THE BLACK SWAN SOCIE


T

 

 

1969
 

Summer 1969

Compared to lives that young Americans were living in Vietnam in the Summer of 1969 Woodstock and all of the wild affairs and festivals that were engaging Americans in the States seem frivolous, selfish and embarrassingly hedonistic. So, maybe at this time we should remember not Woodstock, the Atlantic City Pop Festival, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, the Grateful Dead, Joe Cocker et al. but the thousands of young anonymous men and women who were sacrificing their lives and safety for those who were skinny dipping, smoking dope, drinking to oblivion, protesting against the war in Vietnam and giving the general perception that their young peers who were engaged in the war were criminals. I'm sure if given a choice every damn one of them would have rather been wallowing in the mud at Yasgur's Farm then wallowing in the mud Vietnam.

From the late 1950s to 1969 I evolved from a instinctive and passionate accumulator of rock and roll records to an obsessed collector of records by vocal groups - Doo Wop. In 1967 I encountered an entirely different world of music. I went to college with over 2000 45 records and my roomate arrived with several hundred Lps - all by bands and singers I had never heard of including one Lp with a banana on the cover by a band named the Velvet Underground. They piqued my curiousity but they didn't replace my love for Doo Wop and soul music. By Summer of 1969 I was out of college and waiting for the inevitable - my draft notice. I got it in the Fall of 1969. But, before I was inducted an interesting thing happened. In October 1969 I gave Val Shively $30 for a 45 of the Ravens' DON'T MENTION MY NAME on Mercury. It arrived six months later while I was stationed at Ft. Jackson, S.C. Other guys were getting letters from girlfriends, wives, families, cookies and cakes - I got a record. It was a wierd, wierd thing. I was getting $93 a month from the Army and I had spent 1/3 of that on a piece of vinyl. There occurred a serious disconnect between me and the music that I had been so passionate about almost all of my life. Time would have to pass and many events would occur before I returned to Doo Wop. Years later when after not having seen Val in almost a decade I walked into his shop and nothing had changed. He looked at me as if it been a week not years since we last saw each other. And I swear we took up the conversation that we had left unfinished in 1969.

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The Summer of 1969 was a summer of major events for many Americans. Much is made of the Woodstock Festival as being a pivotal event in American cultural and musical history. As an attendee and witness to the Woodstock Festival I seem to have a different point of view then other folks about the festival, that weekend and that Summer. My experiences that weekend were colored by several factors - I had attended the Atlantic City Pop Festival two weeks prior on August 1, 2 and 3. By comparison AC Pop to Woodstock was a pleasant, wonderful weekend of music and fun. Woodstock from my pov was a weekend in a disaster zone devoid of much of the fun of AC Pop and definitely devoid of any of the pleasantness. In fact, on Saturday afternoon on August 16 after Santana played I got a ride on some guy's motorcycle back to my car in White Lake, which was a mere 10 - 12 miles away. After wolfing down some food I got my first sleep in almost 2 days and when I woke it was raining. I made a fateful decision to split and return to the Jersey shore. The fact that I had seen almost all of the bands before and that Yasgur's farm was a 10 - 12 mile stroll in the rain my decision seemed like a no brainer.

Another factor coloring my life in the Summer of 1969 was that I had received a greetings from Uncle Sam and that in a couple of months I would be wearing the uniform of the United States Army and not bell bottom jeans. When I was discharged from the Army I was a very different person then that that young man of 1969. And now 40 years later that Summer of 1969 seems like such a frivolous time when so many consequential and truly monumental things specifically the War in Vietnam were and are still overlooked by our culture's obsession with the things that were truly ancillary to our country if not our culture - music and Rock Festivals.

Now that the 40th anniversary of the Summer of 1969 is upon us I find that I have little nostalgia for that Summer. Yesterday I read the most recent issue of VFW magazine and it addressed a sobering fact about that Summer and the weekend of Woodstock - August 15 - 18, 1969.

Below is a link to the magazine and I'm reprinting it below.

    1969 MdC 1972  
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Click on the magazine cover to go to VFW website


While Woodstock Rocked, GIs Died

Tue at 1:20pm

With the 40th anniversary of the ‘60s cherished rock concert, the so-called “Sixties Generation” remembers fondly those four days in August 1969. Instead, VFW magazine commemorates the 109 Americans killed in Vietnam then.

by Richard K. Kolb


Newsweek described them as “a youthful, long-haired army, almost as large as the U.S. force in Vietnam.” One of the promoters saw what happened near Bethel (nearly 40 miles from Woodstock), N.Y., as an opportunity to “showcase” the drug culture as a “beautiful phenomenon.”

The newsmagazine wrote of “wounded hippies” sent to impromptu hospital tents. Some 400,000 of the “nation’s affluent white young” attended the “electric pot dream.” One sympathetic chronicler recently described them as “a veritable army of hippies and freaks.”

Time gushed with admiration for the tribal gathering, declaring: “It may well rank as one of the significant political and sociological events of the age.” It deplored the three deaths there—“one from an overdose of drugs [heroin], and hundreds of youths freaked out on bad trips caused by low-grade LSD.” Yet attendees exhibited a “mystical feeling for themselves as a special group,” according to the magazine’s glowing essay.

