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TOGETHER WE SERVED : DISPATCHES

August 2016

 
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Note from the Editor

Greetings! This month's edition of "Dispatches" contains a large assortment of stories from all eras of military history. "Heroic Pilots of Pearl Harbor" covers the two Army Air Corps pilots who took off from the only two surviving planes from Wheeler Field. "The World's First Black Fighter Pilot" covers the history of Eugene J. Bullard in World War I. "Sketching Her Way Across Europe" covers Elizabeth Black, a civilian in a war zone, sketching the faces she met along the way and the efforts to indentify the sketches she left behind.

1/ Heroic Pilots of Pearl Harbor
2/ Profiles in Courage: Charles S. Kettles
3/ Military Myths and Legends: The World's First Black Fighter Pilot
4/ Battlefield Chronicles: Philippine-American War
5/ Sketching Her Way Across Europe: The Elizabeth Black Story
6/ A Vietnam Experience: May 1968 - May 1969

7/ TWS: Unit and Operations Database Update
8/ TWS Bulletin Board
9/ Letters to the Editor
10/ Book Review: Sea Stories:Tales about Leadership, Morale and More

Please send any comments or member-written articles to mike.christy@togetherweserved.com. Bulletin Board Posts and Reunion Announcements to admin@togetherweserved.com.

LtCol Mike Christy, US Army (Ret)

Heroic Pilots of Pearl Harbor
 
At the beginning of December, 1941, Army Air Forces pilots Second Lieutenants George Welch and Kenneth Taylor had moved their P-40s away from the main airfield at Wheeler to a nearby auxiliary field at Haleiwa as part of a gunnery exercise. The vast majority of Army Air Forces fighters at Wheeler were parked in neat rows on the main flight-line; although war with Japan appeared imminent, it was decided that the possibility of sabotage from the ground presented a greater threat than a potential air attack, and it was easier to guard them while parked in neat rows than dispersed on the airfield perimeter. When the Japanese carrier-based sneak attack against Pearl Harbor and Wheeler and Hickam Fields came on the morning of December 7, 1941, the majority of the U.S. Army Air Forces fighters were easily destroyed on the ground, several of them when the first P-40 pilot attempting to take off to fight was hit and killed on his takeoff roll and his fighter went crashing down the flight-line at Wheeler.

Welch and Taylor had spent the evening of Saturday, Dec. 6, at a dance at the Wheeler Field officers club, followed by an all-night card game some distance away from their home base at Haleiwa. That fateful Sunday morning, as they discussed the merits of taking an early morning swim, they heard distant gunfire. Suddenly the Japanese swooped down on Wheeler Field, which was a center for fighter operations in Hawaii. Dive bombers seemed to appear out of nowhere. Violent explosions upended the parked planes, and buildings began to burn. Welch ran for a telephone and called Haleiwa as bullets sprayed around him.

"Get two P-40s ready!" he yelled. "It's not a gag. The Japs are here." The two hopped into Taylor's car with machine-gun bullets from planes of the attacking Japanese aircraft kicking up dust around them. They reached speeds of 100 mph during the 16-mile dash to Haleiwa. Japanese Zeros strafed their car three times. When the two fliers careened onto the airfield nine minutes later, their fighter planes were already armed and the propellers were turning over. Without waiting for orders they took off.

As they climbed for altitude they ran into twelve Japanese Val dive bombers over the Marine air base at Ewa. Welch and Taylor began their attack immediately. On their first pass, machine guns blazing, each shot down a bomber. As Taylor zoomed up and over in his Tomahawk, he saw an enemy bomber heading out to sea. He gave his P-40 full throttle and roared after it. Again his aim was good and the Val broke up before his eyes, tumbling into the sea. In the meantime Welch's plane had been hit and he dived into a protective cloud bank. The damage didn't seem too serious so he flew out again - only to find himself on the tail of another Val. With only one gun now working he nevertheless managed to send the bomber flaming into a watery grave.

Both pilots now vectored toward burning Wheeler Field for more ammunition and gas. Welch later recalled: "We had to argue with some of the ground crew. They wanted us to disperse the airplanes and we wanted to fight." Unfortunately the extra cartridge belts for the P-40s were in a hangar which was on fire. Two mechanics ran bravely into the dangerous inferno and returned with the ammunition.

They headed directly into the enemy planes, all guns firing. This time Ken Taylor was hit in the arm, and then a Val closed in behind him. Welch kicked his rudder and the Tomahawk whipped around and blasted the Val, though his own plane had been hit once more. Taylor had to land, but George Welch shot down still another bomber near Ewa before he returned.

In the aftermath, the single American airfield to emerge from the battle unscathed was Haleiwa. Some speculated that this was because the Japanese did not know of its existence. More likely, it was because Welch and Taylor aggressively and continually drove off the attackers. One group of Japanese planes, their bomb cargoes expended, turned to strafe Hickam and Ewa airfields and the naval installations at Ford Island. One of those Japanese pilots saw an aerial melee in the distance that very likely included Welch and Taylor. The Japanese flier reported seeing several of his comrades' planes falling from the sky in flames.

Taylor later recalled: "We went down and got in the traffic pattern and shot down several planes there. I know for certain I shot down two planes or perhaps more; I don't know." A total of 29 Japanese planes were shot down during the attack, and Welch and Taylor were officially credited with seven of them, four in their first sortie and three in the second.

In all, a total of five U.S. Army Air Forces pilots managed to get their planes off the ground and give battle that morning. One of them, a lieutenant named Sanders, led a group of planes through overcast skies at 6,000 feet. When a formation of six Japanese bombers was spotted attacking an airfield, the group chased them off. Sanders picked out the Japanese leader and sent the smoking enemy plane spiraling into the sea.

Sanders then spotted a comrade in trouble. Lieutenant James Sterling had closed with an enemy bomber, but another Japanese plane had gotten on his tail and was pouring fire into him. Sanders pulled in behind Sterling's attacker, and all four planes went into a steep dive. Sanders was the only one to come out. Sterling lost his life, and both Japanese aircraft went down.

After the Pearl Harbor attack, Taylor was assigned to the 44th Fighter Squadron, and went to the South Pacific at Henderson Field on Guadalcanal. He was able to record two additional aerial kills: the first on January 27 and the other on December 7, 1943, two years after Pearl Harbor. This brought his total number of career kills to six, making him a flying ace. After 27 years of active duty, he retired as a colonel in 1967, and became the Assistant Adjutant General for the Alaska Air National Guard, retiring as a Brigadier General in 1971.

After contracting an illness from a hip surgery two years prior, Taylor died on November 25, 2006 of a strangulated hernia at an assisted living residence in Tucson, Arizona. He was cremated and later buried at the Arlington National Cemetery in June 2007 with full military honors.

Welch remained in the Pacific Theater of Operations and went on to score 12 more kills against Japanese aircraft (16 in total), making him a triple ace.

In the spring of 1944, Welch was approached by North American Aviation to become a test pilot for the P-51 Mustang. He went on to fly the prototypes of the FJ Fury, and when the F-86 Sabre was proposed, Welch was chosen as the chief test pilot.

In September, 1947, the F-86 project moved to the Muroc test facility (now Edwards AFB, California), the same base at which the Bell X-1 was being developed. North American was instructed by Secretary of the Air Force Stuart Symington that they were not, under any circumstances, to break the sound barrier before the X-1 achieved this milestone. However, Welch disregarded this order, and during a test flight on October 1, 1947, he entered a steep dive from 35,000 ft. During the dive, Welch observed symptoms compatible with Mach jump. However, due to problems with the landing gear, further full-speed flights were delayed. On October 14, the same day that Chuck Yeager was to attempt supersonic flight, Welch reputedly performed a second supersonic dive. This time he started from 37,000 ft., and executed a full-power 4g pullout, greatly increasing the power of his apparent sonic boom. Yeager broke the sound barrier approximately 30 minutes later.

To justify the investment in the X-1 program, the Pentagon allegedly ordered the results of Welch's flights classified and did not allow North American to publicly announce that the XP-86 had gone supersonic until almost a year later. The Air Force still officially denies that Welch broke the sound barrier first. Welch had achieved supersonic flight only in a dive, not in level flight, and his flights were unofficial and not tracked by NACA measuring equipment, making verification impossible.

Welch went on to work with North American Aviation in the Korean War as Chief Test Pilot, engineer and instructor, where he reportedly downed several enemy MiG-15s while "supervising" his students.

After the war, Welch returned to flight testing - this time in the F-100 Super Sabre - with Yeager flying the chase plane. Welch became the first man to break the sound barrier in level flight with this type of aircraft, the first USAF fighter to achieve level supersonic flight, on May 25, 1953. However, stability problems with the aircraft arose, and on Columbus Day, October 12, 1954, Welch's F-100A-1-NA Super Sabre disintegrated during a 7g pullout at Mach 1.55. When found, Welch was still in the ejection seat, mortally injured. He was evacuated by helicopter, but was pronounced dead on arrival at the Army hospital. He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.

Welch and Taylor were both nominated for the Medal of Honor for their heroic actions on Pearl Harbor Day, and the Commanding General of the U.S. Army Air Forces, General Henry H. "Hap" Arnold, was reportedly anxious to receive the nominations. Unfortunately for the two heroes, the intermediate Chain of Command, whose pride was evidently smarting from having been caught off guard and suffering the devastation they did, reasoned absurdly that they had taken off without proper authorization and therefore could not be awarded the United States' highest military award. As a result, the awards were downgraded to a Distinguished Service Cross for both men.
 
 
Profiles in Courage: Charles S. Kettles
 
During the early morning hours of May 15, 1967, personnel of the 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Division, were ambushed in the Song Tra Cau riverbed near the Duc Pho District in the South Central Coast of Vietnam by an estimated battalion-sized force of the North Vietnamese Army. The NVA attacked with numerous automatic weapons, machine guns, mortars, and recoilless rifles from a fortified complex of deeply embedded tunnels and bunkers that were effectively shielded from counter fire. Upon learning that the 1st Brigade had suffered casualties during an intense firefight with the enemy, then-Maj. Charles S. Kettles volunteered to lead a flight of six UH-1D helicopters to carry reinforcements to the embattled forces and to evacuate wounded personnel. As the flight approached the landing zone, it came under witheringly deadly enemy fire from multiple directions, with reinforcements hit and killed before they could even leave the helicopters.

