"THE DAY `I' COMPANY DIED"
========================
The black
mountains of Chu Lai come down to the sea with rice paddies
in front of them
and then a wide area of orange sand that is covered by
lifeless bushes
that are shoulder high. The South China Sea, flat and
luke warm begins
where the land ends.
It was here on
the sand and in the bushes, and under a terrible sun, that
the United States
Marines fought a for the first in this place in Asia
called Viet Nam. They fought all day
Wednesday and into the night and
they fought again
on Thursday. Their big American tanks and armored
vehicles were
useless to them. The enemy, these little Asians in black
shirts, knocked
the armor out right away. The Marines were hit with shots
coming out of
bushes in the sand. They fought with rifles and machine
guns. When the
Viet Cong were not on the sand anymore, the Marines went
into the mud of
the paddies after them. The fighting was continuous and
the dead were
everywhere and now everybody knows that America is in a
war. The Marines
say they killed 564 Viet Cong. The Marines do not give
their own
casualties because this is war. But their dead were in the sand
Wednesday and
Thursday, waiting to be put in a box and sent home to
America. The
broken bodies of the wounded were being taken to field
hospitals. And
the rest of them, the kids of 18, 19, and in their early
20s, have had
their lives changed forever by this day on the sands and
in the mud in
front of the black mountains of Chu Lai.
"A lot of
boys came off that ship," Daniel KENDALL, 19, a
**********************
18 FUNERAL BAYONETS ***********************
By The Associated Press *
* Chu Lai, Viet Nam *
*
*
* The 18 rifles
stuck in the hot sand by their bayonets *
* cast shadows
across the ground. *
* They were
arranged in a semicircle in front of a *
* tent. A
camouflaged helmet had been placed on each rifle butt. *
* The rifles
symobolized the men of the 3rd Battalion *
* of the 3rd U.S.
Marine Regiment who died fighting at *
* Van Tuong last
Wenesday and Thursday in the biggest so far *
* in the Viet Nam war. *
* Roman Catholic
and Protestant memorial were held for them
*
* yesterday. *
**********************************************************************
lance corporal, was saying, "and a lot of men are going
back".
KENDALL is from
Boston and he is in I Company. He thinks that I Company
is the best
company in the Marines and when it was put together in
October, back at
Camp Pendelton, San Diego, they got to know each other
right away
because they all knew they had 30 montes to lives together.
And on Tuesday
afternoon, they were taken out of their tents at Da Nang
and put on a
cramped troop ship without being told where they were going,
nobody in I
Company was worried.
"We all know
what we're doing," Terry HUNTER, 22, a corporal, said.
"WE got the
smartest officers and the best non-coms and the best men,
" George
KENDLERS, who is 20, called out.
"India
Company is the best in the Marines," another one of them called
out.
"Yeah, we're
the best," the kids started to yell, and the gray ship
pulled out of Da
Nang and went into the sea.
They were given
chili and rice and cold milk. They liked the cold
milk. It was the
first they had had since coming to Viet Nam.
"They give
us this, they must have some wild operation planned for us,
" KENDLERS
said.
None of them had
been in action before, {note:see entries. Breakout,
Thunderbolt]
outside of having a few stray shots thrown at their camp.
After dinner,
they were told where they were going. They were going to
land on a beach
12 miles south of the town of Chu Lai.
"Intelligence
says a lot of Viet Cong are dug in the area," one of the
officers
said:"But this is one of the things: You must not fire a round
Or you might get
your behind blown off.
"Just
remember what you've been taught," Bruce WEBB, the company captain,
told them. "When
you're fired on, go down, then come up and shoot. Don't
just lay there.
After you shoot, move. Move even if bullets are all
around you. You
run up less casualties when you move."
They went to bed
at 9 p.m. and were up at 4 a.m. and had eggs and
pancakes for
breakfast. At 6:50 a.m., with the sun breaking over the
black mountains
in the distance. I Company came through the water and
onto the sand and bushes and it was the first
time they had ever been in
action {note:see
entries. Ops "Breakout" & "Thunderbolt"].
