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A day that I will remember for my entire life started on the morning of June 16,1967. 1st Platoon, Alpha Company was on
a search and destroy mission in the Mekong Delta in South Vietnam; we were searching for enemy activity in the area and
we were traveling up small river canals in fiberglass boats with ten to twelve men in each boat. While patrolling one small
canal, we spotted two Viet Cong who quickly ran into the jungle for cover. Our Platoon Leader, Lieutenant Phillip O.
ZumMallen, directed us to go ashore and he selected me to take point and lead our men into the thick jungle brush to
locate the enemy. I started to work my way forward watching for booby traps and any signs of a Viet Cong hamlet - it
didn't take long before I spotted an enemy bunker in right in front of me about 20 yards away and some straw huts were
partially visible. I immediately warned my buddies of the situation as I dropped to a prone position while the rest of the men came up to get on line with me.
I had fixed my rifle sights on the bunker and waited for the men to position themselves to conduct a sweep of the enemy
encampment. Suddenly, a booby trap was tripped by a soldier 10 feet away from me - the explosion sent shrapnel into my
face narrowly missing my right eye... I was completely dazed by the loud explosion and pain in my face. Our medic
promptly scrambled up to bandage my wound and help me back to the river bank to be airlifted to a hospital in Vung Tau.
As I was loaded onto a medi-evac helicopter, I then realized that my pal, Joesph Hammac, had been killed by that explosion
and Keith Menefee's foot was hit by shrapnel. A few days later, while in the hospital, many of my fellow Alpha Company
troopers had been wounded in another fire fight and they began arriving - I learned that our Battalion was involved in a big battle near Ap Bac Village that would not only change our lives forever but would live in all our
memories of serving together in Vietnam for the rest of our lives. Alpha Company lost 32 men killed in action, including my Platoon Leader, Lt. ZumMallen, and many more were wounded. That day was June 19, 1967.
Jim Callan Alpha Company, 4th/47th May 1966 to January 1968
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