Jets dropped napalm and bombs on the enemy machine guns on the ridges overlooking the landing zone, with minimal effect. Small arms and automatic weapons fire continued to rake the landing zone, inflicting heavy damage to the helicopters. However, Kettles refused to depart until all reinforcements and supplies were off-loaded and the helicopters were loaded to capacity with wounded personnel. Kettles led the flight out of the battle area and back to the staging area to deliver the casualties and pick up additional reinforcements.

Kettles then returned to the battlefield, with full knowledge of the intense enemy fire awaiting his arrival. Bringing reinforcements, he landed in the midst of enemy mortar and automatic weapons fire that seriously wounded his gunner and severely damaged his aircraft. Upon departing, Kettles was advised by another helicopter crew that he had fuel streaming out of his aircraft. Despite the risk posed by the leaking fuel, he nursed the damaged aircraft back to base.

Later that day, the infantry battalion commander requested immediate, emergency extraction of the remaining 40 troops, and four members of Kettles' unit who were stranded when their helicopter was destroyed by enemy fire. With only one flyable UH-1 helicopter remaining, Kettles volunteered to return to the deadly landing zone for a third time, leading a flight of six evacuation helicopters, five of which were from the 161st Aviation Company. During the extraction, Kettles was informed by the last helicopter that all personnel were aboard, and departed the landing zone accordingly. Army gunships supporting the evacuation also departed the area.

When they were airborne, Kettles learned eight men had been unable to reach the evacuation helicopters due to the intense enemy fire and had been left on the ground.

With one of the rescued Soldiers on board in addition to his crew of four, Kettles immediately turned his unarmed Huey around and headed back to the landing zone to rescue the remaining troops. Without gunship, artillery, or tactical aircraft support, the enemy concentrated all firepower on his lone aircraft, which was immediately damaged by a mortar round that damaged the tail boom, a main rotor blade, shattered both front windshields and the chin bubble and was further raked by small arms and machine gun fire.

Coming in low over the treetops, he skillfully guided his helicopter onto the ground where the eight Soldiers dove into the helicopter, but there was another problem: it was now about three men, or 600 pounds, too heavy. "I didn't know if we were going to get out of there," Kettles remembered, "but I was just going to give it my best try."

In spite of the severe damage to his helicopter, Kettles repeatedly adjusted the revolutions per minute until the heavily damaged aircraft lurched upward, stayed close to the tree tops and limped home to Duc Pho. Without his courageous actions and superior flying skills, the last group of Soldiers and his crew would never have made it off the battlefield.

For his heroic efforts, Kettles was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross (DSC), the nation's second highest medal for gallantry. 

************************************

Charles S. Kettles was born in Ypsilanti, Mich., Jan. 9, 1930. The son of a World War I Royal Air Force (Canadian) and World War II Air Transport Command (U.S. Army Air Corps) pilot, Kettles had aviation in his blood. While attending the Edison Institute High School in Dearborn, Michigan, Kettles honed his love of flying on the Ford Motor Company Flight Department simulator.

Following high school graduation, Kettles enrolled in Michigan State Normal College (now Eastern Michigan University), where he studied engineering. Two years later, Kettles was drafted into the Army at age 21. Upon completion of basic training he attended Officer Candidate School at Fort Knox, Kentucky, and earned his commission as an armor officer in the U.S. Army Reserve, Feb. 28, 1953. Kettles graduated from the Army Aviation School in 1953, before serving active duty tours in Korea, Japan and Thailand.

Kettles returned in 1956 and established a Ford Dealership in Dewitt, Mich., with his brother, and continued his service with the Army Reserve as a member of the 4th Battalion, 20th Field Artillery. 

He answered the call to serve again in 1963, when the United States was engaged in the Vietnam War and needed pilots. Fixed-wing-qualified, Kettles volunteered for Active Duty and attended Helicopter Transition Training at Fort Wolters, Texas in 1964. During a tour in France the following year, Kettles was cross-trained to fly the famed UH-1D "Huey."

Kettles reported to Fort Benning, Georgia, in 1966 to join a new helicopter unit. He was assigned as a flight commander with the 176th Assault Helicopter Company, 14th Combat Aviation Battalion, and deployed to Vietnam from February through November 1967. His second tour of duty in Vietnam lasted from October 1969 through October 1970.

In 1970, Kettles went to Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas, where he served as an aviation team chief and readiness coordinator supporting the Army Reserve. He remained in San Antonio until his retirement from the Army in 1978.

Kettles completed his bachelor's degree at Our Lady of the Lake University, San Antonio, Texas, and earned his master's degree at Eastern Michigan University, College of Technology, in commercial construction. He went on to develop the Aviation Management Program at the College of Technology and taught both disciplines. He later worked for Chrysler Pentastar Aviation until his retirement in 1993. Kettles currently resides in Ypsilanti, Mich., with his wife Ann.

Many who were present for or had heard of Kettles remarkable act of heroism wondered why he never received the Medal of Honor instead of the Distinguished Service Cross. Numerous attempts to get his DSC upgraded to a Medal of Honor were made, but all such efforts failed. Eventually, the tenuous efforts paid off, and his DSC was upgraded to a Medal of Honor.

On Monday, July 18, 2016, President Barack Obama awarded retired Army Lt. Col. Charles Kettles the Medal of Honor during a White House Ceremony.  

"You couldn't make this up. It's like a bad Rambo movie," Obama said, describing the harrowing exploits of then-Major Kettles on that fateful day, May 15, 1967, in "Chump Valley," South Vietnam.

As commander of the 176th Aviation Company, Kettles' mission was to fly in reinforcements and evacuate wounded Soldiers of the 101st Airborne Division, who were outgunned and outnumbered by the North Vietnamese in a rural riverbed near Duc Pho. "They needed support fast," the President said.

Towering above Chump Valley was a 1,500-foot-high hill where the enemy was entrenched in an extensive series of tunnels and bunkers. It was "the ideal spot for an ambush," Obama said.

Despite the dangers that they all were aware of, Kettles and his fellow company of Soldiers took off in their Hueys. As they approached the landing zone, they met a "solid wall of enemy tracers coming right at them," Obama said. "None of them had ever seen fire that intense. Soldiers in the helos were hit and killed before they could even leap off."

Despite the withering fire, Kettles landed his helicopter and kept it there exposed so the wounded could board.

"Once more, machine-gun bullets and mortar rounds came screaming after them. Rounds pierced the arm and leg of Chuck's door gunner, Roland Scheck," Obama said. His Huey was hit. Fuel was pouring out as he flew away. His helicopter was so badly damaged that he couldn't make it to the field hospital so Kettles found another helicopter and took them to safety, the President said.

By then it was near evening. Back in the riverbed, 44 American Soldiers were still pinned down. "The air was thick with gunpowder, the smell of burning metal," the President described. "Then they heard a faint sound. As the sun started to set, they saw something rise over the horizon - six American helicopters, one of them said, "as beautiful as could be.'"

For a third time, Chuck and his unit "headed into that hell on earth," Obama said. "Death or injury was all but certain," a fellow pilot had said, "and a lesser person would not return," the President related.

Once again, the enemy unloaded everything they had on Kettles as he landed: small arms, automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades, Obama said. Soldiers ran to the helicopters as they had before. When Kettles was told all were accounted for, he took off, the President said.

On the return flight, Kettles received a radio call informing him that eight men had not made it aboard. "They'd been providing cover for the others," the President said. They "could only watch as the helicopters floated away. "We all figured we were done for,'" one later said. Kettles came to the same conclusion, the commander in chief said, conveying his words: "If we'd left them for 10 minutes, they'd become POWs or dead."

Kettles couldn't shake from his mind the idea of leaving the eight behind, so "he broke off from formation, took a steep, sharp descending turn back toward the valley, this time with no aerial or artillery support, a lone helicopter heading back in," Obama said.

"Chuck's Huey was the only target for the enemy to attack. And they did," he continued. "Tracers lit up the sky once more. Chuck came in so hot his chopper bounced for several hundred feet before coming to a stop," the President said.

As soon as he landed, a mortar round shattered his windshield. Another hit the main rotor blade. Shrapnel tore through the cockpit and Kettles' chair. Yet, Obama said, those eight Soldiers sprinted to the Huey through the firestorm.

The President described what happened next: "Chuck's helo, now badly damaged, was carrying 13 souls and was 600 pounds over the weight limit. He said "it felt like flying a two-and-a-half-ton truck." He couldn't hover long enough to take off, but the cool customer that he is, he saw his shattered windshield and thought, 'that's pretty good air conditioning.'

"The cabin filled with black smoke as Chuck hopped and skipped the helo across the ground to pick up enough speed to take off, 'like a jackrabbit bouncing across the riverbed,'" the President said, relating Kettle's analogy.

The instant he got airborne, another mortar ripped into the tail and the Huey fishtailed violently. A Soldier was tossed from the helicopter, but managed to grab a skid, hanging on as Kettles flew them to safety," Obama said.

"The Army's Warrior Ethos is based on a simple principle: A Soldier never leaves his comrades behind," Obama said. "Chuck Kettles honored that creed. Not with a single act of heroism, but over and over and over and over. And, because of that heroism, 44 American Soldiers made it out that day."

The most gratifying part of this whole story "is that Dewey's name and Roland's name and the names of 42 other Americans he saved are not etched in the solemn granite wall not far from here that memorializes the fallen in the Vietnam War," the President remarked.

"A Soldier who was there said, 'That day, Major Kettles became our John Wayne,'" Mr. Obama said. "With all due respect to John Wayne, he couldn't do what Chuck Kettles did."

"To the dozens of American Soldiers that he saved in Vietnam half a century ago, Chuck is the reason they lived and came home and had children and grandchildren. Entire family trees, made possible by the actions of this one man," the President concluded.

Kettles, 86, was joined at the ceremony by his wife, Anne. They will celebrate their 40th wedding anniversary in March. With them were eight of their 10 children and three grandchildren. 

When the ceremony concluded, America's newest national hero said, "We got the 44 out. None of those names appear on the wall in Washington. There's nothing more important than that."

