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50 Years ago today
Self | today | Self

Posted on 05/13/2017 3:21:41 AM PDT by Chainmail

On May 13th, 1967, I was shot through my upper right thigh, shattering my femur and almost severing my leg. I celebrate this day every year because it was the day I almost died but through God’s grace, I have lived this half century more.

I was a twenty-one year old Lance Corporal (E-3) in the Marines serving as an Artillery Scout (an enlisted Forward Observer) with Golf Company 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines (2/1) about 16 kilometers Southwest of Danang, Vietnam. Our company was on a local sweep a little north of Hill 55, following the edge of the Song Yen river that bounded ours and the 7th Marines’ Tactical Area of Responsibilities (TAOR). We headed slowly south, searching for the enemy, as always. At first light, I heard a sudden burst of gunfire and saw several Marines firing at a VC that was running away in the open and getting away pretty quickly. We had just gotten the M-16 and even though several hundred rounds were fired in those few seconds, that guy kept running. I aimed carefully with my M-14 and shot him (I had the last M-14 anywhere around; I was an artilleryman and I claimed that “we didn’t have M16s yet” and got away with keeping it). We ran up to get him and found that I had hit him in his right hand, chopping off the edge of his hand, taking his little finger with it. He was an older VC – 40 or so – and I could see he was in a lot of pain, so I bandaged his hand with one of my own bandages and gave him a cigarette. He calmed down, since you don’t bother bandaging somebody or giving somebody a cigarette if you’re just going to kill him. We found out through our Chieu Hoi scout (a former VC that had surrendered and now worked to help guide us and interpret) that he was an outpost for an enemy company just ahead of us, so we deployed to meet them, one platoon working around behind the enemy to block them and two platoons to begin the approach to where we thought they were.

We caught up with them near Dien Xuan village at the edge of a large open and dry rice paddy that had been recently plowed. We passed through one treeline and we were starting to cross the wide open area of that plowed-up paddy, the enemy opened fire. Firefights always started with a couple of quick shots and then very quickly developed into a stuttering, shattering roar, with hundreds of weapons – ours and theirs - being fired, all full-auto, all at once. We were experienced, so we were all flat on the ground and we were initially unscathed. We started firing 60mm mortars and some LAW rockets and the enemy, unusually for them, stood their ground and started firing rockets back at us. I detected two machine guns straight across from us, between 150 and 200m away. I started working up an artillery fire mission to hit those positions with 105mm fire. As I waited for the mission to be cleared and to start sending rounds, I saw dust coming up from the window of a house directly across from me - someone was firing from that window. I fired a raking burst just under the window, from right to left and the house began to smolder and burn.

My artillery fire mission was cancelled because we started to get some wounded and a “Sav-A-Plane” was put into effect – so artillery and mortar missions were stopped to allow medevac helicopters to come in without being hit by our own stuff. The platoon to my left started assaulting across the open rice paddy towards the enemy but several of them were hit all at once, five that I could see. I could also see that the enemy was still shooting at the wounded men by the dust kicking up around them. I was only about 50-60m away and in pretty good cover, so with very great reluctance I realized that I was the closest guy to them and I’d have to go out there and try get them to safety. During those seconds while I was spooling up my nerve, my first-day-in-combat FO Lieutenant, Hank Graves plopped down next to me and said “I’ll cover you”, holding a single-shot M79 40mm grenade launcher. I could see that his safety was on, so I said “the safety comes off by pushing it forward, Sir” and then I got up and ran for the first guy I could reach.

I left my rifle behind because I’d need both hands and it wouldn’t have done me any good to carry a rifle anyway. That plowed paddy was rough and difficult to run on because it was so jumbled up and hard. My ankles twisted and I stumbled steadily ahead towards the nearest guy I could reach. I was sure that I was as good as dead, that the next shot would hit me between the eyes. Everybody was shooting and bullets cracked all around me. The Marine I reached had been shot sideways through the hips and his guts were protruding. He was struggling and thrashing around with pain and I tried to carry him but he was too tall and too broken to move that way. I tried lifting him and pulling him by lifting under his arms but that didn’t work either. His hips were broken and it hurt him too much. A Marine ran towards us from our treeline, a guy we called “Big John” (I never found out his real name – he was known as our “duty hero” and he had been wounded at least twice before), and he grabbed the wounded guy’s feet while I lifted him under his armpits and then we ran towards cover with him between us. Before we got very far, Big John ran out of breath and couldn’t go anymore so I had us all lay flat, as low as we could get and told Big John to take deep breaths. After a few seconds, we got up again and ran some more, finally reaching the inside edge of our treeline. The wounded Marine – LCpl Dave Johnson – was turning blue and I was afraid that he was going to die, so I leaned over him and told him that he “was on the way home”. I knew that there were more wounded men out there and I couldn’t stall anymore, so I started to stand again to get moving back out into that field when I heard a loud bang and fell immediately next to Dave.

