Lewis Sorley was born at West Point into an Army family. He attended grammar school just outside the gate of Fort Sam Houston, and high school at the Texas Military Institute, both in San Antonio, Texas, which he regards as his hometown. He graduated from West Point and was commissioned in the Army in 1956. After attending the Officer’s Basic Course and armor school at Fort Knox, Kentucky, he went to Airborne and Jumpmaster schools at Fort Benning, Georgia before joining the 2d Armored Cavalry Division at Fort Meade, Maryland and later Germany. He spent three years on the faculty at West Point, then in 1966 Sorley deployed to Vietnam as an individual replacement. He was initially assigned as a planner, G3, with I Field Force at Nha Trang, and was involved in early U.S. efforts to support the Vietnamese government pacification efforts, an assignment which he enjoyed a lot, and for which he was awarded the Legion of Merit. He was later assigned as XO to 1st Battalion, 69th Armor, 25th Infantry Division near Pleiku in the Central Highlands. Sorley fondly recalls two little girls showing him around the Saigon Zoo, skinning a tiger, sleeping through a mortar attack (which impressed the troops), steak night at the 5th Special Forces Group headquarters in Nha Trang, R&R in Hong Kong, and a smoked Christmas turkey from Macy’s for his sister. He remembers a bridge collapse on Christmas Eve, a reply by endorsement letter to the battalion commander, an interaction with Bob Hope in Cincinnati, a letter from famous tenor Richard Tucker, and a colonel’s thirst for a Silver Star. Sorley also discusses MEDCAPs and rice wine ceremonies, semi-cooked chicken, loom weaving, and gin and tonics filled up with scotch.
Key Words: West Point, San Antonio, Texas, Texas Military Institute, Fort Sam Houston, TWX (teletypewriter message), West Point, class of '56, Armor Basic School, 2d Armored Cavalry Regiment, Fort Meade, Maryland, gyroscope, basic officer's course, Fort Knox, airborne and jumpmaster training, Fort Benning, New Garden Apartments, tankers night ride, 25th Infantry Division, tank battalion, Central Highlands, Tan Son Nhut, G3, I Field Force, planner, pacification mission, Legion of Merit, I Corp, III Corps, IV Corps, province chief, national police, ARVN (Army of the Republic of Vietnam), RF (regional forces), PF (popular forces), CORDS (Civil Operations and Revolutionary Development Support), cyclos, Saigon Zoo, Pleiku, II Corps Tactical Zone, APO (Army postal system), Route 19 East, Dust Off pilots, Army nurses, forward air controllers, R&R, Hong Kong, Mercury Cougar, Macy's Department Store, Gimbel's, greatest generation, opera singer, Titty Mountain, Dragon Mountain, Brinks BOQ, Stars and Stripes, AFN (Armed Forces Network Radio), Kowloon, Star Ferry, disco, the Scene, San Miguel beer, Jax beer, the 5th Dimension, reply by endorsement, Plei Djereng, Quy Nhon, 67th Evac, 85th Evac, leprosy clinic, ROK (Republic of Korea) forces, combat symposium, Montagnards, Jarai, Bahnar, MEDCAP, rice wine ceremony, scotch, v-mail, MARS, Doonesbury cartoons, San Francisco, Newburgh, New York, Naval Command and Staff School, Naval War College, Newport, Rhode Island, America's Cup, Pentagon, Office of the Chief of Staff, Sugar Land, Texas, Carlisle Barracks, Army War College, OSD Net Assessment, CIA
Key Names: Lieutenant General “Swede” Larsen, General Westmoreland, Ambassador Bunker, Bill Colby, Sergeant Ferneyhough, Colonel Clark, Tom Brokaw, Richard Tucker, Bob Hope, General Abrams, Engelbert Humperdinck, Ray Peers, Buster Boatwright, Dr. John Fagan, Lieutenant General Chae, Colonel Williams, Garry Trudeau, Chick Hayward, Colonel Long, General Truong, Colonel Wolf, Ha Mai Viet, General Harkins, Jack Kennedy, LBJ, Harold K. Johnson, Creighton Abrams, Bruce Palmer, Jr., Secretary of Defense McNamara, Maxwell Taylor, Nixon, Jim Schlesinger, Andy Marshall