What You Don’t Know About The Vietnam War Memorial

June 22, 2009 · carl · Print This Article

Last year my wife and I took one-day bus trip to Washington D.C.

This was something we had both always wanted to do, and when we can manage to find the time we want to go again.
It is truly humbling to visit some of the memorials in our nation’s capitol.

High on the list of the things we were determined to see was the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall.

We weren’t on a guided tour so we were pretty much left to our own devices.

And as we arrived at the memorial, we just happened to overhear a tour guide telling a group of people some of the history behind the memorial.

I knew that for years people have left behind letters, flowers, pictures, even cartons of cigarettes and bottles of whiskey.

What I didn’t know was that everything that is left at the wall is kept at a government warehouse, cataloged by when it was left there.
And I thought that was quite respectful.

I was about to turn away when a woman happened to ask the tour guide a question that, the response to which, quite frankly, brought a tear to my eye.

The woman asked “What is the most unusual thing that was ever left here?”

And the tour guide, who’s voice changed to a reverent tone replied:

“We showed up here one morning to find a brand-new Harley-Davidson motorcycle sitting upright right in the front of the wall.
All of us who work here were used to seeing some unusual items, but this was the only time any of us had seen something like this.
Eventually, through tracing the origins of the motorcycle through it’s serial numbers, we found it had been purchased by a bikers club composed entirely of Vietnam vets.
We managed to contact the head of the club and asked how the bike came to be here.”

And he told us “A lot of the guys who died in ‘Nam loved to ride.

So we all chipped in and did this in case somehow one of them came by, there would be a bike for him to use.”

nam_wall_with_pics_on_front

Did you like this? If so, please bookmark it,
tell a friend
about it, and subscribe to the blog RSS feed.

Popular Topics

Comments

4 Responses to “What You Don’t Know About The Vietnam War Memorial”

    David Sams on June 22nd, 2009 7:33 am

    All gave some…..
    Some gave all

    Cheryl Markland on June 22nd, 2009 9:51 am

    I have a first cousin who died in the Vietnam War at the age of 20,. Donald Philip Markland. His name is on the wall. All my years of growing up was filled with news of the Vietnam War on television.every single day, and the casualty count. It was heartbreaking, because most of the guys were so young. I still think about him today….

    Rosemarie Burtchell on June 22nd, 2009 12:22 pm

    My husband George served in Vietnam, and my website is a tribute to him and all who served..God bless you all for a job well done! and “Welcome Home” Rosemarie

    carl on June 22nd, 2009 1:08 pm

    David:
    Amen my friend.

    Cheryl:
    I also lost some good friends, it’s something you never forget.

    Rosemarie:
    Thank you for the kind words.
    For our readers, you can visit Rosemarie’s site here:

    http://anchorsaway.homestead.com/

Got something to say?