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James N. Rowe

James Nicholas "Nick" Rowe (February 8, 1938 – April 21, 1989) was a United States Army officer and one of only 34 American prisoners of war to escape captivity during the Vietnam War. Colonel Rowe was credited with developing the rigorous US Army Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape (SERE) training program taught to high-risk military personnel (such as Special Operations Forces and aircrews) and the U.S. Army doctrine which institutionalizes these techniques and principles to be followed by captured personnel.

James Nicholas Rowe
Nickname(s)"Nick"
Born(1938-02-08)February 8, 1938
McAllen, Texas, U.S.
DiedApril 21, 1989(1989-04-21) (aged 51)
Quezon City, Philippines
Buried
AllegianceUnited States of America
Service/branchUnited States Army
United States Army Reserve
Years of service1960–74
1981–89
Rank Colonel
Commands held5th Special Forces Group – Battalion Commander
Joint U.S. Military Advisory Group – Chief, Army Division
Battles/warsCold War
AwardsSilver Star
Legion of Merit
Bronze Star (2)
Purple Heart (2)
Meritorious Service Medal
National Defense Service Medal
Vietnam Service Medal
Army Service Ribbon
Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross Unit Citation
Other workAuthor

In 1989, Rowe was assassinated by a unit of the New People's Army in the Philippines called the Alex Boncayao Brigade.

Personal life

Rowe was born in McAllen, Texas, on February 8, 1938, to Lee Delavan and Florence (Survillo) Rowe. He grew up in McAllen, joining his local DeMolay chapter, and graduated from McAllen High School in 1956 before leaving for the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York.[1] His older brother Richard had also attended West Point, but died a few months before graduation in 1944.[2]

On December 27, 1969, Rowe married Jane Rowe, whom he later divorced. His second wife was Mary. He had two daughters, Deborah and Christina, from his first marriage and two sons, Stephen and Brian, from his second marriage.[3]

Military service

Rowe graduated from West Point in 1960 and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the United States Army. In 1963, First Lieutenant Rowe was sent to the Republic of Vietnam and assigned as Executive Officer of Detachment A-23, 5th Special Forces Group, a 12-man "A-team". Located at Tan Phu in An Xuyen Province, A-23 organized and advised a Civilian Irregular Defense Group camp in the Mekong Delta region of Vietnam.

Prisoner of war

 
Rowe, shortly after his escape
 
Page from Rowe's diary while a POW. Pictured is a sketch of the floorplan of the "Hacienda del Sol", an imaginary resort he came up with to lift his spirits.

On October 29, 1963, after only three months in country, Rowe was captured by Viet Cong elements along with Captain Humberto "Rocky" R. Versace and Sergeant Daniel L. Pitzer while on an operation to drive a Viet Cong unit out of the village of Le Coeur.[4] Rowe states that the VC were a main force unit due to his observations of their equipment.[5]

Rowe was separated from his fellow Green Berets and spent 62 months in captivity with only brief encounters with fellow American POWs. Rowe was held in the U Minh Forest, better known as the "Forest of Darkness," in extreme southern Vietnam. During most of his five years in captivity Rowe was held in a 3 by 4 by 6 feet (0.91 m × 1.22 m × 1.83 m) bamboo cage.[6] As an intelligence officer, Rowe possessed vital information about the disposition of defenses around the CIDG camps, the locations of mine fields, identities of friendly Vietnamese, and unit locations and strengths. Rowe had left his West Point ring at home in the United States, and he told his captors that he was a draftee engineer charged with building schools and other civil affairs projects. The Viet Cong interrogated him unsuccessfully. They gave him some engineering problems to solve and Rowe, relying on the basic instruction in engineering he'd received at West Point, successfully maintained his deception.[6]

However, Rowe's deceptive cover was blown when the Viet Cong managed to obtain a list of American high-value prisoners-of-war (POWs), and his name was in the list, identifying him as an intelligence officer. This enraged the VC, prompting them to order his execution.

Rowe was then led deep into the jungle to be shot. When his would-be executioners were distracted by a flight of American helicopters, he overpowered his guard, escaped and flagged down a UH-1 helicopter piloted by Major David E. Thompson. He was rescued on December 31, 1968.[6] Rowe had been promoted to major during captivity.[7]

In 1971, he authored the book Five Years to Freedom, an account of his years as a prisoner of war. In 1974, he continued his military career in the United States Army Reserve.