The Silent Women
Walking quietly,
with no talk, they went into a small cluster of filthy
huts with dirt
paths between them. They call these places villages here.
The village was
empty. On the paths leading from the village to the sand
and bushes, they
found women and children hiding. The women held their
children and
looked at the Marines and said nothing. The women knew where
the Viet Cong
were. But they would not tell the Marines. The Marines were
the enemy.
A second village
was approached. To get to it, they had to go over a
small bridge. The
front of the village was lined with bushes and
shrubbery. I
Company moved up to the bridge. They started to go across
it when one of
the bushes in front of the village moved and a machine gun
began firing from
a trench under the leaves.
The Marines and
mortars dropped into the village. They called for an air
strike. Armed
helicopters lumbered in. Swept-wing jets dove at the
village after the
helicopters moved away. When the air strike stopped,
all the bushes
began to move and there was firing both ways and then
black shirts were
climbing out of the trenches under the bushes and
running back
through the village. I Company came after them. They came
across the bridge
and into the village and Captain WEBB was taliking to
two corporals,a
radioman and runner, and they were going along one of
the trenches with
bushes over it when the booby trap exploded. It killed
the three of
them. I Company now knew what war is.
"He's not
dead," another officer kept telling them. "They're taking him
out by
helicopter. He's all right." The officer didn't want the men to
know their
commander had been killed in the first half hour of the first
action of their
lives.
"SMITH got killed"
Now they were out
into this sand with the bushes and the fire was coming
at them. Not
concentrated fire (****paper torn and creased***)
else, and all of
it coming from holes and bunkers(******************)
came through this
sand, with the bushes tearing at their hands. Every few
minutes,
MICHAELS, who was caying the radio, would hear something on it
and he' call over
to those around him.
"SMITH got
hit. He's dead.."
"SMITH."
the one near him would say. He'd turn to somebody else. "SMITH
got killed."
It would go down the line.
They moved over
three Viet Cong bodies killed by their machine guns. A
helicopter was
downed in one of the paddies in front of them. A line of
tanks and armored
were going in to get the helicopter pilots. I Company
was to go in with
them. There was a line of eight armored vehicles. The
tanks went first.
The first tank pitched through the sand and into the
mud of the paddy
and nothing happened to it.
The Viet Cong
fired at the second vehicle. It was an armored carrier, and
tried to get it
with a .57-millimeter recoilless rifle. The shot missed.
The I Company
Marines in the carrier were climbing out to fight. The
second shot from
the .57 hit and covered the carrier with black smoke and
the bodies fell
out of the black smoke and into the mud.
The water ran out
at noon. Fire was too heavy for helicopters to land with
supplies. The
Marines of I Company went through the sand with the sun
glaring at them
and the shots trying to kill them and they were licking
their lips trying
to forget about water while they fought. These stories
should be from a book about 1944. They are about 1965.
Out of a hole
In the afternoon,
a young boy popped up in front of them. He had crawled
out of a hole
which had an opening so small you could walk by it and not
notice it. He
pointed down into the hole. The boy started running. A
small hand came
out of the hole. Then a black shirtsleeve. Then a rifle.
The Viet Cong
pulled himself out and started running. The I Company
machine gunners
caught him in the middle and his body fell in two parts.
I Company dug in
for the night. There was firing all night and all
morning and
MICHAELS, the radioman, kept calling out to theones near him
the names of
buddies who were killed.
Friday, their faces orange from the sand,
their lips encrusted with it,
their eyes
bloodshot. Terry HUNTER, Daniel KENDALL, and George KENDLERS
sat in a fox hole
with their rifles and a 3.5 rocket launcher and they
were in with
another outfit because I Company was not in the battle
anymore. I
Company had been blown apart. The others who were left had
been taken back
to the beach.