Also attending were some of the Soldiers Kettles served with that day, including Scheck, Dewey Smith, who was among the last eight Soldiers rescued that day, and a number of other Soldiers who fought in that battle. Past Medal of Honor recipients attended as well.


 
Military Myths & Legends: The World's First Black Fighter Pilot
 
A largely unsung and non-known hero of the World War One was the fascinating Eugene James "Jacques" Bullard of the Lafayette flying Corps.

Bullard was born in a three-room house in Columbus, Georgia, the seventh of ten children born to William (Octave) Bullard, a black man who was from Martinique, and Josephine ("Yokalee") Thomas, a Creek Indian. His father's ancestors had been slaves in Haiti to French refugees who fled during the Haitian Revolution. They reached the United States and took refuge with the Creek Indians.

 An adventurer by nature, he left the small town of Columbus and moved to Atlanta by himself while still in his teenage years. He had been told that the way to escape racial prejudice was to head to Europe, particularly France (he once said he witnessed a near lynching of his dad). A long time back his father had pointed out to him that Bullard was a French name and that at least one ancestor had hailed from there. Stirred by all the possibilities, he stowed away on a ship bound for Scotland, arriving at Aberdeen and made his way south to Glasgow. On a visit to Paris, he liked what he saw and how he was treated and decided to settle in France. He became a relatively good boxer in Paris and also worked in a music hall.

France had been good to Bullard, and he quickly fell in love with the country. So when World War I broke out in August 1914, he enlisted in the French Foreign Legion at a time when volunteers from overseas were only allowed to serve in the French colonial troops. Assigned to the 3rd Marching Regiment of the 1st Foreign Regiment as a machine gunner, he saw combat near the Somme River. It was during this time when he learned Americans and other volunteers were now allowed to transfer to Metropolitan French Army units, including the 170th French Infantry Regiment - nicknamed "Les Hirondelles de la Mort," or "The Swallows of Death."

Liking the idea of being part of a unit with crack troops appealed to Bullard, so he put in his request to join the regiment. In February 1916, his requested was granted just as the 170th Infantry was sent to Verdun, one of the largest and longest battles of the First World War on the Western Front between the German and French armies. The battle took place on the hills north of Verdun-sur-Meuse in north-eastern France. It was during this battle that Bullard was severely wounded on March 5, 1916 and sent to a Parisian hospital where he spent the next six months recuperating. During convalescence, he was cited for acts of valor at the orders of the regiment on July 3, 1917 and was awarded the Croix de Guerre.

While convalescing in Paris, his friend and fellow Southerner Jeff Davis Dixon bet Bullard $2,000 that he could not get into the French Air Force. Bullard contended that he could, accepted the bet and on October 5, 1916 arrived at the French aerial gunnery school at Cazaux on the Atlantic. It was here that he met Edmond Genet (the first American flier to die in the First World War in April 1917). He told Bullard about the Lafayette Escadrille which inspired him to be a pilot and not a back seat gunner. In mid-October with Genet's help he transferred to the flight school at Tours for pilot training. The training took a few more months, but it was inevitably given Bullard's persistence that it would pay off. Bullard earned his pilot's license and then Dickerson faithfully paid the $2,000. It was a considerable sum at the time, especially for a gentleman's bet. Dixon admitted that he hated to lose the money, but was delighted that at least Bullard was from Dixie. The result of the bet was to launch Eugene Bullard into history as a first ever African-American aviator.

Like many other American aviators, Bullard hoped to join the famous Lafayette Escadrille, but after enrolling 38 American pilots in spring and summer of 1916, it stopped accepting applicants. After further training he joined 269 American aviators at the Lafayette Flying Corps on November 15, 1916. American volunteers flew with French pilots in different pursuit and bomber/reconnaissance aero squadrons on the Western Front.

 On August 27, he was assigned to the Escadrille N.93 based at Beauzee-sur-Aire south of Verdun. The squadron was equipped with Nieuport and Spad VII aircraft that displayed a flying duck as the squadron insignia. He took part in over twenty air combat missions, and he is sometimes credited with shooting down one or two German aircraft. However, the French authorities could not confirm Bullard's victories. His Spad had an insignia lettered "All blood runs red" and his nickname became the "Black Swallow of Death."

When the United States entered the war, the United States Army Air Service convened a medical board to recruit Americans serving in the Lafayette Flying Corps for the Air Service of the American Expeditionary Forces. Bullard went through the medical examination, but he was not accepted, as only white pilots were allowed to serve. Sometime later, on a short break from duty in Paris, Bullard allegedly got into an argument with a French commissioned officer and was punished by being transferred to the service battalion of to the 170th infantry Regiment of the French army. He was discharged in October 1919 and returned to Paris.

After the war, Bullard settle down, and in 1923 married a French Countess from a wealthy family named Marcelle Straumann. They settle down and had two daughters Jacqueline and Lolita.

Post war Bullard bought a bar named "Le Grand Duc" on the north side of Paris. In the late 1930s, prior to the outbreak of World War II, he was recruited by French intelligence to spy on the Germans who come by his bar. He remained very devoted to France and tried to join the French army but was considered too old. In 1940, he managed to find a way out of German occupied France, biked all the way down to Portugal and returned to the United States on a Red Cross ship. He settled in New York City. He was able to extradite his daughters, but Marcelle remained in France and eventually they divorced.

In 1954, along with two other French veterans, he was invited by French Pres. Charles de Gaulle to light the flame of the Unknown Soldier at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. 

Eugene Bullard received fifteen decorations from the government of France. He was made a Knight of the Legion of Honor, France's most coveted award. He also was awarded the Medaille militaire, another high military distinction. 

He died in New York City of stomach cancer on October 12, 1961 at the age of 66 with his achievements all but forgotten.

While Eugene Bullard is not as famous as a Tuskegee Airmen or Gen. Benjamin O. Davis Junior, as an African-American aviator, he came before all of them. The Chicago Tribune herald him as "as probably the most unsung hero in the history of the U.S. wartime aviation."

 
Battlefield Chronicles: Philippine-American War
 
After its defeat in the Spanish-American War of 1898, the Treaty of Paris (1898) transferred Philippine sovereignty from Spain to the United States, ending centuries of Spanish control over the politics and economy of its longstanding former colony. Filipino leaders, however, did not recognize America's authority and had no intentions of ceding their homeland to a new colonial power.

The decision by U.S. policymakers to annex the Philippines was not without domestic controversy, either. Americans who advocated annexation evinced a variety of motivations: desire for commercial opportunities in Asia, concern that Filipinos were incapable of self-rule, and fear that if the United States did not take control of the islands, another power (such as Germany or Japan) might do so. Meanwhile, American opposition to U.S. colonial rule of the Philippines came in many forms, ranging from those who thought it morally wrong for the United States to be engaged in colonialism, to those who feared that annexation might eventually permit the non-white Filipinos to have a role in American national government. Others were wholly unconcerned about the moral or racial implications of imperialism sought only to oppose the policies of President William McKinley's administration.

Annexation came through a circuitous route. Following the sinking of the battleship USS Maine in Havana's harbor on Feb. 15, 1898, then-Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Navy (and future president) Theodore Roosevelt, while temporarily in charge when Secretary John Long had left early for the day on Feb. 25, responded to what he felt was potential Spanish treachery by placing the entire U.S. Navy on alert worldwide and issuing orders to Commodore George Dewey to gather his Asiatic Squadron in Hong Kong and prepare for war with Spain. When Secretary Long returned to office the next day, in spite of being surprised and upset at the issuance of such drastic orders without his approval, he did not rescind them. A month later, on Friday, March 25, President McKinley received the Navy's final report blaming the sinking of the Maine on Spanish mines, and ordered the U.S. Navy to blockade all Cuban ports. Finally, after another month of contentious debate, on April 25, Congress declared war against Spain.

During the 2 months on alert following the sinking of the Maine, Dewey's Asiatic Squadron went through intensive preparations, including re-supply, reinforcement, and very strenuous and continuous drilling and training. On April 26, following the declaration of war, Dewey sailed with four cruisers (including his flagship), two gunboats, a revenue cutter, and two cargo ships loaded with coal for the flotilla, and headed for Manila to engage a Spanish naval force of approximately 20 craft, consisting of two cruisers, gunboats, and smaller torpedo craft. Dewey risked his flotilla 8,000 miles from home, with no supporting naval ports due to neutrality laws, to steam through potentially mined channels lined with ancient forts bristling with big guns. At sunrise on May 1, after successfully and uneventfully sneaking into Manila Harbor overnight, and with deck gun crews yelling, "Remember the Maine!", Dewey caught the unprepared and ill-trained Spanish fleet flat-footed at anchorage and engaged them in a devastating skirmish with minimal American casualties and no loss of American naval craft. The Spanish fleet surrendered within hours, but Dewey was unable to occupy Manila for over 3 months until ground troops arrived.
 
While the American public and politicians debated the annexation question, Filipino nationalist revolutionaries led by Emilio Aguinaldo seized control of most of the Philippines' main island of Luzon and proclaimed the establishment of the independent Philippine Republic. 

On August 13, Manila fell after a bloodless "battle". Spanish Gov. Fermin Jaudenes had secretly arranged a surrender after a mock show of resistance to salvage his honor. With American troops in possession of the city and Filipino insurgents controlling the rest of the country, conflict was inevitable.

On February 4, 1899, just two days before the U.S. Senate ratified the treaty, sporadic fighting broke out between American forces and Aguinaldo's nationalist fighters. When it became clear that U.S. forces were intent on imposing American colonial control over the islands, the clashes escalated into all-out war. Americans tended to refer to the ensuing conflict as an "insurrection" rather than to acknowledge the Filipinos' contention that they were fighting to ward off a foreign invader.

The United States entered the conflict with undeniable military advantages that included a trained fighting force, a steady supply of military equipment, and control of the archipelago's waterways. Meanwhile, the Filipino forces were hampered by their inability to gain any kind of outside support for their cause and complications produced by the Philippines' geographic complexity, resulting in chronic shortages of weapons and ammunition. Under these conditions, Aguinaldo's attempt to fight a conventional war against the better-trained and equipped American troops in the early month of the conflict in February 1899 proved to be a fatal mistake; the Filipino army suffered severe losses in men and material before switching to the guerrilla-style tactics that might have been more effective if employed from the beginning of the conflict.