 
Five Years to Freedom

Survival course

In 1981, Rowe was recalled to active duty as a lieutenant colonel to design and build a course based upon his experience as a POW. Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape (SERE) is now a requirement for graduation from the U.S. Army Special Forces Qualification Course. SERE is taught at the Colonel James "Nick" Rowe Training compound at Camp Mackall, North Carolina. It is considered by many to be the most important advanced training in the special operations field. Navy, Air Force and Marine Special Operations personnel all attend variations of this course taught by their respective services.[6]

Support of Philippine counter-insurgency

By 1987, Colonel Rowe was assigned as the chief of the Army division of the Joint U.S. Military Advisory Group (JUSMAG), providing counter-insurgency training for the Armed Forces of the Philippines. Working closely with the Central Intelligence Agency and intelligence organizations of the Republic of the Philippines, he was involved in its nearly decade-long program to penetrate the New People's Army (NPA), the communist insurgency that threatened to overthrow the Philippines' government.

By February 1989, Rowe had acquired intelligence information which indicated that the communists were planning a major terrorist act. He warned Washington that a high-profile figure was about to be assassinated and that he himself was second or third on the assassination list. At around 7:00 in the morning of April 21, 1989, as he was being driven to work at the Joint U.S. Military Advisory Group headquarters in an armoured limousine, Rowe's vehicle was hit by gunfire from a .45 caliber pistol and an M16 rifle near a corner of Tomas Morato Street and Timog Avenue in Quezon City.[8] Twenty-one shots hit the vehicle; one round entered through an unarmoured portion of the vehicle frame and struck Rowe in the head, killing him instantly, while chauffeur Joaquin Vinuya was wounded. Years later, the New People's Army eventually claimed responsibility for his assassination. Filipino nationals Juanito T. Itaas (principal) and Donato B. Continente (accomplice) were convicted by a Philippine court in 1991 and sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of Rowe, and 10 to 17 years for the attempted murder of his driver, Joaquin Vinuya. In 2000, the Supreme Court of the Philippines affirmed the convictions but reduced Continente's sentence to 14 years, concluding that he was acting as an accomplice, not as a principal. On June 28, 2005, Continente was released from prison. On January 8, 2022, Itaas was released from prison as he was found to have completed the service of his sentence through the Good Conduct Time Allowance (GCTA) Law under Republic Act 10592.[9]

He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery, in Arlington, Virginia.[10]

Politics

Rowe was a staunch conservative and a strong critic of George McGovern in the 1972 presidential campaign. He ran as a Republican for the office of Texas Comptroller in 1974 but was easily defeated by Democrat Bob Bullock in a strongly Democratic year because of the Watergate scandal. Bullock received 1,099,599 votes (71.6%) to Rowe's 419,657 (27.3%). A third-party candidate earned the remaining 16,383 (1%) votes. Rowe did not run for office again and Bullock became a two-term lieutenant governor.[1]

Awards and decorations

Silver Star

 

Citation:

The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress, July 8, 1918 (amended by act of July 25, 1963), takes pleasure in presenting the Silver Star to Major (Field Artillery) James Nicholas "Nick" Rowe (ASN: 0-91033), United States Army, for gallantry in action on 31 December 1968, while a prisoner of the Viet Cong in the U Minh Forest of South Vietnam. During the period 22 to 31 December 1968, after more than five years in Viet Cong prison camps, Major Rowe was forced by his captors to move at least twice daily to avoid friendly airstrikes. On 31 December at approximately 0900 hours, two helicopter gunships began firing into an area approximately 300 meters from his location. The guard detail consisted of one Viet Cong cadreman and five guards, one of whom was assigned to remain with Major Rowe at all times. The guard detail, while monitoring a radio, learned that South Vietnamese infantrymen were searching the terrain nearby. Becoming frightened, the guards moved Major Rowe into a large field of reeds, hoping to evade the infantry force. Major Rowe realized that if he were to escape, he must first get away from some of his guards, so he tricked them into splitting into smaller groups in order to exfiltrate the area. Major Rowe persuaded his one remaining guard that they were being surrounded and kept him moving in a circle through the dense underbrush. While doing so, Major Rowe was able to remove the magazine from the weapon slung across his guard's back. Finding a club, he overpowered his guard, knocking him unconscious, seized his radio, and moved 200 meters into a grassy area. At great personal risk he quickly cleared a section and signaled one of the circling helicopters, which landed and picked him up. His first action after rescue was to request permission to re-enter the area with combat troops and to continue the fight based upon his intimate knowledge of the area. Major Rowe's burning determination to escape, undiminished after five years of intimidation and deprivation, his clear-headedness in formulating an effective plan, and his audacity in executing it successfully, reflect the highest credit on his professionalism and extraordinary courage and are in keeping with the highest traditions of the military service.[11]

