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Larry Jennings
Vietnam
| 510th Engineer Company
Larry Jennings' engineer unit was ordered out of Pleiku and back to the Saigon area. After a long trip that included passage on LST's, they settled in and waited. He had a short time left and he was trying to keep his head down when his buddy organized a trip to Saigon. (2:37)
Vietnam veteran Larry Jennings describes the use of Agent Orange to deprive the enemy of its hiding places. It really worked well, but in 2001, he joined the long list of personnel who had lingering effects. He also had a small shrapnel wound, for which he received no Purple Heart. (2:06)
Larry Jennings was a little older than most of the guys he served with in Vietnam and he tried to steer them away from the bad choices that they could easily make. Many of them looked up to him and took his advice, including one who didn't make it. (1:31)
Larry Jennings returned from Vietnam knowing full well what the reputation of returning veterans was. He points out that women and children die in every war and in this particular war, many of them were in the ranks of the enemy. He does have fond memories of one child, a little girl at an orphanage near his base in Pleiku. (2:17)
Larry Taylor
Vietnam
| 2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Air Cavalry Division
College wasn't in the picture, so Larry Taylor entered the draft in 1967. He only had one bit of trouble in training, but a DI's boot set him straight. (3:26)
The first thing that he noticed was the heat. Larry Taylor was assigned to the 1st Air Cavalry, and while he was getting used to the steamy climate, he made his way to Camp Evans in northern South Vietnam. There wasn't a lot of contact, but there were a lot of booby traps. (5:48)
The 1st Air Cavalry was moved to Khe San to help the Marines under siege. Larry Taylor saw two things there that he had never seen before, body bags and Marines cheering the Army. (6:50)
When Larry Taylor arrived at a mountaintop overlooking the A Shau Valley, the choppers were shaking violently because they were at the upper limit of their maximum altitude. Larry Taylor recalls that flight and the action on the ground that claimed the life of a leader he respected. (5:43)
The unit moved south after a relatively quiet time guarding an engineer unit. Larry Taylor noticed that the terrain around Quan Loi was different from where he'd been, with a lot of rubber plantations. His platoon was on on a short recon patrol when the young lieutenant decided to freelance a little, with nearly disastrous consequences. Part 1 of 2. (9:02)
The platoon heard on the radio that they were on their own, relief couldn't break through. Larry Taylor and the others had walked into an area swarming with NVA. He didn't think his chances were good but an officer from another outfit named Barry McCaffrey came to their aid. Part 2 of 2. (5:03)
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