The bullet hit me on the inside left of my thigh and blew through the outside right of my leg and I just collapsed. I said something like “Unhh, I’m hit” and felt intense, stunning pain. It felt like someone had taken a sledgehammer to my leg and crushed it, which was a fairly accurate analysis. There was no feeling of impact at all when the bullet hit me. My femur was shattered into bits and I was bleeding a lot and the open hole in my greatly expanded leg was too large to cover with my bandages. I grabbed an empty cloth bandoleer and tied it around my upper right thigh next to my crotch and used my Kabar knife to tighten it down to close off the artery and the bleeding. By this time, I felt my blood pool up to my neck while I laid there. A corpsman reached me and tried to get bandages on me but the holes were just too wide, bigger than my spread-out hand. Big John had also been hit (possibly the same bullet that hit me), so the three of us just lay there, waiting until we got help. I remember feeling guilty that I couldn’t just get up and continue helping to get the wounded but there wasn’t any way I was going to be able do it. I also remember being very surprised that I had been hit, even though I had seen people hit all around me for months and I had just finished being near-missed by hundreds of rounds. It’s funny how our young minds work.

Lt. Graves crawled up next to me and said “I’m really sorry you’re hurt Rick, but can I have your rifle?” I told him that it was “all his”. I called in my own Medevac (“Button Vermillion”) – and while I was on the radio, one of the guys from my artillery battery asked which one of us was wounded and using radio jargon I said “Chinstrap Bravo 61 Alpha, Actual” which meant “me”. The voice on the radio said that he was sorry that I was hurt and wished me well. Red-headed Lt Joiner, one of the platoon commanders, came by and treated us to a show of bravado to entertain us by firing offhand with his .45 at the enemy while bullets crackled all around him. I said “Sir, get down, please, you’re drawing fire”. I was fading from loss of blood, so I don’t remember when Dave and Big John were carried to the medevac helicopter but I remember watching that big Sikorsky UH-34 land in that open paddy while everyone was still shooting. I remember really wanting to be on that plane when I felt a tug on my shoulder and it was my VC prisoner from that morning. He pointed at the helicopter and I nodded and he helped pull me up and he helped carry me to the open door of that bird. I remember watching him waving at me with his bandaged hand as the plane lifted us up and on to Charlie Med in Danang.

When I got to Charlie Med, I was completely naked – they cut your clothes off in preparation for triage – but I still had a frag grenade in my hand in case the helicopter went down. Nobody wanted to be taken prisoner in that neck of the woods. There were about a dozen wounded arriving at the same time we did, so there were a lot of men on stretchers lined up on the ground outside the field hospital, waiting to be treated. The corpsmen saw the grenade I had and freaked, which I thought was funny because grenades are just paperweights until you pull the pin. We had a lot of very badly wounded men there and I remember one who had been horrifically burned by a white phosphorus booby trap and was bleeding all over from his burns. The other thing I noticed was how quiet we all were; we were all in almost unimaginable pain but none of us made any noises at all. I was very surprised when they moved me in for treatment first because I thought many were worse off than I was. I was brought into a room, up onto a table and I was bent forward at the waist and a corpsman stuck a long needle into my lower back and then moved in front of me and apologized because his first attempt at a spinal missed. I told him that it’s fine, go ahead a try again. He tried again and then there was the most blessed relief you can imagine when that pain finally stopped.

I was put into something they called the “spider”, a frame to hold me and my limbs in position and a short curtain was put up at my waist between me and the work they were doing on my leg. From my angle, I was looking up at a large circular reflector around a lamp above us and I could see some of what the surgeons were doing with my leg. The lead surgeon looked at me and said “we may have to take your leg off – are you OK with this?” I told him to “do what he had to do”. He asked me to try to wiggle my toes, which I did, I think - since I couldn’t really see what was happening. I talked to the anesthetist while they were working and I said that I looked like an el Greco painting, with all the color of yellow and green in my skin as shown by that reflector. The surgeon turned to him and said “shut him up!” so he stuck some morphine in my I.V. and I was out.

When I woke, I had a plaster cast going from the upper chest, all the way down both legs which were spread in about a 20 degree angle. I had a steel pin transversely through my shin just below the knee and I had tubes all over the place, with freezing cold blood coming through an I.V. in my left arm and I could feel chill blains all the way to my heart. My First Sergeant visited me to see how I was doing and to see if I could still make it back to combat duty but I think even he was convinced that I wasn’t going to be much use for a while and that I should head home.

