Lasting Visions: With the 7th Marines in Vietnam 1970


Book Description

Merriam Press Vietnam War Series. A coming of age story of a farm boy who grew up in the heartland of Kentucky, who enlisted in the Marines in 1969 and experienced Marine boot camp at Parris Island where domineering drill instructors took away the youth in the author and instilled the discipline, training, and motivation necessary to survive in combat. Arriving in Vietnam in March 1970 he was assigned to 3rd Platoon, Mike Co., 3rd Bn., 7th Marines. His story tells of the bravery, camaraderie, and esprit de corps of this Marine infantry squad. Fred's true accounts take the reader into the jungles, rice paddies, villages, and mountains of Vietnam. Lasting Visions takes you to ground zero of the Vietnam War. 33 photos, map.




Lasting Visions: It Comes With The Rank


Book Description

Merriam Press Military Memoir Series. Fred Fenwick joined the USMC at eighteen. Thirty years later he retired at the highest enlisted rank of Sergeant Major. He reported to Parris Island, SC, in 1969 for recruit training and retired in 1999. In 2010 he published his first non-fiction book titled "Lasting Visions: With the 7th Marines in Vietnam 1970." It captured his first year and a half in the Marine Corps. His first book takes you through combat in Vietnam and his subsequent tour in Okinawa and the Orient. "Lasting Visions: It Comes With the Rank" is his second non-fiction book. He has picked up where he left off in his first book and continued through a 30-year Marine Corps career. The author's unique style of storytelling will capture your attention and keep you in suspense. 49 photos.




Lasting Visions of Floy Bugg Fenwick: Mother of Five Marine Sons


Book Description

Merriam Press Biography Series. The true story of a woman who made a difference here on earth. She touched the lives of many people during her 90 years of significant and memorable events. Growing up in the heartland of Kentucky, she married a farmer and lived her entire life working and providing for her family of nine. She did not receive financial compensation for all her hard work, but for her, doing good deeds for others was of prime importance to her happiness and personal gratification. This is a story about my mother, Floy Bugg Fenwick. Her immediate family always had a special bond with her. She raised five sons and four daughters. As fate would have it, all five sons would serve their country in the United States Marine Corps. Her children, grandchildren and future generations will always remember how she made a difference as a decent and upstanding pillar of the community. This tribute to my mother comes from the heart. I will always love her, more than I can adequately express in words. 90 photos.




Lasting Visions II


Book Description

Merriam Press Military Monograph 135. Second Edition (February 2012). The author joined the United States Marine Corps at the young age of eighteen. His destiny was to serve his country as a Marine and make the Marine Corps his career. Thirty years later he retired at the highest enlisted rank of Sergeant Major. He reported to Parris Island, South Carolina in 1969 for recruit training and retired in 1999. During his initial first three year enlistment he would serve in Vietnam and Okinawa. In August 2010 he published his first non-fiction book titled Lasting Visions: With the 7th Marines in Vietnam 1970. It captured his first year and a half in the Marine Corps. His first book takes you through combat in Vietnam and his subsequent tour in Okinawa and the Orient. Lasting Visions: It Comes With The Rank is his second non-fiction book. He has picked up where he left off in his first book and continued through a 30-year Marine Corps career. For the full story and complete understanding of this Marine's military career, Lasting Visions: With the 7th Marines in Vietnam 1970 is a must read. The author's unique style of storytelling will capture your attention and keep you in suspense. He errs on the side of comical, unbelievable, crazy, and downright egotistical. His personal experiences, while progressing through the enlisted ranks, take on a whole new perspective of what some may believe happens within the ranks. His stories shed some light on what it is like receiving orders and working alongside those in the position of authority. As long as there are officer and enlisted ranks in the same unit there will always be differences of opinions and individual ideas of how things should work. As with most command decisions, the author believes that anyone in a position of authority, must always practice good common sense. His stories convey that this is not always the case. Contents: Foreword; Chapter 1: Republic of the Philippines (1971-1972); Chapter 2: Drill Instructor Duty; (1974-1976) Chapter 3: Marine Barracks 8th and I (1977-1980); Chapter 4: 3rd Battalion, 9th Marines (1980-1981); Chapter 5: Istanbul Turkey and Wellington New Zealand (1982-1985); Chapter 6: 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines (1986-1988); Chapter 7: Bangkok, Thailand (1989-1991); Chapter 8: Sergeant Major (1992-1999); The Author; 49 photos.




