Paul  Donahue mrpraboo@aol.com Brother of his best friend Tom. 1285 Ardmore Ct. Niskayuna NY 12309 United States Niskayuna From Vietnam Veterans Against the War, http://www.vvaw.org/veteran/article/?id=1860
A Personal Veterans Day
By Paul Donahue
Being a conscientious reader of our local daily newspaper I have noticed through the years the appearance in the Memoriam column the name of someone I once knew. It always appears on a patriotic holiday, but I could never keep track, so that if Memorial Day or the Fourth of July passed by and I didn't find his name I'd be puzzled. Then last year I finally figured it out. PFC George Gunn was killed in action in Kontum, Vietnam on Veterans Day, 1967. He was eighteen years old.
George was a couple of years behind me in high school, but I remember him because he was a good friend of my younger brother. It is his mother who places the notices in the Memoriam column, sometimes a poem, other times a letter, and sometimes with a thumbnail picture of him wearing his helmet — it looks too big for his head. It is George's story and his mother's devotion to his memory that now defines the meaning of Veterans Day for me.
The holiday itself was originally named Armistice Day in 1919 to commemorate the end of World War I, which saw 116,516 American military lives lost to combat (940,000 Americans overall). President Wilson said, 'To us in America, the reflections of Armistice Day will be filled with solemn pride in the heroism of those who died in the country's service and with gratitude for the victory...' It is celebrated on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month, when the armistice was signed to mark 'the war to end all wars.' Then in 1954, after World War II, where 405,399 Americans died, and the Korean War (54,246 deaths), President Eisenhower signed a bill striking the word, Armistice, and inserting the word, Veterans, in it's place. In 1968 the Uniform Holiday Bill moved all federal holidays to a Monday in the hopes of encouraging more travel, recreation, and cultural activities. This lead to much confusion when it was implemented three years later, as many citizens and states refused to accept the change owing to the historic significance of the original date. So, in 1975, at the end of the Vietnam War, where 58,177 American soldiers died, President Ford signed legislation setting observance of Veterans Day again to November 11th, regardless of what day of the week that date falls on. All of this presidential bill signing mattered little to George's mom. The tragedy of George's death ascribed to her, and to exactly fifty other American mothers on that very same day in 1967, by an ironic coincidence, their own personal Veteran's Day.
My brother and George were best friends they were two of a kind — teenage adventurers. They both grew up in the Mont Pleasant section of Schenectady, NY, an old fashioned ethnic neighborhood. They would contrive to take walks, long walks, perhaps to Mariaville Lake (almost 15 miles directly west) or Thatcher Park (about 20 miles south). Thatcher Park is famous for its overlook, with a view of the entire region, even at the starting point of the hike. I won't describe the short-cut home from the park, but you can guess that since they were walking, yes, over the cliff. My favorite tale is of an evening shoreline bonfire at Great Sacandaga Lake (due north about 30 miles) with some other friends when a voice from the overlooking ledge questioned their intentions, and then, with a degree of benevolence, allowed them to continue their evening. It was none other than Johnny Carson, or so the story goes. Why would George want to enlist in the Army and leave this carefree life behind? My brother asked him. 'You don't understand,' was George's reply, 'It's what I want to do.' George qualified for the 173rd Airborne Brigade and volunteered to fight in Vietnam.
For more than forty years George's mom has been posting a Memoriam in the Daily Gazette on the anniversary of George's death, Veterans Day. After all these years the tone of her missives speaks to a boy, because that is how he left her. She still lives in the same house in Mont Pleasant and she keeps in contact with his buddies and his girlfriend. They help her along and help to keep the memory of George within her, a memory that is fresh and near the surface. The years have left little distance between then and now, time has not allowed the memories to diminish. And, if she is feeling a little blue, she has his scrapbook to quickly cheer her up.
I find it difficult to imagine the burden of sorrow that must weigh on her. She, and all the other mothers, fathers, and families who have lost loved ones, are just as much a casualty of war as the soldiers who fall. I think that we should view Veterans Day through the lens that these families do, and celebrate with solemn pride. It was President Eisenhower who designated the date as Veteran's Day, he also famously said, 'I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, as only one who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity.' I would add sorrow, as only a mother like George's mom can know.
