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The Best Storyteller in Abilene, Texas Shares the Story of His Hero—a Vietnam Veteran With an Eyepatch

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb
The Truth Network Radio
January 24, 2025 3:03 am

The Best Storyteller in Abilene, Texas Shares the Story of His Hero—a Vietnam Veteran With an Eyepatch

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb

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January 24, 2025 3:03 am

On this episode of Our American Stories, our regular contributor Jay Moore tells the story of an ordinary man he considers his personal hero—Dennis Holt.

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And one of those for me is a guy named Dennis Holt, my fellow Americans, and my fellow citizens of the world community. I asked you to share with me today, the majesty of this moment. Four months after President Nixon took office in January of 69, he went on television to really lay out what his peace plan was going to be for ending the war in Vietnam. I've asked for this television time tonight to make public a plan for peace that can end the war in Vietnam.

The offer that I shall now present on behalf of the government of the United States and the government of South Vietnam, with the full knowledge and approval of President Thieu is both generous and far reaching. And in his broadcast, he called for U.S. and North Vietnamese troops to just both pull out simultaneously from South Vietnam over the next 12 months. At the time of his talk, U.S. troops were at their highest level, over 540,000, I think, were in South Vietnam.

But ultimately, the leaders of North Vietnam are going to reject his peace plan. But that same day, North Vietnamese troops were pressing an attack on several South Vietnamese villages and U.S. bases. It really was one of the most wide ranging assaults that they had since the Tet Offensive of 1968.

But South Vietnamese troops and American troops all across the country were fighting back. And one of the persons, one of the guys who was in the fight that day on May the 14th of 1969, was Dennis Holt. I actually met Dennis nine years later, which was in 1978. I was a high school senior. I was working for my dad, who was a home builder. And Dennis worked for him, and he oversaw the construction efforts. And so we spent a fair amount of time together. We would drive from job to job, and occasionally we would have lunch together. I think I was just 17, barely on the edge of adulthood while Dennis, he was 31. And in my eyes, I saw him certainly as a grown man, and certainly someone who was awfully easy to like. One of the first things you notice about Dennis is that he smiles a lot. And also that he has an eye patch over his left eye.

And so one day I decided to ask him how it was that he came to lose his eye. In a pickup truck, we were heading south on a street in Abilene. When Dennis told me what happened on May the 14th of 1969 at a place near Nui Ba Din, which was known as the Black Persian Mountain. It's an area northwest of Saigon, and it was really a perennial hot zone during the Vietnam War. Anyway, Dennis is a native of Abilene. He went to elementary school here. He went to junior high here.

He was a little league all-star. He attended North Park Baptist Church, and he was a member of the Abilene High class of 1965. While he was there, he was the student council vice president. His senior year, he was the quarterback of the Abilene Eagle football team. The following graduation, he enrolled in a local college, McMurray College, and he was going to class during the daytime. And he was working at the Timex plant here in Abilene at night, trying to just earn enough to pay for school.

It was during his junior year that he really ran out of money. And then, of course, he was out of school and the draft board came calling. So, Dennis entered the army on May the 15th of 1968. And by October, he had landed at the U.S. Air Base there, Tan Son Nhut Air Base outside of Saigon. He was a GI in the 25th Division, 2nd Battalion, 22nd Infantry, a group that's often referred to as Triple Deuce.

Dennis was just 21. Three days, though, before Nixon had gone on TV back in May of 69, the North Vietnamese troops unleashed these surprise rocket attacks throughout the country, and it resulted in some of the most intense fighting of the war. But in response to those attacks, four infantry companies were sent out to recon an area that was called the Crescent. The B-52s had just spawned the area, and Dennis' squad was sent out on reconnaissance. And along with his squad was a photographer from the Associated Press. Every platoon is supported by what's called an APC or an armored personnel carrier.

They all have a top-mounted.50 caliber machine gun. Some of the platoon squads named theirs, and Dennis' was dubbed the Phantom. A lot of times, though, the troops walked rather than ride inside the APC, so very often it's just the driver and the top-mounted gunner who were aboard that vehicle. But as Dennis' squad moved through the jungle that day, the APC driver hit a tree, and a branch fell, and it landed on the gunner, and it broke his arm. So someone needed to step up to man the machine gun.

And Dennis has told me before that an unwritten rule in the Army is never volunteer for anything. But he volunteered, and he climbed up into the gunner's spot on the Phantom. And the rest of the afternoon was tense, as you can imagine, but nothing really happened until word finally came that they were to head back to their support base. And true to form, as they started in that direction is when the North Vietnamese launched their ambush. The men of Dennis' squad were caught, though. They had been sandwiched between the trailing APC and the North Vietnamese Army. So it was making it impossible for Dennis to fire his machine gun at the enemy without possibly hitting his own men.

So he began firing into the trees, hoping to hit snipers. He's just a kid from Abilene, Texas. He had never been farther from home than El Paso. And suddenly on a Wednesday afternoon in May of 1969, he's halfway around the world. He's in a sweltering jungle. He's manning a machine gun in a full-fledged honest to goodness real life war.

Both sides are just frantically trying to kill the other in order to keep themselves alive. So Dennis was firing back in a storm of adrenaline, and then his world went black. At the time, Dennis didn't even have all the details of that day.

He wouldn't fully learn what occurred on May 14th of 1969 until he began attending triple deuce reunions back in 2012. But Dennis lost his eye and really came within a literal inch of losing his life when another APC gunner, who was located quite some distance away, squeezed the trigger on his machine gun. And that 50 caliber bullet, which is a half inch wide piece of lead moving at like 3,000 feet per second, it pierced an ammo box. It went through the protective armor on the APC and hit Dennis on the left side of his head.

And it crossed him his eye. He told me that as he drifted in and out of consciousness, that the medics quickly began bandaging his head to stop the blood loss. The Associated Press photographer who was with them raised his camera and took a photo. It shows two medics who were cradling Dennis's head.

There as he's lying on the ground in the Vietnamese jungle, the picture ran in the stars and strikes. The medic strapped Dennis to a rescue basket attached to the outside of a helicopter, and he was evacuated to the very nearest field hospital where that treatment kept him from bleeding to death. After he was stabilized, he would leave Vietnam, he would go to Japan for more care, and then he would be taken to Brook Army Medical Center in San Antonio. Within just a few months of being discharged from Brook, Dennis married a girl in 1970 that he had been friends with at Abilene High. Her name was Linda. She often wrote to him while he was in Vietnam. They moved to the Dallas area, but returned to Abilene in 1978.

They bought a house here near Cooper High School, and it was there that they raised their two daughters. And not soon after that is when I met Dennis. I asked him if he thinks much about Vietnam these days, and he smiled and he said, you know, every morning when I put this eyepatch on. It struck me that for more than five decades, Dennis has lived with Vietnam, but he feels fortunate.

Fortunate that he came on, that he was able to move forward, and I think all that shows in his smile. While he was in Vietnam, Dennis turned 22. Months later, though, when he was back in Texas, he was asked, what did you get for your 22nd birthday?

And his reply was, I got the chance to be 23. On November 1st of this year, Dennis turned 78. He is now a poppy to four granddaughters and one grandson. After 42 years of marriage, Linda passed away in 2012, but Dennis still lives in their home by Cooper, and he is still one of my heroes, and he always will be.

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