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| Vietnam Remembrances (Genealogy Series: Blog 7) |
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 When my uncle Tommy went to Vietnam, I had not yet started school, but I remember. I remember going to Fort Bragg to visit him before he was deported. I remember sitting at the kitchen bar writing letters to him and asking my mom how to spell almost every word. I remember the box of letters my parents kept on the bottom ledge of the bar. I remember my grandma’s constant concern. And I still have the Vietnamese doll he brought back for me. When I asked him recently what he most vividly remembers, he said “everything.” “I can see that period of time in my mind much more vivid than I can remember what I did last month or last week even,” he said. Tommy was drafted into the U.S. Army in August 1967 at the age of 20 and served for 2 years, one of which was spent in the Vietnam Conflict. He served there as a trained artillery surveyor, mostly in the Hue area (which later became Camp Eagle, home of the 101st Airborne). Tommy remembers landing in Vietnam at Cam Ranh Bay in the middle of the night, and soon afterwards, boarding a military plane for Bienhoa (South Vietnam NE of Saigon) where he would remain for one month before the whole unit packed up and moved northward to the Hue area. “To do this,” he explained, “about half our guys would drive all our trucks and vans packed with everything we had, down to Saigon to board a ship and live with their vehicle until they got off at Da Nang where they would meet the rest of us who flew there by a large cargo plane.” They then drove from Da Nang up the coast and over the mountains to the Hue area. This would later become an asphalt road (highway #1), but at that time it was a small dirt road “sometimes on the edges of cliffs and sometimes crossing over small bridges that would scare any sane person.” “What was the hardest part of being away?” I asked him. “Just that,” he said, “being away, but at the same time I was single and only 20 years old, so it was also quite an adventure as well as one large learning experience about almost all aspects of life.” “What sustained you while you were there?” “Number one I would say is the fact that I knew I had a loving family at home all of whom I knew were praying for me to be safe and return home,” he said, and he went on to talk about the comforting letters he received regularly from the whole family. “I think Martha wrote to me everyday while I was there,” he said. (He would later marry her!) “What is your fondest memory of those days?” “My fondest memories are of what I saw in others as a military person. I saw unselfishness, I saw bravery, I saw kindness, I saw loneliness, I saw heartbreak . . . I saw young American soldiers who were not there of their own will but nonetheless were doing what they could for the cause.” He also fondly remembers getting to go to Thailand and Malaysia, and going to Da Nang to see the Bob Hope Christmas show. Then there are the more difficult memories. The knowledge that 58,479 did not return alive. The media’s mind control of the people back home, how the American people allowed the press to control what they should think. The “Jane Fonda types.” The sickening memory of the president “bringing all the deserters home from Canada to be the real heroes of the Vietnam era.” There is disgust and pain in these remembrances. “What do you wish people could understand?” “People will never understand what I wish they could. They are too brainwashed by Hollywood and cowardly writers” who did all the stories about Vietnam on drug users and baby killers. People choose to believe Sean Penn and Tom Cruise over those who were actually there. “While in Vietnam I knew only one person who used drugs and was smoking pot. I saw two other guys smoking but I didn’t know them. They were pumping water from a stream into a tank to take back for showers.” One more question: “What did your Vietnam experience steal from you?” “My Vietnam experience stole nothing from me. Even though I was drafted, I was glad to serve.” Four months after Tommy’s return home, he married his favorite letter writer, and they now have two children, grown and married, and both expecting their first children in January of 2009. In his retirement he enjoys spending time with his family, music, history, and hunting.
the surveying equipment
A temple with a personal story: Tommy and a friend wanted to explore this temple, and they walked all through it. A few days later others went there and leaned against a wall, which turned out to be a fake wall leading underground to the VC hospital. They were killed.
a muddy worksite
 a typical street scene not unusual to lie on the ground in the rain to rest
 Camp Eagle Fire Direction Center  holding enemy AK47 rifle stopping on the road to talk with young boys
I am honored to post this story of my Uncle Tommy, as he is one of my heroes. May this post inspire you to hug or thank your own Vietnam hero! Following is a list of MyChurch's Vietnam vets, posted in appreciation and honor. (Find their links in the comments; others will be added as they comment here.)
Ed Golden2100 Faithrock
Similar blog: My great-uncle Bill in WWII: http://www.mychurch.org/blog/329893/A-Veterans-Day-Tribute-Genealogy-Series-Blog-2 |
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| To add a comment to "Vietnam Remembrances (Genealogy Series: Blog 7)" |
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| December 19, 2008 |
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You bio on your uncle Tommy brought back a lot of memories. I too, am a Viet Nam vet. I was there in 1967-68; about the same age, too. I also flew into Cam Rahn Bay, it was about the safest airport north of Saigon. After a few months was sent to Da Nang where the fighting was a bit more intense.
Thanks for remembering--it was a tough time for all of us; both in Viet Nam and stateside! |
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| December 19, 2008 |
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| Great one I remember that war My Cousin was a PWO for 6 months he flew a F-4 Phantom!!! |
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| December 19, 2008 |
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Doyle, you were not very old then either! Did you have some sense of the war while it was going on? Although I knew my uncle Tommy was in it, my understanding was minute. Now, however, I want to hear all about it.
Ed! I'm so glad you commented here! This blog, although about my uncle Tommy, is a tribute to all Vietnam vets! You are all heroes to me, and I thank you for what you gave! |
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| December 20, 2008 |
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My God how those photos bring back memories. I was in "Nam" from 1966 to 1967. We had to fight to open highway 1 as we called it. (I'm just leaving out the #) I had several time I drove that highway at full throttle. I believe I see what looks like a 105 fire base. Could that be correct? I was trained in the Field Artillery and was transferred to heavy weapons, and my old M-16. The kids, the mud and the gunk. How I remember. And my brave brothers who I served with. We all kind of looked the same. Young and ready. Please tell your uncle Tommy, welcome home soldier!!