Throughout the spring of 1899, American troops pushed north into the central Luzon Plain, and by the end of that year Filipino Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo had retreated into the inaccessible northern mountains. 

Fighting flared with increased bitterness on the island of Samar in 1901. Gen. Jacob H. Smith, enraged by a guerrilla massacre of U.S. troops, launched a retaliatory campaign of indiscriminate and ferocious retribution on the island, resulting in the deaths of between 2,500 civilians (according to western researchers) and 50,000 civilians (according to Filipino historians). His orders included, "kill everyone over the age of ten," and to "make the island a howling wilderness." For his notorious actions, he was court-martialed and forced to retire. 

Guerrilla hit and run tactics began in November of 1899 and lasted through the capture of Aguinaldo in 1901 and into the spring of 1902, by which time most organized Filipino resistance had dissipated. President Theodore Roosevelt proclaimed a general amnesty and declared the conflict over on July 4, 1902, although minor uprisings and insurrections against American rule periodically occurred in the years that followed.

The war was brutal on both sides. U.S. forces at times burned villages, implemented civilian reconcentration policies, and employed torture on suspected guerrillas, while Filipino fighters also tortured captured soldiers and terrorized civilians who cooperated with American forces. Many civilians died during the conflict as a result of the fighting, cholera and malaria epidemics, and food shortages caused by several agricultural catastrophes.

Even as the fighting went on, the colonial government that the United States established in the Philippines in 1900 under future President William Howard Taft launched a pacification campaign that became known as the "policy of attraction." Designed to win over key elites and other Filipinos who did not embrace Aguinaldo's plans for the Philippines, this policy permitted a significant degree of self-government, introduced social reforms, and implemented plans for economic development. Over time, this program gained important Filipino adherents and undermined the revolutionaries' popular appeal, which significantly aided the United States' military effort to win the war.

After 1902 the American civil government regarded the insurrection as over, and the remaining guerrillas as mere bandits, though the fighting continued for years later. About 1,000 guerrillas under Simeon Ola were not defeated until late 1903, and in Batangas province, south of Manila, troops commanded by Macario Sakay resisted capture until as late as 1906.

The last organized resistance to U.S. power took place on Samar from 1904 to 1906. There the rebels' tactic of burning pacified villages contributed to their own defeat. In 1907, the Philippines convened its first elected assembly, while an unconnected insurgency campaign by Moro bands on Mindanao continued sporadically until 1913. The United States had gained undisputed control of the Philippines, and the archipelago became an autonomous commonwealth in 1935.

Except for a 3-year period during WWII when Japanese forces occupied and brutally subjugated the Philippines, the U.S. retained possession of the islands until 1946, when it finally granted independence. But it wasn't until 1992, after the rejection of the U.S. Bases Extension Treaty by the Filipino government, that the U.S. relinquished the last of its naval and air bases in the sprawling archipelago.

The Philippine-American War's cost was significant in the loss of human life. An estimated 20,000 Filipino troops were killed, and more than 200,000 civilians perished as a result of combat, hunger, or disease. Of the 4,300 Americans lost, some 1,500 were killed in action, while nearly twice that number succumbed to disease.

 
A Viet Nam Experience: May 1967 - May 1968

By David K. Wall
U.S. Air Force
 
Entering active duty in August 1965, I immediately volunteered to go to South Viet Nam. The Air Force accepted the volunteer statement, but I had to complete that first assignment before going, which included some 19 months (two winters - brrrrr!) in Maine.

In May 1967, I arrived in Saigon and was immediately flown to Da Nang. My assignment was to a radar site on Monkey Mountain, some 7 miles NE of Da Nang, perhaps one of the safest locations in all of South Viet Nam. At Monkey Mountain, as with other long range radar sites, we primarily provided flight following to fighter and transport aircraft, joined fighters with tankers for mid-air refueling on their way to and from the Hanoi and Haiphong areas of North Viet Nam, assisted in downed pilot rescues, and provided other support as necessary.

In mid-October, I volunteered for and was reassigned to the radar site at Dong Ha, 70 some-odd miles NW of Da Nang. Dong Ha was located in Quang Tri Province, 6 miles northwest of Quang Tri, and 24 miles northeast of Khe Sanh. Being only six miles below the so-called demilitarized zone (DMZ), it was an inviting, stationary target for North Viet Nam military forces, who moved rockets and artillery guns into the DMZ. While an Air Force tour in Viet Nam was 12 months, the maximum tour at Dong Ha was six months due to continuing artillery barrages. The attacks were sporadic but often. One might go two weeks with no incoming shells or "rounds" followed by a similar period of several barrages a day. During my approximately 180 days at Dong Ha, we endured 113 barrages. While taking a sporadic (never more than) 150 rounds a day was nerve wracking, it small potatoes compared to Khe Sanh where, during the Tet Offensive of 1968, as many as 1,500 rounds a day were endured. We thought we had it pretty rough, but Marines coming out of Khe Sanh felt Dong Ha was almost an R&R site! 

When one is attacked by artillery, there are several aspects that become immediately apparent.  First, when the initial round explodes you literally "hit the dirt," as the last place you want to be in an artillery barrage is in an upright position. The flatter you can be on the ground, the better. Due to incoming speed, shrapnel from the exploding round literally goes forward and up. Only a few pieces of shrapnel will blow back in the direction of the firing gun. If a round lands just a few feet beyond your location, you are relatively safe.  Also, if you are fortunate enough to drop in a ground depression, a round has practically got to hit you in order to do damage. This doesn't make the attack any less terrifying, but it does greatly increase survivability. Somewhat humorously when lying flat on the ground, there is an urge to yell or scream, but you don't, because sucking in the air to yell will raise your back another inch or two off the ground! Also, when lying there, you can feel your belt buckle and shirt buttons keeping you up off the ground!

 
Second, the sound of incoming rounds, where everyone recognizes the sound and takes cover is the stuff of which movies are made. While you can hear and react to an incoming round that will impact to your right or left at say a ¼ mile or more, a round coming at you is traveling so fast it will explode by the time your mind recognizes what's happening. It is similar to a lightning strike that hits closer than 50 yards. Ironically, since the round travels in an arc, and the firing sound travels in a straight line, the sound will arrive approximately 1-2 seconds before the round itself. One never hears the first firing, but as you lie flat on the ground, you will hear a very soft "poom," telling you another round is on the way.

Third, there is almost no excuse for being injured or killed by any incoming round except the first one. As the above paragraph indicates, being flat on the ground should prevent injury or death from later rounds. Unfortunately, every artillery-caused death that occurred at the Dong Ha Air Force radar site from October 1967 to April 1968 occurred after that first round. Why? Because being caught out in the open during an artillery barrage is absolutely terrifying, and the temptation to get up and "run for cover" is very powerful. Far too many Airmen paid the ultimate price for yielding to this temptation. 

So, the only viable option is to lie there and take it. Fighting back is impossible. For someone who had not been allowed to fight after sixth grade, because the other kid's parents might take away their insurance from our family's agency and put us in the poor house, I was much better prepared than those raised without such restrictions. My most vivid memory here was of a Captain who played first-string backfield at a large university. He was very powerfully built and could probably have taken on a pack of alligators and won. Unable to fight back when under artillery attack turned him into a virtual alcoholic in a matter of weeks. Regrettably, he was one of many who chose to bury their fears in alcohol, which was readily available.

A Navy Triage located next to our radar site, was the initial receiving point for anyone injured in Quang Tri Province. Often, when not controlling aircraft, many of us could be found at the Triage carrying stretchers from the incoming helicopters to the first treatment location. Between our own compound and the triage, we saw enough injury and death to last many lifetimes. As for what we saw at these side-by-side locations, just think of the opening D-Day scenes in "Saving Private Ryan."  When I and others who served at Dong Ha think of the Purple Heart, injuries seen in our compound and the Triage come to mind. For this reason, none of us at the radar site who received minor cuts and scratches from shrapnel ever put in for the Purple Heart. We all felt we just didn't deserve it.

At the end of March 1968, I left Dong Ha and returned to the safety of Monkey Mountain, and stayed until leaving Viet Nam in May. Those of us returning to Monkey Mountain occasionally provided humor for other individuals, such as when a truck backfired while carrying a lunch tray to my seat. I dove to the floor, and the tray, hot food and all, landed on two Colonels visiting the site! Another time, I was sitting on a bench outside reading a newspaper in the late afternoon when an F4 broke the sound barrier. The paper went up, I dove forward for the ground, and made the best "football clip" of my life on a Marine who happened to be standing about four feet away with his back to me! Fortunately, he wasn't armed at the time!

There were several after effects from experiences at Dong Ha, and everyone changed, some for the better, and some for the worse. Many became alcoholics. Some later overcame the disease, while others did not. Second, after observing so much maiming and killing, many lost the desire to ever again have anything to do with guns. Outside of mandatory proficiency training, I hadn't fired a gun since leaving Viet Nam until 2005 when I bought a shotgun to kill turtles eating fish in our stocked pond. Third, any sudden loud noise would, for several years, cause us to duck, often to the point of hitting the ground. To remain standing after a nearby lightning strike was virtually unknown! Even today, if a loud noise occurs when talking about war in general or Viet Nam in particular, the result is the same. Fortunately, I haven't "hit the ground" since a lightning strike in the summer of 2004. As for PTSD, I thought I never had it until my late wife told me I periodically woke up screaming at night during the first 20 years of our marriage (we married 17 Aug 69). I can't confirm this, as I have no recollection of it ever happening.

Lest one think Viet Nam was nothing but despair, most radar controllers received numerous, very proud moments when they helped save lives and equipment. Joining a fighter with a tanker after the fighter has run out of gas and is gliding down; running a ground controlled approach (GCA) which "the book" says can't be done with long range radar, in near zero visibility and a fighter pilot who is injured and can't change frequencies; and guiding a rescue helicopter to a downed pilot before he can be captured all leave one with a satisfaction that cannot be described. There were many times in Viet Nam when we felt we were needed more than at any other time in their lives, before and since.

