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Battery Stories The 1/92nd Field
Artillery |
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A Btry and Its Wings |
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We immediately set up our guns digging log holes and sandbagging. The ammo men started to put out rounds and power. There was something about this place that gave everyone a bad feeling. The Captain called me over. We tied a piece of ammo crate behind a five ton and started driving around our position. Running over the high grass, which was a good four or five feet high, this was necessary just to make Perimeter foxholes. It was a little boring but it sure beat digging in. In fact every time I passed my gun crew one of the guys gave me a dirty look; which made me enjoy my truck ride a little more. This went on for quite a while until we had a little problem. It wasn't the lack of grass but the edge of the hill. The Captain and I took a roller coaster ride about one hundred yards down the hill. After several attempts to back up the hill failed, the Captain told me to take cover while he went back up for help. It didn't take me long to realize I wasn't alone. I had a few words with the Lord and was backing that baby up the hill before the Captain got back with the men. I always had a special relationship with my CO. So I got Perimeter guard with ammo for a couple of nights. The first night the whole Battery was up sandbagging, the next day also. No fire missions. Most of the second night, was spent sandbagging, once in a while a noise on the slope. We would send off a flare, set the guns for direct fire and that would quiet things down. After all these years I still wonder why Charlie didn't try to take us that night. The next morning about sunrise with the fog hovering over the ground, an infantry Company from the 173 Airborne came in behind us walking through our position. They walked past me in single file down the hill. The fog was so thick that you could only see the men from the waist up. I wish I had said something to them, but we only gave each other a nod or a glance as they walked by. About 30 minutes later the ambush started. You could not see them, but the jungle exploded with gunfire. I started down the hill, but was ordered to hold my position. I could see a couple of jets coming in, The priest left and I never saw him again. The fire mission lasted into the next day. After a short break another one. Battery A was credited with several hundred NVA kills. Our Captain was Decorated and Transferred, Battery A received an Award From the 173rd Airborne Brigade, and orders were given to paint Airborne Wings with the Number of NVA kills on Battery A Guns. I wrote this for two reasons. 1) To tell the story of those brave men, who were murdered by the NVA, while the Politicians were making us drop leaflets and 2) So every one would know why 1/92 Battery A has Airborne Wings. ![]()
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