LETTERS HOME--31 THROUGH 40


Letter #31
22 Jan 69 Hi everyone, Well I've received a lot of mail from you. I also received my package. It was great and those "pills" came in handy. You might as well start another one; and if you could, send me some "Instamatic 124" film. I can borrow my buddy's camera and get some flicks for ya. I hope you received the paper I sent you about Operation Taylor Common. I also received the pictures of Cheryl's new car and one of Bobby. I've got them wrapped in plastic so the rain won't wreck them. Well got to go for now, but at least you know I'm alive. Love, Paul *******************************************************************

Looking back:
"Pills"... This was a term my father used in his letters. A "Pill" to him was a mixed drink, Old Thompsons in ginger. In many of the letters he wrote to me he would say, "I'm having a few pills while I sit and write this letter." The "Pills" I continued to get in the packages were pre-mixed drinks in cans. My father always put two of these drinks in a package, usually whiskey sours. ... I think it was around this time that, one afternoon late, the word was passed that a resupply helicopter had lost its external supply load which consisted of crates of C4 explosive. 1st platoon was told to "saddle up" and prepare to be flown by helicopter into the mountains to recover the C4 that, if it got into the hands of the NVA, would help make many booby traps. I remember staring out the windows of the helicopter and seeing nothing but thick jungle cover over an endless view of mountain peaks and ravines. I had no idea how we would ever find a place to land but we did. As the helicopter descended in a steep, banking dive, a clearing came into view. And, as we neared the ground, both door gunners opened fire with their machine guns which scared the living crap out of us grunts. We thought for sure we had landed in a hot LZ; but, after we ran from the helicopter and formed a perimeter in the edge of the jungle clearing, we were told that the machine gun fire had only been precautionary, "recon by fire." We only had to go a little ways from the clearing to find the C4. Most of the crates were still in tact. We were told that if we gathered all of the crates in a hurry and prepared them to be placed in the cargo net we had with us, the helicopter would be back for the C4 and us Marines. Sounded good. We worked feverishly at gathering all the C4 scattered in the jungle. Even climbed trees to cut the old cargo net to get it down out of the trees. With our job done, we sat near the clearing waiting for the helicopter; but the word came to us that we would spend the night in the jungle and be flown out in the morning. Again, we were only a platoon; and we were all alone in a massive jungle. The enemy could easily out number us. Fortunately nothing happened during the night. The next morning the helicopter came, but the plans had changed again. The new plan was that the C4 would be lifted out, but we were to patrol back by foot to Mike Co. I remember that for most of the way, we followed a stream that in some places was no more than a puddle and in other places was up to our arm pits. When we got back to the company, we found ourselves infested with leeches, many in our groin area. We had to burn them off of each other with cigarettes. 1st platoon was not a happy bunch of Marines that day.
Paul O'Connell December1996


Letter #32
24 Jan 69 Dear Family!!! Right now it's about 7:30 in the morning. I had last watch from 5:30 to 7:30. It isn't getting dark until around 7:15 at night compared to back in October when it was dark at 6:00. In the last two days, we have discovered an enemy base camp. There was only one NVA left behind and two NVA girls. We had to kill the guy and one girl. We completely destroyed the base camp and brought the girl in as a POW. If you send me that "124" film, you'll have to enclose some stamps, as it cost 20 cents to send the film home. You can take the money out of the bank for the film and stamps. We are moving again tomorrow to Hill 226. They say this should be the end of Operation Taylor Common. Then we will go back to An Hoa for a rest, I hope. My red pen just quit on me. I guess it needs an R&R. So do I! Well got to go, but I'll write from 226. Love Paul *******************************************************************

