ALPHA COMPANY 4 / 3 11TH LIGHT INFANTRY BRIGADE

 

Home

Home1

Taps

Forever Young

Heaven's Gate

Support Our Troops

MACV_SOG

Biker Vet's

Tattoos

Alpha Roster

Field Video's

Unit Video's

Alpha Photo's 1968

Alpha Photo's 70/71

Red Cross Donut Dollies

War Doctors

Nurses"Angels of the War"

Point Man

Declassified LBJ Tapes

Waltzing Matilda

Letters Home From Vietnam

Americal Medal of Honor

Chu Lai

Heroes

USS New Jersey BB-62

E Troop 1st Cav 11th LIB

Woodstock VS Vietnam

Sharks & Minutemen

The War Dogs

The Rockpile

Purple Heart

Lost In Time

Our Family Gallery

Jim Sargent 68/69

As Told By Jim Teller

Americal Map Room

Americal Map Room Update

Vietnam Map Room

LZ'S & Fire Bases

Reunions

Kid's View

Vietnam 1945-1975

NewsStand

Stand Down

Peter Dempsey Gallery

Peter Dempsey Gallery One

Miss Kitty

Homecoming Experience's

"Back To Nam"

Dustoff

NDP

Above & Beyond

Sad Sack

Words From The Heart

Alpha Screensavers & Icon

Memorial Flags

Sitreps 67/68

Sitreps 1969

Sitreps 1970

Sitreps 1971

SGT Snuffy's Sounds

Guest Book

Webmaster

Links to other sites

 


Woodstock Values
 VS
The Values of " God's Country "


 
 
 
 
Infantryman Cyril "Rick" Rescorla, whose photo graced the cover of "We Were Soldiers Once . . . And Young," on patrol in Vietnam in 1965. He survived the war -- and was Morgan Stanley Dean Witter's security chief when he died in the Twin Towers on 9/11.

As hippies partied,
meanwhile in nam

( New York Post ) Meanwhile, 8,429 miles around the other side of the world,
514,000 mostly young Americans were authentically serving the country that had raised them to place society over self....


NEWSWEEK described them as "a youthful, longhaired army, almost as large as the US force in Vietnam". One promoter saw what happened near Bethel (nearly 40 miles from Woodstock).NY, as a opportunity to "showcase"  the drug culture as a "beautiful phenomenon".

The newsmagazine wrote of  "wounded hippies" sent to impromptu hospital tents. Some 400,000 of the "nation's affluent white young" attended the "electric pot dream". One sympathetic chronicler recently described them as "a veritable army of hippies and freaks".

Time gushed with admiration for the tribal gathering, declaring; "It may well rank as one of the significant political and sociological events of the age. " It deplored the three deaths there..."One from an overdose
of drugs(heroin)and hundreds of youths freaked out on bad trips caused by low- grade LSD. "Yet attendees exhibited a "mystical feeling for themselves as a special group," according to the magazine's glowing essay.

The same tribute mentioned the "meaningless war in the jungles of Southeast Asia"  and quoted a commentator who the young needed "more opportunities for authentic service."

 Meanwhile, 8,429 miles around the other side of the world, 514,000 mostly young Americans were authentically  serving the county that had raised them to place society over self. The casualties they sustained over those four days were genuine, yet none of the elite media outlets were praising their selflessness.

So, 40 years later, let's  finally look at those 109 Americans who sacrificed their lives  on Aug 15, 16, 17, and 18 1969.

They mirrored the population of the time. A full 92 percent were white(seven of whom had Spanish surnames), and 8 percent black. Some 67 Percent were Protestants, 28 percent Catholic.A disproportionate number...more than one third...hailed from the South. More than two-thirds were single. Nearly one-third were married. Not surprising, the vast majority (91 percent) were under the age of 30, with  78 percent between the ages of 18 and 22.

Overwhelmingly (87 percent), they were in the Army.  Marines and airmen accounted for 8 percent and 4 percent of the deaths, respectively, with sailors sustaining 1 percent.   Again, not unexpectedly, two-thirds were infantrymen.  That same proportion was lower-ranking enlisted men.  Enemy action claimed 84 percent of their lives, non hostile causes 16 percent.  The preponderance (56 percent) had volunteered, while 43 percent had been drafted.  One was in the National Guard.

Of the four days, August 18the (the last day) of "peace and love" in the Catskills when the 50,000 diehards departed after the final act) was the worst for the men in Vietnam.  Thirty-five of them died on that one miserable day.

Many perished in the Battle of Hiep Duc, fighting with the hard-luck Americal Division in the Que Son Mountains.  In fact, 37 percent of all GI's lost in this period came from this one unit.

So when you hear talk of the glories of Woodstock .......the so-called "defining event of a generation"......keep in mind those 109 GI'S who served nobly yet never lauded by the illustrious spokesmen for the "Sixties Generation".

RICHARD K. KOLB


 


WOODSTOCK  DESECRATION


 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
Woodstock
Vietnam
   
Woodstock
Vietnam
 
 

Carlton "Chuck" LeDrew
MGySgt USMC Retired
Life Member of . . .
The American Legion
Marine Corps League
Vietnam Veterans of America
Military Order of the Purple Heart
British Parachute Regiment Association
Non Commissioned Officers Association

Peter Dempsey
Alpha Company 4/3 11th LIB Americal Division


 
 

       Alpha  4/3   11th
   Light Infantry Brigade

Jungle Warriors