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Hero pilot 'Sully' Sullenberger's hometown honors its hero son

Modest US Airways captain to get key to Danville, Calif., in outdoor civic ceremony

January 25, 2009|Maura Dolan

DANVILLE, CALIF. — The US Airways pilot who deftly landed a disabled passenger jet in New York's Hudson River, saving 155 lives, told a cheering crowd of thousands Saturday that he simply did his job.

Danville, a well-to-do suburb east of San Francisco, welcomed back Capt. Chesley B. "Sully" Sullenberger III and hailed him as its "hometown hero" in an outdoor ceremony replete with brass and marching bands, bagpipes, plaques and proclamations, and a slew of speeches by local officials. A retired fighter pilot in a P-51 Mustang even buzzed the event.

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Sullenberger, in a dark suit and tie, sat on a stage next to his tear-stained wife, Lorrie, and smiled and placed his hand over his heart as the crowd whooped and hollered, waved small American flags and hoisted signs that read, "Sully's Soaring Saved Souls," "Sullyfied Hero" and "Excellent Landing!" The Sullenbergers' two teenage daughters, Katie and Kelly, watched from the front row.

When it came time to speak, the tall, thin, gray-haired Sullenberger was a man of few words. He said it was "great to be here in Danville" and expressed his family's gratitude for the celebration. He made only a brief mention of the event that has won him worldwide fame.

"I know I speak for the entire crew when I tell you we were simply doing the jobs we were trained to do," Sullenberger said in a strong, clear voice. "Thank you."

With that, he sat down, and the crowd again erupted. Parents held children on their shoulders to catch a glimpse of their now-famous neighbor on the Town Green, bordered with naked sycamore trees and American flags and jammed with people as far as the eye could see.

Lorrie Sullenberger, wearing a pink jacket and dark slacks, also addressed the crowd, weeping.

"I seem to have this uncontrollable problem with my tears lately," the fitness expert said. "I am so sorry."

She said she and her husband were "breathtaken" when they first glimpsed the large crowd, and she spoke of her love for the town, its annual Easter egg hunts, holiday tree lightings and Fourth of July parades.

"It felt so good to come home the other day to such a safe place," she said, referring to their return from Washington, where the family was invited to attend President Obama's inauguration.

She called her husband "the most honorable man I know," and said she was not surprised that the harrowing incident had ended well "because I know my husband."

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