Looking back:
The following is a story I wrote, back in the summer of 1991, after having returned to Vietnam in 1990. The story is about the enemy base camp mentioned in the letter. Even to this day, I have vivid memories of both the place and the happenings. Both can seem surrealistic at times; and yet, I know these things happened back then. "The Enemy Rest Camp" -- Shortly after Christmas, high in the mountains, beneath a mosaic of green, triple-thick canopy, we came upon bamboo huts built up on stilts with thatched roofs, scattered along one of the most beautiful mountain streams, fed by an underground spring. The ingenuity of those who had built such a camp held me in awe, as my eyes followed the long lengths of bamboo split the long way, and followed the flow of water within the bamboo aqueducts which connected each hut with a constant supply of fresh running water. One had to see it to believe. The sight was right out of Swiss Family Robinson or some other fantasy. And there were pigs, forty or more, miles from their natural habitat, roaming loose through the mountain camp. How and who had herded the pigs so far and so high into the mountains? This was the question asked. Our North Vietnamese defector, the Kit Carson scout, said we were in an enemy-base rest camp, large enough to sleep hundreds; and, although the place appeared empty except for the pigs, there most likely had been someone left behind to care for the camp. A search of the huts exposed no one, but what was discovered hanging in most were hand-crafted bird cages made from match stick thin pieces of bamboo held together by short lengths of tough jungle vine. And yet, there were no birds held captive. Caves were discovered, some natural, some tunneled by hand; and our tunnel rats went to work. Many caves had huge, oversized bamboo baskets filled to the brim with tons of uncooked rice. One cave had hundreds and hundreds of small cans, red in color, with Chinese writing imprinted upon them. Inside the cans was the worst smelling fish I had ever smelt. Another cave was filled with five hundred or more pairs of black pajamas and Ho Chi Minh sandals and another with well-seasoned caldrons and other metal pots. One cave Dillon crawled into on his hands and knees had life in it. He later told us, after the sun set and we sipped hot instant coffee from our canteen cups, how everything seemed to happen so fast, how he heard the drip of water. The drip of water and a sigh. Someone catching their breath. And then just the drip of water again until the infrared-tinted beam from his hand-held flashlight shined on two eyes in the dark and two more eyes and how the four eyes were mesmerized like animals poached in the night. And, as it always seems, the world stopped, stared, then spun faster than ever to catch up to time. As the eyes moved towards a rifle just out of arms' reach, Dillon said he fired his raised forty-five, nearly shattering his own eardrums. To us outside, being entertained by the two monkeys swinging in the trees like Tarzans, the shots sounded like explosions deep inside a West Virginia coal mine. Minutes later, two bodies were dragged out into the faint light of day, onto a worn flat slab of a rock -- the body of a girl with her mid-section, intestines everywhere, blown wide apart and a North Vietnamese colonel, possibly her lover, shot straight between the eyes. In the late afternoon, we corralled the pigs and shot them all dead. The next day we watched from a distance, from a mountain top off to the east, as the jets bombed the hell out of the camp.
Paul O'Connell January 1997


Letter #33
31 Jan 69 Dear everybody!!! Received mail yesterday and got 6 letters from you, 2 from Sharon, and one from Bobby. We moved again today, but would you believe we are on the low lands? It's like being in heaven after the mountains. But, in two or three days, we'll be back in the mountains. I've enclosed a picture. Don't worry about the bandage, it's only covering up a minor gook sore. I hope you like the picture. Steve must be at the Great Lakes freezing. If you can get his address, give it to me. Tell him not to become a corpsman because he'll come to Vietnam and be with the grunts. Well, got to go for now; but I'm still alive. I might look different in the picture, but that's because of the strain that's on you over here. Well, no worry!!! Love, Paul *******************************************************************

Looking back:
The mountains were a constant up and down, an awful grueling "hump," day in, day out. Often we slept with out feet up against a tree trunk; otherwise, we would have slipped right down the side of the mountain in our sleep. The jungle was thick; we seldom got to see the sun, even on days that it shined high overhead above the jungle canopy. Everything was damp and wet. We constantly battled land leeches and mosquitoes and feared the NVA that once again had alluded us but left enough signs that the scouts constantly said we were on the trail of thousands. Deep inside, I know I was scared out of my wits. Who wouldn't be? I remember us going back down into what I called the lowlands. Actually it was what we were told was Highway 14 or QL14. We would patrol this area for a week or so, traveling very light. We didn't even have our packs with us. Just our weapons, poncho and poncho liners, cartridge belts, and bandoleers of ammo. Our packs had been collected and placed in a cargo net and flown out by helicopter. We were, in a sense, a company-size recon unit now; and we only had two meals a day, which were LongRats - freeze dried food, light weight to carry but filling. Yet, two meals a day was not enough for the "humping" we were doing. The picture... The picture was of me cradling an M60 machine gun. I looked 12 in the picture. I had tape around one of my wrists which had been infested with gook sores. In the background was the river that supposedly separated Vietnam from Laos. To this day, my sister Cheryl says she cries when she sees this picture of me because I was so young when it was taken. When I look at the picture, I feel nothing; I have trouble even thinking that it is me who is in the picture. Steve... Again, Steve is my cousin who now had joined the Navy.
Paul O'Connell January 1997