"It's still
the best company in the Marines," KNDLERS said in the
foxhole. "We
just had bad luck. Up on the hill, when the captain got
killed, I wanted
to go right in. When they started shooting at me later,
I felt good. I
didn't want to be the only one who didn't get shot at."
"We're all
real good buddies," KENDALL said.
"We always
went to the Pike together."
"The Pike?
Is that a gin mill?"
"Gin mill?
No. It's an amusement park. It's got rides," HUNTER said.
"Dancing,"
KENDALL said. "You know, an amusement park."
Somewhere close,
artillery was going off. Jets screamed in the sun
overhead. They
sat with their chins down so the sand wouldn't blow into
their eyes. They
talked about an amusement park in Long Beach where young
kids go. Then
KENDALL's eyes came up and saw a guy walking towards them
from another
hole.
"What are
you, soft?" he yelled. "You'll get shot right through the ass
doing that."
The other two
looked up. They all looked the same. Three kids in a fox
hole with faces
that are very old.
[BRESLIN Aug. '65]
~~~~~~~~*************~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~*************~~~~~~~
TAKEN FROM LETTER, FROM SGT MAJ ARTHUR O. PETTY, 305727,
USMC (Ret.), DTD 18 FEB 1989, TO ED
NICHOLLS. (Wpns)
ED, THERE WERE TWO ARTICLES WRITTEN BY JIMMY
BRESLIN ABOUT "I Co.", HERE IS WHAT HE SAID IN THE LAST ARTICLE:
"'I COMPANY REVISITED'
THE HELICOPTER RIDE
FROM THE BIG BASE AT DA NANG TO CHU LAI WHERE THE AMERICANS LIVED IN THE
SAND, TAKES 40 MINUTES. THE SHIPFOLLOWS A LONG UNBROKEN STRIP OF WHITE SAND
WITH THE BLUE WATER OF THE SOUTH CHINA SEA COMING ONTO IT IN EASY WAVES, THAT HAVE WHITE DARTS ON TOP. THE
PLACE WAS MEANT TO BE PRETTY, BUT IT IS
UGLY NOW. IT IS A BEACH THAT YOU CAN
GET KILLED ON. THERE WAS A BOY OF 11 DRESSED ONLY IN WRINKLED SHORTS,
WHO WALKED UP TO A MARINE WHO WAS IN A FOXHOLE AT THE TOP OF THE BEACH. THE
BOY SHOWED HIS TEETH. THE MARINE SMILED BACK. THE
MARINE TURNED HIS
HEAD, THE BOY REACHED INTO HIS SHORTS AND TOOK OUT A HAND GRENADE
AND DROPPED IT INTO THE FOXHOLE
AND THE MARINE LOST BOTH HIS LEGS.
THE SHIP FOLLOWED THE UGLY BEACH STAYING HIGH OVER IT AND
THE MACHINE GUNNER ON THE RIGHT SIDE
SAT IN THE OPEN DOORWAY AND SLEPT WITH HIS HANDS IN HIS LAP AND HIS LEGS DANGLING IN THE WIND ALONG SIDE
OF THE SHIP.
THE AIR COMING
THROUGH THE OPEN DOORS TURNED HOT AND THE SHIP LANDED IN A SWIRL
OF WHITE SAND AND OVEN AIR. IT WAS 110 DEGREES AND WOULD GET HOTTER. A FEW
YARDS FROM THE LANDING PAD THE SAND HARDENED INTO A ROAD WHICH HAD BEEN
CUT BY EARTH MOVERS. THEY HAD "I COMPANY", 3RD BATTALION IN THIS
AREA.