Commendations

COL Rowe was awards the following awards throughout his career:[12]

Memorials

  • James "Nikki" Rowe High School and a major street Col. Rowe Blvd. Formally known as 2nd St. in McAllen, Texas are named in his memory.
  • The JROTC Drill Teams (Rowe's Rifles, Rowe's Rangers) and Shooting Team (Rowe's Rangers) of McAllen High School were named in his honor well before he died.
  • A training facility, Rowe Hall, at the US Army Intelligence Center and School, Fort Huachuca, Arizona was named in his honor.
  • A training facility, Rowe Hall, Consolidated Training Facility (aka ISOFAC) at 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne), Fort Campbell, Kentucky is named in honor of Col. "Nick" Rowe.
  • Having been a member of the Order of DeMolay as a teenager, he was recognized with both the DeMolay Legion of Honor, the highest honor DeMolay confers, and was inducted into the International DeMolay Hall of Fame.
  • An Order of Knighthood priory of DeMolay International in the state of Florida is named in his memory.
  • The obstacle course on Camp MacKall, arguably the hardest obstacle course in the Army, is named the "Nasty Nick"
  • An office facility, the Rowe Building, of the Joint United States Military Assistance Group – Philippines, US Embassy, Manila, was named in his honor.
  • The Colonel James N. "Nick" Rowe Memorial, located in Veteran's Memorial Park in Union Beach, New Jersey, was dedicated on October 9, 2004, by friends, classmates from the West Point Class of 1960, and comrades-in arms. Among the attendees were Major General Ted Crowley (a classmate), Ross Perot, and Colonel Rowe's widow and children.
  • The Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) in Charlottesville, Virginia dedicated a building on May 2, 2014 in his honor

References

  1. ^ a b Garza, Alicia A. "Handbook of Texas Online – Rowe, James Nicholas". Retrieved October 20, 2009.
  2. ^ https://externalapps.westpointaog.org/Memorials/Article/23142/ AOG obituary
  3. ^ Fowler, Glenn. "Col. James Rowe, 51, War Hero, is Killed in an Ambush in Manila" The New York Times April 22, 1989 retrieved August 13, 2015
  4. ^ Rowe, James N. (1971). Five years to freedom. Little, Brown. pp. 1–55.
  5. ^ Rowe 1971, p. 82
  6. ^ a b c d "Colonel James "Nick" Rowe". Retrieved May 25, 2015.
  7. ^ "Case Synopsis: Rowe, James Nicholas "Nick"". Retrieved August 1, 2007.
  8. ^ "People of the Philippines, plaintiff-appellee, vs. Donato B. Continente and Juanito T. Itaas, et al". Retrieved May 30, 2016.
  9. ^ "'Longest-held' political prisoner in PH Juanito Itaas released". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved January 9, 2022.
  10. ^ "Burial Detail: Rowe, James N. (Section 48, Grave 2165-A)". ANC Explorer. Arlington National Cemetery. (Official website).
  11. ^ "James Nicholas "Nick" Rowe, Silver Star". valor.militarytimes.com. Retrieved December 23, 2020.
  12. ^ "James N. Rowe". veterantributes.org. Retrieved December 23, 2020.
  • Rowe, James N. (1971) Five Years to Freedom. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 0345314603, OCLC 676700998

External links

  • A tribute page on James N. Rowe
  • Random House author page on James N. Rowe
  • An account of James N. Rowe's rescue by a US Army helicopter crew
  • Statement by Press Secretary Fitzwater on the Assassination of Colonel James N. Rowe in the Philippines
  • James N. Rowe at Find a Grave  
  • "James Nicholas Rowe". at ArlingtonCemetery.net. (Unofficial website).