Letter #34
5 Feb 69 Dear family! We just finished a 12-mile sweep of the Laos border, and we are now on Hill 305. The big Generals haven't decided when they are gonna end this operation, but they better hurry because we are all getting pretty tired. Kilo company has really had it bad, as 6 men drowned yesterday; and they got pinned down today and took 8 more killed and over 30 wounded. But Mike Company is doing pretty good. I have enclosed some pictures taken on Hill 500 of me and my buddy, Pellman. I'm also gonna send back the other pictures as they are starting to fade. They were great! On my next package, could you send some more booze, some devil dogs, a small jar of coffee or packets, a small jar of Nestles hot cocoa, small bottle of hot sauce, canned pudding (butterscotch), one sponge cake with canned frosting (milk chocolate), and etc. I hope it ain't too much. Getting back to the pictures; notice how skinny I am? I'll gain the weight when I get home. Also notice my tattoo? I've got two now. Well, got to go as I've got to write Sharon, Bobby, and "???" from California. It's some girl I met from Riverside, up near L.A. Love ya all, Paul *******************************************************************

Looking back:
We had traveled southwest along Highway 14 over a two or three day period. We saw the remains of old concrete bunkers and watch towers that had been built by the French. We came upon an old, rusting bulldozer, also from the French days. Before being on Highway 14, when I heard the word "highway," I envisioned a four-lane (maybe just a two-lane) highway. At best, Highway 14 was an overgrown jungle trail that followed the Son Vu Gia (Vu Gia River). On several occasions, our point element saw NVA on the other side of the Vu Gia. The sniper team would be called up while the rest of us rested in column along the trail. We would then hear the crack of rifle fire from the snipers and then wait to hear whether they had come up with a confirmed kill. It seemed that most of the time, we never heard anything definite. Some guys would say that the snipers had killed the NVA and other guys would say that they had missed. We never seemed to get straight scoop. One day, along the trail, we found some caves; and inside one of the caves was more than 100 bicycle frames -- no rims and no tires, just frames. And along a lot of the trail, the NVA had cut pieces of bamboo (maybe about 2-3 ft in length) and laid them perpendicular, one up against the next, to make the trail an "all-weather" trail. I was always intrigued by such ingenuity... The Vu Gia flowed at a very rapid speed. I remember the river varied in width. I remember when we heard about the Marines from Kilo Company drowning. They were crossing the Vu Gia with their packs on and supposedly got carried away by the current. I remember hearing all sorts of rumors about this. Some said their bodies had been recovered while others had said just the opposite, that their bodies were long gone. All we knew was that the word was being passed around that Mike Company was going to cross the Vu Gia also... Pellman was a buddy of mine from New Hampshire. We had gone through ITR together and all the other training prior to Vietnam. He had taken pictures on Hill 500, sent the film home to get it developed; and when his family sent the developed pictures back to him, he gave me one that had him and me standing next to each other along one of the trails we had cut on Hill 500. The two of us looked like skin and bones. I was jealous of Pellman in a strange way because he was with a different platoon, and the platoon he was with always seemed to see the action. What a thing to be jealous about. I remember the day his platoon got ambushed, and the pointman got shot through the head. The word was passed that this platoon was coming back into the perimeter and needed help with their KIA, so I volunteered to go and help them carry him to the LZ; and when I got to them, Pellman was there. He had been in the point element when it had gotten ambushed. I remembering asking him all sorts of question about what it was like to be caught in an ambush and what they did. I remember all he really said was that there was one short burst of AK fire, and the pointman went down; and he and a few others dragged the body of the KIA off the trail. "You didn't get to shoot back?" "At what?" Pellman said. "We never saw a thing." That is what the NVA and the mountains were all about. We never got to see a thing, but at night we could smell the NVA's fires. Cooking odors. There was a SSgt in Mike Company who use to say, "I can smell the 'Rag Man' a million miles away." He use to call the NVA the "Rag Man" or "Luke The Gook." At first, most of us couldn't pick up the scent that the SSgt was smelling; but, as time went on, at night, we all could smell the enemy... Another package, please. "Please keep me alive" is what I was saying. "Send me life." The girl from Riverside? I had met a girl from Riverside when I was in California and had suffered from "love at first sight," yet I never got her address. So, she was nothing more than a fantasy; and I needed fantasy to cope with the reality that was happening all around. As for Sharon, my girlfriend, I think it was about this time that the end was to begin...
Paul O'Connell January 1997


