Stories
Recollections, Pictures, Things, Remembrances, and Thoughts
Many people have written their own personal histories about their time with C 2/5 Cav. Others have sent pictures that are reminders of the way we lived. Some stories are personal, while others are professional. Please send your recollections or photos to webmaster@tallcomanche.org.
Things, Bits,
& Pieces - Daily living, and the things we used. |
Friendly
Fire - attacked by your own gunships - Dec 66 |
Amphibious
Assault Bong Son 1967 |
The Great Cherry Drink Caper - Who stole the captain's red drink? April 1967 |
A
Great Trench of Bloody Hell - Battle of Phu Ninh, Don Markham |
Battle
of March 11, 1967 - Dennis Henzi's recollection of Phu Ninh |
Letters
to Home - written by Tony Vic |
Video of
Operation Pegasus Live shots of C 2/5 Cav, April 1- 7, 1968 |
Gypsies A book by Bob Hutton's about his year with C 2/5 Cav |
The Horrible Word - written by former a medic. |
The Hill - recollections of the fire fight of December 18-20, 1968 | Battle of the Angel's Wing - recollections of helping another company which had been badly hit, March 9, 1969 |
Bodily Functions - Funny remembrance about more than toilet paper | Conduct of a Combat Assault - a description of the intricacies of a heli-borne assault | Artillerymen Who Supported Tall Comanche - Four stories by the "Red-legs" who were with us |
Hey, 28 - Where the Hell Are We? - Using airburst artillery to navigate |
Attack on NDP, June 19-21, 1969 - Remembrances by medic of a heavy attack |
Field Diary of a Medic - Photos and transcript of Doc Watson's diary |
Getting Lost at Night - guard duty in the jungle | Attack by the North Vietnamese Air Force - Bees were almost as bad as the NVA |
George Gobel - Visit with Comanche | Bravest Man I Ever Knew - Risking One's Life for Another | Cow in the Well - Funny story about helping the Vietnamese |
FO and the Cobra Pilot - 6 October 1969 |
October 4-8, 1969 - Summary of a series of firefights | Attack on FSB Ike - November 1969 | Attack on FSB Ike: A Medic's Viewpoint - November 1969 | No Man's Land - A Poem About Death and Healing |
AFVN An actual broadcast from 1971 |
The Last Days - A CO's remembrance Sept 71 - April 72 | Eddie Hancock's Surprise - a story from Veteran's Day, 1999 |
Recollections are listed chronologically.
Things,
Bits, & Pieces
A random collection of pictures of those objects we used on a daily basis.
Want to know how an Infantryman lived in the field? Pictures of gear,
Zippos, food, etc. Return to Top of Page
The Rocket's Red Glare - A Story About Friendly Fire
In Dennis Henzi's story from December, 1966, there is yet another description of war - and how it mistakes are made that sometimes add to the horror. Return to Top of Page
Amphibious
Assault
Not all operations were heli-borne. Don Jensen recounts his experience as
an FNG in May, 1967, as the company made an amphibious assault in Binh Dinh
Province. Return to Top of Page
The
Great Cherry Drink Caper
Not everything in a combat zone is life or death - sometimes it just seems that
way for the average grunt. Dennis Henzi's
funny story about swiping the captain's favorite drink should bring a laugh to anybody
who ever had to pull log duty. Return to Top of Page
Great
Trench of Bloody Hell
This article was written by Don Markham, C 2/5 Cav's commanding officer during
the battle that cost more lives than any other during Charlie Company's time in
Vietnam - the fight at Phu Ninh on March 11, 1967. The article was
published in Assembly, a magazine for alumni of the U. S. Military
Academy. Return to Top of Page.
Battle
of March 11, 1967
Dennis Henzi's recollections of Phu Ninh, the bloodiest fire fight of the war
for C 2/5 Cav. For those of you who have ever known beforehand that you were
going into a fight, you will recognize his feelings. This is a soldier's
point of view - not a commander's. Return to Top of Page.