Ed, thanks for writing also. It is a lonely place here on MyChurch. there are no Viet vets I know of but you and I right now. Welcome home also The Brotherhood lives on.
Many say we lost that war. But, actually it was the beginning of the breaking the back of the Communist. we can be proud of that.
Thanks Kathy, and may God bless!!! |
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| December 20, 2008 |
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| Golden, I loved your words! This blog is also to honor you! I don't know about the fire base. I'll send Tommy an invitation to my blog and maybe he will let us know! |
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| December 21, 2008 |
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| Golden, you are right! The photo I had labeled "camp" is now labeled "Camp Eagle Fire Direction Center." |
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| December 21, 2008 |
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Thanks kathy. I did not have too much wonder as to what I see there. Those old howitzer tubes are a site. they were cardboard tubes that had the projectiles in them. You would pull on two pieces of tape and your 105 shell would slide out. there wee seven "greenbags" and depending how far your shot was going. It would be called how many bags to put in the shell. There pretty "dug in" there. I trained on all weapons from a 45 to a 155 Howitzer. I don't think they train like that any more. It was a lot of wepons to master. That's a great photo. If you look close at the men. It resembles an old tin-tipe photo of the Civil War. (my opinion) But, I'm speaking of the one you called "a muddy work site" A fire direction center and a fire base are two different animals. In some cases. There difficult to see. But, it was a part of our lives. I love my country. So, I have learned to live with the pain that went along with the reality. Looks like Tommy did also. |
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| December 22, 2008 |
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Golden, I was on the wrong photo. Thank you for adding some interesting info to the worksite photo. Do you have a lot of photos from Vietnam? I'm sure you would enjoy seeing Tommy's large collection.
I know that the Vietnam experience was one that the rest of us will never be able to grasp. Culturally an experience that links men together as brothers for life, even if they have never met, and that defines the men for life. Although the experience may have only been one year of the 60 or so years of life, there is a certain loneliness when separated from others who shared the experience. Is it the shared pain? Is it a non-transferable understanding of life? Is it the close brotherhood that cannot be duplicated in everyday culture? I wonder if there are other shared experiences with similar effect on human life. I imagine Holocaust survivors share such a bond. And perhaps immigrants from a particular part of the world. The bond is there despite having never met - it's the shared experience - a deep level of understanding of each other.
Merry Christmas, Golden! God's richest blessings to you! |
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| December 22, 2008 |
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You are very nice in your thoughts Kathy. Yes, it is a shared pain, as you put it. A combat vet knows another by the look in his eys when asked if he were there. I found out a great deal about myself. I learned what true honor is about. When you stand fast rather than run as some do because you would rather die than dishonor your family and your Savior. I always give the glory to God for all i did there. He kept me from fear. That is the only explanation for how I reacted and why I made it back. i am not sorry for the experience. I am proud of the fact that I served to protect my country and their ideals of those who fought on Bunker Hill not far from here.I have a photo of the very bridge at Lexington where 77 men from Peabody stood against some 700 British troops. Only a combat veteran can get the feeling they did when looking back across this bridge. It's a great knowledge that you actually did the same several times in your own life. I suggest any combat vet to go there and see what I mean. Many people who were never in the military go there and say they get a "erie" feeling. I should put that photo up on my photo page. I think will. Please let me know what ou think when you look at it. My ex-wife tossed out most of my photos as well as a shirt that a black Sargent friend of mine gave me. He took a round for me by standing in the way. Being my height, he took it right in the head as I would have. he had three days left in country before going home to his wife and two little girls. I'm glad no one can see me now. It is a very upsetting thought to this day. My ex was mad because of our break-up. Enough said.
Thank you so much for your thoughts. God bless!! |
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| December 23, 2008 |
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Kathy, I almost missed this one, glad I didn't. As I was in the hospital, with my son, I found that much of how he was treated came from teh foundations that the Viet Nam Vets had laid down. Their hard fought battles, back here, when they came home, were the reason that my son was treated with honor and dignity. My tears of love and joy came from their tears of anger and frustration. I was so honored to get to know some of them, and to be brought a small bit into their fraternity, because of my own sons sacrifices. I, for one, will never forget . |
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| December 23, 2008 |
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Golden, please let me know when you post the bridge photo. I just read your blog about Thanksgiving 1967 and hope others will go read it: http://www.mychurch.org/blog/354065/Thanksgiving-Vietnam-1967 What a story!
Dennis, thank you for sharing your personal story. War is such a great illustration of how the human best often comes out during the worst of times.
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| December 23, 2008 |
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I could not find it the other day. i checked both hard drives. But, I know i have it somewhere. I will find it and scan it. i will certainly let you know. God bless!!
Ps. I left an answer to your comment I hope you will read!! |
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| December 23, 2008 |
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| LOL - thanks Ronnie! :) |
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| January 14, 2009 |
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| Kathy....this is absolutely wonderful!! |
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| January 14, 2009 |
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| Thank you, Mike! I like this one too! :) |
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| March 02, 2009 |
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| As a Vietnam Vet I can sure relate to your Uncle Tommy. Like alot of guys I meet over their, he sound like a swell guy. |
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| March 02, 2009 |
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| Thanks, Mike! "Swell" he is, and so are you! I have added a list of MyChurch Vietnam vets to the end of this blog content. In honor and appreciation of your service. Thank you! |
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