As most veterans will tell you, those six months of trial at Dong Ha, as with any trying experience forged some of the strongest friendships of our lives. I still have the names addresses of nearly 20 friends with whom I served during those six months at Dong Ha. The experience? I wouldn't trade it for all the tea in China, but I wouldn't wish it on a dog.

In 1998, one of my children asked if I ever suffered from PTSD, to which I responded that I had no such suffering and felt very lucky about that. My wife Nancy immediately said that if I didn't have PTSD, then why did I wake up screaming at night for the first 20 years of our marriage? To this day, I have no memory of that ever happening!

 
Sketching Her Way Across Europe: The Elizabeth Black Story

In 2010, John Black and his wife Kay of Germantown, Tennessee received an unexpected surprise at their doorstep: a footlocker, which had been stored and unexamined for decades in a family member's garage in California. Inside they found his mother's footlocker filled with a 100 images of her sketches, photographs, scrapbooks, news clippings, and other memorabilia. "I remember these. Thank heavens they're still around," he thought to himself. "The sheer volume of it was overwhelming. It took us awhile to sort through it all." 

Although he and his brother knew some things about their mother during her World War II experience, the discovery of her work launched him on a journey to meet this remarkable woman who had been his mother and to share her story in the widest, most dramatic way possible.

Eventually arriving at WQED Multimedia in her hometown of Pittsburgh he found what he had been hoping for: people who shared his vision on what a great documentary his mother's story would make. The project was immediately assigned to Emmy Award-winning team of writer/producer David Solomon and photographer/editor Paul Ruggieri. The award winning documentary, "Portraits for the Homefront: The Story of Elizabeth Black" premiered November 2013.
 
The one-hour documentary explored Miss Black's lost art career, features interviews with elderly veterans who encountered the artist on the battlefield, and captures memorable scenes of amazed and appreciative families finally receiving portraits that never arrived during the war.

Frank and Eva Clark were surprised when John Black and WQED staff visited their home to present them with a long-lost portrait of Frank sketched in 1944, while he served with the Army in France.

"It's a nice gift, a really nice gift," Clark, 92, said. "I've got four girls, and they all wanted one. They are fighting over it," he said "They really enjoy the way it looks. It looks just like me."

Clark remembered Elizabeth Black as "real nice to get along with. She took a lot of time with you." It lifted the spirits of the men, he said.

When contacted, Betty Koppel Houston said it was about a year after her father, Leo Koppel, had been deployed with the Army that her worried family received a portrait of him from the Red Cross. He was sketched on leave in Holland after fighting in the Battle of the Bulge. "It was exciting to see the portrait when it came home. I was 7 when he went away. I was Daddy's girl. I missed my father," she said.

Her mother hung the portrait on the wall in the living room of their residence. Houston now has it on the wall in her home. "It means the world to me," she said. "It's a good likeness."

Leo Koppel autographed it to his wife: "To Betty, Love + Kisses, your loving husband, Leo."

John Black, who praised the manner in which Solomon tells his mother's story, said, "The most-poignant take-away for him from all the memorabilia probably is the letters written to his mother from family members after they received a sketch."

In some cases, because of slow wartime mail, the loved one had been killed. But a family member, usually a wife, mother or sibling, still wrote a thank-you letter to a stranger who had given the family a wonderful gift. Other letter-writers pleaded for more information about their loved one. Black said, "They wrote, ‘You have seen him. How is he? Where is he now? It's been so long since we heard from him. We are so worried." 

Born in 1912, Elizabeth Black descended from a paternal grandfather John Wesley Black, founder of a weekly newspaper called The Pittsburgh Bulletin. Her father, John Wesley Black Jr., also worked for that publication. 

At a very young age, Elizabeth showed a remarkable talent as an up-and-coming artist in 1930s Pittsburgh. Following recognition at Carrick and Peabody high schools and taking classes at the Art Institute of Pittsburgh, she won a scholarship to the city's Ad-Art Studio School, took classes at Carnegie Tech and studied at the prestigious Art Students League of New York.

Prominent Pittsburgh families including the Mellons, Craigs and Shaws asked her to sketch portraits of their children and other family members. She painted murals for the Point Breeze Presbyterian Church. Her crowning achievement was her selection in 1940 to paint 25 larger-than-life portraits of literary greats such as Henry David Thoreau, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Emily Dickinson. It was no easy task. She stood for hours on a ladder, day-after-day carefully painting each stroke of each portrait into recesses near the ceiling of a great room in the Carnegie Library in the city's North Side neighborhood. Unfortunately, the paintings disappeared during a 1960s renovation.

At the height of World War II, Elizabeth left her promising art career behind and joined the American Red Cross. Following three weeks of screening and training in Washington, D.C., she boarded a ship for England in summer 1943. At age 31, she was stationed in London at a Red Cross Club as part of the Clubmobile brigades - women who drove to field camps in retrofitted buses or trucks throughout Europe providing doughnuts, coffee and a smiling face to war-weary troops. 

Hoping to be more than a hostess, she sought permission from the American Red Cross and the U.S. military to use her abilities to sketch Soldiers and send the portraits to worried families in the United States. In a seven-page business plan written on onion-skin paper she laid out her idea, what she would need in the way of art supplies to carry it out and how it would all work to include that camps hold lotteries to determine who would set for her. The American Red Cross accepted her proposal. 

In less than a year, Elizabeth sketched her way across England, France, Germany, Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg visiting camps and boosting the morale of American Soldiers and capturing hundreds of young faces with deft strokes of charcoal. 

When she finished whosever portrait she was working on, she asked her subjects to sign their portraits and write their hometown addresses. The large sketches, dated and signed, often containing endearments to loved ones back home, were mailed to parents, wives and siblings. 

Often her sketches reached families months after they were mailed due to the agonizing slow nature of wartime delivery. Some were never arrived at all. In some cases, the subject had died before the portrait got to the family. They would write a letter saying, "Thank you so much. We will cherish this forever. He was killed a month ago."

Regardless of where she was drawing a portrait, curious onlookers gathered around, grateful for the chance to talk or even flirt with the blue-eyed, brunette portrait artist. Some wrote heartfelt notes of appreciation in a notebook she carried with her at all times. 

On Oct. 21, 1944, a staff sergeant from Los Angeles wrote, "My best wishes to the finest personality I have ever met and sincerely an artist to scetch (sic) a mug like mine. Thanks a million!" A poem from a Brooklyn Soldier ended, "Never will I forget that friendly gal/who made me smile, thank you pal."

During a visit to Cherbourg, France, in 1944, the artist met Julian Black, a Navy commander from Chattanooga, Tenn. They joked about their shared last name, and he wrote a popular song lyric in her notebook, "I'll be seeing you." 

After an intense courtship, they married during the 1944 Christmas holidays at the American Chapel in Paris. Family legend has it that they were the first American couple to do so there since D-Day. 

When the war ended, the couple sailed for America in June 1945 and settled first in Staunton, Va., moving three years later to Waynesboro, then a town of 11,000 people located 20 miles southeast of Charlottesville. 

Elizabeth had two sons and helped her attorney husband Julian with his soft-drink business he had entered with a college classmate. After he husband died from a heart attack in 1956, Elizabeth sold the business back to her late husband's friend and waited for her sons to grow up. In 1963, she packed up the family car and moved to Berkeley, Calif. She chose Berkeley because it was a college town and had a bohemian reputation of being a good place for artists and musicians. She resumed portrait work but on a far lesser scale than her successful Pittsburgh years. 

Later she moved to Portland, Ore., where at the age of 71, she died from a heart attack in October 1983.

Producer/writer David Solomon said, "The story of Elizabeth Black is a reminder of how just one person can make a huge difference." "She provided a moment of brightness for hundreds of troops in battle, and gave hundreds of families' peace of mind when it was desperately needed." The undertaking has been one of the most-memorable and satisfying in his career he added.

If you are interested in seeing the entire hour of "Portraits for the Homefront: The Story of Elizabeth Black," please go to the following site. It will be well worth your time.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E9K2Wgvs_hM
 
TWS: Unit and Operations Database Update
 

As the Chief Historian my goal for TWS is to focus on accuracy. I will be providing updates every month, so you can have the latest information you can add to your Operations History Section or Unit Assignments. This is what sets TWS apart from any site that exists on the Internet today and in the future.

 

We now have descriptions in all the Vietnam War Campaigns, Operations and Battles across all the sites. We have 80 percent of all the WWII Battle trees completed with descriptions. The Korean War is completed on the Army and the Marine sites. I'm 1/3 finished on the AF Korean War tree. The GWOT Campaigns are completed on the Army, Marines and AF. Once you have entered all your units and operations, your timeline on your profile will look like a storyboard of your career.

 

I have expanded what we all do prior to combat, our military core of "Training." So I have added new sections to the all the sites. So if you participated in a training exercise and you do not see it, please send a note to admin@togetherweserved.com. Please send a full description; otherwise it takes me longer to do the research. I also started adding physical training areas. So if your ship was practicing Naval gunfire support at the Vieques Island, PR or your unit was on a live-fire range at Hohenfels, these are there to be added to your profile.

 

There are many vague entries such as "Cold War Operations" and others that are not in the list to choose from. The Cold War was a period in time, not an Operation. These will be going away in the next year as I find the actual event the member participated in. I've also been restructuring all sites to reflect "Forward Operating Bases" back to the Vietnam War. This will allow you to show the FOB where you deployed to and the Campaign you were in. We have a large number of "Task Force" units in our Operations tree. These will be moved on your profile to your unit assignments.

 

Lastly, as a long term project I'm working, with the help of the site VPAs, on getting the dates added to the units of each activation, deactivation or redesignation. This will reduce the list of units that are in the thousands on every site down to just the ones active during your time in the service.  

 
Roger A. Gaines 
LTC, SC (Ret US Army) 
TWS Senior Military Advisor 
Chief Historian and Database Manager
 
 
TWS Bulletin Board

If you wish to make a post to our new Bulletin Board - People Sought, Assistance Needed, Jobs Available in Your Company, Reunions Pending, Items for Sale or Wanted, Services Available or Wanted, Product or Service Recommendations, Discounts for Vets, Announcements, Death Notices - email it to us at admin@togetherweserved.com.

Announcements
Have Your Membership Sponsored!
If you are a "free" member of Together We Served and would like to contact those you served with but can't afford to pay for it this time of year, simply log back in and accept membership from one of our partners.


