Tag Archives: Vietnam War

“They have never known peace”

Donald R. Elmore, Bowling Green; Robert Michael Bradley, Bowling Green; Paul Douglas Aton, Franklin, Ky.

Donald R. Elmore, Bowling Green; Robert Michael Bradley, Bowling Green; Paul Douglas Aton, Franklin, Ky.

As I sit out here in the jungle, I have time to do a lot of thinking.  As I sit here with the Bugs and ants crawling over me, inspect the places on my legs and arms where the leeches have sucked my blood I remember how good I had it back in the world.

So wrote Charles Edward Bingham (1944-1997) of Butler County, Kentucky, in his Vietnam diary on June 27, 1968, amid notations of numbers killed and wounded, patrols, encounters with the enemy, and that day’s passwords.  As of this March 29, National Vietnam War Veterans Day, Bingham’s experience is one of dozens documented in the Manuscripts and Folklife Archives collections of WKU’s Library Special Collections.   More from 1968:

Feb. 22:  Knocked out 2 enemy bunkers, had four confirmed kills.

June 29:  Received sniper fire, one man from 3rd Plt. was killed. . . Ended up with 2 KIAs and 2 WIAs, had a bad day.

July 31:  Went out today and hauled in body of P.F. which was blown away by Viet Cong mine.

Sept. 19:  Brown was killed by booby trap while going out on ambush.

Despite these grim entries, Bingham composed a poem in which he observed of the Vietnamese:  These people have been fighting all their lives,/ They have never known peace as you and I.

And on another occasion:  For those who fight for it, Life has a flavor that the protected never know.

For more collections of letters, journals, photographs, personal narratives and oral history interviews of Vietnam War veterans, search TopSCHOLAR and KenCat.

Comments Off on “They have never known peace”

Filed under Manuscripts & Folklife Archives

#May4Matters

On the 45th anniversary of the Kent State shootings, read our 2010 blog about a Kent State professor’s letter to WKU librarian Julia Neal in the aftermath of the tragedy.

Comments Off on #May4Matters

Filed under Manuscripts & Folklife Archives

#May4Matters

Protest March

We were recently contacted by the May 4 Visitors Center at Kent State University to participate in the 45th anniversary of the Kent State shootings. According to the email WKU was one of 1250 universities and colleges that held protest demonstrations in the week that followed that Monday tragedy.  And indeed on Tuesday, May 6th WKU students joined the nationwide protest against the shootings and the escalation of the Vietnam War.   That protest began a two week sparring match between students and WKU administration. Continue reading

Comments Off on #May4Matters

Filed under University Archives

“Love, Love, Love Ken”

Moment of freedom: Ken Fleenor arrives at Clark Air Force Base, March 14, 1973; Ken and Anne Fleenor reunited.

Moment of freedom: Ken Fleenor arrives at Clark Air Force Base, March 14, 1973; Ken and Anne Fleenor reunited.

“I sometimes think of home and Western Kentucky University and possible retirement there.”  So wrote Major Kenneth R. Fleenor (1929-2010), a Bowling Green native and 1952 WKU graduate, in a letter to his wife and five children in Hampton, Virginia.  Four years earlier, on December 17, 1967, the Air Force pilot had been shot down during a combat mission over North Vietnam, seized by a mob, then beaten, tortured and starved almost to death.  After spending a few weeks at the infamous “Hanoi Hilton” prison, he had been transferred to a nearby facility nicknamed “the Zoo,” where he would spend more than five years as a prisoner of war.  When Fleenor was finally released and returned to the U.S. on March 14, 1973, he was 30 pounds underweight and permanently damaged by the physical abuse he had endured.

But Fleenor’s priority on returning, he wrote, was “strictly on reestablishing myself as husband and father to my wife and kids, and to reintegrating myself into the Air Force as an Air Force officer.”  This he did, serving at Randolph Air Force Base near San Antonio, Texas until his retirement.  He never moved back to Bowling Green, but came home to WKU on April 15, 1973, when the University celebrated “Ken Fleenor Day.”  After retiring, Fleenor went into business and held various public service positions, including mayor of Selma, Texas from 1987-1994.

The Manuscripts & Folklife Archives section of WKU’s Special Collections Library was honored last year when Fleenor’s family donated a collection of correspondence, artifacts, photos, videos and other records focusing on his military career, and in particular on his years as a prisoner in North Vietnam.  Included are letters between Fleenor (who often signed “Love, love, love Ken”), his wife Anne, his children and other family members, written over the years as they tried to support each other, manage their lives, and look forward to his freedom.  Some of the letters bear the markings of North Vietnamese censors; one of them duly noted, perhaps for propaganda purposes, a correspondent’s hopes “for an end to this terrible War.”

Click here to download a finding aid for the Kenneth Fleenor Collection and to read some of his and his family’s extraordinary letters.  For other collections about the Vietnam War, search TopSCHOLAR and KenCat.

Comments Off on “Love, Love, Love Ken”

Filed under Manuscripts & Folklife Archives