Letter #35
7 Feb 69 Dear Family, MEAL, COMBAT, INDIVIDUAL BEEF, W/Spiced Sauce B-1A UNIT As you can see, I've enclosed another flap off my breakfast. It wasn't too bad as there were two chocolate wafers and one can of peaches with it. Plus, I made a cup of "comoffee." It's made like coffee except you add a packet of cocoa. It's pretty tricky to make at first because ya gotta put in the right proportions, but I'm the best "comoffee" maker in my squad. Yesterday was a real cheerful day for us; in the morning around 11:00, the choppers brought in hot chow for all of us to have two helpings. We had steak, potatoes, green beans, gravy, bread, and chocolate milk. It was the first hot chow since Christmas. Then, at 1:00 pm, they brought in assorted accessories like potato sticks, corn twist, cigarettes, combs, mirrors, toothpaste, writing gear, socks, T-shirts, Bibles, and even little pen-light flashlights. Everybody pretty well got their share of the above. To top it off, at 4:00 pm, another chopper came in with beer and soda; cakes; and would you believe, ice cream? Well, they did. They brought enough ice cream in so everybody got two hoodsies. They had it packed in dry ice. Plus, we all got a piece of cake and one beer and one Pepsi. So, yesterday was pretty good. This morning everybody woke up with the shits. Pardon my language! Now, I'm gonna write a little bit to everybody: Tommy... It seems like every day you're getting stitches. You better be more careful. When I get home, I'm thinking about buying a new drum set so we can really find out how good we are. I still have the drum sticks that were sent to me and have really learned a lot of new beats and made up some of my own. Every once in awhile, I put on a show for the guys and play on tin cans. So be good and try and stay out of trouble. Marsha... Well, I heard you've become a pretty good driver. I hope you get your license in the near future. When you do, be careful; and don't take after me. Remember the speeding ticket and the accident with the good old Mustang? Let this be an example for you to drive safely. Maybe when I buy my new car, I'll let you drive it; but it might be difficult with the big engine and 4-speed. Cheryl... Well, I received a letter from Bobby the other day and wrote him yesterday. There can't be too much worry with him, as war games ain't quite as dangerous as the "War Games" (huh!) I'm participating in. I hope you like your new job as the money ($$) sounds real good. Mama & Dad... Well, I've also enclosed one dollar that we use over here. It's not gook money but a military payment certificate (MPC). I want you to draw $25 out of my bank account and give each of the kids $5 and you people $10. Make sure you do it!!!! The reason is for GP (General Principles). They use that expression a lot over here. I should know in about a week when I'll be going on R&R. When I find out, I'll have you send me most of my money. Then I'll start saving again. I say you only live once, so I'll probably spend every last penny. Well, got to go for now; but I'll write later. Love, Paul *******************************************************************

Looking back:
I had enclosed the cardboard flap from my C-Ration box. I still have it today with my letters. I still remember this particular day in Vietnam that I wrote about. All the goodies and supplies. And I remember having the feeling like we were being fattened up for the kill. Maybe this is why I wrote such an extensive letter.
Paul O'Connell 1997