A WEEK BEFORE, SOUTH
THEY CAME AS 143 YOUNG FACES. THEY WERE TRAINED TO FIGHT BUT THEYHAD NEVER
FOUGHT BEFORE [UNTRUE]. THEY CAME THROUGH THE WATER AND ONTO THE SAND AND
EVERYTHING WENT WRONG AND 15 WERE KILLED AND 54 WERE
WOUNDED. THE ONES
WHO ARE LEFT HAVE HAD THEIR LIVES CHANGED FOREVER. 'SOME WAY
TO FIGHT'
A CAPTAIN BY THE NAME OF KING FROM ANOTHER COMPANY STOPPED
HIS JEEP AND SAID THEY WERE OUT ON THE
PERIMETER AROUND THE AIRSTRIP. "WE DID SOME RUNNING AROUND LAST NIGHT", HE SAID WHILE HE
DROVE. "THE VC SENT A DOG WITH A SATCHEL CHARGE ON IT THROUGH US. THEY HAD NO
FUSE ON THE CHARGE. THEY WERE
HOPING A MARINE WOULD SHOOT THE DOG AND SET OFF THE CHARGE
AND TAKE ALOT OF US. WE WERE CHASING
THE DOG ALL OVER. SOMEBODY DOWN THE LINE FINALLY CAUGHT HIM. ISN'T THAT SOME WAY TO FIGHT?
A MILE DOWN THE ROAD, OFF INTO THE DEEP SAND, THERE WAS A
SAND BAG PILLBOX, KING STOPPED INFRONT
OF IT. "I COMPANY", HE CALLED OUT. A MARINE STUCK HIS HEAD OUT "THIS IS IT, SIR", HE SAID
'WHOS' THE COMMANDING OFFICER?' THE MARINE
SAID 'CAPTAIN RAMSEY WILL BE OUR NEW C.O., HE TAKES OVER TOMMOROW'. "REALLY?, WHAT HAPPENED TO YOUR OLD
C.O.?'. "HE WAS KILLED LAST WEDNESDAY."
THE MARINE SAID. "OH!, KING SAID. I COMPANIES ACTING
COMMANDER WAS RIGHT UP THE WALK BEHIND
HIM.
THE WALK WAS MADE OUT OF SANDBAGS NEARLY COVERED WITH SAND.
THEY WENT UP A DUNE AND DOWN THE OTHER
SIDE TO A BOWL WITH SAND DUNES ON ALL SIDES OF IT. THE FLOOR OF THE BOWL WAS A PATCH OF DIRT WITH SPARSEGRASS AND A
FEW BUSHES COMING OUT OF IT. IT WAS A
REJECT OASIS, A SIDELESS TENT WAS ON
THE GRASS.
PURNELL, THE LIEUTENANT WAS SITTING IN THE LITTLE BIT OF
SHADE GIVEN BY THE SCRUB BUSHES, HIS
GRAY T-SHIRT WAS DARK WITH SWEAT, TARNISHED DOG TAGS HUNG DOWN THE FRONT. A FATIGUE CAP WAS PULLED DOWN
OVER A SLIGHTLY FRECKLED FACE. HE SAID
HIS NAME WAS JOHN AND HE WAS 25 AND FROM OCEAN CITY, MD.
'SOME WAY TO DIE'
"HOW IS YOUR OUTFIT NOW?" HE WAS ASKED. "WAITING"
HE SAID "WAITING TO GET SOME
REPLACEMENTS. THEN WE WILL GO BACK AND DO IT ALL OVER AGAIN." ANOTHER LT., JOHN KELLY WALKED OVER [*2nd Plt Cdr].
HE WAS SHIRTLESS AND HIS BOOTS WERE
UNLACED. HE IS 25 AND COMES FROM HAVEN AVE IN N.Y. CITY. "I NEVER SAW ANY HESITATION" PURNELL SAID "NOT
ONCE". HE LOOKED UP AT KELLY, "DID YOU SEE
ANYBODY HESITATING?" "NEVER" KELLY SAID.
"THERE NEVER WAS AN INSTANCE WHERE YOU HAD TO KICK ASS TO GET GOING". PURNELL SAID "YOU
THINK YOU WOULD SEE SOME OF THAT AFTER THE WAY THEY WERE STANDING THERE WATCHING THEIR FREINDS GETTING
MANGLED SO BADLY. THERE WERE ALOT OF
HORRIBLE WOUNDS BUT THEY NEVER HESITATED."