james, rowe, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, january, 2013,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources James N Rowe news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message James Nicholas Nick Rowe February 8 1938 April 21 1989 was a United States Army officer and one of only 34 American prisoners of war to escape captivity during the Vietnam War Colonel Rowe was credited with developing the rigorous US Army Survival Evasion Resistance and Escape SERE training program taught to high risk military personnel such as Special Operations Forces and aircrews and the U S Army doctrine which institutionalizes these techniques and principles to be followed by captured personnel James Nicholas RoweNickname s Nick Born 1938 02 08 February 8 1938McAllen Texas U S DiedApril 21 1989 1989 04 21 aged 51 Quezon City PhilippinesBuriedArlington National CemeteryAllegianceUnited States of AmericaService wbr branchUnited States ArmyUnited States Army ReserveYears of service1960 741981 89RankColonelCommands held5th Special Forces Group Battalion CommanderJoint U S Military Advisory Group Chief Army DivisionBattles warsCold War Vietnam War Filipino InsurgencyAwardsSilver StarLegion of MeritBronze Star 2 Purple Heart 2 Meritorious Service MedalNational Defense Service MedalVietnam Service MedalArmy Service RibbonRepublic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross Unit CitationOther workAuthorIn 1989 Rowe was assassinated by a unit of the New People s Army in the Philippines called the Alex Boncayao Brigade Contents 1 Personal life 2 Military service 2 1 Prisoner of war 2 2 Survival course 2 3 Support of Philippine counter insurgency 3 Politics 4 Awards and decorations 4 1 Silver Star 4 2 Commendations 5 Memorials 6 References 7 External linksPersonal life EditRowe was born in McAllen Texas on February 8 1938 to Lee Delavan and Florence Survillo Rowe He grew up in McAllen joining his local DeMolay chapter and graduated from McAllen High School in 1956 before leaving for the United States Military Academy at West Point New York 1 His older brother Richard had also attended West Point but died a few months before graduation in 1944 2 On December 27 1969 Rowe married Jane Rowe whom he later divorced His second wife was Mary He had two daughters Deborah and Christina from his first marriage and two sons Stephen and Brian from his second marriage 3 Military service EditRowe graduated from West Point in 1960 and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the United States Army In 1963 First Lieutenant Rowe was sent to the Republic of Vietnam and assigned as Executive Officer of Detachment A 23 5th Special Forces Group a 12 man A team Located at Tan Phu in An Xuyen Province A 23 organized and advised a Civilian Irregular Defense Group camp in the Mekong Delta region of Vietnam Prisoner of war Edit Rowe shortly after his escape Page from Rowe s diary while a POW Pictured is a sketch of the floorplan of the Hacienda del Sol an imaginary resort he came up with to lift his spirits On October 29 1963 after only three months in country Rowe was captured by Viet Cong elements along with Captain Humberto Rocky R Versace and Sergeant Daniel L Pitzer while on an operation to drive a Viet Cong unit out of the village of Le Coeur 4 Rowe states that the VC were a main force unit due to his observations of their equipment 5 Rowe was separated from his fellow Green Berets and spent 62 months in captivity with only brief encounters with fellow American POWs Rowe was held in the U Minh Forest better known as the Forest of Darkness in extreme southern Vietnam During most of his five years in captivity Rowe was held in a 3 by 4 by 6 feet 0 91 m 1 22 m 1 83 m bamboo cage 6 As an intelligence officer Rowe possessed vital information about the disposition of defenses around the CIDG camps the locations of mine fields identities of friendly Vietnamese and unit locations and strengths Rowe had left his West Point ring at home in the United States and he told his captors that he was a draftee engineer charged with building schools and other civil affairs projects The Viet Cong interrogated him unsuccessfully They gave him some engineering problems to solve and Rowe relying on the basic instruction in engineering he d received at West Point successfully maintained his deception 6 However Rowe s deceptive cover was blown when the Viet Cong managed to obtain a list of American high value prisoners of war POWs and his name was in the list identifying him as an intelligence officer This enraged the VC prompting them to order his execution Rowe was then led deep into the jungle to be shot When his would be executioners were distracted by a flight of American helicopters he overpowered his guard escaped and flagged down a UH 1 helicopter piloted by Major David E Thompson He was rescued on December 31 1968 6 Rowe had been promoted to major during captivity 7 In 