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           | Memorial Day is a federal holiday in the United  States for remembering the people who died while serving in the country's armed forces. The holiday,  which is observed every year on the last Monday of May originated as Decoration  Day after the American Civil War in 1868, when the Grand Army of the Republic, an  organization of Union veterans founded in Decatur,  Illinois, established it as a time for the nation to decorate the graves of  the Union war dead with flowers. By the 20th century, competing Union and Confederate holiday traditions, celebrated on  different days, had merged, and Memorial Day eventually extended to honor all  Americans who died while in the military service. It typically marks the start  of the summer vacation season, while Labor Day marks  its end. 
Memorial Day is not to be confused  with Veterans  Day; Memorial Day is a day of remembering the men and women who died while serving, while Veterans Day celebrates the service of all U.S. military  veterans.  
On  this Memorial Day, I remember Mike Thomas from Hot Springs, Arkansas.          
             On  August 14, 1969, I wrote my parents from Long Binh, Vietnam: 
            
              I took George [Coppage] over to Bien Hoa Air  Base to catch a flight back to Phan Rang, and we ran into Murray Green, who  used to room with Randy Snapp at Yellowstone, who is now a pilot. Also ran into Mike Thomas, an old Sigma Nu from Hot Springs, who is with the 11th  Armored Cav over by Cambodia. 
             
            Looking  back, it’s amazing That four old friends would run into each other a half a  world away. George Coppage was from Fayetteville and was a Sigma Nu at the  University of Arkansas. George and I were old friends.  
            Murray  Green was from Alabama, and I knew him from Yellowstone in 1965, where he was a  seasonal ranger, and I was working as a Student Trainee Architect with the  National Park Service. I rode back to Arkansas with Murray at the end of the  summer. It was a memorable trip because Murray shot himself in the leg while  practicing “fast draw” on a Wyoming roadside.  
            Mike  Thomas was a also a Sigma Nu at the University of Arkansas, although a couple  years younger than George and I. He graduated from Hot Springs High School in  1964 with Bill Clinton. 
            George  and Murray were C-123 pilots in the Air Force. Mike Thomas was in the Army  Infantry. 
            George,  Murray and I stopped by the Officers Club at Bien Hoa to get a beer and ran  into Mike Thomas, who joined us. That was the last time we would see him. 
              
              Tom Butt, George  Coppage and Murray Green at Ben Hoa Airbase, 1969 
            Exactly a  month later, Mike was killed near Phước Long, a district-level town in Bình Phước  Province, in the Southeast region of Vietnam on the border with Cambodia. He  was 23 years old. 
            Among his  posthumous awards were a Silver Star, our nation's third highest award for  bravery, a Bronze Star Medal, an Air Medal, and a Purple Heart. Lieutenant  Thomas already had been awarded the coveted Combat Infantry Badge for combat  action against an enemy. - See more at: http://www.vvmf.org/Wall-of-Faces/51684/MICHAEL-H-THOMAS#sthash.GAs5eGAq.dpuf.  
              
              
            It was a long  time ago, but Michael Herman Thomas has not been forgotten. His name appears on  Panel 18W, Row 88 of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. He has also been remembered  over the years by the people he served with. Take a look at the following posts  as recent as 2014: 
                
               
              Lt.  Michael Herman Thomas 
               
              Posted  on 12/16/14 - by Greg Schlieve C Co, 5/7, 1st Air Cav schlieve@charter.net 
               
              I  served with Mike in Vietnam in 1969 with the 1st Cav. I remember him well. I  visited his parents twice after the war. To my surprise Mike led the same life  as his father. His father signed up for the Army, and became a Lt in WWII. He  married his sweetheart before going overseas into the Battle of the  Bulge.....where he was wounded. Mike also signed up to serve, quitting college.  He trained as both an infantry officer and artillery too. Before he was shipped  overseas he married his sweetheart. He was so much like his father that it  stunned me when I first met Herman. Mike was a great man. I went back to  Vietnam in 1994 and found the spot where he was killed. With me was a fellow  1st Cav officer----who was with us in 1969 too. His name is Tim Millar. We held  a belted service for Mike.  
   
  Remembering  An American Hero 
   
  Posted  on 9/14/13 - by Curt Carter  
               
              Dear  1LT Michael Herman Thomas, sir 
   
              As an American, I would like to thank you for your service and for your  sacrifice made on behalf of our wonderful country. The youth of today could  gain much by learning of heroes such as yourself, men and women whose courage  and heart can never be questioned. 
   
              May God allow you to read this, and may He allow me to someday shake your hand  when I get to Heaven to personally thank you. May he also allow my father to  find you and shake your hand now to say thank you; for America, and for those  who love you. 
   