It was a long process of recovery, taking years, but Dave and I both made it. Dave went back to Vietnam about a year later and was wounded again, same place in his body and was discharged as disabled after that. Dave was a true character and married his sweetheart while he was in Unauthorized Absence (AWOL) from the hospital, concealing his colostomy bag in his tuxedo. There was some discussion whether I would keep my leg but thanks to the grace of God and the skill of my doctors, I kept it and learned to walk again after several grafts and 7 months in traction. I got out of the Marine Corps after a tour with the Air Wing as a machine gun instructor, then returned to the Marine Corps 3 1/2 years later to serve another 24 years, retiring in 1996.

50 years is a long time ago, yet it feels like it was almost last week. I know that I was one of many tens of thousands who went through experiences like this, a river of wounded, flowing through the Philippines, Japan and then hospitals in the States to finish our recoveries. I am deeply grateful to my Maker for letting me live for all these years and for all of His gifts. I remember my fellow Marines and our Corpsmen and that incredibly brave medevac pilot, and those skilled surgeons with warmth and I’ll always be thankful that I could be there with them and that I didn’t let them down.


TOPICS: History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: combat; freeperstory; marines; the60s; usmc; vetstory; vietnam; vietnamvets
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To: CIB-173RDABN
I enlisted a few days after my birthday so I guess MY timing was good to get me orders before 18.

Whatever ... welcome home brother

41 posted on 05/13/2017 5:16:46 AM PDT by knarf (I say things that are true, I have no proof, but they're true.)
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To: Chainmail

It’s a little embarrassing to write about myself but I figured that my 50th anniversary had to be a special day.

...

I’m glad you chose to write about it.


42 posted on 05/13/2017 5:20:08 AM PDT by Moonman62 (Make America Great Again!)
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To: Chainmail

What a great story.

Thank you for sharing it.


43 posted on 05/13/2017 5:20:38 AM PDT by Vermont Lt
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To: Chainmail

Joining with so many, and thanking you very much.


44 posted on 05/13/2017 5:26:30 AM PDT by Pathfinder
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To: CIB-173RDABN

Salutes to all my fellow Vietnam vets. I remember many vivid scenes from my 413 missions flying A-4s in 68-69 as if they were yesterday. Indeed, where did that half-century go?
Semipermanent Fi.

TC


45 posted on 05/13/2017 5:31:28 AM PDT by Pentagon Leatherneck
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To: Chainmail

I read your story to four Army vets this morning over coffee. All of them veterans of combat in the Sandbox.

They and I thank you and salute your service and the sacrifice you made.

I will add - Welcome home.


46 posted on 05/13/2017 5:33:37 AM PDT by mad_as_he$$
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To: Chainmail

Thank you for your service.


47 posted on 05/13/2017 5:39:32 AM PDT by Triple (Socialism denies people the right to the fruits of their labor, and is as abhorrent as slavery)
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To: Chainmail
"It's strange, but I remember everything from my 17 months in Vietnam. I don't know why. It's a little embarrassing to write about myself"

Did you happen to meet John Kerry? Seems he was there...
Some people have no shame.

48 posted on 05/13/2017 5:45:11 AM PDT by outofsalt ( If history teaches us anything it's that history rarely teaches us anything)
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To: Chainmail

We had just gotten the M-16 and even though several hundred rounds were fired in those few seconds, that guy kept running.


I envision a gunney hopping mad screaming at a platoon for some range time for a group of gyrenes that can’t hit a guy running with a few hundred rounds. Kudos on your snap shot.


49 posted on 05/13/2017 5:45:20 AM PDT by redcatcherb412
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To: Chainmail

Thank you for sharing such a remarkable event in your life.


50 posted on 05/13/2017 5:46:15 AM PDT by Boomer One ( ToUsesn)
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To: Chainmail

God bless you and thank you.


51 posted on 05/13/2017 5:48:10 AM PDT by Skooz (Gabba Gabba we accept you we accept you one of us Gabba Gabba we accept you we accept you one of us)
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To: Chainmail

SALUTE
For your valor and great writing.
Larry
USAF Tan Son Nhut AB 70-71


52 posted on 05/13/2017 6:04:56 AM PDT by larryjohnson (FReepersonaltrainer)
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To: Chainmail
Great story, glad you made it back.
Despite 13 months on the DMZ I was never wounded, but to this day I celebrate 21 July - the day I rotated - as my second birthday.
Semper Fi ...
53 posted on 05/13/2017 6:05:33 AM PDT by oh8eleven (RVN '67-'68)
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To: Chainmail

Thank you for your service. I was born that October


54 posted on 05/13/2017 6:11:21 AM PDT by Sybeck1
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To: Chainmail

I sometimes wonder just how many Viet Nam vets are surviving just so they can pi$$ on Jane Fonda’s grave?


