The Greenvillian who potentially saved millions of lives

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Maj. Rudolf Anderson Memorial | Photo via @cityofgreenville

You can take a walk pretty much anywhere downtown Greenville + be surrounded by history. The stories of our city are hidden everywhere in plain sight.

If you’ve ever taken a stroll through Cleveland Park, you’ve probably seen this memorial. What’s it for? Why is it a plane? Who is Major Rudolf Anderson?

If that name doesn’t sound familiar, Major Rudolf Anderson was a Greenville native who potentially saved millions of people’s lives + was the only casualty of an almost-war.

How? Let’s back up.

The year is 1962 – in the midst of the Cuban Missile Crisis.

Major Rudolf Anderson was a U-2 pilot who helped gain photographic evidence of Soviet missile sites in Cuba. On October 27, 1962, as he was flying over the tropical island, Anderson was killed as his U-2 plane was shot down over Cuba.

So how did his death potentially save millions of lives? Anderson’s death made leaders on both sides realize that the crisis was “rapidly spiraling out of their control.” Unless they wanted a nuclear war, they had to end it.

The story as we all know it ends with “a top-secret deal” and a peaceful end to the thirteen-day standoff. Without Major Rudolf Anderson, things could have ended much differently.

Anderson is now buried at Woodlawn Memorial Park, and Cleveland Park features his memorial to remind us that it was a Greenvillian who potentially saved us all from a devastating nuclear war.

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