From time to time there are many small stories located
in much larger ones. This is one such story of
2nd Lt. Terrance Collinson Graves of 3rd Force Recon -
MOH Posthumously
Team Box Score of the Third Force Recon Company reached its assigned
recon zone six miles northwest of Dong Ha on 15 February 1968 by walking from
the nearest firebase. Composed of eight men including patrol leader Second
Lieutenant Terrence C. Graves, six enlisted Marines, and a corpsman, Box
Score had a rather typical mission, to determine enemy activity, engaging
what enemy they found with supporting fires, locating landing zones and
trails, and attempting to capture a prisoner.
By the afternoon of the 16th, the team had reached an area overlooking a
small stream pocked with bomb craters. Hearing voices in the thick brush
across the waterway, the team crossed the stream to set up an ambush in a
bomb crater alongside a trail. Within minutes seven NVA walked down the
pathway. When the enemy was within five meters of the ambush, the recon men
opened up, killing all seven. In the brief firefight, the NVA were barely
able to return fire; however, two of the rounds they managed to get off
struck Corporal Danny M. Slocum, tearing away skin and muscle from his thigh
but not producing life threatening wounds.
While the team medic, HM3 Stephen R. Thompson, was treating Slocum,
Graves hastily searched the bodies and found a diary along with other
documents. The patrol leader then called a med-evac for the wounded Marine
and began moving the team to a better point to bring in the helicopter. Box
Score made it only a few meters before the team was raked by automatic
weapons fire from two different directions. Graves ordered the team into a
hasty perimeter as the Marines returned fire. Several of the NVA machine
guns were knocked out by accurate M-79 grenade launcher fire by Corporal
Robert B. Thomson, though Thomson had been unable to spot the exact position
of the automatic weapons until Private First Class Michael P. Nation exposed
himself to mark their positions with tracer rounds for Thomson to zero in on.
The silencing of the enemy machine guns brought only a brief lull to the
fighting. Every minute, more NVA joined the battle, until at least two
companies were ringing the eight-man patrol. Despite the number of NVA,
Graves had to move his team to a better position from which to fight and
hopefully be extracted. As the lieutenant directed in air strikes and gun
ships to cover their movement, the team began inching its way to the top of a
small knoll. At one point a CH-46 attempted to land near the team but took
several hits and had to lift off.
As the CH 46 flew out of range, the NVA again concentrated their
firepower on the recon team. Graves took a bullet in the thigh, but an
inspection by Doc Thompson revealed that the bone was not broken. After a
quick bandaging, Graves was back on the radio coordinating the supporting
fires. No sooner had the corpsman finished with the lieutenant than Corporal
Thomson yelled that he too had been hit. A bullet had penetrated the
Marine's left side and shattered the pelvic bone before lodging in the
abdominal cavity. Doc Thompson recalls, "He said, ‘I'm blacking out, Doc,
I’m blacking out. ‘ Then he passed out on me, and I think at that moment he
died. I started closed-chest cardiac massage and mouth-to-mouth
resuscitation. While I was doing this, Lopez, Private First Class Adrian S.
yelled, ‘Doc, Emrick's (Lance Corporal Steven E.) hit, I think he's dying.‘
I looked over and said, Nation [who had been cross-trained by Thompson in
medical procedures], just do what you can."
Nation alternated between treating Emrick and doing his best to fight off
the NVA. According to Nation, "Emrick kept saying, 'Get the radio off.'
That was what he was talking about; he wasn't worried about himself. Lopez
finally got it off by snapping off the bottom of the pack. Then Emrick said,
'Oh my God,' and that's the last thing he said. I started to give him mouth
to mouth. Lopez said he could still feel a pulse."
There was no letup in the NVA fire despite the repeated runs by
fixed-wing aircraft and helicopter gun ships. Graves continued to fight as
he directed the team to make another attempt to move to higher ground. With
Doc Thompson and Private First Class James E. Honeycutt dragging Thomson and
with Nation and Lopez carrying Emrick, Graves and Slocum provided covering
fire despite their wounds. A few minutes later Box Score reached the low
grassy ridge that was large enough for a set down extraction. Although the
patrol was then in a good position for extraction, the ridge they occupied
was paralleled by two higher hills, both occupied by the NVA only 100 meters
away.
The fight by the eight Marines against several hundred NVA had been going
on for over an hour and a half. Another CH-46 made an attempt to reach the
team but took heavy fire and had to regain altitude. Captain David Underwood,
orbiting the fight at 1,000 feet in his H-34, radioed that he was coming in
to make the extraction. Flying behind a Huey gunship for covering fire,
Underwood came in at treetop level through a gauntlet of small-arms and
machine-gun fire, touching down only a few meters from the team. Intense
fire immediately centered on the H-34, shattering the side windows and some
of the pilot's instrument panel gauges. More rounds were slamming into the
fuselage and fuel pods. Although practically every warning light was lit up
on the still operational parts of the instrument panel, Underwood stayed at
the controls, waiting for the recon team to climb aboard.