Letter #36
16 Feb 69 Dear Family, Well, I've finally found a chance to write. I've received a lot of mail in the past week but haven't received the magazines you said you mailed. Well, I've finally got a chance to rest. Mike Company has moved to Hill 508 where there is a huge artillery battery. But check this out. There are twelve men from Mike Company plus 16 from Lima Company on top of Hill 1081. We are the only ones up here. The NVA can't touch us because of the way the mountain is. The only way you can get up here is by chopper. Here's a drawing of the mountain. We are where the "X" is. Well, R&R comes out in 5 days. Sure hope I get one so I can sleep for awhile. We are supposed to go into An Hoa pretty soon, but they've been saying that for months. Well, got to go for now; but at least you know I'm still alive. Love, Paul PS Haven't received the "Quincy Sun" for about a month. *******************************************************************

Looking back:
Nine days had passed since I had last had a chance to write a letter that would find its way out of Vietnam. I found no reason to write if I thought the letter wasn't going to get back to the "world." Besides, if we were captured, we didn't want to have any letters in our packs. Because of this, I burnt the mail I received from home after I read the letters over and over... The magazines I hadn't received were back in An Hoa. The Marine in charge of the mail kept them for himself -- my Playboys. I would discover this when I got back to the rear and found Playboys on the mail clerk's desk. The Playboys still had the mailing labels on them with my name. I wanted to shoot the mail clerk but others kept me from him... In the nine days that passed after our feast in the jungle, we crossed the Vu Gia again to get back on Highway 14. This second crossing was done at a narrow part of the river by going across by rope, like the "slide for life" at Parris Island. A Marine from Hawaii was the one who swam across the rapidly flowing river to get the rope to the other side and tie it off to a tree. I remember he was carried quite a ways down stream before he got to the other shore. The crossing took all day. While we waited for our chance to cross (only one man crossed at a time; what a target for the NVA, a Marine dangling from a rope), we took turns providing security for the crossing and for each other while we bathed in the river. It always felt good to get squeaky clean, yet it never seemed to last for more than a few minutes... I walked point for Mike Company when we came back up Highway 14. I no longer was carrying the PRC25 radio. I was probably frightened out of my mind yet didn't let that get in the way of staying alert. I remember walking at a very quick pace along the trail. Maybe I thought I could survive the point by coming up on the enemy real quick. Or, maybe I was so nervous that I had no say over my pace. Even to this day, having walked point for 12 "clicks" on Highway 14 is one of my claims to fame... I guess we had chanced fate and won. The patrols all up and down Highway 14, two river crossings, and my walking point back up Highway 14 to Hill 508 produced no casualties for Mike Company, but that was going to change in time... I spent one night on Hill 508, which was known as LZ Maxwell and had an artillery battery on top. When we arrived on top of LZ Maxwell and relieved what other company had been providing security for the artillery battery, we were starved. I remember the artillerymen watching us grunts eat C-rations like we were savages. Can after can after can. Mixing all types of food together. And they watched us guzzle down all sorts of water. It was so good to be in a place us grunts considered to be a safe haven... The day after arriving at LZ Maxwell, 12 Marines from Mike Company were told they were going to be lifted by helicopter to Hill 1081 known as "Table Top" or "Parker Pen Relay;" because on top of Hill 1081 was a radio relay station. I was one of those chosen. I didn't know at that time that I had really been chosen to survive Vietnam because many of those from my squad and platoon who remained back at LZ Maxwell would be dead two weeks later. Yes, surviving Vietnam had so much to do with nothing more than fate. Myself and Marines I remember by name, as Reed and Calder, and another Black Marine I can see in my mind but can't remember his name, would live to make it home, while Sergeant Thompson, Corporal Johnston, Merriweather, Christianson, Freeman, and others, whose names I either didn't know in the beginning or have lost in time, would die in the jungle... Hill 1081... I etched a diagram of Hill 1081 on a piece of paper for my family to see. It really was a "table top"-type mountain. We really did believe that no one other than us that arrived could get to the top of Hill 1081 because of the shear cliffs on all four sides that rose up from the lower mountains below us. On clear days, we had a panoramic view of all the mountains between Laos and the lowlands leading to Da Nang. We also had a great view of LZ Maxwell and the hills surrounding it that would become infested with NVA...
Paul O'Connell January 1997


