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Subject Topic: Vietnam Memorial - ’The Wall That Heals’
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RW
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Posted: June-04-2009 at 9:55pm | IP Logged Quote RW  

I'd like to strongly encourage everyone who can to visit the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall that's on display here in Johnson City, June 4-7, on the grounds of Science Hill High School at the Liberty Bell Track, located beside Freedom Hall Civic Center.
 
I'd wanted to see "The Wall That Heals" for many years that's located in Washington, D.C., but I've never made it up there. My cousin's have been to Washington, D.C. to visit the wall to see their father's name and all the others who were killed in Vietnam engraved on the wall. I was really excited to hear recently the wall would be on display here in Johnson City.
 
One of my uncle's (Andrew Earl Jenkins, who was born Feb. 10, 1930 in Maryville), my mother's oldest of her two brother's, unfortunately he was killed on his third tour of duty in Vietnam. Uncle Andrew's third tour date began on Feb. 19, 1969 and he was killed Apri 14, 1969. He and my mother and their other brother were very close, as their mother had passed away when my mother's youngest brother was born.
 
I'll never forget when my uncle got killed in Vietnam. In the middle of the night, my mother woke my dad and my sister and I up in the house, she was screaming and crying, saying "Andrew's been killed, Andrew's been killed!" The next morning as we all got up, for my dad to go to work and my sister and I to go to school, my mother was just beside herself. That afternoon when my sister and I came walking home from our neighborhood school, a military vehicle was in our driveway. They were at our house to deliver the news my uncle had been killed in Vietnam.
 
I'm sure some have seen the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall, but if you've haven't, do try to visit "The Wall That Heals" that's on display in Johnson City through this Sunday.
 
I hope no one is offended by what I've posted. But visiting "The Wall That Heals" earlier this evening was really something special for me. It's just hard to put into words the feeling I felt when seeing my uncle's name engraved on the wall. And not just my uncle's name, but ALL of the names.
 
Even though I was only 11 years old when my uncle got killed, I always loved getting to visit with him and my aunt and cousin's when I was young. He was a good man, a proud American!!! He served his country. I remember how cool it was when I was young getting to visit Uncle Andrew and family when he was stationed at Paris Island, S.C., and also over at Cherry Point, N.C. Getting to go on the base and see what Marine Corps life was all about, it was an eye-opening experience for a young boy.
__________________________________

Searches begin as ‘Wall’ opens

By Rex Barber
Press Staff Writer
rbarber@johnsoncitypress.com

Roy H. Ferguson has 54 names to find on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.

He has been to the memorial in Washington three times and still hasn’t seen them all. He continued his mission Thursday morning as “The Wall That Heals” opened at the Liberty Bell Track near Freedom Hall Civic Center. Ferguson, a Marine Corps sergeant who served in Vietnam from 1964-66, has only recently been able to speak about his experiences.

The memorial has helped in that.

“I’ve been there three times. I still haven’t got it finished,” he said, pausing to compose himself. “I have to leave. I can’t handle it. I left 54 of them on the ground over there.”

Ferguson, who lives in Fall Branch, served with the 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marines, Hotel Company and Delta Company 19, also known as “The Walking Dead.”

“I want to say that (they’re) one hell of a bunch of Marines,” Ferguson said pointing to the traveling memorial and choking up. “The others too. They were brave. They were fighters. And when we went we all went as one. We can’t say enough for them. We can’t do enough for them.”

The wall on display at Liberty Bell Track is an exact half-scale replica of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. Inscribed on the memorial are the names of the more than 58,000 Americans who died during the Vietnam War or remain missing in action. The traveling memorial opened officially at 10 a.m. Thursday with an Air Force fly over, music, ceremony and speeches. Johnson City Mayor Jane Myron read a proclamation declaring the first week of June Vietnam Veterans Week in the city.

Bobby Bates served in the Air Force in Vietnam. He knows a man on the wall – Gary A. Curtis. Bates went to Science Hill High School with him. In fact, the two men sat near each other all through school because their names were close together in the alphabet.

Bates said Curtis volunteered for the job of being lowered into a tunnel to check for the enemy one day. He was shot in the gut. His fellow soldiers hauled him back up. Curtis died in his captain’s arms.

“I loved him as a friend, you know,” Bates said. “For him to do what he did I think is a sign of courage and bravery and respect for your fellow man.”

Maurice L. Webb, a Vietnam veteran who served as a gunner in the Navy, could never get to Washington to see the original memorial, so he was glad to visit the traveling version. He said even though he was a sailor, the closest he ever got to the coast of Vietnam was about 80 yards once near Da Nang.

Webb was a “brown water” sailor, he said. He and his team fired more than 10,000 50-pound projectiles at enemy positions for Marine Corps units. He knows three soldiers on the memorial. James Tart, Gary Carter and Eddie Reed were the names he was seeking Thursday.

Webb said he thought of his time in Vietnam during the Tet offensive of 1968 while looking for his comrades’ names.

“I knew them from the time they was in the first grade, especially James Tart and Eddie Reed,” he said. “They was pretty outgoing, friendly, very well liked.”