              With respect, and the best salute a civilian can muster for you, Sir 
   
              Curt Carter  
   
  Road  311 
   
  Posted  on 10/28/11 - by Andrew J. Hudson  
   
    
   
              Road  311 map & footnotes, 1969 map sheet 6432 iv, titled dong South Vietnam,  scale 1:50,000 & 2011 Google earth satellite image. The map & footnotes  are included to accompany the remembrance for first lieutenant Michael Herman  Thomas. In 1969 there was no water over road 311. Between lines 23 & 24,  the southern path of 311 through the water no longer exists. 311 now is 749  & continues northwest & intersects with 741 where buttons was & Nui  Ba Ra is located. Major east-west trail shown below Pp Binh Lan. Two dots left  of military area mark RFPF camp. Creek & ford is shown below RFPF camp.  Significant curve & battle area is just north of bm 250 between grid lines  25 & 26.  
   
  Michael  Herman Thomas 
   
  Posted  on 10/28/11 - by Andrew J. Hudson  
               
              Forty-two  years ago First Lieutenant Michael Herman Thomas was killed in action in the  Republic of South Vietnam about 1:00pm on Sunday, September 14, 1969. Among his  posthumous awards were a Silver Star, our nation's third highest award for  bravery, a Bronze Star Medal, an Air Medal, and a Purple Heart. Lieutenant Thomas  already had been awarded the coveted Combat Infantry Badge for combat action  against an enemy. 
               
              23  years and 86 days old Michael Herman Thomas, an Infantry officer, was serving  with my cavalry Troop on a combat mission the day he was killed in action on  Road 311 south of Phouc Long and Song Be in Phouc Long-Binh Phouc Province. 
               
              My  name is Andrew J. Hudson. I did not personally know Lieutenant Thomas but we  were colleagues and professional soldiers who worked together. I was the Troop  Commander of Troop D, 1st Squadron, 9th Cavalry, 1st Cavalry Division. 
               
              First  Lieutenant Michael Herman Thomas, some called him Mike, was the Scout Platoon  Leader, Company E, 5th Battalion, 7th Cavalry, 2d Brigade, 1st Cavalry  Division. He was with his Scout Platoon attached to my troop the day he was  killed. This reflection and recollection is offered from my memory to remember  Lieutenant Thomas and to give some details about where he was in South Vietnam,  what he was involved in, his dangerous work, and who he was with during the  last two days of his life. 
               
              Please  refer to the separate posting titled Road 311 to see a small part of the 1969  map sheet, with footnotes, that was used then to show the battle area on Road  311 where Lieutenant Thomas was on September 14. 
              Troop  D, or Delta Troop as it was sometimes called, was the only ground cavalry troop  in the 1st Squadron, 9th Cavalry, an air cavalry squadron. The troop was  organized with three ground cavalry platoons and instead of horses the troopers  were mounted in trucks and jeeps. Each platoon in Troop D had a Scout Section  with two Scout Squads, an Infantry Squad, a Mortar Squad, and an Anti-Tank  Section with two 106mm recoilless rifles. 
               
              The  authorized, forward operating, front-line combat strength of Troop D was 125.  However, like all combat units in Vietnam, and like all armed forces combat  units in all wars the United States has participated in, Delta Troop was never  at full strength. Every day the Troop always performed combat operations  short-handed. 
               
              In  1969 there was no internet, no web-cam, no email, no smart phone, no cell  phone, no cell phone camera or video, no texting, no I-pods, no I-pads. There  was no technology then that we see our soldiers, who are fighting other wars,  using today. In addition to those devices and tools we now have internet  satellite mapping applications like Google Earth. So, using Google Earth we are  able to identify, and help provide a feel of where Lieutenant Thomas and Troop  D were on the ground then. 
               
              Lieutenant  Thomas and his Scout Platoon conducted both air assault and ground combat  operations from Fire Support Base (FSB) Buttons. Delta Troop, also based on  Buttons, conducted dismounted operations in the jungle and rubber plantations,  and mounted reconnaissance, scouting, screening, patrolling, and security  missions along the vast and intricate network of trails, roads, highways and  other lines of communication throughout what is now Phouc Long-Binh Phouc  Province. At night when on Buttons Lieutenant Thomas and his Scout Platoon, as  well as Delta Troop, was assigned defensive positions for a sector of the  large, expansive perimeter on Buttons. Occasionally Delta Troop would conduct a  night ambush outside of Buttons. 
               
