logo
Local veteran looks back to Vietnam War on 50th anniversary

Local veteran looks back to Vietnam War on 50th anniversary

Yahoo30-03-2025

The Brief
A local veteran looked back on her time serving in the Vietnam War on the 50th anniversary of the end of the war.
Now Linda Pugsley volunteers as a chaplain to treat mental, emotional and spiritual wounds.
Saturday was the annual Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans & War Dogs Remembrance event at Veterans Memorial Park.
TAMPA - On the 50th Anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War, a local veteran flight nurse shared her experience serving in the Airforce.
Hillsborough County resident Linda Pugsley tended to physical wounds in combat. She said, "Total life-altering damage to their bodies, and it was like, woah."
Now Pugsley volunteers as a chaplain to treat mental, emotional and spiritual wounds. In her early 20s, she worked as a trauma nurse at a Boston-area hospital when she joined the military.
She said, "I was just 21-years-old, and then I joined the reserves as a flight nurse." Pugsley served two tours in Vietnam. "'68 through '69. We got over there about May or June. And then I went back in January '72," she said, "We just did the keep them alive, stop their bleeding, keep them breathing, and put them either to Yokota Airbase in Japan or Clark Airbase in the Philippines."
Saturday marked 50 years since the last American troops left South Vietnam.
Big picture view
Pugsley said her feelings about her time serving are complicated. "What was that all about? I think the disturbing part for those of us in Vietnam. Well, over 58,000 died," she explained, We didn't conquer the enemy. Why did we go?"
She said the Vietnam War was a difficult one for many reasons. She said, "We were stuck in the middle of politics."
And when she returned home, there was a lot to unpack. She explained, "It's kind of like a double whammy. You go through the trauma of war and all of what you had to give up and go through over there.
Many of them lost their friends or saw them get injured, and then they had a guilt complex because they got to go home."
Pugsley said it's a heavy weight that thousands of veterans still carry 50 years later.
READ: John's Pass Seafood Festival returns 6 months after recent hurricanes
Saturday was a little bit of respite for those brave men and women with the annual Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans & War Dogs Remembrance event at Veterans Memorial Park.
Pugsley shared the invocation followed by an honor guard, tributes to local Vietnam Veteran inductees to the Florida Veterans Hall of Fame and Southeast Asian performances and cuisine. She said, "I've seen a great change in appreciation for our military and that warms my heart."
CLICK HERE:>>>Follow FOX 13 on YouTube
The Source
Information for this story was gathered by FOX 13's Jennifer Kveglis.
STAY CONNECTED WITH FOX 13 TAMPA:
Download the FOX Local app for your smart TV
Download FOX Local mobile app: Apple | Android
Download the FOX 13 News app for breaking news alerts, latest headlines
Download the SkyTower Radar app
Sign up for FOX 13's daily newsletter

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

That time I was headed nowhere, fast
That time I was headed nowhere, fast

Boston Globe

time10 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

That time I was headed nowhere, fast

Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up School was a break from work on the farm and on trucks, and I wanted to laugh and run wild. Still, I wonder what difference it might have made if any one of my teachers had given me a tape measure, pencils, and paper and sent me out to measure everything in the playground or draw the birds in the sky that I saw there. But that just wasn't how teachers taught boys like me. I suspect they had little doubt as to the type of man I would become — the kind I worked with on ranches and construction sites, ones with clichéd blue-collar traits, both good and bad. Advertisement My father was among them. A professional country music musician, a trucker, and operator of heavy equipment, he was also a drinker and a fighter. He espoused racist views that made no sense to me, since I'd only ever been around white people, and some of them were dangerous crooks who'd spent time in prison. My father was also the one man I spent much of my young life with — under trucks, tending farm animals, riding around in pickups. Advertisement I drank with or around him in my late teens. I spent endless hours with him as he worked and drank with other men. I often witnessed his raw violence — toward helpless animals on our farm, toward a sister's boyfriend who'd sneaked into the house. I learned that emotions can be dangerous. When I was 8, after weeks of being attacked by a rooster that left me bloodied, my father locked me in a barn with it. I had a large stick. The rooster, his spurs. I knocked him out of the air and would have killed him, but my father stopped me. He respected that rooster and called me 'Rooster' ever after. By the end of my junior year of high school in 1981, I had a grade-point average in the low D range, poor attendance, lunch time drinking, and pervasive discipline problems, including fights in and out of school. Like millions of American boys and young men, past and present, I was well on my way to becoming a member of a Advertisement So how am I writing this after a 30-year career in journalism instead of a few stints behind bars and the kind of hard-luck life I'd seen so much of? Rebellion, and a science fiction novel. As my senior year approached, my father wanted me to delay going back to school so I could work for him. Ambivalent as I was about school, I knew that if I did this, I would never go back, and I had the vague but motivating sense that I wanted something else for myself, something more. I rebelled by going back to school. Later that year, I moved out of my family home. I met the girl who has now been my partner for more than 40 years. I made guy friends who introduced me to punk rock and wild, nonviolent escapades with bikes, trampolines, junk cars, and conversation. And then I met Mark, who gave me the first novel I ever read. I had noticed that our social studies teacher genuinely engaged with Mark's challenging questions. Skinny and studious, Mark appeared more rebellious to me than those of us roughhousing, flirting, drunk or stoned or both, giggling at the back of the classroom. I was curious about Mark's ability to so constructively question authority. We spoke a few times about it, and one afternoon, he gave me ' Advertisement Briefly, 'Orphans' is about a young man, Hugh Hoyland, who discovers that his world exists inside a spaceship. This reality was hidden from him by myths and lies passed down to him that his own willful ignorance perpetuated. Only when he encounters the freaks of that world — banished mutants, the readers of forbidden books, and thinkers — does Hugh understand that there is an entire universe outside his world. There could not have been a more apt metaphor for my cramped, small, myth-laden life. The novel sparked something in me. I began to read and study. I participated in a week-long event for high schoolers on a college campus. I figured out how to get student loans and Pell Grants. I figured out how to get into the community college in Billings and then the University of Montana, where I studied philosophy and eventually earned an MFA in creative writing. For me, education was an act of defiance. It freed me from the confines and contours of a destiny as a hard and angry man, and it made me want to earn access to the world beyond it. But I had to discover my own path to the power of language and knowledge. There's a lot of talk about boys these days. How they're in trouble. How they're toxic. I hope that as we focus on them, we don't force-feed them our expectations or beat them down like dangerous animals. I hope we give them the time and space to be rebellious and build themselves up with education that welcomes them. It's a lot of trouble to let boys be boys, but I believe in us. Advertisement

