Bill
Mauldin Stamp Honors Grunts' Hero

The post office gets a lot of criticism.
Always has, always will.
And with
the renewed push to get rid of Saturday mail delivery,
expect complaints to intensify.
But the
United States Postal Service deserves a standing ovation
for something that's going to happen this month: Bill
Mauldin is getting his own postage stamp.
Mauldin
died at age 81 in the early days of 2003. The end of his
life had been rugged. He had been scalded in a bathtub,
which led to terrible injuries and infections;
Alzheimer's disease was inflicting its cruelties. Unable
to care for himself after the scalding, he became
a resident of a California nursing home, his health and
spirits in rapid decline.
He was not
forgotten, though. Mauldin, and his work, meant so much
to the millions of Americans who fought in World War II,
and to those who had waited for them to come home. He
was a kid cartoonist for Stars and Stripes, the military
newspaper; Mauldin's drawings of his muddy, exhausted,
whisker-stubbled infantrymen Willie and Joe were the
voice of truth about what it was like on the front
lines.
Mauldin
was an enlisted man just like the soldiers he drew for;
his gripes were their gripes, his laughs were their
laughs, his heartaches were their heartaches. He was
one of them. They loved him.
He never
held back. Sometimes, when his cartoons cut too close
for comfort, his superior officers tried to tone him
down. In one memorable incident, he enraged Gen. George
S. Patton, and Patton informed Mauldin he wanted the
pointed cartoons -- celebrating the fighting men,
lampooning the high-ranking officers -- to stop. Now.
The news
passed from soldier to soldier. How was Sgt.
Bill Mauldin going to stand up to Gen. Patton? It seemed
impossible.
Not quite.
Mauldin, it turned out, had an ardent fan: Five-star
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, supreme commander of the
Allied forces in Europe. Ike put out the word: Mauldin
draws what Mauldin wants. Mauldin won. Patton lost.
If, in
your line of work, you've ever considered yourself
a young hotshot, or if you've ever known anyone who has
felt that way about himself or herself, the story of
Mauldin's young manhood will humble you. Here is what,
by the time he was 23 years old, Mauldin
had accomplished:
He won the
Pulitzer Prize. He was featured on the cover of Time
magazine. His book "Up Front" was the No. 1 best-seller
in the United States.
All of
that at 23. Yet when he returned to civilian life and
he grew older, he never lost that boyish Mauldin grin,
he never outgrew his excitement about doing his job, he
never big-shotted or high-hatted the people with whom
he worked every day.
I was
lucky enough to be one of them; Mauldin roamed the
hallways of the Chicago Sun-Times in the late 1960s and
early 1970s with no more officiousness or air of
haughtiness than if he was a copyboy. That impish look
on his face remained.
He had
achieved so much. He had won a second Pulitzer Prize,
and he should have won a third, for what may be the
single greatest editorial cartoon in the history of the
craft: his deadline rendering, on the day President John
F. Kennedy was assassinated, of the statue at
the Lincoln Memorial slumped in grief, its head cradled
in its hands. But he never acted as if he was better
than the people he met. He was still Mauldin the
enlisted man.
During the
late summer of 2002, as Mauldin lay in that California
nursing home, some of the old World War II infantry
guys caught wind of it. They didn't want Mauldin to go
out that way. They thought he should know that he was
still their hero.
Gordon
Dillow, a columnist for the Orange County Register, put
out the call in Southern California for people in the
area to send their best wishes to Mauldin; I joined
Dillow in the effort, helping to spread the appeal
nationally so that Bill would not feel so alone. Soon
more than 10,000 letters and cards had arrived at
Mauldin's bedside.
Even
better than that, the old soldiers began to show up
just to sit with Mauldin, to let him know that they
were there for him, as he, long ago, had been there for
them. So many volunteered to visit Bill that there was a
waiting list. Here is how Todd DePastino, in the first
paragraph of his wonderful biography of Mauldin,
described it:
"Almost
every day in the summer and fall of 2002 they came to
Park Superior nursing home in Newport Beach, California,
to honor Army Sergeant, Technician Third Grade, Bill
Mauldin. They came bearing relics of their youth:
medals, insignia, photographs, and carefully folded
newspaper clippings. Some wore old garrison caps. Others
arrived resplendent in uniforms over a half century old.
Almost all of them wept as they filed down the corridor
like pilgrims fulfilling some long-neglected
obligation."
One of the
veterans explained to me why it was so important:
"You would
have to be part of a combat infantry unit to appreciate
what moments of relief Bill gave us. You had to be
reading a soaking wet Stars and Stripes in a
water-filled foxhole and then see one of his cartoons."
Mauldin is
buried in Arlington National Cemetery. This month, the
kid cartoonist makes it onto a first-class postage
stamp. It's an honor that most generals and admirals
never receive.
What
Mauldin would have loved most, I believe, is the sight
of the two guys who are keeping him company on that
stamp.
Take a
look at it.
There's
Willie. There's Joe.
And there,
to the side, drawing them and smiling that shy, quietly
observant smile, is Mauldin himself. With his buddies,
right where he belongs. Forever.
The
opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those
of Bob Greene.