              FSB  Buttons was located a couple of kilometers west and north of Nui Ba Ra mountain  and about 6 kilometers west of Phouc Long and Song Be. Buttons was the  headquarters base of the 5th Battalion, of Troop D, and of a howitzer battery  consisting of six towed 105mm cannons. This artillery battery provided fire  support for the 5th Battalion Infantry companies, the Scout Platoons, and for  Delta Troop. The 5th Battalion's crest was titled Garry Owen, for the Irish  tune George Armstrong Custer chose as the 7th Cavalry Regimental song in 1867.  In 1969 the 5th Battalion commander was Lieutenant Colonel Thomas F. Healy. 
               
              Nui  Ba Ra is a small mountain rising up from relatively flat ground to a height of  about 760 meters (about 2,300 feet) at its tallest peak. Obviously a volcano  millions of years ago, it stands alongside an east-west secondary road now  numbered 741. Road 741 forms an intersection with Road 311 in Phouc Binh about  three kilometers west of the mountain. However, today, Google Earth images,  dated 2011, shows Road 311 now to be north-south Road 749. Road 741 runs east  of Nui Ba Ra to the cities of Phouc Long and Song Be, and to the Song Be River.  At the north-west base of the mountain is an airstrip that was then capable of  landing aircraft as large as the C-123 and the C-130 Hercules, the workhorses  of the United States Air Force. Buttons was on the north side of Road 741. On  Google today a large community of houses, shops, businesses, and warehouses  occupy some of the flat ground where Buttons was in 1969. 
               
              When  the artillery battery on Buttons needed to provide fire support for 5th Battalion  units working to the south the mountain interfered with the angle of fire so  several cannons would have to be moved to the south side of Nui Ba Ra. This is  where Lieutenant Thomas and Private First Class John Anthony Halladay, his  assistant and Radio Telephone Operator (RTO), were on Saturday, September 13,  1969. Three of the 105mm howitzers assigned to FSB Buttons had been positioned  on the southwest side of the mountain to provide fire support for infantry  companies working along the Song Be River, and in the jungles, and rubber  plantations south and southeast of Buttons. The Scout Platoon had been assigned  the mission to provide security for these three guns and their crews at this  temporary base which was on flat, open terrain with no protection, except for  the foxholes dug by the Platoon. 
               
              That  Saturday morning, September 13, 1969, Delta Troop had proceeded from Buttons  with two cavalry platoons, the second and third, on its mission to establish  strong points along Road 311 from its southern junction with the principal  Highway QL14, which was about 100 miles northeast of Saigon. Troop D’s first  platoon was on detached duty providing reinforced perimeter security for Troop  B, 1st Squadron, 9th Cavalry, which was located at a Fire Support Base near An  Lôc, west of FSB Buttons. 
               
              About  three weeks earlier all six of Troop D’s 106mm recoilless rifles and their  crews, the entire Troop Anti-Tank Sections, had been airlifted to the top of  Nui Ba Ra. On occasion Lieutenant Thomas and his Scout Platoon drew the  rotational duty to provide security for the major communications complex  established on top of the mountain. This complex provided extended distances  for military radio transmission for all combat and combat support units working  in the 1st Cavalry Division Area of Operations (AO), and it housed highly  secretive and sophisticated surveillance and detection equipment that monitored  the continuous infiltration and movements of North Vietnamese Army (NVA) forces  into South Vietnam from Cambodia. Security for this complex protected the  communications detachment soldiers as well as the massive amount of electronic  equipment from enemy assaults and sapper attacks. That's why the 106s were  there. 
               
              While  Lieutenant Thomas and his Scout Platoon secured the three howitzers on that  Saturday, four provincial policemen from Song Be were assigned to Troop D.  Their mission was to intercept movement along Road 311 and to check papers and  conduct inspections of bicycles, motorcycles, wagons, cars, trucks, buses, and  pedestrians. The police were not there to find enemy soldiers, D Troop was; and  its mission also was to support the police as they searched for bandits,  questioned strangers and looked for contraband. 
              This  area in Phouc Long-Binh Phouc Province west and south of Phouc Long and Song Be  was a major infiltration route, a virtual highway no less, for North Vietnamese  Army forces moving down the Ho Chi Minh Trail and entering South Vietnam from  Cambodia in an area known as The Parrot’s Beak several kilometers west of Buttons.  Some estimates placed the number of enemy soldiers pouring into South Vietnam  along this route into the 1st Cavalry Division’s AO at a thousand every few  days. Paradoxically, President Richard Nixon had ordered the withdrawal of  thousands of American troops every few days during this time and ordered US  forces to avoid major engagements. 
               
              In  1969, from its southern junction with QL 14, Road 311, a secondary, asphalt  road barely able to handle two-way traffic wound its way northwest over rolling  terrain, through open plain, jungle and rubber plantations and connected with  Highway LTL1A (today on Google it's Road 748). LTL1A (Road 748) connects with  Road 13 and Road 13 runs south to the outskirts of Saigon (Ho Chi Minh City)  and north to Cambodia. 
               