Here is an excerpt from a poem written by Major Michael Davis O'Donnell in Dak To, Vietnam, in January of 1970, three months before his helicopter went missing in Cambodia: 'If you are able, save for them a place inside of you and save one backward glance when you are leaving for the places they can no longer go...And in that time when men decide and feel safe to call the war insane, take one moment to embrace those gentle heroes you left behind.'
Dec 3, 2011 |
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George  Donahue mrpraboo@aol.com Brother of his best friend Tom. 1285 Ardmore Ct. Niskayuna NY 12309 United States Niskayuna From Vietnam Veterans Against the War, http://www.vvaw.org/veteran/article/?id=1860
A Personal Veterans Day
By Paul Donahue
Being a conscientious reader of our local daily newspaper I have noticed through the years the appearance in the Memoriam column the name of someone I once knew. It always appears on a patriotic holiday, but I could never keep track, so that if Memorial Day or the Fourth of July passed by and I didn't find his name I'd be puzzled. Then last year I finally figured it out. PFC George Gunn was killed in action in Kontum, Vietnam on Veterans Day, 1967. He was eighteen years old.
George was a couple of years behind me in high school, but I remember him because he was a good friend of my younger brother. It is his mother who places the notices in the Memoriam column, sometimes a poem, other times a letter, and sometimes with a thumbnail picture of him wearing his helmet — it looks too big for his head. It is George's story and his mother's devotion to his memory that now defines the meaning of Veterans Day for me.
The holiday itself was originally named Armistice Day in 1919 to commemorate the end of World War I, which saw 116,516 American military lives lost to combat (940,000 Americans overall). President Wilson said, 'To us in America, the reflections of Armistice Day will be filled with solemn pride in the heroism of those who died in the country's service and with gratitude for the victory...' It is celebrated on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month, when the armistice was signed to mark 'the war to end all wars.' Then in 1954, after World War II, where 405,399 Americans died, and the Korean War (54,246 deaths), President Eisenhower signed a bill striking the word, Armistice, and inserting the word, Veterans, in it's place. In 1968 the Uniform Holiday Bill moved all federal holidays to a Monday in the hopes of encouraging more travel, recreation, and cultural activities. This lead to much confusion when it was implemented three years later, as many citizens and states refused to accept the change owing to the historic significance of the original date. So, in 1975, at the end of the Vietnam War, where 58,177 American soldiers died, President Ford signed legislation setting observance of Veterans Day again to November 11th, regardless of what day of the week that date falls on. All of this presidential bill signing mattered little to George's mom. The tragedy of George's death ascribed to her, and to exactly fifty other American mothers on that very same day in 1967, by an ironic coincidence, their own personal Veteran's Day.
My brother and George were best friends they were two of a kind — teenage adventurers. They both grew up in the Mont Pleasant section of Schenectady, NY, an old fashioned ethnic neighborhood. They would contrive to take walks, long walks, perhaps to Mariaville Lake (almost 15 miles directly west) or Thatcher Park (about 20 miles south). Thatcher Park is famous for its overlook, with a view of the entire region, even at the starting point of the hike. I won't describe the short-cut home from the park, but you can guess that since they were walking, yes, over the cliff. My favorite tale is of an evening shoreline bonfire at Great Sacandaga Lake (due north about 30 miles) with some other friends when a voice from the overlooking ledge questioned their intentions, and then, with a degree of benevolence, allowed them to continue their evening. It was none other than Johnny Carson, or so the story goes. Why would George want to enlist in the Army and leave this carefree life behind? My brother asked him. 'You don't understand,' was George's reply, 'It's what I want to do.' George qualified for the 173rd Airborne Brigade and volunteered to fight in Vietnam.
For more than forty years George's mom has been posting a Memoriam in the Daily Gazette on the anniversary of George's death, Veterans Day. After all these years the tone of her missives speaks to a boy, because that is how he left her. She still lives in the same house in Mont Pleasant and she keeps in contact with his buddies and his girlfriend. They help her along and help to keep the memory of George within her, a memory that is fresh and near the surface. The years have left little distance between then and now, time has not allowed the memories to diminish. And, if she is feeling a little blue, she has his scrapbook to quickly cheer her up.