Dragging, pulling, and crawling through the elephant grass, the Marines
loaded the aircraft as Graves continued to return the NVA fire. Three long
minutes passed as the recon men ensured that their wounded buddies were
pulled onto the aircraft that was now profusely leaking fuel and was in
danger of exploding. Nation later stated, "I guess Lieutenant Graves saw how
bad the plane was hit and realized if the chopper didn't leave then it
wouldn't be leaving at all, because I saw him waving at the pilot and yelling
'get' or 'get out.' He did this realizing that he might get hit again and his
chances of getting back were pretty slim, but he wanted to make sure that the
rest of us made it back. What Lieutenant Graves did is the bravest thing
I've ever seen."
As Underwood began to lift the crippled chopper, the NVA ran out of their
protected positions for better shots. One burst strafed the bird, a bullet
hitting Lopez in the thigh and glancing off the bone and into the Marine's
stomach. As the helicopter gained a few feet of altitude, Slocum and
Honeycutt realized that Graves was being left behind, with no words exchanged
between the two, both Marines jumped from the helicopter to help their
lieutenant. With the loss of weight of the two men, Underwood was able to
gain altitude quickly and nurse the bird to the nearest medical facility.
More than 20 bullet holes were later counted in the aircraft.
Meanwhile, Underwood's wingman, Captain Carl Bergman, was attempting to
pick up the remaining recon men. Three passes through the NVA fire failed to
find the Marines, but on the fourth try Bergman spotted the trio and set his
H-34 down near them. The chopper immediately came under intense automatic
weapons fire from NVA so close that initially Bergman could not distinguish
between the sounds of the outgoing from his door gunners and the incoming
from the enemy. A shout from the cargo compartment revealed that the crew
chief had been wounded and that the fuel cells were hit and leaking. Bergman
was forced to lift off before the remaining members of Box Score were able to
fight their way to the helicopter.
Graves, Slocum, and Honeycutt continued to return fire as they made still
another attempt to move to a more advantageous position. The NVA dropped two
mortar rounds near the trio but did no damage. Suddenly a UH-1 pilot spotted
an opening and swooped in almost on top of the Marines. The Huey hovered
just off the ground as the recon men threw their gear aboard and pulled
themselves into the aircraft. Cross fire from the NVA zeroed in on the
chopper as it attempted to lift off. Graves was hit again, as was the
copilot, who slumped over the controls. The Huey nosed over and crashed on
its side into the jungle.
Slocum found himself on top of "a heap of bodies." As he crawled out of
the helicopter, 15-20 NVA were sweeping toward him on line. The enemy
spotted the Marine and opened fire as he turned and ran toward a nearby
stream. Hitting the stream bed at a dead run, Slocum was able to elude his
pursuers.
By then, darkness was closing in on the battle area. A reaction force
consisting of a platoon of B Company, 1st Battalion, 4th Marines air-landed
near the crashed Huey to rescue any survivors. Before they reached the
downed aircraft, they too became engaged with the NVA from three directions
and suffered one killed and four wounded. Unable to proceed, the platoon
formed a defensive perimeter.
Slocum heard the firefight from his hiding place near the stream but
decided to remain in place. He later recalled matter-of-factly, "I didn't
want to go back over there. There was a firefight going on and I didn't want
to get shot anymore."
At daylight the next morning, the remainder of B Company was lifted in
and finally reached the crashed chopper to report that Graves and Honeycutt
were dead and Slocum missing.
The missing Marine‘s problems were not yet over. In his attempt to link
up with B Company, the infantry Marines mistook him for an NVA and called in
artillery on him. Slocum states, "It didn't bother me; I got down in a hole."
When the infantrymen started toward Slocum's hole, not wanting to take
any more chances, he headed in the opposite direction. Finally a chopper
spotted him and coordinated his joining up with B Company. Slocum was
evacuated to the Naval Hospital in Cam Ranh Bay where after two and a half
months he recovered from his wounds and eventually rejoined the Third
Company. Thomson, Lopez, and Emrick were not so fortunate. All three died
of their wounds either aboard Underwood’s helicopter or within hours of
reaching the evacuation hospital.
Slocum, Doc Thompson, and Bergman later received the Silver Star.
Thomson’s Silver Star and Honeycutt‘s Navy Cross were both awarded
posthumously. Underwood also had earned a Navy Cross. On 2 December 1969,
in the office of the Vice President of the United States, Spiro T. Agnew
presented the Medal of Honor posthumously to the family of Lieutenant Graves.
This is a passage taken from the book: 'From Inside Force Recon, Recon Marines in Vietnam'
by Michael Lanning and Ray
Stubbe. Passed on to me through Leslie Paul Gifford III of Groton, NY on
2-15-2001.