Christmas 1969 at LZ Buttons
Mike Logsdon, HHC, 2/12th Cavalry
After 8 months of duty forward I lobbied for and was detached to a new
assignment on Bien Hoa Army Base to serve as the battalion morning report clerk
between the field and headquarters. It was safe and strap. We wore starched
uniforms and shined boots and our quarters were cleaned by hooch-maids. I had
extended my DEROS and had less than 100 days to go, but I really missed my
buddies out on the LZ.
I didn’t know many clerks at Bien Hoa who had ever been to an LZ, but conversely, it seemed that all of the clerks forward had been in the field. I wrote in a letter home: “Although a lot of people think I am crazy for going up to LZ Buttons, the guys here are mostly clerks who have not gotten off the Bien Hoa base. I am more comfortable forward although I’ll be back to my M16 and flak jacket again.” So, on Christmas Day, 1969, I left the relatively safe base near Saigon and caught a log bird back to the LZ to be with my friends whom I had spent the year with.
You learn one side of guys while we were fighting our
paperwork war, but deep friendships were gained in the field and on the LZ. The
worst duty we now saw was perimeter guard, latrine detail, and the weekly
mine-sweep missions we volunteered for to get away from the HQ brass.
There was a cease fire in place and the First Cav was
experiencing unnerving calm. I remember the events of the day: a local
orphanage putting on a show for us, a Filipino band playing the stateside music
of the day, including “Dashing through the snow…” (remember, it was 100 degrees
by day), but the Christmas meal prepared by the mess hall was most memorable.
The meal was the highlight of the year and our group of
friends over the last 10 months really wanted to sit together. The mess tent
was purposely small and some of us were expected to eat in the NCO tent, so 8 of
us went to the adjacent commo area. We sat outside on 55-gallon drums of
gasoline and enjoyed the meal and being able to get together again. I’ll always
remember the Christmas Day comment that our jokester buddy made: “…a well placed
mortar could give our families something to remember for every Christmas in the
future.” But I was 23 and we all felt that we were on borrowed time, anyway.
I stayed for 3 days but avoided guard duty. Upon my
return to Bien Hoa my co-workers talked to me as if I had just come back from
the front lines. It was several weeks later, when I served as
sergeant-of-the-guard on this large installation, that I fully appreciated the
safety of Bien Hoa.
Mike Logsdon can be reached at mike@cipher100.net