Bataan Death March survivor honors brothers-in-arms

By Staff Sgt. Ken Scar, 335th Signal CommandMarch 22, 2017

99-year-old Bataan survivor
1 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – 99-year-old Bataan survivor finishes 8.5 miles in memorial march
Ben Skardon, 99, a retired Army colonel and a survivor of the Bataan Death March, crosses the eight-and-a-half mile finish line at the Bataan Memorial Death March observance at White Sa... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army)
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Retired U.S. Army Col. Ben Skardon, 99
2 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Retired U.S. Army Col. Ben Skardon, 99, a survivor of the Bataan Death March, walks in the annual Bataan Memorial Death March at White Sands Missile Range, accompanied by green-to-gold New Mexico State University Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE, N.M. -- More than 7,000 people gathered here in the early-morning hours Sunday to participate in an 8.5-mile walk in observance of the 75th anniversary of World War II's infamous Bataan Death March.

Once again, Ben Skardon, a retired Army colonel, was the oldest participant and the only living survivor of the Bataan Death March to walk in the event.

Skardon, 99, walked through the unforgiving New Mexico desert as temperatures reached 90 degrees, refusing to quit until he reached the same distance he had covered in his previous nine marches.

Skardon is a beloved alumnus and professor emeritus of Clemson University in South Carolina, which meant Clemson orange was the color of choice for the 64 members of "Ben's brigade" -- his die-hard support group of friends, family, former students and relatives of his fellow prisoners of war.

HISTORY OF THE MARCH

The Bataan Memorial Death March event honors a special group of World War II heroes responsible for the defense of the islands of Luzon, Corregidor and the harbor defense forts of the Philippines.

On April 9, 1942, tens of thousands of American and Filipino troops were forced to surrender to Japanese forces. The U.S. service members were soldiers, sailors, airmen from the Army Air Corps, and Marines. Among the surrendering troops were large numbers of the New Mexico National Guard's 200th Coast Artillery -- the reason the memorial march is held in New Mexico.

Often overlooked are the four months of fierce fighting that took place before the American and Filipino forces surrendered. Skardon earned two Silver Stars and four Bronze Stars during that short time span.

After their surrender, the troops were force-marched 65 miles to confinement camps throughout the Philippines. They were deprived of food, water and medical care. About 10,000 men died on the march, while thousands of others died in the camps. Those who survived weren't freed until 1945.

This was Skardon's 10th, and he insists, not his last time walking in the march here, which marks its 28th year.

Skardon said he considers it a personal pilgrimage to participate in the walk. He believes it's his obligation to attend every year and walk with the thousands of others who come to honor his brothers-in-arms who didn't survive the Bataan Death March or the years of confinement that followed.

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