Letter #37
18 Feb 69 Dear everybody!! Well, today I received the newspaper about the snow storm. I wish I could have been there. It's really starting to get hot over here; but being up on this hill, it really gets cold at night. Last night was Tet eve. To the Vietnamese it's like New Year's eve. They get drunk and smoke pot, then go out and raise hell. I haven't heard if anybody got hit last night, but we could see all the villages lit up. Today, we got resupplied. We got C-rations, fruit juices, candy, beer & soda, eggs, potatoes, chocolate milk, onions, catsup, cigarettes, and writing gear. Tomorrow we are getting sleeping jackets which are actually Banlon shirts, so we are pretty well set. I was wondering if you could send me a transistor radio. It doesn't have to be anything too expensive. They have station AFVN -- Armed Forces Vietnam, and they play pretty good music. Plus, send some extra batteries as they are hard to get over here. I want you to buy it with my money. Well people, got to go hard boil some eggs for tonight. I'll write tomorrow. Love ya all, Paul *******************************************************************

Looking back:
On the day I wrote this letter, I had been in the Marine Corps one whole year and hadn't seen snow since the day I had left for Parris Island... Some people are not aware that there was some sort of a Tet Offensive in 1969. It might not have been as dramatic as the Tet of 1968; but for those of us in Vietnam, we would be subjected to an increase in enemy activity. I get mad sometimes when I look at a history book on the Vietnam War and don't see much about what went on for fighting after the Tet of 1968. Unfortunately, a lot of fighting went on and a lot more dying... Often, Hill 1081 had blue sky and a bright sun shining down upon it, while the mountains around us of lower elevation would be cloud covered. Because of this, when the resupply helicopters couldn't descend into the clouds and deliver their external sling load of supplies, instead of taking the supplies back to An Hoa or Da Nang, they would climb up through the clouds and into the blue sky and drop the supplies with us. We were having a feast on top of Hill 1081 while those below us were starving again because of the weather... I remember it was so cold on Hill 1081 and we were so high up in the mountains that there were no mosquitoes. What a blessing! No mosquitoes and no having to douse ourselves with "bug juice," insect repellent that burnt our skin when it got on sensitive parts... I remember the nice Banlon shirts sent out to us. They kept us warm at night and made me think about home because I use to wear Banlon shirts all the time before I joined the Marines... I think I wanted a transistor radio because up on Hill 1081, the radio reception was unbelievable. In fact, we often would go inside the radio shack of Parker Pen Relay and listen to what was going on in Vietnam. This relay station seemed to know what was going on in the entire country... Hard boiled eggs... We had eggs coming out of our ears. In fact, I think one day we even had an egg fight...
Paul O'Connell January 1997


Letter #38
19 Feb 69 Dear everybody!!!! I'm in a pretty good mood today as I've finally got an R&R. The two choices that came up were Okinawa and Hawaii. I took Hawaii. Everybody says even if you're not married, you can have a lot of fun there. Plus, after four months in country, I'd go almost anywhere. You can't even imagine the strain this war puts on ya. This is what you'll have to do for me. I want you to send $400 of my money to me by a money order that has to be obtained in a post office so I can cash it in An Hoa. My R&R is from March 25-31, so I want you to mail the money on the 12th of March. I'll come out of the field about the 21st of March and go into Da Nang about the 23rd. I figure if you send the money order the 12th, I should have it by the 18th. I won't be sending money home this month as I'll put that check towards R&R also. That will give me about $540. It might seem crazy to spend all this money, but look at it this way ... when will I ever get a chance to go to Hawaii; plus, anybody who's been through what a Marine goes through deserves to go somewhere and have a good time. I'll write tomorrow. Love, Paul *******************************************************************

