Through a veteran friend, I was recently connected up with a Vietnam era veteran of an early war period, Aviation DS company. Scott has been very generous with his archive, which provides some valuable recollections of this units operations and some superb photographic evidence, of early aircraft markings and cloth insignia. I will release this in a measured way in the coming weeks, but 1st the story of how Scott made it to Vietnam, in his own words.
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"I graduated from Fort Bragg High School in June of 1963 and enlisted in the Army a week later. I was only 17 at the time so needed a permission slip from my parents…Can’t do that any longer, need to be at least 18 now. I went to basic training at Ft. Ord, California, then around the end of August that year went to my helicopter maintenance school in Ft. Eustis, VA. I think the school was about 9 or 10 months long. Upon graduation they kept the top ten out of the class, and turned us into instructors there at the school. Viet Nam was just starting to pick up and they knew that they would need a lot of mechanics and crew chiefs so were building up their training cadre.It was fun for a while, learning how to write lesson plans, doing overhead viewgraphs for your visuals, writing tests. But after a few times teaching the turbine engine portion of the training I was getting bored. And still had about two years to go on my first enlistment. I asked a recruiter how a guy could get out of that teaching job, he said “Well son, you either finish our your enlistment, die, or you can re-enlist and pick either a duty station or an MOS change…” So after being in the Army for a year I re-enlisted for another three years and picked Viet Nam as my duty station. After all that’s where all of the helicopter action was starting to be and I wanted to be part of that. Found out that there was a maintenance company getting ready to leave for Viet Nam. So in late August I drove across Country and reported in to the 56th Transportation Company (Aircraft Direct Support) at Ft. Lewis, WA."
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"I graduated from Fort Bragg High School in June of 1963 and enlisted in the Army a week later. I was only 17 at the time so needed a permission slip from my parents…Can’t do that any longer, need to be at least 18 now. I went to basic training at Ft. Ord, California, then around the end of August that year went to my helicopter maintenance school in Ft. Eustis, VA. I think the school was about 9 or 10 months long. Upon graduation they kept the top ten out of the class, and turned us into instructors there at the school. Viet Nam was just starting to pick up and they knew that they would need a lot of mechanics and crew chiefs so were building up their training cadre.It was fun for a while, learning how to write lesson plans, doing overhead viewgraphs for your visuals, writing tests. But after a few times teaching the turbine engine portion of the training I was getting bored. And still had about two years to go on my first enlistment. I asked a recruiter how a guy could get out of that teaching job, he said “Well son, you either finish our your enlistment, die, or you can re-enlist and pick either a duty station or an MOS change…” So after being in the Army for a year I re-enlisted for another three years and picked Viet Nam as my duty station. After all that’s where all of the helicopter action was starting to be and I wanted to be part of that. Found out that there was a maintenance company getting ready to leave for Viet Nam. So in late August I drove across Country and reported in to the 56th Transportation Company (Aircraft Direct Support) at Ft. Lewis, WA."
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