Charles Alvin Beckwith

Officer

Birthday January 22, 1929

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1994, Austin, Texas, U.S. (65 years old)

Nationality Georgia

#25217 Most Popular

1929

Charles Alvin "Charlie" Beckwith (22 January 1929 – 13 June 1994) was a career United States Army Special Forces officer best remembered for creating Delta Force, the premier counterterrorism and asymmetric warfare unit of the United States Army, based on his experience serving with the British Special Air Service.

He served in the Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation and the Vietnam War, and attained the rank of colonel before his retirement.

Beckwith was born in Atlanta, Georgia, on 22 January 1929, to Baptist parents Elza Dozier Beckwith (1894–1940) and Clara Eugenia Beckwith (Rey; 1895–1973).

He was an all-state football player for his high school team.

He later enrolled in the University of Georgia, where he was a member of the Delta Chapter of the Sigma Chi fraternity, and ROTC.

1950

Beckwith lettered in football for the Bulldogs, and was approached by the Green Bay Packers for the 1950–51 NFL draft, but turned it down in favor of a military career.

After the Korean War (1950–1953) was over, then-Second Lieutenant Beckwith served as a platoon leader with Charlie Company, 17th Infantry Regiment, 7th Infantry Division in South Korea.

1952

He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the United States Army in 1952.

1955

In 1955, Beckwith was assigned to the 82nd Airborne Division as the commander of the combat support company of the 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment.

1958

In 1958, after completing Ranger School, Beckwith joined the Special Forces and was assigned to the 7th Special Forces Group.

1960

In 1960, then-Captain Beckwith deployed to Laos for two years on Operation Hotfoot.

Although Beckwith had presented proposals throughout the 1960s for a superbly elite, highly autonomous direct-action unit, the idea had sat on the shelf for a decade.

1962

In 1962, Beckwith was sent as an exchange officer to the British 22 Special Air Service Regiment(SAS) where he commanded 3 Troop, A Squadron.

He conducted war-time guerilla operations with the SAS during the Malayan Emergency.

In the jungle, he contracted a case of leptospirosis so severe that doctors did not expect him to survive.

However, he made a full recovery within months.

Upon his return from England, Beckwith presented a detailed report outlining the Army's vulnerability in not having an SAS-type unit.

For several years, Beckwith (who was still a Captain) submitted and re-submitted the report to Army brass, only to be repeatedly thwarted in his efforts.

Special Forces leadership at the time thought that they had enough on their hands and did not need the trouble of creating a new unit.

Meanwhile, as the 7th SFG(A) operations officer, Beckwith went to work revolutionizing Green Beret training.

Special Forces at the time focused on unconventional warfare, and especially foreign internal defense: i.e. training indigenous personnel in resistance activities.

But Beckwith recognized that, "Before a Special Forces Green Beret soldier could become a good unconventional soldier, he'd first have to be a good conventional one... Because I had commanded rifle and weapons companies, I was appalled on arriving in Special Forces to find officers who had never commanded conventional units."

Beckwith restructured 7th's training, basically rewriting the book on Army special operations training from the real-world lessons he had learned with the SAS.

Beckwith also had learned that a symbol of excellence like a beret had to be earned.

Officers were being assigned to Special Forces straight out of war college with no prior special ops experience and were given their Green Beret on arrival.

Beckwith instituted the hard-nosed and practical training standards that would lend themselves to the birth of the modern Q-Course.

1965

In 1965, Beckwith volunteered to return to Vietnam where he was selected to command a high-priority special forces unit Project Delta (Operational Detachment B-52).

He used his SAS experience to test and select men for long-range reconnaissance operations in South Vietnam.

Following his promotion to Major, Beckwith led B-52 in the rescue of the besieged Special Forces camp at the Siege of Plei Me, during which President Lyndon B. Johnson requested to speak to him directly over radio in order to congratulate and encourage him; his iron-fist disciplinarian style of running of the camp is described in detail in CBS News Journalist John Laurence's book "The Cat from Hué".

1966

Beckwith was critically wounded in early 1966 (he took a .50 caliber bullet through his abdomen).

It was so bad that medical personnel triaged him as beyond help for the second time in his military career.

This time, again, Beckwith made a full recovery and went on to overhaul the Florida Phase of the U.S. Army Ranger School.

Beckwith transformed this phase from a scripted exercise based upon the Army's World War II experience, into a Vietnam-oriented jungle training regimen.

1968

In 1968, following the Tet Offensive, then-Lieutenant Colonel Beckwith returned to South Vietnam, taking command of the 2nd Battalion, 327th Infantry (Airborne), 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Division.

For the nine months that he commanded the 2/327 (“No Slack”), they saw many successes in combat operations, including: Huế, Operation Mingo, Operation Jeb Stuart, Operation Nevada Eagle (clearing the Huế-Phu Bai area), and Somerset Plain (sweeping the southern portion of the A Shau Valley).

The toughest job the battalion had was clearing a seven kilometer stretch along Route 547, running west of Huế, eventually defeating the determined NVA defenders so that Fire Support Base Bastogne could be established.

1973

From 1973 to 1974, Beckwith served as commander, Control Team "B" with the Joint Casualty Resolution Center (JCRC) located at RTAFB Nakhon Phanom, Thailand.

Under the Command of BG Robert C. Kingston, USA, JCRC's sole mission was to assist the Secretaries of the Armed Services to resolve the fate of servicemen still missing and unaccounted for as a result of the hostilities throughout Indochina.

JCRC had a predominantly operational role—the carrying out of field search, excavation, recovery, and repatriation activities.

1975

He was promoted to colonel and in 1975 returned to Fort Bragg, North Carolina as the Commandant of the U.S. Army Special Warfare School.