Chronology

Jan 032015
 

Photographs by Ben Loder (click on thumbnail to enlarge then scroll through all pictures)

Dec 312014
 
New Year Deck Log Post

New Year’s Post on USS ORLECK DD 886

Sunday, 1 January 1967

Moored to the HENDERSON, portside to
Berth sixteen in Long Beach, a great deal to do.

MASON is starboard, her lines smart and tight,
SOPA COMMINPAC, we’re ready to fight.

Readiness Condition is number Five,
YOKE is set , hopefully to keep us alive.

Ships present include many ships bright and clean,
Yard district craft bustling, First Fleet looking mean.

All’s well must we say on a wonderful ship,
We’re ready to steam, deploy and fight with full kit

Oh, were we in WESTPAC we would do a good job,
A victory from Commies is what we would rob.

Our men are ready, we’ve got a good crew,
We are willing to fight until we are through.

J. S. CLARK, LT, USN

Dec 292014
 

All of those speaking received a similar award.  John got his award, not because he was there, but because of what it says on the document. John and Sandy are in the middle of building their house in the State of Washington and could not come.  I wanted you all to see this.  We are so thankful for John and the hard work he did that helped us insure our history will be available for years to come for those who want to know.  The participants at the 2014 San Diego Reunion signed the back of this document for John.

Thanks John.

Check out the decklogs.

Check out the cruise books.

 

John Barrios Resolution

John Barrios Resolution

Dec 112014
 

USS ORLECK DD 886 FIELD DAYS
March 12-14, 2015
Berth: 604 North Enterprise Blvd., Lake Charles LA 70601
(1-10 Exit 31A, Lake Charles)

The USS ORLECK DD 886, one of the most decorated ships to have served after WWII, will hold its first Field Day event in Lake Charles LA on March 12 —15, 2015. We need your help and participation! Step up and be one of the heroes to save this wonderful part of American History!

ORLECK needs supporters from across the country to come to work on her. Are you a Destroyer sailor whose ship is gone but not forgotten? The ORLECK will provide you the opportunity to revisit your time aboard your ship. Did you serve on a different kind of warship or in another branch of the military? . Are you the family member of a sailor or other military member? Are you someone who is just interested in history or just wants to help? If you served during WWII, Korea, Vietnam, any of the more recent conflicts, during peacetime, or if you never served, you can help preserve her legacy! If you can’t participate in March we will be doing additional Field Days in the future. Field Days are open to anyone, young or old, male or female, who wants to come aboard and serve!

The USS ORLECK DD 886, a Gearing Class Destroyer and workhouse of the US Navy for 37 years, also served 16 years in Turkey, our NATO ally, as the TCG Yucepepe D-345. She was commissioned at the end of WWII, served gallantly in Korea where she earned four battle stars and distinguished herself as the initiator of the “Train Busters”, then went on to earn 14 battle stars in Vietnam as “Top Gun” and “Grey Ghost of the Vietnam Coast”. She was the US Naval Reserve training ship in Tacoma WA before serving as a Turkish warship engaged in Middle East actions.

ORLECK has been back in the United States for almost 15 years and opened to the public for tours and events at her current location in April 2011. She awaits your arrival to work on her and bring her back to represent her days of glory. We must share the legacy of the ORLECK and her sailors with our children and grandchildren so they will understand what you did on their behalf and in defense of the Nation and our way of life! It is also a once in a lifetime opportunity to give her a proper restoration and “Welcome Home” recognition as the Vietnam War Veteran she is. In fact, the Senate Concurrent Resolution Number 135 of the 2014 Louisiana Legislature recognized the ORLECK’s distinguished history in its entirety and named the USS ORLECK Naval Museum as the Official Vietnam Memorial Museum Ship of the State of Louisiana. Please join ORLECK’s supporters and volunteers in welcoming her home and preserving her for posterity.

Those wanting to attend but are unable to due to age, health, or other circumstances can help in many ways, not the least of which is to know, care, and pray for the efforts of our volunteers. Others can support ORLECK financially and/or with their presence at the Field Days.

Here is THE PLAN:

