Тёмный

George Thomas Duggins' interview for the Veterans History Project at Atlanta History Center 

Atlanta History Center
Подписаться 8 тыс.
Просмотров 14 тыс.
50% 1

We welcome your comments on this interview at VeteransHistoryProject@AtlantaHistoryCenter.com
Catalog Number: VIS 201.0625
In this interview, George Thomas Duggins shares his memories of being in the United States Army in the Vietnam War. He reflects on his childhood, when his mother was a pediatric nurse and he explains the circumstances of his adoption. His father was a big fan of University of Kentucky sports. He chronicles his high school and college education, including sports and ROTC. He describes his first Army assignment in New Jersey including how he and his wife could visit New York City via Coast Guard boat. The post was a holding area for soldiers returning from Korea and Vietnam. Because of its location on the coast, bodies would often wash up. He remembers being trained for riot patrol after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. He describes his family’s reaction to his orders to Vietnam. As he was traveling to Vietnam, he heard President Johnson’s speech about stopping the bombing of North Vietnam. He listened to the 1968 Georgia-Florida football game on Armed Forces Radio his first night in Vietnam with incoming fire going on. He describes the difficulty in getting supplies and how he would barter with the Air Force to get things like flush toilets, trading them for Vietnamese weapons. Using the supplies, they built bathrooms, an officers’ club, an NCO club and a basketball court. He details the effects of 1969’s “Little Tet” where he witnessed bodies stacked and how it affected him. He tells of R&R with his wife in Hawaii and remembers his division commander, who made sure all his troops got hot meals and ice cream. He talks of his homecoming and subsequent family and career.

Опубликовано:

 

25 май 2020

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 11   
@geraldwilson3559
@geraldwilson3559 Год назад
Thank you for your service and sharing, Sir. Gerald.
@danmurphy4472
@danmurphy4472 2 года назад
What a Great Human Being !!......Thank You for everything SIR.
@langtyme76
@langtyme76 Год назад
My dad was in the 25th in 1968, in Cu Chi. Thank you for your service sir
@falconmoose1589
@falconmoose1589 4 года назад
Excellent....One of the best....Excellent volume and excellent questions. Thank you for your time and work.
@jimmyandkathyharrell
@jimmyandkathyharrell 3 года назад
Thank you. A true gentleman!
@richardlong8014
@richardlong8014 Год назад
Welcome home.
@almcallister6490
@almcallister6490 2 года назад
Great interview. I was at Cu Chi in the 242nd ASH at the same time Lt Duggins was there and supported 25 INF Div so was involved in a lot of the things he talked about.
@matabeleman
@matabeleman 4 года назад
nice interview..
@richardlong8014
@richardlong8014 Год назад
Everybody had a job. Some of us had more than one job. It takes an Army to support an Army. Without that support the Army falls apart. The enemy was everywhere. There were no front lines. Frequently it was safer in the boondocks than in the rear with the gear. Army Lineman cable construction long lines, Da Nang '66
@danielwitmer3242
@danielwitmer3242 5 месяцев назад
Everyone I talked too would say your statement is full of shit!
@stanpressley8136
@stanpressley8136 Год назад
Audios audio audio come guys check this stuff before posting
Далее
1❤️
00:21
Просмотров 6 млн
Randall Kusiak - Vietnam - Veterans History Project
54:28
Buzz  Sodeman
1:58:20
Просмотров 2,5 тыс.
Veterans History Project - Larry Stoneking
1:44:41
Просмотров 4,4 тыс.
Bob Anderson
3:01:40
Просмотров 10 тыс.
Mindscape Ask Me Anything, Sean Carroll | July 2021
3:49:01