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Arland D. Williams Jr.

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Cause of death
  
Plane crash, drowning

Nationality
  
United States

Occupation
  
Monument
  
14th Street Bridges

Siblings
  
Jean Fullmer

Monuments
  
14th Street Bridge

Alma mater
  
The Citadel, 1957

Employer
  
Federal Reserve System

Award
  
Lifesaving Medal

Arland D. Williams Jr. httpswwwthestarcomcontentdamthestarnewsw

Born
  
September 23, 1935 (
1935-09-23
)

Died
  
13 January 1982, Washington, D.C., United States

Education
  
The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina

Resting place
  
Dodge Grove Cemetery, Mattoon

Arland Dean Williams Jr. (September 23, 1935 – January 13, 1982) was a passenger aboard Air Florida Flight 90, which crashed on take-off in Washington, D.C., on January 13, 1982, killing 78 people. One of six people to initially survive the crash, he helped the other five escape the sinking plane before succumbing to his injuries.

Contents

Arland D. Williams Jr. Arland D Williams Jr Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

A clergyman later said His heroism was not rash. Aware that his own strength was fading, he deliberately handed hope to someone else, and he did so repeatedly. On that cold and tragic day, Arland D. Williams Jr. exemplified one of the best attributes of human nature, specifically that some people are capable of doing anything for total strangers.

The 14th Street Bridge over the Potomac River at the crash site was renamed in his honor.

Personal background

Arland D. Williams Jr. The hidden cost of heroism Health Behavior NBC News

Born and raised in Mattoon, Illinois, Williams graduated from Mattoon High School in 1953, where he acquired the nickname "Chub." He attended The Citadel in South Carolina. According to his high school girlfriend, Williams had been nervous about The Citadel's swimming requirement, as he had always had a fear of water. After graduation he served two years in the military in a stateside post and then went into banking, eventually becoming a bank examiner for the Federal Reserve System in Atlanta. A divorced father of two, he was engaged to be remarried.

Air Florida Flight 90

Arland D. Williams Jr. Arland D Williams Jr Scholarship Mattoon Area Southeastern

On January 13, 1982, during an extraordinary period of freezing weather, Air Florida Flight 90 took off from nearby Washington National Airport, failed to gain altitude, and crashed into the 14th Street Bridge, where it hit six cars and a truck on the bridge, killing four motorists.

Arland D. Williams Jr. Arland D Williams jr by Landon Winegar on Prezi

After the crash on the bridge, the plane then continued forward and plunged into the freezing Potomac River. Soon only the tail section which had broken off remained afloat. Only six of the airliner's 79 occupants (74 passengers and 5 crew members) survived the initial crash and were able to escape the sinking plane in the middle of the ice-choked river.

After the crash

News cameramen watched from the bridge, recording the unfolding disaster. There appeared to be no way to reach the survivors in the water. Bystanders helped as fellow passerby Roger Olian, with a makeshift rope, began an attempt to rescue them. At about 4:20 p.m. EST, Eagle 1, a U.S. Park Police helicopter based at Anacostia Park in Washington and manned by pilot Donald W. Usher and paramedic Melvin E. (Gene) Windsor, arrived and assisted with the rescue operation. At one point in the operation the helicopter's skids dipped beneath the surface of the icy water.

According to the other five survivors, one passenger continued to help the others reach the rescue ropes being dropped by the hovering helicopter, repeatedly passing the line to others instead of using it himself. While the other five were being taken to shore by the helicopter, the tail section of the wrecked Boeing 737 shifted and sank further into the water, dragging Williams under the water with it.

The next day, the Washington Post described his heroism:

An essay in Time Magazine dated January 25, 1982, was written before the identity of Williams was known. Roger Rosenblatt, the essay's author, wrote:

Honors, memorials

The four other members of the Air Florida rescue who also risked their lives but survived were honored shortly after the disaster.

It took over a year to investigate and establish without any doubt Williams' identity and actions. On June 6, 1983, Williams was posthumously awarded the United States Coast Guard's Gold Lifesaving Medal in a White House Oval Office presentation to his family by President Ronald Reagan and Secretary of Transportation Elizabeth H. Dole. Mrs. Virginia Williams, accepted the medal on her son's behalf. Other participants in the ceremony included the recipient's father, Arland, his children, Arland III and Leslie Ann, and his sister, Jean Fullmer. Also present were Vice Admiral Benedict L. Stabile, Vice Commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard, Senator Charles H. Percy and Representative Daniel B. Crane of Illinois.

The docudrama Flight 90: Disaster on the Potomac was aired on NBC television on April 1, 1984. It displayed the heroism of Williams, portrayed by Donnelly Rhodes.

The repaired 14th Street Bridge over the Potomac River at the crash site, which had been officially named the "Rochambeau Bridge," was renamed the "Arland D. Williams Jr. Memorial Bridge" in his honor by the city government of the District of Columbia in March 1985. Senator Ernest Hollings of South Carolina, a fellow alumnus of the Citadel, initiated the action in late 1983.

In 1993, Reagan retold the story of Williams and paid tribute to him during a commencement address at The Citadel on May 15. In 2000, The Citadel — and Williams' alma mater (class of 1957) — created the Arland D. Williams Society to recognize graduates who distinguished themselves through community service. The Citadel also established the Arland D. Williams Endowed Professorship of Heroism in his honor.

In August 2003, the new Arland D. Williams Jr. Elementary School in his hometown of Mattoon was dedicated.

Pop singer Sara Hickman's song "Last Man in the Water" is a tribute to Williams.

References

Arland D. Williams Jr. Wikipedia