On July 12th, 2008 God called home his child, Colonel Merwin Hancock Silverthorn, Jr. Col. Silverthorn had been waiting to meet his maker and join his wife of 63 years, who had preceded him.
Col. Silverthorn entered this world on September 24, 1920, in Vallejo, CA. Merwin grew up in locales far and wide, including Guam and Haiti where his Marine Corps officer father fulfilled tours of duty. Merwin’s achievement of earning the rank of Eagle Scout was a sign of his future commitment to serve his country in the United States Marine Corps.
Merwin, inspired by his father, joined the United States Marine Corps upon graduation from the University of California, Berkeley in 1942. He married his sweetheart, Ruth Lamborn whom he had met in his 10th grade geometry class at Wilson High School in Washington D.C. His deployment to the Pacific, in WWII in 1943 was the first of many long and arduous tours of duty while serving 26 years in the Marine Corps.
Merwin’s unwavering dedication to the USMC was exemplified in multiple ways during his stellar Marine Corps career. As a young officer, Col. Silverthorn fought in five campaigns in the Pacific, earning a purple heart, two bronze stars, and a silver star. Col. Silverthorn, then a 23 year old 2nd Lt. and a commander in the amphibious reconnaissance squadron, earned the silver star for playing a vital role in the landing on Tinian. He participated on the landing of Saipan, and several other major Pacific islandlandings. Co. Silverthorn continued his distinguish career after WWII. With a growing family then Maj. Silverthorn was assigned to the duty of Professor of Military History, the ROTC Senior Officer at the University of Colorado. He was one of very few Lt. Colonels to be selected to attend the Army War College in Carlisle, PA. From 1963-1965, Col Silverthorn was the Fleet Marine Officer for the 7th Fleet, under Vice Admiral Moorer.
During the height of the Vietnam War, Col. Silverthorn was the Commanding Officer of the 2nd Infantry Training Regiment located at Camp Pendelton, CA, where he trained 10,000 Marines each month on their way to Vietnam, and although he was known as an extremely demanding commander, it was his commitment to his troops that gave them the skills they needed to survive.
Col. Silverthorn also fought in the Korean War. He retired from the Marine Corps after serving 26 distinguished years on July 25, 1968. After raising four children he moved with his wife to Japan where they lived for 19 years. Col. Silverthorn conducted business in Tokyo for US and Japanese companies. It was while living in Japan that he realized his long held dream of becoming a pilot. Ruthie and “Silver” as his friends called him, retired on the Big Island of Hawaii where Silver taught Sunday School, volunteered for the Coast Guard Air Patrol and gardened. A two hour documentary was produced and aired about Col. Silverthorn’s life and is featured in the book Swift, Silent, and Deadly.
Col. Silverthorn lived in Morgan Hill near his daughter for the last three years and attended St. Catherine’s every Sunday.
Funeral Mass will be held 1:00 P.M. Friday, July 18 at St. Catherine Catholic Church, Morgan Hill.