  • Mark your calendar! March 12-15, 2015: Field Days aboard USS ORLECK DD 886. Send a copy of this to folks in your email address book who might be interested. When you see information appear on Facebook regarding the Field Days, please share it on your personal page. Send Bob Orleck at email below any ideas or contacts that you think would be appropriate.**
  • Sign up for USS ORLECK Field Day News emails at http://www.ussorleck.com//field-days-e-mail-list-signup/ which does not commit you to anything. The emails will provide information about the field days should you decide to come or if you just want to follow the happenings.
  • Ready to Register? Fill in the on-line registration form at http://www.ussorleck.com/field-days-e-mail-list-signup/field-days-line-registration/  and submit on-line.  Then all you have to do is send your check and come to the Field Days.  (Those registering will be automatically added to the email notifications.) The Museum provided the following information on accommodations: “Currently we are able to house a maximum of 75 people aboard the ship and accommodate at least 25 more on shore if additional space is needed, for a total of 100 berthing spaces. Heads and showers are available aboard the ship as well as at the on shore accommodations. All meals will be provided aboard the ship for the volunteers.”
  • Make travel arrangements. Ok, how do you get to Lake Charles?
  • By car. Lake Charles is located in Southwest Louisiana along IH-10, approximately 30 miles East of Texas border. This is about 2 hours, 15 minutes east of Houston; one hour, 15 minutes west of Lafayette LA; two hours west of Baton Rouge LA; under 3 hours west of New Orleans; and about 4 hours south of Shreveport LA.
  • By air. Air travel to Lake Charles-LCH is by United Airlines via Houston-IAH or American Airlines via Dallas-DFW. One can also sometimes make good connections especially from the East through Lafayette-LFT. Many people find it more economical to rent a car in Houston and drive the 2 hours, 15 minutes to Lake Charles. If you fly to Lafayette and rent a car the drive to Lake Charles is about 1 hour, 15 minutes. (Please note that Houston’s other airport, Houston Hobby-HOU, is another option but American and United do not fly from Houston-Hobby to Lake Charles so you would need to drive to Lake Charles.
Nov 132014
 

The article written by Shad Olson below is reprinted by permission.

The article was inspired by his visit and that of his fiancee and her family from South Vietnam to Mt. Rushmore on the day we visited there and was interviewed by him.  That interview resulted in a video that was used on his NBC affiliated news program.   He then shared it on my Facebook page and it has been seen by so many and shared by over 60 people on their page.  Take a moment to look at that video and then read the article.  What is in the next paragraph I expressed to him after reading the article.

“What a wonderful tribute to your father-in-law. (congratulations on your marriage). What an inspiring story. What a message of triumph of good over evil. What evidence of a loving God! What a tremendous blessing Liuu was and what blessings he received. There are no coincidences. Even though I do not have photos to remember them by, I am so glad we were able to be a part of your day, to do a tiny bit to make them feel welcome, to share ice cream and tea with them. What a fine memory for me and Barb. Your writing is so powerful it brought tears to my eyes. I could feel his pain and struggles and be amazed at his resilience and faith. How much more can a man love his family than he. I can only think of one other and He is the basis for our hope in the truth.  This should be an award winning piece.

Bob”

 

On 11/6/2014 12:02 PM, Shad Olson wrote:

A Vietnamese Father’s Pilgrimage to Mount Rushmore, 40 Years After Saigon

September 27, 2014 at 4:04pm

Five minutes either way and they might never have met. If left to sheer coincidence, they probably wouldn’t have. Then again, this was no mere happenstance, but a pilgrimage of soul and destiny. A divine and urgent appointment with history, some forty years in the making. Forged of mud and blood and Napalm and memories scattered on a smoky wind, hovering above rice paddocks and misty jungle canopy. A meeting of men set in motion by the grinding wheels of obstinate forces on opposite sides of the world, generations apart. All, torn and tattered by the horror of war. Fire and gristle. Bodies, souls and hearts in need of mending. And on a clear August day in South Dakota, mended men, brought to pay respects in a place reserved for whispers and hallowed thoughts and Presidents, carved in stone.

For 74-year old Luu Van Truong of Vietnam, this visit to Mount Rushmore was no tourist’s junket, but a reverent observance of a place that for years has filled his dreams with mystery and wonder. Just days into his only journey to the United States, Luu wants to see the place where three of his eight children held their hands in the air and became U.S. citizens, I do solemnly swear. The magic place of dreams. He has heard the stories by phone and choked tears of pride on the day it happened in 2002. But twelve years later, he is here in person and wants to pay a father’s respect. Gratitude is the only righteous course for a grateful heart, and as a devout Vietnamese Catholic, Luu is grateful and obligated to a fault. Grateful not just to see the monument and the mountain, but to bask in the spangled essence of a nation where three of his eight children found lives and futures and prosperity, safely distanced from the violence and privation of their childhood in postwar Vietnam.

Grateful for a father’s sacrifice, well spent.

Even now he can see them crying. Ragged and squatting. Desperate and dirty. Eating moldy potatoes and boiled yucca root and fermented fish after the war destroyed most of his country’s rice crop and tens of thousands starved around them in the wreckage of a fractured nation.

Even now he can see them screaming. As Viet Cong enforcers hauled their beloved father away after the fall of Saigon to a filthy prison where abuse broke his body and pneumonia nearly killed him before his pitiable condition convinced his captors to send him home to die.

Even now, he can see them weeping. All of them. Five of eight children, placed on airplanes and scattered to the west. Two to Australia. Three to the United States. Propelled by a father’s stoic sacrifice and a mother’s silent hope that the agony of separation would yield better lives for them in places of free air and abundance. The truth was painful and clear. The only way to keep them all alive was to let some go away. Far away. Forever. He would have sent all eight of them if his heart could bear it. If his wife’s mind could bear it. But none of them could. Family is the world, entire. And so, three would stay. Five would go. It was all that could be done. Night after night before their departure there were too many tears for sleep. One by one he had visited their rooms, wrestling against himself and his desperate rescue and fighting the urge to beg them not to go. If they changed their minds, they could stay, he said. If they were too frightened to leave, they could stay, he said. They could go when they were older, he said. He would miss them. He would always love them. He was proud of their courage. Never forget that I love you, he said.

