Lieutenant and Mrs. W.P. Grace Jr. He
enjoyed the close community life at
battalion-sized posts of the pre-World War II Army to which his
father was assigned. Several of his early schoolmates were later
classmates at West Point. Hearing stories about campaigns of his
father’s regiment in Europe, Bill knew that he also wanted to serve
his country. His father, a college honors ROTC graduate and career
Infantry officer, advised him to prepare for West Point. To that
end, Bill attended Augusta Military Academy in Virginia for his
final two years of high school. There, he was an honors student,
played football and lacrosse, and was on the fencing team. By
graduation from high school, Bill had attended 13 different
schools and, at the very least, had learned how to meet people and
thrive in new situations.
Bill entered the Military Academy as the
second youngest member of the Class
of ’54 and found “Beast Barracks” to be a terrific
introduction for his four-year
struggle with the math and engineering departments.
During those years as a cadet, Bill discovered he could meet
challenges while retaining perspective and a
sense of humor, which served him well during his 30
years of service. His discipline and fighting spirit spilled over
into everything he undertook and led to his receiving the Beebe
Trophy as an outstanding Army fencer. The friendships forged in
Company B-2 grew throughout all his years.
Upon graduation in June 1954, Bill
reported to Fort Benning, GA for the
Infantry Officer Basic Course, Ranger School, and
Airborne School. Upon successful completion of the Army’s courses
for newly minted Infantry officers, Bill, along with 10 other
classmates, became a platoon leader in the 9th Infantry
Regiment at Fort Lewis, WA. Duty at Fort Lewis was
followed by assignments as company executive officer and then as
aide-de-camp to the commanding general
of the Yukon Command in Fairbanks, AK. Returning to
the States, Bill became
a company executive officer and then company
commander in the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg, NC. His
dissatisfaction with the training being conducted and what he
considered to be overemphasis of style over substance led to his
request for transfer to Special Forces, where he confirmed the true
professional
love that remained with him throughout his career.
Bill was assigned once more to Fort Benning for the Infantry Officer
Advanced Course and then to the Army Language School at the Presidio
of Monterey, CA. While studying the
Korean language, he somewhat reluctantly
agreed to a blind date arranged by old Army friends
of his parents. Surprised and
smitten on that first date, Bill proposed marriage to
Gail Clark after two weeks.
They shared a wonderful marriage lasting more than 49
years, a marriage blessed by two daughters, Dr. Laura Grace and
Lisa Grace Stevens.
Three months later, Bill joined the 1st
Special Forces Group on Okinawa in what became the seminal
assignment of his military career. He took one of the first A-teams
to be deployed to the highlands of Vietnam for work with the
indigenous mountain tribes. A return to the 82nd
Airborne Division was shortlived, as a back injury forced him out.
He became a Soviet foreign area officer, earning an MA in soviet
studies at Georgetown University. This designation led to continuous
assignments in the intelligence community, interrupted only by a
battalion command assignment at Fort Dix, NJ. Bill finished his Army
career in management in the intelligence community and retired as
the Director of Foreign Intelligence for the then Army Assistant
Chief of Staff for Intelligence. He retired in July 1984 in Vienna,
VA.
From the Army, Bill went to work in the
Aerospace Division of General Electric, remaining there for seven
years until heart problems caused him to leave. He spent several
years as an executive director of a refugee resettlement
organization in Arlington, VA. After retirement from that position,
Bill and Gail moved to Amelia Island, FL, where they established a
nonprofit ministry to help those who were too poor to qualify for
help from Habitat for Humanity. Their ministry aided those in need
by establishing financial independence and organizing them in the
fight against drug abuse.
After a dozen years in Florida, the lure
of living close to family called Bill and
Gail to Boise, ID, where their younger daughter lived
with her husband and four children. In Boise, Bill and Gail helped
to establish a local affiliate of a
national ministry that served the poor and the
disenfranchised. Bill became an
accomplished woodcarver, leaving prizewinning works
treasured by his family and church. With prayer and perseverance,
Bill continued to serve God and country. Throughout Bill’s life,
family remained paramount, the source of great pride and the
beneficiary of great love. Generations have been inspired by his
courage, honor, and commitment to the ideals set forth in the Cadet
Prayer,
steadfastly maintaining “loyalty to all
that is worthy and noble.”