Volunteer of the Month

Cpl George Reilly
US Marine Corps
(Served 1960-1964)

Shadow Box: http://marines.togetherweserved.com/bio/George.Reilly.239555


Cpl George Reilly has been a member of Marines Together We Served since July 11, 2009

In 2013, TWS formed the "Person Locator Service". George uses his background as a retired NYPD Detective to find people that are not currently members of our site. Over the years he has personally been responsible for hundreds of reunions of old friends. 

Thank you George, for your dedication to helping your fellow veterans and making TWS the best it can be.

Service Reflections Video of the Month
Up Close and Personal Video Interview With TWS Member Cpl Edgar Harrell, WWII Veteran and survivor of the sinking of the USS Indianapolis.
 
 


VA and Other News

VA Secondary Conditions - Rating and Claiming Benefits with PTSD, Depression, TBI, Pain, Anxiety


It is important for veterans to understand what secondary conditions are with respect to VA benefits.

Veterans with Traumatic Brain Injury, TBI, may also have depression, anxiety, headaches, and insomnia. 
These are labeled as ‘secondary conditions’ by the VA. And YES, they can be service connected and rated. 

When veterans are able to get a secondary condition service related it can add to monthly VA benefits, and adds to a combined total rating. Veterans deserve compensation due to secondary conditions.

This can also include the diagnosis of PTSD. 

Secondary conditions due to PTSD may include: 
Conditions of depression. Anxiety. Insomnia. Sleep Apnea. Headaches. Substance abuse. Hypertension. Irritable bowel syndrome, IBS. Even health complications from cigarette smoking. All of these may be secondary conditions that can be proved and supported by a good Independent Medical Opinion or Nexus Letter.

These are secondary conditions, and can be diagnosed as such. But most doctors and evaluators do not know how to effectively use the VA guidelines to connect them to a service connected condition and rate them.

These diagnosis’ only become compensated secondary conditions if the symptoms and impairments can be ‘linked’ to an existing service connected disability.

There are many secondary conditions that can be rated and may apply to current service connected disabilities. These are non-service connected conditions that are produced by a service connected condition. 

Here are just a few examples. First are listed the current service connected disability, what follows may be the secondary conditions.

Depression, and memory loss. 
Depression, and insomnia
Chronic Pain, and depression 
Chronic pain, migraines, and PTSD 
Chronic pain, and insomnia
Chronic pain, and anxiety 
PTSD, and migraines 
PTSD, and hypertension 
PTSD, and sleep apnea 
PTSD, and IBS
PTSD, and COPD 
Anxiety, and hypertension 
(Chronic pain could be any physical injury that is service connected).

The above are actual secondary conditions that the VA has awarded benefits for.

There is documentation of the research and case law.

The VA has specific criteria for non service connected secondary conditions. If you want to read about the case that started this, it is Allen v. Brown, 1995.

Here is the VA criteria: 
Secondary Service Connection Criteria

For secondary service connection to be granted, generally there must be (1) medical evidence of a current disability; (2) evidence of a service-connected disability; and (3) medical nexus evidence establishing a connection between the service-connected disability and the current disability. Wallin v. West, 11 Vet. App. 509, 512 (1998). When service connection is thus established for a secondary condition, the secondary condition shall be considered a part of the original condition. 38 C.F.R. § 3.310 (2012); Harder v. Brown, 5 Vet. App. 183, 187 (1993). Additional disability resulting from the aggravation of a nonservice-connected condition by a service-connected condition is also compensable under 38 C.F.R. § 3.310(a). Allen v. Brown, 7 Vet. App. 439, 448 (1995).

Take action

If a veteran currently has a diagnosed service connected disability and believes they have other symptoms or conditions that are not rated or not service connected, then contact me. Even if a veteran has had conditions denied by the VA, contact me. Most likely I can help you with the claim.

Veterans deserve compensation for everything they have given to military service. This includes the secondary conditions the VA recognizes.


Brett Valette, Ph.D.
Clinical Psychologist 
National Register Psychologist


www.VeteransPsychEvaluations.com

Transgender men and women allowed into military
In a historic move, the Pentagon on Thursday lifted its ban on allowing transgender men and women to serve openly in the military.

The announcement at the Pentagon by Defense Secretary Ashton Carter follows extensive study by the U.S. military to remove one of the last discriminatory hurdles for military service, treating gender identity on par with race, religion, color, sex or sexual orientation.

"Our mission is to defend this country, and we don't want barriers unrelated to a person’s qualification to serve preventing us from recruiting or retaining the soldier, sailor, airman or Marine who can best accomplish the mission," Carter said. "We have to have access to 100% of America’s population for our all-volunteer force to be able to recruit from among them the most highly qualified - and to retain them."

The move came nearly five years after the formal end of "don't ask, don't tell," a 17-year-old policy that barred gays and lesbians from serving openly in the military. The Pentagon does not have a precise count of how many transgender men and women are in the services now, because they face discharge if they reveal their identities.

The Palm Center, a research institute based in San Francisco, estimates that there are about 15,500 transgender members of the U.S. military, "making the Department of Defense the largest employer of transgender people in America."

Despite the policy change, there are many senior military leaders who believe the Pentagon is moving too fast and has not yet resolved issues related to the plan. In recent weeks, Carter has met with military chiefs to hear concerns and suggestions to ease the process.

But officials said the full policy must be completely implemented no later than July 1, 2017.

House Approves Measure to Bar Women from Draft
The Republican-led House backed a measure that seeks to bar women from being required to register for a potential military draft, a victory for social conservatives who fear that forcing females to sign up is another step toward the blurring of gender lines. 

By a vote of 217 to 203, lawmakers approved an amendment that would block the Selective Service System from using any money to alter draft registration requirements that currently apply only to men between the ages of 18 and 25. For more details, see this Military.com article. http://www.military.com/daily-news/2016/07/07/house-approves-measure-bar-women-draft-registration.html

RELATED TOPICS
Women in the Military http://www.military.com/topics/women-in-the-military


Doolittle Raider David Thatcher dies at 94
Former U.S. Army Air Forces Staff Sergeant David Thatcher, one of the two remaining Doolittle Raiders, died Wednesday morning in Missoula, Montana.

The Doolittle Raid was an air raid led by pilot Lt. Col. James H. Doolittle on Tokyo on April 18, 1942. Sixteen B-25 Mitchell bombers carrying 80 crewmembers bombed military targets on the island of Honshu.

Thatcher was the engineer-gunner on the seventh B-25 to take off from the USS Hornet. After bombing its assigned targets, the aircraft crash landed off the coast of China. Thatcher was the only crewmember not seriously injured in the crash, so he took charge getting his fellow airmen medical attention. He persuaded Chinese fishermen to carry his injured crewmates to temporary safety. In doing so, he saved the entire crew from capture. For his leadership on this day, he was awarded the Silver Star.

Thatcher received an honorable discharge from the Army Air Forces in July 1945.

Fairchild Air Force Base held a commemorative event in April to honor the 74th anniversary of the raid.

"I hope that airman will continue to honor the raid and remember what was done," Thatcher said, at the event.

Lt. Col. Richard Cole is now the last surviving Doolittle Raider.

Committee Conducts Hearing on TBI
The American Legion's Deputy Director of Veterans Affairs & Rehabilitation Roscoe Butler testified recently during a congressional hearing. He addressed pending legislation regarding traumatic brain injury (TBI) evaluations for compensation and implementation of peer specialists at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) medical centers. If passed into law, S. 244 would require VA to work with the Institute of Medicine (IOM) to conduct a comprehensive review of VA examinations, ensuring TBI symptoms and subsequent levels of disability are accurately diagnosed for purposes of awarding disability compensation. Recently, VA acknowledged that it may have under-evaluated nearly 25,000 veterans suffering from TBI. Testimonies and a video of the hearing are available on the U.S. Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs website. http://www.veterans.senate.gov/hearings/pending-legislation06292016

For more on traumatic brain injuries, visit the Military.com traumatic brain injury section. http://www.military.com/topics/traumatic-brain-injury

VA Workers Protest VA Medical Care Changes
Dozens of Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) workers rallied July 1 outside the Fayetteville VA Medical Center in Fayetteville, NC protesting a proposed overhaul of veterans' medical care. The Commission on Care, a panel created by Congress two years ago amid concern over long wait times for care at VA centers nationwide, is expected to recommend soon privatizing care for millions of veterans. The American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) says the move would close 12 to 15 VA hospitals. The AFGE has organized similar protests recently at VA centers across the country.

For more information, visit the AFGE website https://www.afge.org/ and read the Opinion Page in the New York Times http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2016/06/28/should-the-veterans-health-care-system-be-privatized.

For more on veteran benefits, visit the http://www.military.com/benefits

State Veteran's Benefits
Everyone knows about the federal benefits available to veterans, but did you know many states also offer great benefits to their veterans? State benefits range from free college and employment resources to free hunting and fishing licenses. Most states also offer tax breaks for their veterans and specialized license plates, some states even provide their veterans with cash bonuses just for serving in the military.

We have compiled a handy summary of the benefits each state and territory offers, each summary page also has a link directly to specific State Department of Veterans Affairs. Be sure to check it out, there may be a benefit available to you or your family that you didn't know about! http://www.military.com/benefits/veteran-state-benefits/state-veterans-benefits-directory.html

New Study Finds 20 Vets Die by Suicide Each Day
The most comprehensive study yet made of veteran suicide concludes that on average 20 veterans a day are taking their own lives. The average daily tally is two less than the VA previously estimated, but is based on a more thorough review of Defense Department records, records from each state and data from the Centers for Disease Control, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs. 

