Eagle Biography
William T. "Tom" Meredith
William T. "Tom" Meredith is the father of today's US Air Force (AF) civil engineer (CE)
forces. He led the development and fielding of Prime Base Emergency Engineer Force (BEEF)
and Rapid Engineer Deployable, Heavy Operational Repair Squadron, Engineer (RED HORSE)
units, providing comprehensive engineering and heavy construction support in combat
theaters. These units form the modern combat engineer forces that have provided premier
expeditionary construction support for every US contingency since Vietnam. Meredith was
born in Halifax, Virginia, in 1919.
He graduated from high school in Brandy, Virginia, in
1937, and attended the College of William and Mary on a sports scholarship. With World War
II raging, he walked away from a professional baseball career and enlisted as a private in
the US Army in 1941. After basic training, Meredith was selected for the Corps of
Engineers and sent to trade school. Upon graduation, he was assigned to the Haynes Mission
in the China-Burma-India theater, where he partnered with British engineers to lead
airport construction operations in multiple theater locations. In November 1942, Meredith
was transferred to India as a guerrilla scout leader, leading a group of local tribesmen
to provide terrain reconnaissance supporting the security of the Allies' critical northern
Burmese supply routes.
In March 1943, Meredith was escorting senior US leaders when they
were ambushed and surrounded by Japanese forces. After evading capture and being
re-supplied by airdrop for two weeks, Meredith engineered the group's escape, leading them
127 miles back to safety. In the midst of this incident, Meredith was awarded a
battlefield commission. He separated from the Army at the end of World War II, but
returned in 1947 and transferred his commission to the AF in 1949. From 1949 to 1961 he
served in various roles, including overseeing construction of US facilities in the United
Kingdom and Scandinavia, garnering congressional approval for construction AF-wide and
attending Air Command and Staff College and Air War College.
In July 1961, Meredith began
restructuring CE to provide direct combat support. He developed the Prime BEEF and RED
HORSE concepts while assigned to AF headquarters, fielded those units as commander of the
CE Construction Group at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, trained them as commander of the
560th CE Squadron at Eglin AFB, Florida, and carried out the mission as commander of the
554th RED HORSE unit in Phan Rang, Vietnam. Meredith retired as a brigadier general in
1973, but continued as a leader in private industry and government service, including
leading a US delegation to the Philippines in the mid 1980s. In 1986, the AF honored
Meredith's vision and leadership by creating the Meredith Trophy, awarded to its best
contingency engineering skills team at the conclusion of a biannual competition. He is now
retired and lives in Canton, North Carolina, with his wife Patricia.
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In October 1967, then-Colonel Meredith assumed command of the 554th RED HORSE
Squadron in Phan Rang, Vietnam, executing the RED HORSE mission that he had
designed, fielded and trained. RED HORSE units such as these have served as
the premier expeditionary engineer organization in every US contingency since.
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