55 posted on 05/13/2017 6:16:33 AM PDT by CIB-173RDABN (US out of the UN, UN out of the US)
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To: Chainmail

My brother served there. My uncle, a very brave man, gave his life there. The Vietnam War was a huge waste of lives.


56 posted on 05/13/2017 6:17:54 AM PDT by tjd1454
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To: Chainmail
Lt. Graves crawled up next to me and said “I’m really sorry you’re hurt Rick, but can I have your rifle?”

Has got to be one of the best lines in the war.

57 posted on 05/13/2017 6:25:39 AM PDT by The_Republic_Of_Maine (politicians beware)
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To: Chainmail

First, we must always thank the triune God for being by your side and healing you mind, body and spirit! Through all of life’s troubles, we can hand those to him and not keep them festering in us making our and other’s life miserable. War, rape, violence, etc. are difficult for our human minds to handle alone! Thank you, Jesus!

Thank you for serving. I’ve heard personal stories from Nam vets who relied on their common sense, education, growing up with BB guns and other guns to shoot dinner, and of course prayers that got them through this war. I graduated from HS in 1972 so knew several who fought and a couple who lost their lives locally. (I remember that almost every truck at high school had two or three guns in the gun racks and the trucks were not locked!). One profound memory was when I went to a gathering with friends of about 5 guys from Nam. They brought pictures and told stories, some with a few tears, but in the end it was just being thankful they are there today and well. They would not let me see some of the pictures even though I accidently turned a page and saw a man dead. My friend’s wife put his pictures to music and a video of his helicopter medvac and it made us all cry. The real stories and the real pictures are more powerful than any movie to me!

And, yours is not fake news (!) so something amazing to read this morning. You are blessed!!...and a blessing!


58 posted on 05/13/2017 6:28:35 AM PDT by YouGoTexasGirl
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To: Chainmail
The date stopped me cold.

I got my Purple Heart, and lost my cherry, exactly 36 months later. Just north of Quang Ngai, and near Mai Lai. We took an RPG while holding at a light hover waiting for the last of six pac’s to get on board. The unit had been in contact earlier that morning and had several individuals to extract back to the 91st Evac in Chu Lai.

The RPG hit the transmission (UH-1H) just over our door gunner's shoulder. Killed six infantry and one door-gunner. The AC, myself and the Crew Chief were the only ones to get out. There was one pac that had moved just as we were being extracted some 30 minutes later, and the AC made a run to get him. Still, by the time we got to the 91st Evac in Chu Lai, he had passed.

The bird was totaled, couldn't be hooked out, and it had to be blown in place the following day. Later I heard that we had lost a second slick that day, and I believe I recall hearing that one of our Charlie Model gunships took serious damage and casualties. My memory of the events is really foggy nowadays.

I have been lurking on this site for over a decade and although I had set my self up to participate long, long ago, the politics of my job were such that I have avoided having any political affiliation on the Internet.

But your post, and the fact that I retire in four months, finally got me to make a post of my own on this site.

Your really fine narrative of your experience in ‘67 really caught my eye when I saw the date. I wish I could remember the events of that day in ‘70 as well as you do your May 13th in ‘67.

Our war was a half century ago. And I agree, we need to give prayers and support to the troops involved in today's support of our country and it's allies. Ours was a long time ago.

59 posted on 05/13/2017 6:43:52 AM PDT by ExCW2Army (How does One Hang an RPG from his Dog Tags?)
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To: Chainmail

You did good Marine, really good. I salute you every time I meet up with any PH Marine brother or other service veteran showing PH on their cover or even license plates. I was on the flightline in Danang in 67 & 68 pumping fuel and patching up ground fire holes in silver Marine C-130s. I stood very near the many stretchers with KIA Marines in body bags as they waited for Grave Registration to arrive to get them ready for their trip home. As an electrician, I wasn’t regular air crew so my Viet Nam was a basically the tarmac where our C-130s taxied in from runs to supply ordinance ( and beer) and retrieve KIA from combat bases in I Corps. I always knew there were “real” Marines out there hauling the heavy load. Thank you, Brother. I am close with about 150 veterans from all theaters and also with 50 Marine Corps League brothers and Corpsmen here in Loveland, Colorado. Wish we had you with our units here, hope we’ll be in the same unit in our final duty station. Robin - Sgt USMC


60 posted on 05/13/2017 6:43:52 AM PDT by Robin292 (document password protection for important personal data)
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