"One veteran suicide is one too many, and this collaborative effort provides both updated and comprehensive data that allows us to make better informed decisions on how to prevent this national tragedy," said Dr. David J. Shulkin, VA Under Secretary for Health. "We as a nation must focus on bringing the number of veteran suicides to zero." For more details, see http://www.military.com/daily-news/2016/07/07/new-va-study-finds-20-veterans-die-by-suicide-each-day.html

For more on mental health and wellness, visit the Military.com Mental Health and Wellness page. http://www.military.com/benefits/veterans-health-care/mental-health-and-wellness


Member Submissions

Old, Bent-over Korean Woman
By John House
U.S. Air Force
 
In 1986, while stationed at Osan AB in South Korea, during a then-annual joint U.S.-South Korean military exercise called Team Spirit in which we dressed in full "battle rattle" and worked 12-hour days, I was trudging home to my off-base apartment after another tiring 12-hour day, wearing full exercise "battle" dress (flak jacket, helmet, web belt with full canteen, gas mask, and other add-ons, etc.), walking up a very steep hill on a road that was empty except for a very old, bent-over Korean woman who was shuffling down the hill toward me with her walking stick. These Korean roads typically had very narrow sidewalks on each side that ended against the continuous walls of the buildings that lined the streets. I was walking on the right side of the road (I had learned to stay close to the side of the road after several attempts by Korean cab drivers to run me over), and she was on the other side.

As we neared each other, I was surprised to see her turn and cross in front of me, heading for the side of the road on my right. There was plenty of room in the road, it was nearly two lanes wide, though without markings, so I thought that like so many Koreans I had encountered, she was simply hostile to Americans and was going to say or do something rude. I had been subjected to rude behavior before by many young Korean males who resented our presence in their country.

My apprehension about her motives, however, was about to receive a shock. As we drew abreast, she stopped and backed up against the building wall behind her, just a foot or so from the edge of the road and only 3 feet or so from me. To my surprise, she slowly, and clearly painfully, straightened up with her back against the wall until she was nearly erect, and she put her trembling right hand to her forehead and saluted me, and as I passed her, I heard her say in broken English, "G.I. number one!" That is the ultimate compliment in Korea, where everything is rated on a scale of one to ten. Her compliment humbled me, and I stopped and turned to her with tears welling in my eyes and thanked her in Korean, "Kamsahamnida ajumma" ("Thank you, ma'am"). She held her salute and repeated her words until I turned and resumed my trek up the hill.

I realized as I continued my trudge homeward that she was old enough to have lived through the Korean War and probably knew and experienced it first-hand, along with the horrors visited upon South Korea by marauding North Korean troops. The stories of the atrocities are many and legend in South Korea, including the popular story of a young boy who was killed by North Korean troops (there was a statue of him I think in Seoul or near the DMZ, but I can find no reference to it online). Anyhow, South Koreans old enough to remember the war were more likely to be grateful for our presence, while the younger generations knew only the resentment I had experienced.

 The old woman's actions humbled me and continue to humble me to this day. I've never felt like I personally deserved her gratitude, but I was proud to have been its recipient on behalf of our great country.

 
USS Hornet Sailor
By Kelly Rose,
Sullivan Independent News
 
USS Hornet (CV-8), the seventh ship to carry the name Hornet, was a Yorktown class aircraft carrier of the United States Navy. During World War II in the Pacific Theater, she launched the Doolittle Raid on Tokyo and participated in the Battle of Midway and the Buin-Faisi-Tonolai Raid. In the Solomon Islands campaign, she was involved in the capture and defense of Guadalcanal and the Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands where she was irreparably damaged and sunk. Hornet was in service for a year and six days and was the last US fleet carrier ever sunk by enemy fire. For these actions, she was awarded four service stars, a citation for the Doolittle Raid in 1995, and her Torpedo Squadron 8 received a Presidential Unit Citation for extraordinary heroism for the Battle of Midway.
 
In 1941, when Frank Blum was 24 years old and working as a jackhammer operator, helping to build the Army camp at Fort Leonard Wood, he knew he would have to go in to the service soon. He had talked to a couple friends he knew in Bourbon who told him they were going to join the Navy tomorrow and would Blum would like to join them? With no desire whatsoever of being drafted into the Army, he agreed. So Blum and his buddies were taken by Blum's sister in his car to St. Louis. Blum's sister kept the car and he went off to war. 

Blum was on the USS Hornet aircraft carrier in April 1942 working in the tool room during the Doolittle Raid or the Tokyo Raid, an air raid that was planned and led by Lt. Col. Jimmy Doolittle. Blum said Doolittle told him he liked to keep a set of tools with him on board his plane. Blum fashioned a custom tool box for him that went with Doolittle when he flew off the flight deck on his historical mission. 
 
Blum was also on the ship on October 26, 1942, when it was torpedoed and sunk during the Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands, in the South Pacific. When they gave the order to abandon ship, he slid down a half-inch rope from the bow of the ship into the swirling water. "I was paddling like heck to get away from there and I thought I was getting pretty far out and I looked back and here I was, still in that swirl. So, I got my feet up against the ship and I give myself a shove then I took off." He was rescued by one of the smaller ships nearby. He added, "You didn't see land. All you see is water everywhere. They sent destroyers through and they were throwing lines out. They had cargo nets that you could climb up. It was spooky." He had a flashlight in his pocket that still worked and threw it in the ocean and watched it descend for 3 miles or more. 
 
After that, they needed some men to go to the USS North Hampton and some to go to a boat pool. "I said, what's a boat pool and they said it's working on the landing craft and I said give me that. I'll take it rather than the North Hampton. I knew she was a heavy cruiser. It went back to Guadalcanal and it got torpedoed and down it went. I lucked out of that," he said.
 
Blum was sent to the New Hebrides Islands to salvage some planes that had fallen. He said two years before going to the islands, he was told of a missionary who had previously journeyed there and ended up being invited by the natives to be their dinner.
 
While serving in the Hebrides, he contracted a fever which began a long trip from Tulagi to Guadalcanal to New Caledonia and Wellington, New Zealand and then back to the states, all while he still had chills and fever and suffering from Malaria. During his medical leave his leave had been extended six more week, he invited his girlfriend, Mary, back home in Missouri, to come be with him. She went and while there, the two were married. They are still together 71 years later, living in Sullivan.

Blum finished out his tour on a troop ship headed to Okinawa when the Japanese surrendered, thus ending the war.

Looking For

Do You Remember Me?

My name is Joseph LaRicci. I was known as Sgt Ricci or Sgt Ricky (They pronounced my name Ricky). I went to Korea  Aug 4, 1950 I belive. I was in I Co. 38th Infantry Reg.- 2nd Infantry Division from about Aug 1950 to Aug 1951. I was in the 3rd Platoon and Lt Robbie was my Platoon Leader. I am 84 years old and cannot remember the names of most of my Platoon or Company members. I was at Kuna Rea When the Chinese came into the war. I lost a good amount of buddies in that retreat. Sgt Peter Patete was one. Many who were killed in early combat were Louis Bird, Richard Carrigo, Pvt Castro, Orlondo Calabres. So many, I can't remember all their names.
If any of this sounds familiar to you, please contact me. I'd love to hear from old friends.

Joseph LaRicci
josephlariccijr@comcast.net



Help a Homeless Vet
I would like to say what a small world we live in that a few weeks ago I was going home after a full day driving for Uber and saw a homeless man in the median who looked in desperate need of water. He was holding a sign saying "Homeless Navy Vet" on it and I inquired as to what ships and when. The 1st ship he mentioned was the USS Nimitz CVN68 from 1977 to 1979. I was also on Nimitz during that time and and he asked what division and I said S-3. I actually knew the guy but after 37 years everybody changes and some not for the better. I came by later and picked him up and brought him home for a short time then he said he had to get back to his 4th wife whom was also homeless in Las Vegas. I took him back to her and the next day I tracked him down and got him some food and more water. I also gave him my business card to contact me again when he was ready. I tried tracking him down again to no avail. I wanted to bring him to the local VA outreach center in town but I have not been able to find him so far. I knew him as SHSA Harkness but he is actually now a Navy Retiree retiring as an SH1. Wanted to know if you could get the word out about his condition and for shipmates we served with to find him and his wife and give them a helping hand. We owe it to them and ourselves not to abandon our old shipmates even after 37 years.  

Thank You,  Peter Hagen SH2 USN-RET

If you have any information or can help, email Pete at phagen64@yahoo.com

Hill 182 Korea Vets
I was in Korea 1951 & 1952 I was discharged June 1952. I was on Hill 812 where I contracted Hepatitis. In August I went in the V.A.hospital I spent one year recovering. I was told my condition was not service connected, yet this area was called Hep Valley. I am looking for other Marines who served in this area.

I want to find other service members who served in the area of Hill 812 to verify my findings.

Irvin M Leatherbury
Leatherburyi@aol.com

Harold Alvin McGee
I am Harold Alvin McGee who served in Korea in Dec. 1973 until Dec 1974. I filed for PTSD and looking for someone who was there with me when one soldier attacked another. I have pictures but no names to go with them. The VA requires names. The attacker was from San Antonio Tx, the receiver was from Baltimore Md. 

I was in Ft. Bliss, Tx from Jan. 1979 until June 1979 work in (CIF) Central Issue Facility. HHB HQ Command when a guy was arrested for killing his wife's ex-husband, I need his name. 

Any info I is truly appreciated. 
Email- ham55ros@gmail.com 

Do You Know David Michael Backes
I have filed a claim on behalf of his widow. I need to find any other Air Force Veteran who may have been deployed with Mr. Backes and where did they arrive after leaving the United States of America. It is my understanding that pretty much the majority of Air Force personnel flew into Tan Son Nhat Airport, Vietnam prior to deployment to any of the RTNAB (Royal Thai Navy Air Bases) such as Utaoao, Thailand.

The Department of Veterans Affairs of course is questioning whether David ever set foot (boots on the ground) in Vietnam. This appears to be the only issue that is preventing his spouse from getting the claim granted.

Department of Finance and Accounting Services claim they can't find any records in David's file. In other words there are no travel vouchers to verify where he flew to prior to arriving in Utapao, Thailand.

David's information on where he trained, who he served with and his assignments are listed below.