              Today,  however, using Map Sheet 6432 IV, Titled DONG SRE VIET, Vietnam, Scale 1:50,000  dated 1969, and superimposing images from Google Earth, we see that Road 311  from its junction with QL14 exists but is no longer numbered. Where the path of  Road 311 was in 1969 is now under water, apparently from flooding because of  dam removal or dam building on the Song Be River and its tributaries. Instead,  on Google Earth, we see that from junction QL14 Road 749 (Road 311) has been  built west of the original Road 311 skirting around the water and connecting  with the old Road 311. 
              From  QL14 US Army engineers, using Rohm plows, had cleared the large jungle growth  from both sides of Road 311 and created tree lines. Within some of the clearing  lay remnants of downed trees; and the grass and undergrowth had already  sprouted. 
               
              On  this quiet Saturday, with the provincial policemen, elements of Troop D were  positioned in strong points along Road 311 from its junction with QL14. The  policemen and the Third Platoon infantry squad manned a reinforced inspection  point just slightly north of the significant curve on Road 311 (see map, the  curve is between lines 25 and 26 and just north of BM250 on the map). Each  strong point position was located to enable 360 degrees of observation and supporting  fire. From my position, with a third platoon scout vehicle, we could see the  next position to the north. And that position could see us and the next  position to the north, and the next position could see the supporting positions  in both directions, and so on. Distances between positions varied depending on  the terrain, the lay of the land. 
               
              It  was late afternoon. The day had been uneventful and it was time to wrap it up  and head for Buttons. The section of Road 311 where we were was not travelled  that day by anyone or any vehicle. Quickly we learned why. It was uncanny. But,  then, and now, on reflection, it was quite simple. Usually we would see a  farmer, a traveler, someone on a bicycle, a motorcycle, children, water  buffalo, a truck, some living, moving soul when we were out on our missions. Of  course, when either the Viet Cong, or soldiers of the North Vietnamese Army,  were, or had been, in the area we saw no one. There were times when Troop D or  Lieutenant Thomas' Scout Platoon had established night ambushes and nothing had  happened. In the morning hours at sun-up, children would appear, safely away,  but visible, with baskets of bottled soft drinks. Soldiers always were issued  cases of soda in cans through regular military supply channels. But the  children, ages from around four through ten or twelve, always had soft drinks  in bottles. And usually the bottles were cold even in the early morning. 
               
              I  gave the order over the radio to the platoon leaders to pack up and mount up  and begin moving north along Road 311. The third platoon scout vehicle with me  followed as we moved north toward Sergeant Donald Sidney Skidgel’s position.  Sergeant Skidgel was a senior Scout Squad Leader in Troop D’s third platoon. We  saw his jeep moving slowly along the road before disappearing down over a small  knoll. 
               
              Suddenly,  we heard heavy firing erupt from AK47s and machine guns ahead of us. I shouted  Go! and Ferguson gunned the jeep. When we topped the knoll where Sergeant  Skidgel had been we saw his jeep a few meters down the road stopped on the  right edge. We pulled up near his jeep and hastily dismounted. I ran forward.  Sergeant Skidgel was kneeling behind the right front wheel of his jeep and was  firing his rifle across the front of the vehicle. His machine gunner and jeep  driver also had dismounted and were firing into the tree line across the road.  The enemy fire was from the west tree line across where BM 250 is shown on the  map. 
               
              It  is still in my memory of kneeling beside him and seeing him smile and nod, a  look of excitement on his young face. Sergeant Skidgel, who was expecting a  birthday in one month, when he would be 21 years old, would be killed in action  the next day, a couple of hundred meters north on this road where he was now  kneeling. He reported the contact and estimated the enemy force to be about  eight to twelve soldiers. No one in his scout squad was hurt. 
               
              From  the north two other scout jeeps arrived and for the next few seconds we all  poured heavy rifle and M60 machine gun fire into the suspected enemy positions.  We stopped firing and cautiously moved forward to search for the enemy  soldiers. We found foxholes, weapons positions, equipment, equipment harnesses,  backpacks, communications wire, and evidence of wounded or killed enemy  soldiers but no bodies. It was determined that they had spent some time in the  location because of the marked improvements that had been made and the firing  positions that were established. 
              Now  the sun was setting. By the time our search or enemy soldiers and of the enemy  positions was completed a pair of fighter-bombers arrived, called for by  Captain Tom Mahoney, the FO. He directed the fighter-bombers’ to attack west  and south of the tree line where they dropped their bombs. On this day these  United States Air Force fighter-bombers carried no napalm. 
               