Lasting Visions: The End of an Era


Book Description

Merriam Press Military Biography Series. Donald Fenwick enlisted in the US Marine Corps at 18. His destiny was to serve his country as a Marine and to make the Marine Corps a career. He reported to Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego, California in Jan 1957 for recruit training and retired in Oct 1990. For 33 years he served our nation and retired as a Master Gunnery Sergeant. His illustrious military career embodies both the old breed and the new breed of the Marine Corps. Donald served in distant lands such as Vietnam and Okinawa with several cruises aboard ship in the Caribbean Sea and Mediterranean Sea. His story will capture your attention and give you an insight into the reality of what being a Marine is all about. His personal experiences while growing up on the farm in rural Kentucky and while progressing through the enlisted ranks, reveal the espirit de corps, camaraderie and the struggles he had to endure. 71 photos, 2 maps.







Our Vietnam War


Book Description

In January of 1970, Alpha Company was redesingated Alpha CUPP as part of the Combined Unit Pacification Program, which turned out to be anything but peaceful. During the next 6 months the company led the 1st Marine Division in frequency of fire fights. The communist Viet Cong and North Vietnam Army soldiers were more than willing to take on squads of a dozen or so Marines isolated in each of the nine villages where they were assigned the missions of training the local defenders, driving the enemy out of the villages, helping open schools and market places, and winning over the people to the side of the often corrupt South Vietnam government officials. Based upon his combat journal and myriad media articles about the operation, their former platoon leader T.S. Miller's rather objective reporting of significant events is in sharp contrast to the unedited, emotional tone of the stories shared by his Marines at several reunions, decades later. What was it like to be a teenaged American Marine assigned to a foreign village, where you neither spoke the language nor understood the culture, to face off against a determined, combat hardened amoral enemy who was dedicated to destroying you and any Vietnamese who was willing to stand by you and your buddies, the only people you could really trust? Add to that conundrum the readily available temptations of drugs, sex, and alcohol in the villes and you get a sense of the pressures they endured 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, month after month. How did they respond? Read on and find out!




U.S. Marines in Vietnam


Book Description




U.S. Marines In Vietnam: The Bitter End, 1973-1975


Book Description

This publication represents the ninth volume in an operational and chronological series covering the Marine Corps’ participation in the Vietnam War. This particular volume details the final chapter in the Corps’ involvement in South-East Asia, including chapters on Cambodia, the refugees, and the recovery of the container ship SS Mayaguez. Although largely written from the perspective of the III Marine Amphibious Force, this volume also describes the roles of the two joint commands operating in the region: the Defense Attaché Office, Saigon, and the United States Support Activities Group, Thailand. Thus, while the volume emphasizes the Marine Corps’ role in the events of the period, significant attention also is given to the overall contribution of these commands in executing U.S. policy in South-east Asia from 1973 to 1975. Additionally, a chapter is devoted to the Marine Corps’ role in assisting thousands of refugees who fled South Vietnam in the final weeks of that nation’s existence.




Lasting Visions III: The End of an Era


Book Description

Merriam Press Military Monograph 138. Donald Fenwick enlisted in the US Marine Corps at 18. His destiny was to serve his country as a Marine and to make the Marine Corps a career. He reported to Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego, California in Jan 1957 for recruit training and retired in Oct 1990. For 33 years he served our nation and retired as a Master Gunnery Sergeant. His illustrious military career embodies both the old breed and the new breed of the Marine Corps. Donald served in distant lands such as Vietnam and Okinawa with several cruises aboard ship in the Caribbean Sea and Mediterranean Sea. His story will capture your attention and give you an insight into the reality of what being a Marine is all about. His personal experiences while growing up on the farm in rural Kentucky and while progressing through the enlisted ranks, reveal the espirit de corps, camaraderie and the struggles he had to endure. 71 photos, 2 maps.