I find it difficult to imagine the burden of sorrow that must weigh on her. She, and all the other mothers, fathers, and families who have lost loved ones, are just as much a casualty of war as the soldiers who fall. I think that we should view Veterans Day through the lens that these families do, and celebrate with solemn pride. It was President Eisenhower who designated the date as Veteran's Day, he also famously said, 'I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, as only one who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity.' I would add sorrow, as only a mother like George's mom can know.
Here is an excerpt from a poem written by Major Michael Davis O'Donnell in Dak To, Vietnam, in January of 1970, three months before his helicopter went missing in Cambodia: 'If you are able, save for them a place inside of you and save one backward glance when you are leaving for the places they can no longer go...And in that time when men decide and feel safe to call the war insane, take one moment to embrace those gentle heroes you left behind.'
Dec 3, 2011 |
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Stanton  Bob nysdeerhntr@gmail.com I grew up in Schenectady Saratoga Springs NY USA Birthday wishes Happy Birthday George. Although we both grew up in Schenectady I didn't know you. I lived in the Woodlawn area on the other side of the city and I went to Linton High. Schenectady sure has changed since you left it! And for the worse I'm sorry to say. I just want you to know that you are thought of and prayed for today. You have not been forgotten! Enjoy your birthday in heaven. God speed. May 13, 2011 |
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David  Kuta kutadr@yahoo.com Friend Austin TX 78750 Thank's I often think about you especially during Veterans Day. I remember the fun at the Y in Mt. Pleasant and double dating etc. We had lots of fun, even being a little crazy at times. I just read your,' I Wonder, God...If You'd Wait at Your Door? (Hello, God) “Poem and it touched me. Thank you for being my friend and fighting for our freedom. Nov 3, 2010 |
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Carl Woodman CWoodhog@yahoo.com friend, from high school Just, the other day your name, came up and a tear came, to my eye, thinking how we skipped school, at Mount, Pleasent Lanes. I will not forget you, ever, God bless. Jul 30, 2009 |
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Garnet Jenkins garijen@bresnan.net Grand Junction, Co. ~God Had You, In His Keeping, We Have You, In Our Hearts~
 In Remembrance, of your Sacrifice and with a Multitude, of Thanks, for your Courage, Service and Dedication, to our Country and for Freedom. Rest in Peace, Pfc., George Bruce Gunn and know, that you will, NEVER BE FORGOTTEN. My brother, Sgt., David Dickinson is, a young hero, who also made, the Supreme Sacrifice in Vietnam, in 1967.... NEVER MY SOUL, STILL THE SONG, OF WOUNDED HEARTS, THEIR LOVED ONE, GONE.... OF HIM WHO, GAVE HIS LIFE, FOR ME.... THAT I MIGHT LIVE, IN LIBERTY. Apr 6, 2009 |
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Pat  O paonder@nycap.rr.com Same Class in High School, 1967 Schenectady NY 12303 USA In Memory Just wanted to say how touched I was when a classmate of mine was killed in Vietnam. I still remember his 'cool' attitude, and kind/friendly personality. He will always be remembered with respect for his service to our country. Dec 6, 2008 |
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Manuel Pino Bco 2/8th 1st Cav 68-69 mpjr54@msn.com

Veterans Day 2006......You Are Not Forgotten! Nov 11, 2006 |
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Guy Perkins (Carlone) gpperkinssr@nycap.rr.com 2nd Cousin 5 Casey Court Albany, NY 12205 USA I was only 3 when Georgie was KIA. My mother spoke of him often as my mother and all my cousins have always been close. I remember seeing him in full uniform at my grandmothers before he left. A Picture of him was hung on her wall with great pride. Those memories I believe are what instilled that pride in me to serve in the Air Force for 10 years and was part of the first Gulf War in 1990 - 91. I will remember him with all the pride my family has felt for him, and his memory will never die! We all Love and Miss Georgie. Monday, June 05, 2006 |
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Robert Tripp rtripp@cogeco.ca a friend never met Ridgeway, Ontario Canada "Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his friends." John 15:13 Sunday, March 13, 2005 |
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