              Our  day ended and we resumed the march toward Buttons. The policemen with us were  exhilarated by the brief combat show and also were happy for their mission to  be ended. We said goodbye as we dropped them off at their headquarters near  Song Be. 
              Upon  arrival at Buttons a complete battle report was submitted. Later that evening during  a command briefing and meeting with Colonel Healy and his operations staff a  reconnaissance and scouting mission was decided and planned. It was decided  that Lieutenant Thomas and his Scout Platoon would slip into the area to  determine what size force was there and fix the enemy's locations. Once that  was done an infantry company would be air lifted by Huey helicopters to the  site to destroy the enemy force. 
               
              It  would be Delta Troop’s mission to pick up Lieutenant Thomas and his Scout  Platoon the next morning, Sunday, September 14, at the mini-camp of the three  artillery guns, on the south side of Nui Ba Ra, and transport them to the site  where the fight had been that day. The plan was that Scout Platoon members  would ride on Troop D’s scout jeeps and surreptitiously slip off as we moved  south along the road. From the slow moving jeeps they would step into the  sprouting jungle grass alongside the road and quickly fade from view. Then they  would consolidate under concealment of the jungle and infiltrate into the area  to conduct a thorough reconnaissance to pick up the trail. Troop D would  reestablish strong points along 311 to be available to respond quickly and  provide support or relief if the Scout Platoon got into trouble before being  able to enter and fade into the jungle. 
              Troop  D arrived at the temporary howitzer position on the south side of Nui Ba Ra  about 10:00am on Sunday morning, September 14. The artillery gun crews had not  completed packing but Lieutenant Thomas reported that his Scout Platoon was  ready to move. Colonel Healy and his operations staff had decided the towed  cannons would not need a security escort on their return to Buttons. 
               
              With  my map sheet spread out on the hood of the jeep we discussed our mission and  our plans. At the same time I took stock of the size of our combat force that  was present for duty: there were 22 troopers in the Second Platoon (of an  authorized combat strength of 40), 24 troopers in the Third Platoon (of an  authorized combat strength of 40), and Lieutenant Thomas and the 14 other  members in the Scout Platoon (which probably had an authorized combat strength  of 40). So, counting the FO, Captain Mahoney, and his two-man team and Ferguson  and me our combined combat strength on this day totaled just 66. 
               
              In  every war the fighting strength of American combat units always has been  reduced. Troop D’s combat power was reduced because of the loss of the First  Platoon that was near An Lôc; the loss of all six 106mm recoilless rifles and  crews that were on top of Nui Ba Ra; because of work details and perimeter  security responsibilities on Buttons; and, illnesses, injuries, emergency  leaves, and scheduled Rest and Relaxation (R & R) absences. These shortages  were bad enough but Monday, September 15, was to be payday and Delta Troop’s  Second Platoon Leader had been dispatched to the 1st Cavalry Division base camp  at Phouc Vinh as Troop pay officer to pick up the Troop payroll. 
               
              Because  of a normal rotational practice it was the Second Platoon’s time to lead the  mission. Because the Second Platoon Leader was at Phouc Vinh picking up Delta  Troop’s pay, the second platoon was being led by the Platoon Sergeant who was a  seasoned combat veteran. We decided Lieutenant Thomas and Private First Class  John Anthony Halladay, his assistant and RadioTelephone Operator (RTO), would  ride in the Second Platoon Sergeant’s jeep to facilitate communications and  command and control. 
               
              The  Scout Platoon members would be mounted in the Troop’s Second Platoon vehicles  and at the agreed upon point, which was at the significant curve near where we  had been in the brief fight the day before (between the numbers 25 and 26 on  the map), and upon the agreed signal the 15 Scout Platoon members would  individually slip off the slow moving vehicles and fade into the sprouting  jungle grass alongside the road. The Troop’s vehicles would slow, but would not  stop, and continue for a short distance pretending nothing was out of the  ordinary. Then the Troop would take up strong point positions similar to the  day before and be prepared as a reactionary force for the Scout Platoon. 
               
              At  about 11:30am we mounted up and departed the temporary artillery position with  Troop D's Second Platoon leading. I had asked the leaders huddled around my  jeep if they wanted their platoon to eat our cold C-Ration lunch there, in the  mini-artillery position, or get on with the mission and eat later once we all  were in position. It had been collectively decided to eat lunch later when we  all were in position. 
               
              Lieutenant  Thomas sat on top of the right rear radio that was mounted on top of the right  rear fender directly behind the Second Platoon Sergeant. Private First Class  Halladay sat on top of the radio that was mounted on top of the left rear  fender of the jeep, behind the jeep driver. One of the Scout Platoon’s radios  was strapped on his back. Another Scout Platoon member with a radio also was in  this jeep. 
               