A RECOILESS RIFLE
AND MORTARS HIT A ARMORED CARRIER I CO. TROOPS WERE ON. TEN
OF THEM FELL INTO THE SAND RIGHT AWAY DEAD OR WITH BODIES SPLIT OPEN. IT
DIDN'T STOP THE REST OF THEM. PURNELL SAID "RETURNED FIRE AND ATTACKED, THAT'S
ALL THEY KNOW HOW TO DO. CPL HUNT, MARVIN HUNTS' MEN IN HIS SQUAD
WERE KILLED. HE
HELPED CARRY THE BODIES OUT. THEN HE TOOK THE REST OF THE SQUAD,
THREE MEN AND WENT RIGHT ON. AT NIGHT HE WAITS IN THE REAR AND HERE COMES
5 VC's DRAGGING A WOUNDED MAN, THEY COME RIGHT BY HUNT IN THE DARKNESS. HE
CUTS 'EM ALL DOWN WITH AN AUTOMATIC RIFLE. SO WE DID ALL RIGHT, THAT'S
SIX RIGHT THERE.
THEY'LL GO OUT NOW" KELLEY SAID, IT WOULDN'T MEAN A THING TO
THEM AS LONG AS THEY GET A CAN OF COLD BEER. THEY DON'T COMPLAIN ABOUT A THING.
"WARM BEER IS ALL THEY SQUWAK ABOUT" PURNELL SAID.
THEY PAY FOR THEIR BEER, KELLY SAID, TWENTY CENTS A CAN,
JAPANESE BEER. BUT WE DON'T GET ICE
DELIVERED WITH IT THE BEER IS WARM AND THEY BITCH ABOUT IT. THEY ARE PAYING FOR IT. THEY ARE ENTITLED TO
YELL, THEY OUGHT TO GETIT FREE, PURNELL
SAID.
"THEY WON'T GET IT FREE", KELLEY SAID. "PEOPLE
DON'T THINK IT'S A REAL WAR YET. THE
PEOPLE", PURNELL SAID, "THE HELL WITH THE PEOPLE, THE SONS OF BITCHES. I REMEMBER THIS TV PROGRAM I SAW, IT
WAS ON BEFORE WE CAME OVER HERE. THEY
WERE INTERVIEWING SOME STUDENT AND HE SAID HE DIDN'T WANT TO COME HERE AND FIGHT BECAUSE HE HAD SIX YEARS OF
COLLEGE EDUCATION AND IF HE GOT
KILLED IT WOULD GO TO WASTE". "THAT'S A WHORE
TALIKG, NOT A MAN", KELLEY SAID. "YEAH,
BUT THEY PUT HIM ON TV", PURNELL SAID. "WHY DON'T THEY PUT SOME OF THESE KIDS ON THE TELEVISION. MAYBE PEOPLE
WILL LISTEN TO SOMEBODY LIKE THAT. " PURNELL SAID, "AND I KNOW THE
GUY ON TV CAN'T EITHER. ALL I CAN REMEMBER IS V.J. DAY AND I REMEMBER IT BECAUSE THEY HAD A BIG PARTY AT MY HOME
AND I WAS ALLOWED TO STAY UP LATE. I
WAS SIX YEARS OLD, I DON'T EVEN REMEMBER MUCH ABOUT KOREA", KELLY SAID. "WHAT THE HELL, I WAS 12 YEARS
OLD WHEN IT WAS GOING ON, IT DIDN'T
SINK IN."
THE TWO OF THEM GOT UP AND WENT TO THE TENT AND STRETCHED
OUT ON COTS.
THE REST OF I Co. WAS SPREAD OUT ON THE SAND ON THE OTHER
SIDE OF THE DUNES.
EVERYTHING IS SAND-- HERE AT THIS PLACE-- WHICH IS A BIG
BEACH--
WHERE YOU CAN GET KILLED ON SUNDAY.