Document Type
Oral History
Interviewer
Craig Day
Interview date
6-10-1999
Interview location
Lisbon Falls, Maine
Time
00:32:14
Files
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Streaming Media
Abstract
Henry “Hank” Fuller, interviewed by Craig Day at Lisbon Falls, Maine, June 10, 1999. Fuller discusses his youth in Connecticut and moving to Maine, growing up feeling patriotic and anticipating the day he would join the service, feeling “duped by the system” after serving in Vietnam, now questions authority, the divisiveness of the war, attending college for the deferment, graduating and qualifying for a commission in the Marines. He talks about his experience in Basic School, the assassinations of Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King while in Basic School, being assigned to the Third Marine Division infantry located in the northwest corner of South Vietnam a little over four months before reassignment to his tank unit, his belief that the service was just looking for bodies resulting in weak Marine Corps leaders, dealing with soldiers from McNamara’s Project 100,000, recruits with developmental delays who received low scores in cognitive aptitude, the soldiers in his platoon, losing four men at Hill 162, and the guilt he continues to feel about the eight men who were killed. Fuller speaks about arriving in Vietnam, feeling a blast of heat when the airplane door was opened, the smell of the place, the White Elephant in Da Nang, war correspondents, his first exposure to combat, leading by example to earn respect, his pride in fulfilling his duty without cracking, knowing the exact dates he knew the war was wrong, the importance of Hill 162, the physical demands of going on patrol, the U.S, strategy to only wound VC soldiers to specifically create a burden for the North Vietnamese to manage, the Vietnamese culture valuing age over youth opposed to American culture, incidents of theft from U.S. soldiers by ARVN non-coms, the Army being issued higher quality, newer weapons than the Marines who received WWII era weapons and gear, receiving outdated maps of the DMZ and stumbling across a bunker complex as a result. He talks about contracting jungle rot in his arms and the lack of basic hygiene in the field, going on R and R then returning to receive his first lieutenant’s warrant and Purple Heart on the same day, getting wounded by shrapnel from a rocket-propelled grenade, being medevacked on July 13, 1969 from Charlie Two after tearing his knee apart running for a bunker under fire, going to the Third Medical Battalion to be put in a cast and requesting to see his men again to say good-bye before being taken to Da Nang by jeep, his experiences at Yokosuka Naval Hospital and Chelsea Naval Hospital, returning home to recuperate then reporting to Buffalo, New York to spend 16-months as the casualty assistance officer being responsible for death notifications. Fuller explains suppressing his psychological pain until one Christmas season in the early 1980s when he began dreaming about Vietnam, his father’s death occurred two days before Christmas a few years earlier and the four men killed at Hill 162 happened two weeks before Christmas, the treatment he received from civilians after the war, rubbings he made at the Vietnam wall memorial, and his career as an Occupational Therapist working with disabled children. Text: 57 pp. transcript. Time: 02:04:03.
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Part 1. mfc_na4495_01A
Part 2. mfc_na4495_01B
Part 3. mfc_na4495_02A
Part 4. mfc_na4495_02B
Disciplines
Military History | Oral History | United States History
Birth date
December 14, 1945
Location
Suffield, Hartford County, Connecticut
Nation of origin
United States
Home state/Territory
Maine
Gender
Male
Ethnicity
European-American
Occupation
Occupational Therapist
Branch of service
U.S. Marine Corps
Service Unit
Third Marine Division
Dates of service
1967-1971; Vietnam, September 1968-July 1969
Date of entry
September 8, 1967
Service entry
Commissioned
Location of Service
Quảng Trị
Awards & Ribbons
Purple Heart
Wars & Conflicts
Vietnam War
Battles & Engagements
Tet, 1969
Entry Rank
O-1 2nd Lieutenant
Highest Rank
O-2 1st Lieutenant
Exit Rank
O-2 1st Lieutenant
Names
Barry Goldwater, Richard Nixon, Hubert Humphrey, Lyndon B. Johnson, Barry Goldwater, John F. Kennedy, Captain Dick Gardiner; Gerhold; Robert Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr., Reverend Abernathy, Bill Russell, Lt. [Thaddeus] Lesnick, Lt. [Ellsworth] Kramer, Mesque, Smith, Boucher, Don Hoe, Ted Kennedy, Terry Penseneau, Albert Gates, Corp. Chauncy Whiteside, Steve Dowdell, Duncan Sleigh, Eric Barnes, David Schwartz, Corporal Hine, Ron McLean, Mike Wanch, Everett Reepy, John McCain, Reagan, Saddam Hussein, Jean Sanders, Sara Fuller
Locations
Washington, D.C.; Quantico; Okinawa; Khe Sanh; Da Nang; The White Elephant; Quang Tri; Dong Ha; Mudder’s Ridge; Con Thien; Ben Hòa River; The Washout; Charlie Two; Hill 162; Leatherneck Square; Cam Lo; DMZ; Laos; Yokosuka Naval Hospital; Chappaquiddick
Headings
Vietnam War, 1961-1975; Tanks; Project 100,000; Operational rations (Military supplies); Jungle rot; Combat patrols; Rest and recreation; Military casualties; Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
Collection name
Maine Vietnam Veterans Oral History
Collection number
MF224
Item number
NA4495
Recommended Citation
Fuller, Henry, "Hank Fuller, interviewed by Craig Day, Part 3" (2023). MF087 Vietnam Veterans Oral History. 31.
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/ne_vietnam_vets/31
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