PROPOSAL FOR PLACING
LT. COL. LEONARD P. LYNCH
UPON THE RSA WALL OF HISTORY

Prepared by Terrence A. Lynch
Montgomery, AL

TO: Charles Humphries and RSA Associates PH&J Architects, Inc. DATE: 26 April, 1998 History does not just happen, it is made by people. Often those people are soldiers doing their duty for God and for country. My father, Lt. Col Leonard P. Lynch, was such a soldier and he played a vital role in Montgomery's history, perhaps more vital than that of Martin Luther King, Jr. or Rosa Parks. The 1965 Selma to Montgomery Civil Rights March did not just happen because Martin Luther King, Jr. decided to march. It did not just happen without bloodshed because that was the way Martin Luther King, Jr. wanted it. The Selma to Montgomery march was enabled in large part by my father, Lt. Col. Leonard P. Lynch. Like Moses he and 4,000 troops separated the waters of hatred and opened the road to Montgomery that King and 25,000 marchers might pass without bloodshed. The Civil Rights March to Montgomery was not done by simply praying and putting one foot in front of the other. It was a military campaign orchestrated and conducted in large part by my father which involved 4,000 troops and their armed deployment and logistical support. My father was the logistics transportation officer responsible for opening the road to Montgomery. He was in direct communication with Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy under the Commander in Chief Lyndon B. Johnson, charged with the duty of enabling the establishment of a safe corridor between Selma and Montgomery and insuring that the march might proceed without incident or bloodshed. Were it not for my father's behind the scenes role in opening and maintaining a safe corridor between Selma and Montgomery the now famous march would have never happened or would have surely turned into another blood bath. Often those who serve their country in uniform go unnoticed and slip silently into the night, forgotten because they were merely there doing their duty, following orders. But my father happened to be a man without racial prejudice who always believed in equal civil rights for all people. Had not such a man as my father been at the right place at the right time, King would never have stepped into Montgomery without blood on his hands and history would have taken an altogether different course. This is not a case of trying to claim undo credit. It is simply a revelation of what really happened in 1965, some 33 years ago. When the National Guard was federalized it was given orders to clear a safe corridor from Selma to Montgomery to enable the march to proceed in an orderly and safe manner. At the time my father was a National Guard Advisor living in Montgomery and stationed out of the National Guard Armory in Prattville. For some years he had been involved in the overseeing of that post. When the National Guard was federalized, as a senior logistics transportation officer my father was largely responsible for opening and maintaining a safe corridor between Selma and Montgomery. This involved the planning of operations, the movement and emplacement of 4,000 armed troops, supplies and support operations, and the maintenance of communications with the White House through Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy. Were it not for my father's many years of experience in the conduct of such operations during World War II, the reconstruction of Europe, the Korean War and the Cold War, the Selma to Montgomery march would likely have never happened without bloodshed. It was enabled because my father was a highly trained and skilled soldier, who followed orders and did his duty to the best of his ability for God and for country. If these are values that we want to pass to our children then they must know the truth, that the Selma to Montgomery march happened because force of arms under the command of highly trained military personnel enabled it to happen. It was not just a mass of people walking down the highway unhampered, but a carefully orchestrated military operation which my father and 4,000 National Guard troops executed. By telling the truth and displaying my father's image as a career soldier who had a vital role in the making of history upon the RSA Wall of History, people will know that if they serve their country they, too, may one day play a vital role in securing our freedom and maintaining our civil rights. But if the myth persists that freedom and liberty may be secured or maintained without force of arms, then they may one day be lost. It is true that Martin Luther King, Jr. was an advocate of nonviolence but the only reason he and 25,000 marchers were able to make it to Montgomery during March of 1965 without bloodshed is because 4,000 armed troops watched over them night and day like guardian angles. The Selma to Montgomery march was enabled by force of arms and my father was the logistics transportation officer who was largely responsible for opening and maintaining a safe corridor for marchers to Montgomery. True, the marchers were nonviolent, but they were hampered and opposed by hatred and prejudice every foot of the way. It is doubtful they would have even made it over the Edmund Pettus bridge and down the road to Montgomery without bloodshed, had my father and 4,000 armed troops not enabled the march by force of arms. An appropriate commemoration of this era in history would show my father as a career soldier with the inscription "Like Moses he and 4,000 armed troops parted the waters of hatred and opened the road to Montgomery that King and 25,000 marchers might pass without bloodshed." Any other historical portrayal of the Selma to Montgomery march or that era in history which does not tell the whole truth and leads people to believe that rights may be asserted without force of arms is a lie which places our freedom in jeopardy. I would hope you do the right thing and place a soldier on the Wall of History and nominate my father, Lt. Col Leonard P. Lynch, to be that soldier. Respectfully, Terrence A. Lynch cc. Mary Ann Neeley, Executive Director of the Landmark's Foundation of Montgomery Ed Bridges, Director of the Alabama Department of Archives and History

Entire Contents © Copyright 1998 by Terry Lynch and Electronic Arts. All Rights Reserved.