Vietnam vets who left school for service get diplomas over six decades later
Vietnam vets who left school for service get diplomas over six decades later

Yahoo

time12 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Vietnam vets who left school for service get diplomas over six decades later

Muscatine, Iowa — When Dennis Snyder of Muscatine, Iowa, took his yearbook photos more than six decades ago, he thought he would be a member of the graduating class of 1963. "It's hard to believe I was ever that young," Snyder joked to CBS News. The summer before his junior year at Muscatine High School, the Vietnam War was heating up. Snyder volunteered to join the Navy. The 17-year-old Iowa farm boy was sent to a base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. The choice to serve his country meant Snyder missed the chance to graduate from the hometown school he loved. "I wanted to get my diploma through the high school any way that I could," explained Snyder, who obtained his GED, but wanted a diploma from Muscatine High. This year, his decades-long dream was finally realized, when he became one of a handful of octogenarians in Iowa who enlisted during the Vietnam War to finally get their high school diplomas. Snyder and another veteran, 81-year-old Richard Hill, along with their much younger senior peers, donned caps and gowns as part of the Muscatine High class of 2025. "Some of them were giving me thumbs up," Snyder said of the graduating students. "When I got that diploma, I felt like a million dollars." They are part of Operation Recognition, a program through the Iowa Department of Veterans Affairs that's given more than 100 veterans a chance to graduate. "I think it's the least we can do for veterans that serve our country, and that's why they have the program, so they can close that chapter," said Eric Sanders, director of Muscatine County Veterans Affairs. Snyder says he shares the honor with high school friends who never made it home from the war. "We have seven that were killed in Vietnam…I knew all seven of them," Snyder said. "One was a very good friend." Snyder believes there are many more veterans around the country that deserve their diplomas and the recognition of service that comes with it. "I am honored to be at this point," Snyder said. "And, you know, I don't have a lot of years left…but I'm going to enjoy this diploma for the rest of my life." Sneak peek: The Life and Death of Blaze Bernstein Some key Democratic congressional leaders left out of Trump's Iran attack plans Netanyahu reacts to U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear sites

Vietnam vets who left high school for service get their diplomas over six decades later
Vietnam vets who left high school for service get their diplomas over six decades later

CBS News

time13 hours ago

  • CBS News

Vietnam vets who left high school for service get their diplomas over six decades later

Vietnam vets in their 80s who left high school early to serve finally get their diplomas Muscatine, Iowa — When Dennis Snyder of Muscatine, Iowa, took his yearbook photos more than six decades ago, he thought he would be a member of the graduating class of 1963. "It's hard to believe I was ever that young," Snyder joked to CBS News. The summer before his junior year at Muscatine High School, the Vietnam War was heating up. Snyder volunteered to join the Navy. The 17-year-old Iowa farm boy was sent to a base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. The choice to serve his country meant Snyder missed the chance to graduate from the hometown school he loved. "I wanted to get my diploma through the high school any way that I could," explained Snyder, who obtained his GED, but wanted a diploma from Muscatine High. This year, his decades-long dream was finally realized, when he became one of a handful of octogenarians in Iowa who enlisted during the Vietnam War to finally get their high school diplomas. Snyder and another veteran, 81-year-old Richard Hill, along with their much younger senior peers, donned caps and gowns as part of the Muscatine High class of 2025. "Some of them were giving me thumbs up," Snyder said of the graduating students. "When I got that diploma, I felt like a million dollars." They are part of Operation Recognition, a program through the Iowa Department of Veterans Affairs that's given more than 100 veterans a chance to graduate. "I think it's the least we can do for veterans that serve our country, and that's why they have the program, so they can close that chapter," said Eric Sanders, director of Muscatine County Veterans Affairs. Snyder says he shares the honor with high school friends who never made it home from the war. "We have seven that were killed in Vietnam…I knew all seven of them," Snyder said. "One was a very good friend." Snyder believes there are many more veterans around the country that deserve their diplomas and the recognition of service that comes with it. "I am honored to be at this point," Snyder said. "And, you know, I don't have a lot of years left…but I'm going to enjoy this diploma for the rest of my life."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store