1971 he authored the book Five Years to Freedom an account of his years as a prisoner of war In 1974 he continued his military career in the United States Army Reserve Five Years to Freedom Survival course Edit In 1981 Rowe was recalled to active duty as a lieutenant colonel to design and build a course based upon his experience as a POW Survival Evasion Resistance and Escape SERE is now a requirement for graduation from the U S Army Special Forces Qualification Course SERE is taught at the Colonel James Nick Rowe Training compound at Camp Mackall North Carolina It is considered by many to be the most important advanced training in the special operations field Navy Air Force and Marine Special Operations personnel all attend variations of this course taught by their respective services 6 Support of Philippine counter insurgency Edit By 1987 Colonel Rowe was assigned as the chief of the Army division of the Joint U S Military Advisory Group JUSMAG providing counter insurgency training for the Armed Forces of the Philippines Working closely with the Central Intelligence Agency and intelligence organizations of the Republic of the Philippines he was involved in its nearly decade long program to penetrate the New People s Army NPA the communist insurgency that threatened to overthrow the Philippines government By February 1989 Rowe had acquired intelligence information which indicated that the communists were planning a major terrorist act He warned Washington that a high profile figure was about to be assassinated and that he himself was second or third on the assassination list At around 7 00 in the morning of April 21 1989 as he was being driven to work at the Joint U S Military Advisory Group headquarters in an armoured limousine Rowe s vehicle was hit by gunfire from a 45 caliber pistol and an M16 rifle near a corner of Tomas Morato Street and Timog Avenue in Quezon City 8 Twenty one shots hit the vehicle one round entered through an unarmoured portion of the vehicle frame and struck Rowe in the head killing him instantly while chauffeur Joaquin Vinuya was wounded Years later the New People s Army eventually claimed responsibility for his assassination Filipino nationals Juanito T Itaas principal and Donato B Continente accomplice were convicted by a Philippine court in 1991 and sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of Rowe and 10 to 17 years for the attempted murder of his driver Joaquin Vinuya In 2000 the Supreme Court of the Philippines affirmed the convictions but reduced Continente s sentence to 14 years concluding that he was acting as an accomplice not as a principal On June 28 2005 Continente was released from prison On January 8 2022 Itaas was released from prison as he was found to have completed the service of his sentence through the Good Conduct Time Allowance GCTA Law under Republic Act 10592 9 He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington Virginia 10 Politics EditRowe was a staunch conservative and a strong critic of George McGovern in the 1972 presidential campaign He ran as a Republican for the office of Texas Comptroller in 1974 but was easily defeated by Democrat Bob Bullock in a strongly Democratic year because of the Watergate scandal Bullock received 1 099 599 votes 71 6 to Rowe s 419 657 27 3 A third party candidate earned the remaining 16 383 1 votes Rowe did not run for office again and Bullock became a two term lieutenant governor 1 Awards and decorations EditSilver Star Edit Citation The President of the United States of America authorized by Act of Congress July 8 1918 amended by act of July 25 1963 takes pleasure in presenting the Silver Star to Major Field Artillery James Nicholas Nick Rowe ASN 0 91033 United States Army for gallantry in action on 31 December 1968 while a prisoner of the Viet Cong in the U Minh Forest of South Vietnam During the period 22 to 31 December 1968 after more than five years in Viet Cong prison camps Major Rowe was forced by his captors to move at least twice daily to avoid friendly airstrikes On 31 December at approximately 0900 hours two helicopter gunships began firing into an area approximately 300 meters from his location The guard detail consisted of one Viet Cong cadreman and five guards one of whom was assigned to remain with Major Rowe at all times The guard detail while monitoring a radio learned that South Vietnamese infantrymen were searching the terrain nearby Becoming frightened the guards moved Major Rowe into a large field of reeds hoping to evade the infantry force Major Rowe realized that if he were to escape he must first get away from some of his guards so he tricked them into splitting into smaller groups in order to exfiltrate the area Major Rowe persuaded his one remaining guard that they were being surrounded and kept him moving in a circle through the dense underbrush While doing so Major Rowe was able to remove the magazine from the weapon slung