   1.  8/12/1965-Basic Airmen Enlisted/3709  Lackland AFB, Texas (ATC)

   2.  9/15/1965-Student AFI/3419TH Student Sq, Lowry AFB, Colorado, (ATC)

   3. 10/26/1965-20430 Stu (CrsABR 20430-1 3427 Stu, Lowry AFB, Colorado (ATC)

   4.  3/3/1966-Intelligence Operations Specialist (100)  306th Bomb Wing, McCoy AFB, Florida (SAC)

 His Tour of  Duty is listed as follows;

1.  9/27/1966-TDY 4133 Bomb Wg, APO San Francisco 96334 Departed September 26, 1966 UNACC FSSD-None 15 Feb 66, Isolated Area (ADJ);   Then it states the date departed as July 29, 1967, NA For Accompanied or Unaccompanied FSSD July 25, 1968 Isolated Area Yes-R

2.  3/31/1967-Intel Operations Specialist 306th Bomb Wing, McCoy AFB, Florida (SAC)

3.  4/21/1967-Intelligence Operations 306th Bomb Wing, McCoy AFB, Florida (SAC)

4.  8/1/1967-Intelligence Operations Specialist HqSq 4258th SWg, U-Tapao AF, Thailand (SAC)

5.  8-25/1968-T-10 Engraver 15th Recon Tech Sq March AFB, California   (SAC)

6.  10/31/1968-Air Intelligence Analyst 15th Recon Tech Sq March AFB, California (SAC)

7.  1/15/1969-RAD  AFM  39-10  SDN:715

8.  1/16/1969-HQ ARPC (ORS) Denver, Colorado  

In addition, I was told that the Air Force had Softball Teams (David played on the team) that traveled away from there assigned bases to possibly other Royal Thai Navy Air Bases.  I don't know if any stops had to be made at Tan Son Nhat, Vietnam. 

If there is anyone who was a closed friend who deployed, served, played on the softball team or had the same Air Force Specialty Code of Operations Intelligence Specialist at Utapao or Guam and worked with David I would greatly appreciate it if you could please contact me at (714) 904-5652. 

Charles Nelson
I am looking for my father. His name is Charles Nelson. In 1978 he was a Chief Petty Officer and a volunteer fireman in Seattle,Wa. He was stationed at Sandpoint Naval Base. He is African American. He would now, I assume, be in his 60s. He had a friend named Preston Knowles who was the same rank as he was and also a volunteer fireman. Chuck knew my mother as Deborah "Debbie" Foster. She had two young girls at the time who both met him. His mother lived across from some park in the Seattle area.

I have Neurofibromatosis, I have also had Myloidisplastic Syndrome and have gone into treatment. My doctors keep asking about my medical history, which I can't provide. If anyone out there has any info on this man please contact me at madonna_regis@yahoo.com

Veteran Information

Agent Orange
If an AO / Dioxin affected veteran, know one, spouse or offspring add your statement in comment area too! All 18+ can sign!  NO VETERAN LEFT BEHIND, Pass along to others too!
 
Our government needs to do its job and take care of the veterans as prescribed by law, Abe Lincoln and DOD regulations.
 
Will you sign this petition? Click below to review many comments and decide, 5,200+ have done so to date.
 
http://signon.org/sign/equality-wrt-vet-dioxin 
Agent Orange and other Dioxin toxins.
 
SIGN, Pass along to others too (family, friends, tweeter and your email list), post link to group pages like FB every few days, and SHARE and reSHARE with everyone! 
 
http://benefits.va.gov/BENEFITS/factsheets/serviceconnected/presumption.pdf
 Current VA Presumption.pdf and some presumed medical conditions
 
http://www.veteranprograms.com/id1071.html Agent Orange Presumptive Disabilities
 
http://www.vva.org/Guides/AgentOrangeGuide.pdf A good guide
 
http://makeagentorangehistory.org/agent-orange-resources/background/health-effects-of-agent-orange-dioxin/
 
http://www.congressmerge.com/onlinedb/ Contact congress
 
http://www.veterans.senate.gov/chairman Contact form
 
Robert.A.McDonald@va.gov   Head of the VA. Send him your details.
(513) 509-8454

Submitted by Dennis McHenney 
mchenney@att.net
 
 
Letters to the Editor

GeneralI have been enjoying reading your TWS Dispatches. Nice job.
~Mike R. Vining, Sgt. Major (Retired)
U.S. Army


The dispatch received today was so, so good. Thank you for it.
~Gary Sheldon
U.S. Army


I really find the TWS communications interesting and well done. I frequently cut and paste an article to a friend. Keep up the great work!
~Larry Meier
U.S. Army


I continue to learn a lot from your site whether WWII, Korea or even 'Nam. Thanks!

The USS Laffey story proves again fact can be more engaging then fiction! 

Col Kasler's story was one I was unaware of - obviously a very great American.

As for the father who refused to accept the honors earned by his sons in Korea; my heart went out to him as I understand his reasoning. I envy my late Dad, his 'little brother' and my late father-in-law, all WWII vets who fought in the very last war* we pursued until there was unconditional surrender by the enemy. It's frustrating to see men & materials wasted, to some extent, on 'wars' we do not declare much less make every effort to win a complete victory.  When will we learn? Per MacArthur, 'there is no substitute for victory'!

*The little "incursion" into Grenada being the only exception since "45.

Lastly, CPO Struble's letter to the editor assumes his family members that volunteered during 'Nam had ulterior motives. Beyond questioning their motives, he also assumes only regular Army/Marines were at risk. Obviously USAF & Navy had losses but so did Guard/Reservists. Iowa had at least one Guard unit called up (ANG from Sioux City) to duty in 'Nam. I find it discomforting that he calls into question motives of men who enlisted in any branch, particularly since they are his family. In my case my draft # was borderline but I chose to enlist as I did not want to explain to my kids "someday" (if I had any) as to 'why didn't I serve?’ So like my Dad, I enlisted in the Air Force (in his day Army Air Corps) and served 46 months with 18 in Asia. 

As luck would have it I did marry a year after my enlistment was up, have 2 children, one of which just came back from a year in Afghanistan (USNR Officer 'called up'). We are VERY proud of her just as my parents was proud of me, his folks proud of him and so on all the way back to the Civil War where a direct ancestor served the Union.

I would never question anyone who enlisted OR in the day, accepted their draft notice as opposed to running to Canada or getting hokey medical excuses as several of my H.S. classmates did.
~Gerald A. Edgar
U.S. Air Force 1970-74
Garner, Iowa


Reporting the War
Read the article on Ernie Pyle and was a tribute to men of our times to save a little of the brave who made WW II a success against tyranny.
~Charles A. Lloyd
U.S. Navy


The man who drove Ernie Pyle to shore in a Higgins Boat is named Fred Rhodes. He is an active 91 year old member of the Lexington Texas American Legion. His LST 801 was Kamikaze at Okinawa.
~William Spivey
U.S. Marine Corps


Profiles in Courage: Col James Kasler
I enjoy reading your reports. Today I discovered that there is a hero from my home state of Indiana. Thank you.
~TSgt Francis McMillian
U.S. Air Force (Ret)


Military Myths & Legends: The Ship That Wouldn't Die 
An outstanding article on the USS Laffey. She can still be seen today - berthed at Patriot's Point, Mount Pleasant, SC - serving as a museum ship alongside the USS Yorktown (CV-5) and the USS Clamagore (SS-343).
~Thomas E. Williams
U.S. Air Force


Your article on the Laffey should have ended with a note that she is still alive and is on display at Patriots Point in Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina.
~James Garner
James Island, SC

 

Book and DVD Review: Sea Stories: Tales about Leadership, Morale and More
 
By Frederick W. Nickols

Review
Looking for that perfect book that takes you from your reading chair to the high seas of adventure? Look no further than this book which contains 40 separate stories from the author's 20 year service in the U.S. Navy. Some of these stories are quite short, other are not. 

Some stories are humorous; a couple are grim; some people will find one of them a bit disgusting. All are based on real people and real events. A few are liberally laced with profanity but most of them are not. 

These tales from the author's Navy days are meant to be educational as well as entertaining. After all, sea stories - whether real or imagined events - have something in common with myths and folklore. 

So what is a sea story? Ask any Sailor or Marine, especially "sea going" Marines. On occasion they are mostly fact. At other times mostly fantasy. Sometimes they are reconstructions of the way things should have been and others are works of pure imagination - which are the most fun and most memorable. 

Perhaps the most popular and timeless sea story repeated over and over again deals with making the distinction between the "Old" Marine Corps with the current one at the time of its telling. It begins on November 10, 1775, at Tun Tavern, in Philadelphia where Navy officers interviewed the first prospect willing to join the Marine Corps. After numerous applicants were turned down, they finally found a young man who fit their requirements. They had him sign the book, paid him his dollar, and bought a round of rum to toast his enlistment followed by a second round before sending him off to a table in the corner to wait. After a few more interviews, they found a second recruit, who soon joined the first. "This is great," the second recruit said. "They paid me right away, and even bought me a tot of rum!" "Humph" sneered the first. "In the Old Corps they bought us two." 

I recommend this fun, entertaining and informative book for anyone and believe they will find something in the stories to which they can relate. It is also an easy read since it can be read chapter by chapter as each of the 40 episodes stand on their own. This is especially true for those with a busy schedule who can enjoy a chapter or two in a matter of minutes and come back later to read a few more. 

In his parting words, the author wrote: "This concludes the sea stories I have to tell at this time. Do I have more? Yes I do, but as my wife has so firmly pointed out, "You can't tell those." So these will have to do for the time being.

Reader Reviews
Fred Nickols shares authentic stories from his U.S. Navy career in a humorous way. I read a sea story a day. He adds a lesson learned about human nature and human relations that are short and sweet. It made me remember and reflect upon a few sea stories of my own! I plan to pass this treasure trove along to another Navy person to enjoy.
~Amazon Customer

I have known about the author for some 20 years through our common interest in Perceptual Control Theory (mentioned on page 95), but met him just once along the way.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this collection of stories; laughed my head off in places, and came to better understand where Fred is coming from in his current role as an independent management consultant.

These enjoyable stories not only shed light on life in the navy as experienced by the people who actually make the ships function, but provide a perspective on life in any big organization and the importance of a human touch.

Once I got into it, I could not put it down until I came to very last page.
~Dag Forssell

About the Author
Fred Nickols was born in Fort Madison, Iowa in 1937. He is a retired, decorated Navy chief petty officer and a fire control technician, charged with operating, maintaining and repairing complex, shipboard weapons systems (guns and missiles).
He currently writes and consults about various aspects of workplace management, including human behavior, performance and productivity.
 
 
 
 

CONNECTING VETERANS SINCE 2003