Quincyan Bob Ericson: Korean War’s “Ceasefire Bugler”

As United Nations representatives and leaders from North Korea signed a ceasefire agreement to end the Korean War on July 27, 1953, a lone bugler played taps at 2400 hours (midnight) at the UN Truce Camp in Panmunjom, Korea. United States Marine Sergeant Bob Ericson, a native of Quincy, became known forever after as the war’s “ceasefire bugler.”
Ericson had been playing the bugle since age 11, when he joined the Drum and Bugle Corps of Quincy’s American Legion Post 37. This fortuitous association placed him among young men of the nation’s best drilled corps. In 1946 the Quincy Corps, with young Ericson on bugle, won the national championship in San Francisco.
A year earlier during a workforce shortage caused by World War II, Ericson had detasselled corn alongside German P.O.W.s held at Camp Ellis near Macomb, Illinois. After joining the Marines in 1950 and completing basic training at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, the Corps named him 1st Service Battalion Bugler of the 1st Marine Division. The war in Korea loomed over the horizon.
In 1948, Korea had been divided at the 38th parallel with a communist government in the north and the People’s Republic in the south. On June 25, 1950, North Korea invaded its southern neighbor and President Harry Truman, without waiting for congressional approval, deployed American troops.
Fought by U. S. and UN Forces to stop the spread of communism in Southeast Asia, the war cost five million military and civilian lives, with about 40,000 Americans killed and 100,000 wounded. The war ended in a stalemate, and Korea remains divided to this day. Peace negotiations began soon after the war started in 1951, but politics as mean and vicious as the fighting held them up for two years.
In a 2010 interview, Ericson reflected on this dismal interlude: “Negotiations took place in a tent and were made difficult by the Koreans, who cut legs off the chairs to sit taller than UN representatives. They also cut the bases off the American flags. During this two-year charade, most of the causalities and fatalities of the war took place. South Korean President Syngman Rhee tried to destroy the ceasefire by releasing 20,000 North Korean P.O.W.s, but they were so tired of war they disappeared into the population rather than fight.”
After officials signed the truce, an exchange of sick and wounded prisoners took place with the Koreans. The Marines assigned Ericson to Freedom Village—where doctors and nurses received weakened soldiers—and there he played daily bugle calls for the camp.
Governments around the world remembered and honored Sergeant Ericson’s efforts. In 1995 President Reagan appointed him to the commission which was to design, build and dedicate the National Korean War Memorial on the Mall in Washington, D. C. He was named the official bugler at the dedication ceremony. Ericson and his wife Gladys, with a contingent of twenty local Korean War veterans, took a train to Washington for the ceremony, where about 200,000 veterans had gathered. During the practice session for the program, a spotlight shone on Ericson as he played taps and then held the last note until fading into the orchestra’s rendition of “America the Beautiful.” He gradually muted his bugle and waited for the song to begin, but as he looked down for a cue from the orchestra the musicians gave him a standing ovation.
In 2003 the Korean government invited Ericson to play at the 50th anniversary of the war’s ceasefire, and during this time the Norwegian Embassy learned about the “ceasefire bugler” and invited him to play in that country. In Norway, after a limousine ride to the Norwegian War Memorial courtesy of the government, a national magazine featured his performance, together with a half-page photograph.
Ericson also played his bugle at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery in Washington, the dedication of the Illinois Korean War Memorial at Oak Ridge Cemetery in Springfield, the Korean War Memorial at the Illinois Veterans Home in Quincy, the burial of the last known Civil War veteran in Memphis, Missouri, and several international memorial programs. He became director of the same Quincy American Legion Drum and Bugle Corps he had played in as a youth and served as an officer in the Marine Corps League and the Korean War Veterans.
Robert “Bob” Ericson was born on August 22, 1930, and except for three years in the USMC lived in Quincy his entire life. His father was a WW1 veteran who later became a postal worker. In 1948 Ericson married Gladys Holtschlag and after his discharge on January 4, 1954, accepted a job offer from his father-in-law, the owner of Holtschlag Florist. For the first eight years of his 35-year career he worked in the greenhouse as a grower, learning this trade on the job and by using the G.I. Bill for specialized horticultural training. He then became a floral designer and in 1969 the National FTD named him Designer of the Year.
After contracting rheumatoid arthritis, Ericson reached a point in 1989 when he could no longer stand for long periods of time and accepted a job as the first Veterans Service Officer for the Illinois Disabled Veterans of America at the Illinois Veterans Home in Quincy. In that position, he helped former servicemen and women receive benefits and medical aid and directed them to VA programs and agencies.
Ericson lived at the Veterans Home himself until his death on July 13, 2021. He had come full circle: his first public bugle performance took place in the Home’s Lippincott Hall on Armistice Day (now Veterans Day) of 1941, twenty-six days before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor that began U. S. involvement in World War II.
Ericson’s most poignant performances, though, were perhaps private. He played taps for 69 years at nearly 7,000 funerals of American military veterans who solemnly entered the hereafter on the notes of a lone Marine bugler bestowing a final elegy from a grateful nation.
Sources
Blair, Clay. The Forgotten War: America in Korea 1950-1953. New York: Random House, 1987.
“Bob Ericson New President of Florist Group.” Quincy Herald-Whig, Sept. 22, 1970, B4.
Catchpole, Brian. The Korean War: 1950-53. New York: Carroll & Graf Pub. Inc., 2000.
Genosky, Rev. Landry O.F.M. ed. People’s History of Quincy and Adams County: A Sesquicentennial History: Quincy,
IL: Jost & Kiefer Printing Co., pp. 436-37.
Newkirk, Joseph. “Bob Ericson Interview.” Illinois Veterans’ Home Bugle, Oct-Nov. 2010.
“Quincyan Plays Taps at D.C.” Quincy Herald-Whig, July 28, 1995.
“Truce Signed.” The Graybeards: The Korean War Veterans Association 17, no.4 (2003): 1,3, 9, 11, 18, 26-31.





