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Wilbur D. Brickwell

Wilbur D. Brickwell

No. 1991622 December 1928 - 23 April 1999

Died: Lacey, WA
Buried: Ashes to be scattered at a future date


WILBUR DAVID "BRICK" BRICKWELL
was born in Englewood, NJ, the only child of Harold and Mildred Cook Brickwell. He grew up in New Jersey and graduated from Hackensack High School. He was a Boy Scout and a member of the Civil Air Patrol, and he found particular enjoyment in flying, biking, and participating in theater arts. Following high school, Brick joined the Air Force and, during his three-year enlistment, served at Scott Field, IL, Randolph Field, TX, and Stewart Field, NY. He then took math and science courses at a junior college near his home while awaiting a senatorial appointment to West Point

Brick’s four years at the Academy were fairly typical. He experienced the usual Plebe conflicts with the upperclassmen, some academic and “area” concerns, and an occasional blind date. His final blind date was to the 100th Nite Show his yearling year with Lorraine Miloche of Teaneck, NJ, the girl he would court thenceforth and marry a few days after graduation.

Following graduation leave and completion of the Artillery Officers Basic Course, Brick and Lorrie headed to Ft. Sill, OK, where Brick commanded a battery. In 1957, Brick resigned his commission, taking a three-year “sabbatical” from the Army. In 1960, he was reappointed after deciding for certain on a military career. Assigned to the 73rd Artillery, 1st Armored Division, at Ft. Hood, TX, Brick’s duties included a tour as an aide-decamp. Afterward, he attended the Artillery and Ground-to-Air Missile School at Ft. Sill, OK, and Ft. Bliss, TX.

In 1963, Brick studied Turkish at the Army Language School in Monterey, CA, in preparation for a two-year tour in Ankara. There he was in charge of the Translation Unit for the Joint U.S. Mission and served briefly as an aide and the acting G-3. After serving a year in Viet Nam with Headquarters, II Field Force, Brick moved his family to Blacksburg, VA, where he earned a master’s degree in history and enjoyed an especially gratifying four-year assignment with the Military Science Department at Virginia Tech. Brick then served as the Inspector General at Ft. Wainwright, AK, his final assignment. The family enjoyed great adventures in the cold environment.

In 1974, Brick retired from the Army, was quickly hired by a Canadian drilling company working on the Alaska Pipeline, and the family settled in Fairbanks. The responsibilities of Brick’s new job involved organizing and managing the Fairbanks office and providing liaison between the company’s activities on the North Slope and their offices in Calgary, Alberta.

When the pipeline project ended, Brick and Lorrie retired to Florida, leaving their two adult children in Alaska and taking the other two children with them. Soon thereafter, Brick and Lorrie took up RVing and cruising and enjoyed many adventures on the road as they ventured across the nation. In the late 1980s, Brick developed melanoma and prostate cancer, conditions dictating a more sedate life, and they made one final move to Lacey, WA, near Ft. Lewis and closer to other family members. A subsequent heart condition was followed a few years later by the appearance of four inoperable brain tumors, which led to seizures.

Although ailing and terminally ill, Brick was determined to participate in one final tribute to his alma mater, the Founders Day celebration at Ft. Lewis on 15 Mar 1999. Of that day Lorrie said: “He looked so handsome and stood straight and tall as he sang his ‘Alma Mater.’ On the way home, he had his first really bad seizure. . . . In April, it was obvious he did not have much time. He stayed in bed then, and Home Hospice kept him comfortable. He was ready and glad when the children gathered to say final goodbyes on April 23rd, the day he went to the Lord.”

Lieutenant Colonel Brickwell’s awards included the Bronze Star with oak leaf cluster, two Meritorious Service Medals, and the Joint Service Commendation Medal. He is survived by his wife Lorraine; his four children, Tom, Lise, Jim, and Bill; their spouses; and seven grandchildren.

“Brick, an officer and a gentleman always.”
 

Lorraine M. Brickwell and an E-1 classmate

Originally published in TAPS JANUARY / FEBRUARY 2006

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