That same tribute mentioned the “meaningless war in the jungles of Southeast Asia” and quoted a commentator who said the young need “more opportunities for authentic service.”

Meanwhile, 8,429 miles around the other side of the world, 514,000 mostly young Americans were authentically serving the country that had raised them to place society over self. The casualties they sustained over those four days were genuine, yet none of the elite media outlets were praising their selflessness.

So 40 years later, let’s finally look at those 109 Americans who sacrificed their lives in Vietnam on Aug. 15, 16, 17 and 18, 1969.

An American Profile
They mirrored the population of the time. A full 92% were white (seven of whom had Spanish surnames) and 8% black. Some 67% were Protestants; 28% Catholic. A disproportionate number—more than one-third—hailed from the South. More than two-thirds were single; nearly one-third married. Not surprisingly, the vast majority (91%) were under the age of 30, with 78% between the ages of 18 and 22.

Overwhelmingly (87%), they were in the Army. Marines and airmen accounted for 8% and 4% of the deaths respectively, with sailors sustaining 1%. Again, not unexpectedly, two-thirds were infantrymen. That same proportion was lower-ranking enlisted men. Enemy action claimed 84% of their lives; non-hostile causes, 16%. The preponderance (56%) had volunteered while 43% had been drafted. One was in the National Guard.

Of the four days, Aug. 18—the last day of “peace and love” in the Catskills when the 50,000 diehards departed after the final act—was the worst for the men in Vietnam. Thirty-five of them died on that one miserable day. Many perished in the Battle of Hiep Duc (see VFW August 2008) fighting with the hard-luck Americal Division in the Que Son Mountains. In fact, 37% of all the GIs lost in this period came from this one unit.

So when you hear talk of the glories of Woodstock—the so-called “defining event of a generation”—keep in mind those 109 GIs who served nobly yet are never lauded by the illustrious spokesmen for the “Sixties Generation.”

© August 2009 VFW Magazine
www.vfw.org




110 Young Americans who died on 'Woodstock weekend' August 15 - 18, 1969

James D. Anderson 

Frank C. Armijo 

John M. Bozinski

Roger d. Brown

Daniel E. Carey

Tyrone Chatman

Ricky W. Church

Alejo Del Valle Sanchez

Chester L. Goins

Johnnie Graham, Jr.

Vincent L. Shepersky

Jacky E. Landers

Richard D. Laxson

David B. Lentz

Michael L. Lewis

Raymond Ligons

Raymond. G. Masse

Joseph W. Mitchell

Terry K. McDonnell

Earl J. Overacker

Paul Ponce

Paul M. Roberts

Ronnie Lee Robertson

Robert H. Shields II

John G. Smith

William H. Someville

James Sprinkle

Boyd L. Whitted

Tommy Joe Berrier

William K. Blackburn

George F. Bonnett

John M. Davis

Isarel Esparza

Mark W. Eveland

Jerry A. Frakes

Clifford M. Gibson

William S. Heider

Lawrence J. Humprey

Thomas D. Jones

William N. Lagrone

Rodney D. Little

Michael D. Muse

Clifford P. McCrary

Arturo A. Nazabal, Jr.

Samuel H. Pierce, Jr.

Ronald E. Shipley

Charles L. Troxel

Eugene Tucker

John E. Wibbens

Terry Lee Barr

Carl C. Bates, Jr.

Curtis Bowman

Gerald L. Caton

Kim M. Diliberto

David A. Gay

Frank A. Frangella

Gregory J. Gee

William P. Gooding

Paul R. Hopkins

Chalmers C. Humphries

James R. Hurst

Donald James, Jr.

Frederick Mezzatesta

George L. Miner

Steven M. Miotke

Ronald W. Panno

Matthew Peterson

Clifford Seals

Vernon D. Southerland

Ronald D. Tillery

Daniel R. Turner

Jayson F. Ulrich

Jay D. Webster, Jr.

Douglas W. Wilkie

Scott E. Wise

Howard C. Ard

Norman D. Auten

Donald R. Barrett

William J. Bassignani

Newton T. Bell, Jr.

Howard R. bruckner

Daniel R. Davis

Mario P. DeLeon

Stanley H. Dickerson

Robert H. Donaway

Rodney L. Engel

Robert A. Fox

Rigoberto Gomez-Diaz

Mark W. Grigsby

George A. Guy

Gary W. Harvey

Gerald A. Henry

Edwin C. Hockeberry

James G. Hodgskin, Jr.

James W. Kirksley

David Lewis

Vincent T. Masciale

Douglas C. Merrill

Vincent J. Musco

Francis McLaughlin

Robert K. Spillner

Benny B. Parker

Bobby Riddle

John C. Rodgers

Edwin J. Smolarek, Jr.

Richad W. Nelson

Thomas L. Stradtman

David R. Tibbetts

Paul W. Vanerboom, Jr.

Gary E. Young


Raymond George Masse

Specialist Four
B CO, 4TH BN, 3RD INF RGT, 11 INF BDE
Army Of The United States
15 May 1948 - 15 August 1969
West Springfield, MA


For more information about the men and women who gave their lives while serving in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War click on the Wall above.


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This is one of a series of large flyers that some guy handed out at Woodstock.



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