Anthony Vicinanza (Tony Vic) collected all the letters he wrote home from the time he landed at Bien Hoa and was assigned to the 1st Cav. This is the way we thought and wrote when we were young and in combat. Return to Top of Page.
Video
- Operation Pegasus
This is actual video, originally shot by Ken
Burington on a personal 8mm film camera. There is no sound. It
begins with a fire mission by C Company's Mortar Platoon. It covers a
combat assault into LZ Tom and LZ Stud, and a fly over of both the old French
Fort and Khe Sanh. in early April, 1968. To view it, you will the free RealPlayer
plug-in.. To
see the sequenced list of shots, as well as a map of the area, go to April
1968. Return to Top of Page
The
Gypsies
Bob
Hutton served with Tall Comanche during 1968 and 1969. Drafted in
1967, he began his tour as a rifleman while C 2/5 Cav was working out of LZ
Jane, about 10 miles south of Quang Tri city in the extreme northern end of
South Vietnam, sometime in March 1968. Bob was one of the company RTOs
by the time he finished his tour in April, 1969 in Tay Ninh Province. He titled his unpublished book "Gypsies"
because C 2/5 Cav moved so much. This book is written about us by one of
us. The book is free. All those who served with the company owe it
to themselves to read this book. You may contact Bob at TallComanc@aol.com.
Return to Top of Page
The
Horrible Word
Having served as a
medic with Company C, 2/5 Cavalry, from March through December,
1968, Richard "Doc" Bovie
writes what it means to him to have been a combat medic. Most former
grunts will tell you the medics (known to everyone as "Doc") were true
heroes. Return to Top of Page
The
Hill
The story of what happened on December
18th through 20th, 1968. The primary narrator is
Bob Hutton, with some additional
comments by Richard "Doc" Bovie.
Material was also derived from the Tactical Journal 1SG Richard Soloway kept in
the field. Return to Top of Page
Battle
of the Angel's Wing: A Charlie Company Epilogue
Jay Phillips was the Squad Leader of
1st Squad, 1st Platoon. In this story, Jay relates
how it was to move at night to the rescue of two platoons of Company B, 2/5 Cav,
after they were overrun by NVA troops just a stone's throw from the Cambodian
border. Most of the story is Jay's own recollection, but he meshes it
closely with the official Combat After Action Report prepared by the 14th
Military History Detachment of the 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile) Return to Top of Page
Bodily
Functions
Only a medic would think to write this story! Richard
"Doc" Bovie describes very well how some of the "less
dainty" aspects of life are handled by the grunt. "Doc"
Bovie served with C 2/5 Cavalry from March 1968 to March 1969. Return
to Top of Page
The
Conduct of a Combat Assault
Doug
Young was with Company C 2/5 Cav from April to August, 1969. In
this article he describes the complex operation known as the Charlie Alpha, or
heli-borne combat assault. Please be patient while this story downloads to
your computer - it is a long file. If you have additional information,
please contact Doug at Comanche6@gmail.com.
Artillerymen
Who Supported Tall Comanche
This collection of four stories, each written by an artilleryman who humped the
weeds with us, is written from the standpoint of what it was like to be a
grunt with an artillery MOS. Charlie
Dickey (1969-70), Doug
Hendrixson (1969) and Dan Bertram (1969)
all contributed to this article. If you're a former C 2/5 Cav grunt - you
must read this article. Please be patient while this story downloads to
your computer - it is a long file. Return to Top of Page
Hey, 28. Where the Hell Are We?
Doug Hendrixson was one of the artillery forward observers attached to C 2/5 Cav. Knowing the company commander, CPT Douglas Young, couldn't navigate his way to the bathroom of his own house, Hendrixson describes how air-burst artillery was used to keep from being lost in the jungles of Tay Ninh Province in 1969. Return to Top of Page
Attack on an NDP, June 19-21, 1969
Jerry "Doc" Watson was the Senior Medic on the night when C 2/5 Cav was collocated with B Company, and suffered a horrific mortar and B-40 attack that left three troopers dead, and many others wounded. Of particular interest is the story about the severely wounded 3rd Platoon Leader. Return to Top of Page
Photos and transcript of a diary Jerry "Doc" Watson kept from May 23rd, 1969, until August 7th, 1969, when he was wounded. Return to Top of Page
Getting
Lost at Night
A short story by Mike Hayes telling of
pulling guard while in the perimeter at night in the deep jungle of Tay Ninh
Province in June, 1969. But this story almost had a tragic ending.