              We  crossed the east-west creek near the hamlet of Ap Binh Lan, which is now under  water (see the map). A Regional Forces (RF)Provincial Forces (PF) camp was  located on the west side of Road 311 (marked as Military Area along the creek  on the map). The RFPF soldiers (their nickname was RuffPuffs) and many of the  families who lived at the camp were along the side of the road as we moved  past. The RFPF soldiers were somewhat similar to a state guard unit and were  used mainly as a security listening post, as an outpost, for the Provincial  government. In fact the RFPF was not really a combat force, although they did  fight when defending their camp. The main mission for this RFPF force was  manning a listening-post on a major east-west trail that crossed Road 311 (see  map) and reporting any movement. United States Army Advisors lived, trained,  and conducted operations with the RFPF. We all waved. None of the several  Advisors assigned at this RFPF camp were visible. 
               
              As  his two lead scout jeeps climbed to the high ground south of the creek (marked  as a ford with the image of a bridge on the map), south of Ap Binh Lan and the  RFPF Camp (Military Area), the Second Platoon Sergeant requested permission to  conduct a reconnaissance by fire with his lead scouts’ pedestal mounted M60  machine gun. The second platoon infantry squad followed him and my jeep was  behind the infantry squad truck. The FO followed my jeep, and behind Captain  Mahoney was the second platoon 81mm-mortar squad in their three-quarter ton  truck, followed by the two jeeps of the other scout squad of the second  platoon. The Third Platoon was in tactical formation following the Second  Platoon. In the cavalry column the standard operating combat distance was  maintained between each vehicle. 
               
              In  just a matter of seconds permission was received from the 5th Battalion  Tactical Operations Center (TOC) at Buttons to conduct the reconnaissance by  fire. I relayed this approval to the Second Platoon Sergeant. The lead scout  jeep was by then over the crest of the hill and descending toward the shallow  valley. Before the lead scout jeep began its ascent out of the valley the  machine gunner began firing his machine gun into the right side of the road  (including up and forward toward where the enemy soldiers had been located the  day before), and then across the road to the left in a sweeping 180 degree arc.  The second scout jeep machine gun also was firing into the clearing near the  road and into the tree lines, first to the left, on the north side of the road,  and then on the south side of the road into the grass and along the tree line. 
               
              The  lead scout jeep topped the second hill and was just about to enter the significant  curve which was slightly north of where the brief fight had occurred the day  before. As planned the Cavalry column began to slow in anticipation of  Lieutenant Thomas and the Scout Platoon members to begin dismounting the  vehicles. 
               
              The  area exploded in a fusillade of AK47, heavy machine gun, and rifle fire, and a  barrage of B40 Rocket Propelled Grenades (RPG) from both sides of the road. The  entire Troop column was engulfed in this withering assault. 
               
              The  reconnaissance by fire by the lead scouts’ machine guns provided the early  trigger to a classic horseshoe shaped ambush that had been established by a  large enemy force, later estimated to be about 600 soldiers. The premature  execution of the ambush permitted the rear of the Troop to extend beyond the  northern most enemy positions along both sides of the road. This blocked the  North Vietnamese Army forces from surrounding us. 
               
              A  devastating shower of rockets, machine gun and automatic weapons fire had hit  the two leading scout jeeps and the Second Platoon Sergeant’s jeep. The Troop  Second Platoon Sergeant and his driver were gravely wounded. Six other second  platoon troopers and several Scout Platoon members also were wounded. 
              Lieutenant  Thomas and Private First Class Halladay were instantly killed. 
               
              A  rocket exploded next to my jeep. Ferguson and I hastily dismounted and took  cover on the right side of the jeep. The enemy automatic weapons fire was  intense. I hurriedly pulled a portable radio out of the back of the jeep and we  moved away from the vehicle expecting it, and us, to be hit at any moment. We  were somewhat concealed in the grass at the edge of the road, but the thin  blades of grass could not stop rockets or bullets. 
               
              I  switched channels on the portable radio and called the Battalion TOC at Buttons  to report our contact and to request helicopter gun ship support. I advised  that I had only one radio and that I would be switching back to the troop radio  frequency to manage the fight. Eventually the Troop had to use the 5th  Battalion command radio frequency to communicate because of a shortage of  portable radios in the Troop. This was a serious shortcoming for ground cavalry  units that had to conduct combat operations with only vehicle mounted radios.  As a mounted cavalry troop we were not authorized to have and were not issued  portable radios. The portable radios, antennas, handsets, harnesses, and  batteries we had were scrounged or bartered for. 
               