across his guard s back Finding a club he overpowered his guard knocking him unconscious seized his radio and moved 200 meters into a grassy area At great personal risk he quickly cleared a section and signaled one of the circling helicopters which landed and picked him up His first action after rescue was to request permission to re enter the area with combat troops and to continue the fight based upon his intimate knowledge of the area Major Rowe s burning determination to escape undiminished after five years of intimidation and deprivation his clear headedness in formulating an effective plan and his audacity in executing it successfully reflect the highest credit on his professionalism and extraordinary courage and are in keeping with the highest traditions of the military service 11 Commendations Edit COL Rowe was awards the following awards throughout his career 12 Badge Combat Infantryman Badge Special Forces Tab Ranger Tab United States Army Special Forces Combat Service Identification Badge1st Row Silver Star2nd Row Legion of Merit Bronze Star with V device and 1 Oak leaf cluster Purple Heart with 1 Oak leaf cluster3rd Row Meritorious Service Medal Prisoner of War Medal National Defense Service Medal4th Row Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal Vietnam Service Medal with 1 silver and 3 bronze Campaign stars Army Service Ribbon5th Row Army Overseas Service Ribbon Vietnamese Gallantry Cross with 1 Bronze star Vietnam Campaign Medal with 60 deviceBadge Master Parachutist BadgeUnitawards Army Presidential Unit Citation with 3 Oak leaf clusters Joint Meritorious Unit Award Vietnamese Gallantry Cross Unit Citation U S Army version Memorials EditJames Nikki Rowe High School and a major street Col Rowe Blvd Formally known as 2nd St in McAllen Texas are named in his memory The JROTC Drill Teams Rowe s Rifles Rowe s Rangers and Shooting Team Rowe s Rangers of McAllen High School were named in his honor well before he died A training facility Rowe Hall at the US Army Intelligence Center and School Fort Huachuca Arizona was named in his honor A training facility Rowe Hall Consolidated Training Facility aka ISOFAC at 5th Special Forces Group Airborne Fort Campbell Kentucky is named in honor of Col Nick Rowe Having been a member of the Order of DeMolay as a teenager he was recognized with both the DeMolay Legion of Honor the highest honor DeMolay confers and was inducted into the International DeMolay Hall of Fame An Order of Knighthood priory of DeMolay International in the state of Florida is named in his memory The obstacle course on Camp MacKall arguably the hardest obstacle course in the Army is named the Nasty Nick An office facility the Rowe Building of the Joint United States Military Assistance Group Philippines US Embassy Manila was named in his honor The Colonel James N Nick Rowe Memorial located in Veteran s Memorial Park in Union Beach New Jersey was dedicated on October 9 2004 by friends classmates from the West Point Class of 1960 and comrades in arms Among the attendees were Major General Ted Crowley a classmate Ross Perot and Colonel Rowe s widow and children The Defense Intelligence Agency DIA in Charlottesville Virginia dedicated a building on May 2 2014 in his honorReferences Edit a b Garza Alicia A Handbook of Texas Online Rowe James Nicholas Retrieved October 20 2009 https externalapps westpointaog org Memorials Article 23142 AOG obituary Fowler Glenn Col James Rowe 51 War Hero is Killed in an Ambush in Manila The New York Times April 22 1989 retrieved August 13 2015 Rowe James N 1971 Five years to freedom Little Brown pp 1 55 Rowe 1971 p 82 a b c d Colonel James Nick Rowe Retrieved May 25 2015 Case Synopsis Rowe James Nicholas Nick Retrieved August 1 2007 People of the Philippines plaintiff appellee vs Donato B Continente and Juanito T Itaas et al Retrieved May 30 2016 Longest held political prisoner in PH Juanito Itaas released ABS CBN News Retrieved January 9 2022 Burial Detail Rowe James N Section 48 Grave 2165 A ANC Explorer Arlington National Cemetery Official website James Nicholas Nick Rowe Silver Star valor militarytimes com Retrieved December 23 2020 James N Rowe veterantributes org Retrieved December 23 2020 Rowe James N 1971 Five Years to Freedom Boston Little Brown and Company ISBN 0345314603 OCLC 676700998External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to James N Rowe A tribute page on James N Rowe Random House author page on James N Rowe An account of James N Rowe s rescue by a US Army helicopter crew Statement by Press Secretary Fitzwater on the Assassination of Colonel James N Rowe in the Philippines Col James Nick Rowe Priory homepage James N Rowe at Find a Grave James Nicholas Rowe at ArlingtonCemetery net Unofficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James N Rowe amp oldid 1127865758, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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