Looking back:
My father would write back to me how I should be careful with my money. Letter after letter after letter would be about how I could have my money stolen or loose it. It would almost seem like I was living back at home having him harp on and on. I think I remember that, originally, these R&Rs belonged to other Marines; but they were either killed or wounded or for what other reasons were not able to go on R&R. Although neither Okinawa nor Hawaii were places I really wanted to go to, like I said in the letter "I'd go almost anywhere." Yes, just the thoughts of getting out of Vietnam was an R&R in its own little way. (Actually, I wanted to go to Australia; but guys with more than four months in country were getting the choice to go to Australia. Many wanted to go to Australia because the girls were "round eyes.")
Paul O'Connell 1997


Letter #39
23 Feb 69 Hi everybody!!! I'm sure glad I'm still on Hill 1081. Last night, the NVA started their Tet offensive. They hit An Hoa, and we heard over the radio that the enemy made it across the runway and blew up an ammo dump. They also hit the main part of Mike Company and also Kilo, Lima, and India. We heard they hit Da Nang and Saigon. So, if you read anything in the newspaper about those things; don't worry, as I wasn't involved. I'm still in perfect health and unscratched. Well, got to go for now. Love, Paul *******************************************************************

Looking back:
Again, with the "Parker Pen" radio relay station on top of Hill 1081 (also known as LZ Dagger), we were able to learn all sorts of what was going on in Vietnam. It seemed like every place in Vietnam had been attacked except for us on top of Hill 1081. It reinforced in our heads that, no way could the enemy get to us. I remember we heard over the radio that Mike Company on LZ Maxwell had been mortared during the night and that the NVA had probed the defensive perimeter. I was just so glad to still be alive.
Paul O'Connell January 1997


Letter #40
26 Feb 69 Hi everybody!!! Ya probably all wondering why you haven't heard from me. Well, as you've probably heard, the gooks have been hitting all allied bases; so this kind of keeps the choppers out of the sky. Plus, we have been fogged in up here on Hill 1081. Well, Mike Company on Hill 508, has been under heavy mortar and ground attacks for the last four days. Every time a chopper tries to get in there, the gooks mortar the LZ. The gooks have hit every Marine unit in this area except for us up here. Like I said before, we are up too high for mortars, rockets, and etc. So don't worry. I haven't received any mail in the last 9 days; but, when things cool off, they'll get it out to us. Right now there are air strikes going on down in the valley. The gooks are actually only 500 yards away down in the valley. Yesterday, we all sat on the cliff and watched Mike Company on Hill 508 get mortared. They have run about 17 air strikes in the last three days, and the gooks are still down there. The bombs from the jets make holes about 100x100x100. I can't figure why they haven't got rid of the gooks, but maybe they haven't hit the right place. I've only got about 3 weeks before I go to Hawaii. I can't wait because every night one of my buddies tells me of all the fun he had and the places to go. Right now, I'm in need of a bad haircut as it's over my ears by about a half inch. It's almost like old civilian times. They'll make me cut it before I leave for R&R. I also got athletes feet on the right foot. The itching is driving me crazy, but all I can do for it is put foot powder on it. Other than that and being a little bit dirty, I'm in excellent condition. Got to be signing off for now, but I'll write later on. May God bless you all! Love, Paul PS. Call Sharon, and read her this letter as I haven't time to write. Tell her I love her! *******************************************************************

Looking back:
There was a feeling inside that I should be with the rest of Mike Company instead of up on top of Hill 1081, despite the fact men were being killed and wounded there. And yet, I also was glad I was right where I was in what seemed to be a safe place. We still believed no way could the enemy get to us. Hell, he would have had to be some sort of superhuman to scale the sides of Hill 1081. I remember the birds-eye view of the war going on beneath us. We would sit on the edge of Hill 1081 and drink coffee and watch the jets scream towards earth, then jettison their bombs and then climb back up nearly straight like a rocket. And then, every once in awhile, we would go to the radio shack and ask what the latest news was from Mike Company. We would hear of guys being killed and wounded and how the NVA continued to fight despite the heavy bombing.
Paul O'Connell January 1997


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