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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums63 Years Ago Today, the First US Soldier Was Killed in Vietnam
Note: This OP is cross-linked in the Veterans Forum.
James T. Tom Davis was sent to the Republic of Vietnam in May 1961 with the US Army Security Agency (ASA) to pinpoint enemy radio transmitters. (Images: Davis family via Mark Raab)
In a tortured war that would eventually cost American families 58,220 of their brave sons and daughters, the very first US Army Soldier to die in ground combat was Specialist James T. Tom Davis 63 years ago today, on 22 Dec 1961.
James T. Tom Davis
A Tennessee native like Medal of Honor awardee Alvin Cullum York (immortalized by Gary cooper in the 1941 film Sergeant York), James Davis enlisted in the US Army after high school, becoming a signals intercept specialist with the Army Security Agency (ASA).
The ASA was formed in 1945 to intercept and monitor enemy and friendly radio communications (AKA SIGINT). The ASA operated covertly in Vietnam as radio research units. Coriolanus is proud to write that one of his military instructors in university served with the ASA during the Vietnam War.
Excerpt from Mark Raabs excellent article:
"The 3rd Radio Research Unit arrived at Tan Son Nhut on 13 May 1961 and was the first entire US Army unit to deploy to Vietnam. The men who got off the plane wore civilian clothes, a reflection of their secretive assignment. Previously, members of the military arrived as individuals and were placed in units after they were in-country. US personnel in Vietnam in May 1961 were assigned to Military Assistance Advisory Group-Vietnam, formed in November 1955. The US had approximately 3,000 military personnel in Vietnam at the time."
"Tracking a Viet Cong radio signal west of Saigon on 22 Dec 1961, Specialist Davis and a contingent of ten South Vietnamese soldiers headed to meet the enemy. But their vehicle struck a powerful mine, killing nine ARVN soldiers. Specialist Davis pulled his surviving ARVN driver out of the disabled truck and fired upon the attacking Viet Cong guerillas with his carbine. Some 50 feet away from the vehicle, Davis was hit by enemy fire and fell."
"The Viet Cong, no longer receiving any return fire, rushed to the wounded Davis. They shot the Soldier in the head and rifled through his pockets searching for anything valuable. The guerillas didnt recover his watch which Davis kept in his breast pocket away from his electronic devices." But Specialist Davis efforts werent in vain.
"Using fresh intelligence from the 3rd Radio Research Unit, US and ARVN personnel headed west to attack the Viet Cong at the Thieng Quang pineapple plantation in Operation Chopper on 24 Dec 1961, the first helicopter assault of the Vietnam War and the birth of the Air Cavalry."
Specialist James Tom Davis was buried in his hometown at Livingstons Good Hope Cemetery on 3 Jan 1962. On 10 Jan, less than three weeks after his death, the ASA officially named the 3rd Radio Research Units Tan Son Nhut compound Davis Station.
# # #
Endnote: During the Cold War, the late great singer Johnny Cash was also a SIGINT specialist. As a crack Morse code interceptor, he deciphered Soviet signals for USAF intelligence.
While monitoring the Soviet Morse Code chatter on 5 Mar 1953, Johnny Cash became the very first American to hear of the death of the Soviet supreme leader, Joseph Stalin. The Man in Black then relayed the important information to his superiors, a secret he wouldnt reveal for many years and the rest is history.
Sources:
https://www.historynet.com/first-us-soldier-killed-vietnam/
https://stationhypo.com/2018/02/26/johnny-cash-the-man-in-black-was-a-morse-code-intercept-operator/
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Alvin-Cullum-York
BigmanPigman
(52,356 posts)without going down a road of new information and experiences.
Last night I tried to watch "Born On The Forth Of July" and ended up researching more and more.
The film documentary Hearts And Minds makes me go ballistic in a nanosecond. I've studied the Vietnam War in my film class in 1983 and when Apocalypse Now was shown for free at sat through it twice. Coming Home and Born On The Forth Of July were also very good but the film that makes me super angry is the 1974 documentary Hearts and Minds. I took about 3 days to get through all the accounts documented on the film and it was worth it.
If you have the opportunity to watch it I recommend it.
C0RI0LANUS
(1,851 posts)During the Vietnam War, LBJ asked ex-POTUS Harry S. Truman for advice. HST advised [sic] "When they hit you, hit'em back twice as hard!!!" So LBJ did. But that was HST's Korean War experience. The only similarity between Vietnam and Korea was the enemy was Asian and Communist. The Vietnamese people were fighting for their independence from the French for 150 years and in a guerilla jungle environment. The Korean War was a battlefield that moved up and down. Moreover, the US was supporting a corrupt, brutal regime in Saigon.
electric_blue68
(18,685 posts)Been to The Wall. Beautiful, and deeply poignant.
Response to electric_blue68 (Reply #3)
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C0RI0LANUS
(1,851 posts)electric_blue68
(18,685 posts)C0RI0LANUS
(1,851 posts)I thought of the book when you mentioned 1967, that's all.
electric_blue68
(18,685 posts)Had some great Canadian on-line friends for a bunch of years.
C0RI0LANUS
(1,851 posts)electric_blue68
(18,685 posts)👍
Hekate
(95,281 posts)Rest in peace 💔
Emile
(30,780 posts)First Americans killed in the Vietnam War, July 8, 1959
On this day in 1959, Maj. Dale Ruis and Master Sgt. Chester Ovnand became the first Americans killed in the opening stages of the Vietnam War when Viet Cong guerrillas attacked a military assistance advisory group compound in Bien Hoa, 20 miles northeast of Saigon.
https://www.politico.com/story/2015/07/this-day-in-politics-july-8-1959-119804
C0RI0LANUS
(1,851 posts)The first American soldiers killed in Vietnam were Major Dale Buis and Sergeant Chester Ovnand when their compound was attacked by Viet Cong guerillas in 1959 as you pointed out.
Major Dale Buis (L) and Sergeant Chester Ovnand (R) courtesy of The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund.
The first American soldier to be killed in ground combat was Specialist James T. Tom Davis, who led a team of ARVN soldiers on an offensive operation against the enemy on this day 63 years ago (1961).
And technically the first Americans KIA in Vietnam were two CIA pilots during the French army's Battle of Dien Bien Phu in May 1954: James McGovern and Wallace Buford.
(Undated photo of James Bernard McGovern Jr)
I should have worded my OP a little better. Thanks again for the clarification.
Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_B._McGovern_Jr.
KewlKat
(5,657 posts)C0RI0LANUS
(1,851 posts)"Out of 14,395 study participants in the US, nearly 33% of their urine samples contained detectable amounts of 2,4-D."
Source:
https://www.tweaktown.com/news/84533/chemical-used-in-agent-orange-found-third-of-americans/index.html
jmowreader
(51,604 posts)The current Fort Devens is a small fenced-off area that's there to support the Army Reserve and National Guard units in New England. The building the library was in is now an office for a company that makes plastic packaging; there's a sign near the road that says what the building used to be and who Specialist Davis was.