              Ahead  of us I could see the second platoon infantry squad truck. I could see the  Second Platoon Sergeant’s jeep, which was on fire. I also could see the second  scout jeep which was ablaze. I could not see the lead scout jeep, or any of the  troops. I could hear some of their machine guns and rifles firing mixed in with  the long bursts of many enemy AK47s and exploding rocket propelled grenades. 
               
              Behind  us, down into the shallow valley, I could see some of the third platoon’s  vehicles. The FO’s jeep, which always followed my jeep, was on fire. I could  see troopers moving near the edge of the road. They were firing into the tree  line on both sides of the road, red tracers slamming into the target locations. 
               
              Sergeant  Skidgel’s jeep was the second scout jeep leading the third platoon and that  platoon’s order of movement was similar to the second platoon. Everyone in the  third platoon had dismounted under fire, seeking cover and concealment. 
              Ferguson  and I were pinned down, as were the Second Platoon and Scout Platoon troopers  at the head of the column. When we tried to move we all drew a hail of  automatic weapons fire. Ferguson provided observation and cover as I talked on  the radio with Lieutenant Ross, the third platoon leader. I could not establish  contact with the Second Platoon Sergeant or with anyone in the Second Platoon  or Scout Platoon. I did not know the Second Platoon Sergeant and his jeep  driver were gravely wounded. I did not know Lieutenant Thomas and Private First  Class Halladay had been killed. 
               
              Soon  I was able to talk to Colonel Healy who had hurriedly arrived on station in his  command helicopter when he heard my report of heavy enemy contact. Soon, too, I  was talking with Cavalier Red, the First Platoon Leader of Troop C. Captain  Gayle Jennings, Cavalier Red, was piloting a Cobra gun-ship and was maneuvering  to provide close air support with his rockets and cannons. A Blue Max aerial  rocket artillery gun ship also joined in providing supporting fire into  suspected enemy positions along the tree lines on both sides of the road. And  Colonel Healy's helicopter door gunners even got into the fierce fighting by  pouring their machine gun fire down into enemy positions. It was pile-on time. 
               
              More  help came in the form of an Armored Cavalry Troop from the 11th Armored Cavalry  Regiment that just happened to be loading onto C-130 aircraft on the airstrip  at the northern base of Nui Ba Ra across the road from Buttons. The armored  cavalry troopers in M113 Armored Personnel Carriers (APC) each mounted with the  .50 caliber Browning heavy machine gun rushed to support us on Road 311. With  firepower from Delta Troop, the Scout Platoon, the Armored Cavalry Troop, a  Cobra gunship from Troop C, a Blue Max Cobra gunship, and from two sets of Air  Force F4E Phantoms with napalm, the battle ended. The reinforced enemy unit  simply faded into the jungle. 
               
              Colonel  Healy decided to insert an infantry company into the battle area and directed  that my troop move to the north to the high ground, south of the creek crossing  and the RFPF camp, and secure an area for the Huey helicopters to land on Road  311 so the infantry company could safely dismount. This infantry company’s  mission would be to pick up the trail and close with and destroy whatever was  left of the enemy unit. 
               
              This  was done. Lieutenant Thomas, Private First Class Halladay and Sergeant Skidgel  had been evacuated from the battle ground. Later a combat medic reported that  Lieutenant Thomas' wounds had been instantly fatal. 
               
              I  believe that if he could have, in that desperate moment under heavy enemy  automatic weapons and B40 rocket fire, Lieutenant Thomas would have bravely  stood up-right in the back of the jeep and poured his rifle fire into the enemy  positions to protect his fellow soldiers. 
               
              Colonel  Healy was deeply moved upon learning of Lieutenant Thomas' death. Later a  memorial was held on Buttons for him that, security permitting, as many  soldiers as possible attended. 
               
              It  was so hurtfully sad then, and it seems even sadder now, that First Lieutenant  Michael Herman Thomas was killed in action at the significant curve on Road 311  south of Phouc Long and Song Be in Phouc Long-Binh Phouc Province, Republic of  South Vietnam on Sunday, September 14, 1969. He was only twenty-three years  old, so very young. 
               
              He  was far from home but he was not alone. He was among a close brotherhood of  combat soldiers who cared about him and who now, and will always, remember him  and honor his service to our country. First Lieutenant Michael Herman Thomas  answered the call of our nation to stand in harm's way and served in the United  States Army with great honor and bravery. We truly mourn his ultimate  sacrifice. For 42 years not a single day has gone by that I haven't thought  about him. 
               
              Friends  and former Scout Platoon members who served with him posted remembrances on  this Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund website, recalling that Lieutenant Thomas  was a leader who cared about his soldiers. I remember Colonel Healy later  proclaimed Nui Ba Ra was thereafter to be known as Mount Thomas. 
               
