military aspects of province administration. Reassigned to I Corps advisory Detachment Civil and Psychological Affairs Office, he was responsible for coordinating activities of five province teams in rural development and reconstruction. Wounded during the tour, he received the Purple Heart.

Following his graduation from C&GSC in 1967, Ed had DA staff duty at the Office of the Chief of Research and Development (OCRD), supervising and monitoring all Army development programs in electronic warfare, cryptologic activities and counter-intelligence activities. He was the OCRD representative on the Army Electronic Warfare Board, Defense Service Board EW Panel, Army Cryptology Review Board and similar groups.

Ed next served as military advisor to the Chief Scientist, Department of the Army, with additional duties as executive secretary of the Army Scientific Advisory Panel (ASAP), coordinating activities, briefings, symposiums and the semi-annual meeting of the entire ASAP.

In 1970, he returned to Fort Hood to command the 1/81 Tank Battalion, participating there in the early Modern Army Selected Systems Test Evaluation and Review (MASSTER) tests and conducting and supervising tactical and administrative training of the battalion.

Ed subsequently was principal deputy to the Science Advisor to the Commanding General, HQ MASSTER, reviewing test plans and reports, and providing technical and scientific advice. He helped develop a large-scale data collection system and developed, organized and wrote specifications for an instrumentation system using lasers and mini-computers to simulate 190 tactical weapons systems for use in field tests. He participated in proposal evaluation and contract negotiations and presented briefings. He assigned responsibility for the Contracting Officer’s Technical Representative to lead the government management team in supervising the contractual development and fabrication of the laser hit/kill system that cost in excess of $2.5 million.

While at HQ MASSTER, Ed became the Assistant to the Deputy Chief of Staff, Management and Budget. He was the principal staff officer responsible for internal organization, budgeting, accounting, statistical analysis, management engineering and automatic data processing.

He was assigned to Iran in 1974 with duties as Corps Area Armor Advisor and advisor to the Iranian Army School.

Following retirement in June 1977, he went to work for Bell Technical Operations, TEXTRON. He was Project Manager, Director of Engineering, Vice President and General Manager in Tucson, AZ until June 1988.

Ed and Carolyn retired to Kimberling City, MO, moving to a house next door to his parents. Serving as a local alderman for six years, he chaired the Planning and Zoning Committee and also led the development of a Solid Waste Management Program for a five-county area. Additionally, he chaired the Library Committee for seven years.

Ed’s free time was devoted to his family, auto mechanics, wood working, boating and fishing.

In 2008, Ed and Carolyn moved to Denton, TX to be closer to their three children and eight grandchildren.

Following Carolyn’s death in January 2010, Ed found love again with Nell Elizabeth Blazer Gardner, meeting at their high school reunion, marrying the next year and moving to Missouri. After Nell’s death in 2012, Ed moved to Allen, TX to once again be near his family.

Ed’s Howitzer article mentions his musical ability and a love of bridge. These were things that he carried throughout his life. His collection of horns is legendary. Card games have always been a constant at family gatherings.

He is survived by his sister, Pat Farrand, and three children: Susan Sherrin, Linda Hill and Steve Roderick.

Ed was one of the most dependable and conscientious persons. He was always ready to lend a helping hand to others. Duty, Honor, Country was how he lived his whole life.

 

Originally published in TAPS 2015

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