The Liberty Bell Track was crowded with several hundred visitors Thursday. Tens of thousands are expected throughout the weekend.

“For the next four days this will be sacred ground,” said Rolling Thunder Chapter 4 President Doug Grissom. “We hope that it will help the Vietnam veterans and their families heal.”

Grissom said the wall’s presence also is a chance to educate children on the sacrifices made during the war and on history not taught in school.

Rose Marie Whisnant brought her daughter and her next-door neighbor for that educational experience.

“The wall represents the veterans who have given their lives to protect our country,” Whisnant said.” And I have a daughter, Emma Grace Whisnant, whose father is a veteran. And I wanted her to understand what it means to have a family member, father, who is a veteran and what that signifies.”

Whisnant does not know anyone on the wall but thinks it will instill pride in her daughter and other children.

“I think it’s made an impression on them,” she said. “They may not fully understand everything that this signifies, but I believe that God has a plan and a purpose for everything. And that from today seeds have been planted that will be meaningful to them later on.”

The memorial is free and open 24 hours a day until Sunday night.

A visitor looks for a special name on the Wall.  (Ron Campbell / Johnson City Press photo) 

 

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Posted: June-04-2009 at 10:02pm | IP Logged Quote RW  

I made some pictures this (Thursday) evening while up at Liberty Bell Track beside Freedom Hall Civic Center viewing "The Wall That Heals" and my uncle's (Andrew E. Jenkins) name is visible on this panel.
 
It's really an awesome sight, seeing the wall illuminated by lights after dark. Each night at 8 p.m. Taps is played.

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Posted: June-05-2009 at 4:12am | IP Logged Quote WOOWOO  

"GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN"

 



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Thats LIFE!!! Get over it and get on with it!!!
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Posted: June-09-2009 at 12:07am | IP Logged Quote RW  

Wall draws more than 20,000 and sets donation record

By Rex Barber
Press Staff Writer
rbarber@johnsoncitypress.com

Tens of thousands of visitors came to “The Wall That Heals” this past week.

A traveling half-scale replica of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C, bearing the names of the more than 58,0000 Americans killed or missing in action in Vietnam between 1959 and 1975, the memorial was open 24 hours a day to the public from Thursday until Sunday.

Richard “Gunny” Lyons, site manager for the traveling memorial, said the Johnson City visit, a first for the region, was a huge success.

“It’s the biggest one for this year,” Lyons said as volunteers packed up the wall’s panels Monday morning. “It’s the biggest one I’ve ever done.”

More than 20,000 visitors came out to the memorial, giving more than $13,000 to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund.

“You all put them to shame,” Lyons said comparing this visit to others he has done across the nation. “They can’t come close to Johnson City and the people of Tennessee. This is more than double of what ... I have done.”

Medals, flags, letters and other items were left at the wall. Each item will be given to the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Mountain Home, veterans museum for safekeeping and permanent display, Lyons said.

“It was great,” he said. “The people came. The tears were shed. The wounds were healed. The memories were brought back.”

Skip Church, chairman of the committee that arranged for the memorial’s visit, wanted to thank the hundreds of volunteers and area businesses that donated goods, services, time and money to the memorial’s visit.

“There were so many organizations involved,” Church said. “It wasn’t just one or two organizations involved, and that’s the reason for its success.”

Healing the mental wounds veterans received in Vietnam, though, was not the only purpose the memorial served. Randy Lingerfelt, veterans benefit representative for the Department of Veterans Affairs, said the memorial allowed him to meet veterans and their families and explain benefits they were due and never knew about.

Lingerfelt works out of Mountain Home and had a station set up during the four days the memorial was here.

“A lot of the veterans don’t want to go to a structured environment and I had more veterans come up and talk to me one-on-one because they felt comfortable from not being in a facility,” he said. “Instead they were out here, and they really enjoyed that.”

Sam Fann, a Vietnam veteran and director of The Manna House in Johnson City, volunteered to help with the memorial because it would help so many other veterans who could not travel to Washington to see the names of fellow soldiers who never made it back from Vietnam.

“I had more people say how they really appreciated us bringing the wall here because they would never be able to make it to Washington,” Fann said.

It will be at least three years before the memorial will return. However, plans are being made to honor Vietnam veterans each June, said Sandra Richardson, spokeswoman for the local chapter of POW/MIA advocacy group Rolling Thunder.

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Posted: June-09-2009 at 12:12am | IP Logged Quote RW  

Visitors to the 'Wall That Heals' get a final look before closing ceremonies Sunday afternoon.  (Brian Bishop / Johnson City Press)

Volunteers dismantle “The Wall That Heals” on Monday morning at the Liberty Bell track.  (Rex Barber / Johnson City Press)

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Posted: June-09-2009 at 12:20am | IP Logged Quote RW  

I definitely hope some of you that live in East Tennessee, Southwest Virginia and Western North Carolina visited "The Wall That Heals" while it was on display here in Johnson City.

I'm really glad to hear how well-attended the showing was. I'm telling you, it was something to see. It's hard to describe how I felt when looking at ALL the names engraved on the panels, knowing that each name represented someone who died. Over 58,000 names, to be exact.

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