Medal of Honor Wall unveiled at Martinsburg VA Medical Center

January 25, 2019

MARTINSBURG, W.Va. — West Virginia is first for something good. 

It’s taken years, but each of the state’s four VA medical centers now has its own Medal of Honor Wall commemorating veterans who received the nation’s highest military honor. 

The final piece of the statewide effort was unveiled Friday morning. Martinsburg VA Medical Center officials were joined by more than 100 people to see the new wall recognizing area Medal of Honor recipients. 

Hershel “Woody” Willams, the only living West Virginia recipient of the Medal of Honor, took part in the event, along with U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., and medical center director Timothy J. “Tim” Cooke. 

Williams, 95, is a retired U.S. Marine Corps warrant officer and U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs veterans service representative. He was honored for heroism beyond the call of duty during the Battle of Iwo Jima during World War II. 

“West Virginia is the first state to pay tribute to all of our Medal of Honor recipients in the areas served by medical centers. West Virginia is No. 1,” he said, pausing briefly as audience members applauded. 

Now it’s time for the rest of the country to catch up, he said.

Some VA centers, including the Martinsburg facility, also honor recipients from other states, he said. 

That includes the Huntington VA, which “takes care of some of those Kentuckians, and those Ohioans who stole our river. We don’t hold it against them — they were just smarter. It should be the West Virginia River. not the Ohio River,” he said with a chuckle. 

Despite years of advocacy work, he declined to take credit for this and the other memorial walls in Clarksburg and Beckley. 

“This is not about me. It’s about them, and these veterans are the reason we’re here,” he said. 

“Most of them would not have expected to receive our nation’s highest award for valor for doing something above and beyond the call of duty,” he said. 

The 45 veterans featured locally on the 63-foot long wall are from the medical center’s catchment area that covers 22 counties in four states. 

Their service dates to the Civil War and also includes the ongoing war on terror, he said. 

“Most people would not have known the names of these veterans, but with this memory wall, their names will be forever known,” he said. 

Three veterans from the Tri-State are among those honored, including Lt. Henry G. Bonebrake from Waynesboro, Pa;, Ens. Hugh Carroll Frazer from Martinsburg, W.Va.; and First Lt. Francis M. Smith of Frederick County, Md.