A TRIBUTE TO
MAURICE COCCHI
COMPANY COMMANDER
OF
A CO 27TH COMBAT ENG 68/69

I
work as a veteran’s service officer and my office
is located in a small town in western Massachusetts.
The town offices are located in a building, which
was previously a high school, and my office is a converted
classroom. The office is typical of an early twentieth
century classroom – high ceilings, blackboard
spaces at either end of the room, entrance and exit
door at one side, and four large windows opposite
the entrance wall. The room receives sunshine most
of the day and is light and pleasant. My desk and
computer workplace are located at one end of the room
opposite the entrance. Across from my desk area, and
near the entrance, there are tables crowded with veteran
literature, benefits pamphlets, state veteran information
and federal veteran information. It was in this setting
where I met Maurice Cocchi for the first time. .
Maurice
Cocchi walked into my office in August of 2003. It
was early afternoon of a pleasant summer’s day.
As he entered the office, he carefully scanned the
room as if he was scoping the terrain of a future
battle engagement. Maurice was fairly tall, probably
close to six feet and stocky in build. He was wearing
cut off jeans, a plaid lumberman’s shirt and
tan work boots. He had a full black beard, and a deep
voice of authority, which at times would be quiet
and peaceful depending on the need. I rose to greet
and offer him a seat, which he refused. He indicated
he was looking for an address of someone in the Veterans
Administration. I looked up the address and gave it
to him. He thanked me for the address, viewed the
perimeter of the office again and took his leave.
That was to be the first of many meetings.
Maurice
Cocchi had graduated from college in the early 1960s
with a degree in chemical engineering and continued
on to graduate school. After graduate school, he enlisted
in the US Army in 1964. He served as an enlisted man
for over two years and then was commissioned as an
officer in 1966. Perhaps it was fate, but whatever
is was, one day I was looking for information on the
internet about Vietnam when I found a site dedicated
to the 27th engineer battalion and their work on Route
547 in the A Shau Valley, Vietnam. In the article
there was a section asking anyone if they knew the
where-abouts of Captain Maurice Cocchi? I responded
to the request and was soon to hear from Vinny Alestra
the author of the site. Vinny had served under Captain
Cocchi and attributes his survival today, as well
as the survival of many others, to the skills of Captain
Cocchi. He cared about his men. He would see to it
that his men ate first, a credit to his manners as
well as his consideration for his men and their safety.
The operation to reopen and upgrade Rte 547 from Phu
Bai to the A Shau Valley was described by brigade
headquarters as potentially the most difficult combat
engineering task up to that point of the Vietnam War.
He had an uncanny ability to know when to move the
men of A company and protect them from the enemy.
Maurice
was discharged from the army on the 31st of July 1969
and remained in Southeast Asia working for Air America
(CIA) for many years in that area of the world. He
later worked for the Department of the Interior as
a water analyst.
Maurice was a very complicated man. He had served
his country admirably in the army; he continued to
work for his country with the CIA and later for the
Department of the Interior. He spent his last ten
years reclusively on a small farm in western Massachusetts.
It was during these later years I got to know him.
Now and then he would visit me in my office. We would
discuss literature, fishing, and writing, and, as
I was to discover, he had an amazing understanding
of the constitution. Hemingway was an author we both
liked, and together we spent many hours talking about
his writing. One day Maurice brought me some manuscripts
to read. The writing was all done on yellow writing
pads in long hand. The penmanship was of good hand
and the writing was amazing to me. I had, for some
time, felt he had been endowed with uncommon intellect.
Having read through these manuscripts, I knew on good
days I was witness to genius. However, some days were
difficult for Maurice. As I think about his reclusive
lifestyle, I know he was haunted by man’s inhumanity
to man.
Maurice
fought one final battle with cancer. He was hospitalized
during much of his last year, and I would keep communication
with him by telephone two or three times weekly. In
late June he was out of the hospital for a while and
came to visit me. He stood in the doorway of my office
and with a grin from ear to ear pronounced, “LET
THE BASTARDS KNOW COCCHI’S BACK”. Somehow
he had fought through all the cancer treatments and
had come home with a positive outlook. He was for
a short period of time better than I had ever seen
him. Sadly, Maurice lost his battle with cancer and
died in late October of 2005. It was my privilege
to know Maurice Cocchi, as it was a privilege for
his men to serve under him.
Robert Mathison

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