Yes, daddy. Yes, father. Yes, Bo.

At five o’clock morning Mass, a final prayer for covering and protection. God guard them and guide them. Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee, Amen. They understood the broken message within a father’s broken heart and felt the deep love that had shattered both. He wanted them to stay. He wanted them to go. There could be no turning back. Goodbye was the only way. America would mend the pieces and bring them together again, someday. Only in America. America. The magic place.

And finally, he was here.

Surrounded by three daughters and his American son-in-law, visiting holy ground at the Shrine of Democracy, to render sacred offering of thanks for hopes realized and prayers answered. Eight children on three continents, healthy and well-fed and smiling in their good lives of hard work and reward. All entrepreneurs and land owners, business owners and investors, laborers and housewives. Swathed in Burberry and Louis Vuitton and Rolex, Mercedes, Toyota and Land Rover. Pizza Hut and Starbucks and McDonalds and Olive Garden and Levi. Crunchy granola and warm apple pie with ice cream. The material trappings of wealth and security so far removed from their impossible beginnings in that faraway place of danger and deprivation. The freedom to pursue life and happiness and that, more abundantly. A sacrifice well spent. A father’s broken heart mended and then mended, again.

And then and there, it happened. Another appointment with history. Shadowed beneath the stoicism and stone of Washington, Jefferson, Roosevelt and Lincoln, a mended father finds himself standing and surrounded by other men. American men. Grizzled and graying. Sunburned and stalwart. Some in frayed denim and military patches. Others in leather and bandanas and faded fatigues. Fellow pilgrims on a veteran’s motorcycle reunion. They’ve heard him talking and laughing with his children. They’ve heard him speaking the musical language of a country full of memories and visions and nightmares left behind, but never forgotten.

They know he is Vietnamese. They press in.

An honorable man and children from a place where young American men went to die and their brothers returned home empty and in need of mending, too. Men, broken and mended, just like him. The American son-in-law makes introductions, all around. The youngest daughter translates. John and Tom, Marines. Bill and Don, Navy. Steve and Jerry, Infantry. Doug, Sam and Ron, Special Forces. Guys, meet Luu Van Truong. Imprisoned two years by the Viet Cong for giving help to the pro-American resistance. Battered and almost killed. So sick they let him go home. Expected him to die, but he didn’t. Sent most of his children to the western world for a better life. Hated like hell to see them leave. Loved them too much to let them stay. This is his first visit to the United States. First time to Mount Rushmore. He wanted to see the place where his children became part of America. The place where it all began. The magic place.

Even now, the father can see them crying. Pulling his wiry frame to their burly chests for hugs and tears and clapped backs. Engulfing his hand in theirs for firm handshakes and posing for photographs.

We fought for you. We honor you. We would have died for you.

Men in POW/MIA t-shirts sharing tears and stories with the miracle pneumonia man, prisoner of war, released to die by the Vietcong. Telling him they did their best for him and for his people. Telling him they would have done more, but couldn’t. Telling him where they served and how long. Telling him they had done all that they could.

Damn VC. Damn rules of engagement. Damn Agent Orange.Damn political war.  At least we made it here. At least we made it back. At least your children made it out. Five of them, you say? One-way ticket, not knowing if you’d see them again? How’d you do it? Don’t know if I could. Best father there ever was. No doubt about it. Good man. Damn right. Great man. You bet.

In that moment beneath a sunny-blue South Dakota sky they are brothers, sisters and pilgrims, one and all. Human souls welded together by the smoke and fire of helpless struggle. Rippled lives on history’s ocean, set in motion by tidal forces of ideology and crushed by the tectonic, malignant hatred of ambitious men, long dead. With leaking eyes and a voice choked to a rasping whisper, the Vietnamese father thanks the American soldiers for their service, years ago. He thanks them for their kindness, here and now. Let’s have some ice cream, he says. Maybe some iced tea or a cool drink of water. Protectors and defenders with good hearts and loving eyes. Stubborn and undimmed sojourners on a mutual journey. Time to leave. Say goodbye.

Even now, he can see them waving. Waving a hero’s farewell through tears of joy and reunion and remembrance. Goodbye, my friend. Goodbye.

We fought for you. We’d do it again. Damn right.

A mended father, freed prisoner and welcomed hero, waves back at them. Waving from the magic place of stone cathedral and humanity’s shared struggle for liberty. Waving back through years of misty history to a younger version of himself, surrounded by the smoke and fear of an evil time; a young man and refugee children scattered to the western winds and borne on silent prayers to unseen sanctuary. Ripped asunder, rescued and reunited. Safe. Secure. Serenely blessed.

Goodbye, good friends, goodbye.

The long, last, mended evidence of a father’s sacrifice, well spent.

Goodbye. Goodbye.

Goodbye.

Shad Olson

Anchor/Producer/Investigative Reporter
NewsCenter1/KNBN-TV
NBC Network Affiliated
(307) 699-7806 (c)
(605) 343-2121