Return to Top of Page
Attack of the North Vietnamese Air Force
Not really! But Jerry "Doc" Watson's account of a bee attack in 1969 made it seem as though the bees were part of the NVA. Return to Top of Page
George
Gobel visits Comanche
In July of 1969, comedian George Gobel went all the way out to LZ Mary to visit
the troops. Mike Hayes recalls the
story. Return to Top of Page
SFC Miguel "Pepe" Calzada was a true hero, and Charlie Dickey pays tribute to this soldier's soldier who risked his life for Charlie in October, 1969, when Charlie got hung up in a trip wire. Return to Top of Page
The
Cow in the Well
Not all Vietnam
stories are guts and glory. Terry
Black tells this story of how his platoon saved a cow that had fallen in a
well in August or September, 1969, in III Corps. Return
to Top of Page
A
Few Minutes in the Life of a Forward Observer and a Cobra Pilot
Charlie Dickey was a Recon Sergeant with Battery A, 1/77th
Artillery, and was attached to C 2/5 Cav. Charlie's job was to direct artillery
fire - both tube artillery and the Aerial Rocket Artillery from the 2nd
Battalion, 20th Artillery - the famous Blue Max. This
amazing story takes place on October 6th, 1969, but the culmination
comes about many years later when Charlie found the Cobra pilot who saved his
life. Return
to Top of Page
October
4-8, 1969
Charlie Dickey wrote this article, with input from Mike
Hayes, Dan Bertram, Don Bongle, and Brian Phipps. It recounts a series of
inter-related firefights. It is interesting in that it does more than
merely recount firefights - it tells of all the other things that go on during a
fight, such as the overwhelming thirst, and having to wait inline to be
Medevac'd. Return
to Top of Page
Attack
on FSB Ike
C 2/5 Cav built LZ Ike in April 1969.
It was such an irritant to the NVA that it was attacked three times. In
this story, Dan Bertram recounts his
personal recollections of the events of that last major attack on Ike in November,
1969. Dan served as the Forward Observer attached to Comanche from
Battery A, 1/77th Artillery. Return
to Top of Page
Attack
on FSB Ike: A Medic's Viewpoint
Vance "Doc" Gifford had been with the 2nd Battalion 5th Cavalry for
all of two days when FSB Ike was hit in November, 1969. He treated some of
Charlie Company's wounded and saw the carnage around him. Return
to Top of Page
Robert "Indian" Lisenby walked point with Charlie Company in 1970. Like other point men, he was often the first to meet the enemy. Like many of us, he has been haunted by his experiences. He found release through talking about those experiences with others, by faith in God, and by writing this poem. Return to Top of Page
Armed
Forces Vietnam Network
This thirty minute recording of an AFVN show was
taped in October of 1970. Courtesy of Jeff
Wilhoit, grunt and RTO with
Company A , 3rd Battalion, 1st Infantry, 11th
Infantry Brigade, Americal Division. To listen, you will need the free RealPlayer
plug-in.
Return to Top of Page
The
Last Days
Dolf Carlson was the last commanding
officer of C 2/5 Cav in Vietnam. In this piece, Dolf recalls what is was
like from the time he assumed command in September 1971 until he took the guidon
back to Ft. Hood, Texas, in April 1972. Dolf pays tribute to the last KIA
suffered by the company, and recalls the poignant memory of hearing of the fall
of Saigon in 1975. This is a long file - have patience while it
downloads. Return to Top of Page
Eddie
Hancock's Surprise in the Newspaper
Eddie
Hancock had quite a surprise gift on Veteran's Day, 1999. The Tampa
Tribune wrote a story about the gift. Return
to Top of Page
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Updated September 03, 2006