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The Washington Times Online Edition

Town turns out for freed hostage

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Capt. Richard Phillips and his wife, Andrea, thank the crowd during a community picnic Saturday in Vermont to honor the selflessness and bravery of the captain of the Maersk Alabama, a U.S.-flagged cargo ship, who survived a five-day hostage ordeal off the coast of Somalia recently.ASSOCIATED PRESS Capt. Richard Phillips and his wife, Andrea, thank the crowd during a community picnic Saturday in Vermont to honor the selflessness and bravery of the captain of the Maersk Alabama, a U.S.-flagged cargo ship, who survived a five-day hostage ordeal off the coast of Somalia recently.

JERICHO, Vt. | Less than two weeks after the U.S. Navy rescued Capt. Richard Phillips from captivity by Somali pirates, the skipper got a hero’s welcome Saturday from a crowd of about 500 of his neighbors and well-wishers from around New England.

“Now I know why I moved to Vermont,” Capt. Phillips, skipper of a U.S. cargo ship, said in a thick accent of his native Massachusetts. “It’s not just the maple syrup, the foliage and the snowboarding. This is true American community, and it’s a true caring for each other.”

Capt. Phillips was skipper of the Maersk Alabama when Somali pirates boarded the ship April 8. The ensuing five-day hostage drama gripped the world’s attention and ended on Easter when Navy sharpshooters fatally shot three of the pirates holding him and took a fourth into custody.

All that was a world away Saturday as Capt. Phillips’ neighbors threw a community picnic for him in the 216-acre park straddling the line between Underhill, where he and his family live, and neighboring Jericho. The weather was unusually fine for Vermont in late April, with sunshine and temperatures in the 80s.

A covered bridge crosses a stream at the entrance to the park, and by afternoon, a sign saying “Welcome Home Captain Phillips” at one end of the bridge bore hundreds of signatures.

Capt. Phillips, dressed in a short-sleeve, blue-and-white plaid shirt, khakis and a cap from the ship at the center of his rescue, the USS Bainbridge, spoke briefly, thanking his family, his community and the U.S. military.

“If you see someone in the military in a restaurant or on the street, in an airport, shake their hands and thank them for what they do day in and day out,” he said.

Capt. Phillips, 53, accepted gifts including a flag that had flown over the U.S. Capitol, from an aide to Sen. Patrick J. Leahy, Vermont Democrat; a Vermont flag that had flown over the Statehouse in Montpelier, from Gov. Jim Douglas, a Republican; and a six-pack of his favorite beer, Labatt’s Blue, from Rep. Peter Welch, Vermont Democrat.

Mr. Douglas, who declared Saturday “Captain Richard Phillips Day in Vermont,” introduced the sea captain by saying, “I don’t think there’s any better example of the values and strengths and the indomitable spirit of the people of Vermont” than Capt. Phillips.

Several speakers lauded Capt. Phillips for offering himself as a hostage to the pirates, thereby keeping his crew out of harm’s way. Mr. Welch and Leahy aide Chuck Ross read from U.S. House and Senate resolutions describing those events.

After the speeches, Capt. Phillips, his wife, Andrea, and daughter, Mariah, stood under a party tent greeting well-wishers.

One was Cindy Adams, 49, who had made the more than four-hour trip from North Attleboro, Mass. She said she recently lost her job as a manager in a plastics plant.

“I just wanted to let him know how proud we are, to give him a hug,” she said. “We needed a shot in the arm. We needed a story with a happy ending.”

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