              This  year, in June 2011, Lieutenant Thomas would have been 65. 
               
              To  his family, to us, and to me, he always will be very special. 
               
              We  will always honor, we will forever be indebted to, and we will always remember,  First Lieutenant Michael Herman Thomas, United States Army. 
               
              Andrew J. Hudson 
              Lieutenant Colonel, Cavalry-Armor 
              United States Army (Retired) 
              September 14, 2011 
   
  Never  Forgotten 
   
  Posted  on 8/9/11 - by Robert Sage rsage@austin.rr.com 
               
              Michael  is buried at Memorial Gardens Cemetery, Hot Springs, AR. SS BSM AM PH  
   
  NATIVE  AMERICAN PRAYER 
   
  Posted  on 5/25/04 - by Chris Spencer cws71354@bellsouth.net 
               
              It  is said a man hasn't died as long as he is remembered. This prayer is a way for  families, friends and fellow veterans to remember our fallen brothers and  sisters. Do not stand at my grave and weep I am not there, I do not sleep. I am  a thousand winds that blow, I am the diamond glints on snow. I am the sunlight  on ripened grain, I am the gentle autumn rain. When you awaken in the morning  hush, I am the swift, uplifting rush of quiet birds in circled flight, I am the  stars that shine at night. Do not stand at my grave and cry, I am not there, I  did not die  
   
  Reflection  of a leader and friend 
   
  Posted  on 5/28/00 - by Ken "Doc" Raupach ANamDoc@aol.com 
               
              Reading  Bill McClung's remembrance brought back similar memories of Mike (1-6). I too  was his platoon medic when he was with "C" Co. 5/7, 1st Air Cav. The  day I got to the field (as a FNG) I didn't know a thing. 1-6 immediately took  me under his wing and made sure that my stuff was squared away. Two days later  we made our first combat assult and we were in the first bird that landed in  the LZ. 1-6 looked like a miniature "John Wayne" as he jumped out of  the helicopter. He told me to follow him and keep my head down. I'm glad I did.  As the last bird off loaded the troups, the lead gun ship erred and fired into  our men and killed and wounded several men. 1-6 told me it was time to do my  thing. As I treated the injured, Mike acted as my runner to get my aide bag, IV  supplies and whatever else was needed. Other memories of Mike proved over and  over again, just what a great man he was. I think about him often and how kind  he was to new guys like me and how he made sure that I knew what I was doing during  Vietnam. My last memory of Mike was seeing him in a body bag on LZ Buttons.  When Darryl (another platoon member) said 1-6 was gone, it was too hard to  believe. I wonder what contribution Mike would have made to our nation had he  lived. May be his legacy is carried out through people like Bill and me and all  the others that Mike looked after and helped. Mike was a good man, he loved his  family and is truly missed by this vet. I hope that I contribute as much.  
   
  In  Loving Memory...A Friend 
   
  Posted  on 1/18/99 - by Bill "Doc" McClung bmcclun@corus.jnj.com 
   
              Mike  Thomas ( 1-6 ) was the best officer I ever was associated with in the U.S.  Army. He was the Platoon Leader of the Recon Platoon of the 5/7 Cav of the 1st  Cavalry Division when I had the pleasure and honor of serving with him from  June-September 1969. He had the full respect of every member of the  platoon...he did not ask any of his men to do anything that he did not or would  not do himself. He was the best leader I have ever experienced in my life! I am  absolutely devastated by his loss and the fact that I will never be able to be  with him again. I'll never forget the time that Mike, Opha Peden ( RTO ) and I  were back in LZ Buttons in Song Be on a stand down when we decided late one  night after a couple of beers to get some C-rat Ham slices to  "barbecue" when we almost got caught by the MP's...that would have  looked nice, a 1st LT caught stealing C-rats...we laughed so hard we cried that  night! Not too many officers I knew of stayed with their medic and RTO while  they could have been in the O Club...Mike always did. That's why he was special  to me and probably the main reason I am alive today!  
               
   
  the  Wall of Faces 
               
              Brought  to you by the organization that built The Wall, the Vietnam Veterans Virtual  Memorial Wall is dedicated to honoring, remembering and sharing the legacies of  all those who died in the Vietnam War. Here you can go beyond the names on The  Wall to see the faces, share the stories and read the remembrances posted by  friends, neighbors, classmates and family members.  
               
              All  of these photos will be showcased in The Education Center at The Wall on the  National Mall in Washington, D.C. To learn more about the effort to collect  these photos and ensure their faces will never be forgotten, visit www.buildthecenter.org. 
               
              - See more at: http://www.vvmf.org/Wall-of-Faces/51684/MICHAEL-H-THOMAS#sthash.JTrJAVXp.dpuf.  
              
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