*** Of This And That
In The Old 1960s North Adamsville Neighborhood-The Fallen Of The Vietnam War
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
In recent
times I have spent not a little time touting the virtues of the Internet in
allowing me and the members of the North Adamsville, Massachusetts Class of
1964, or what is left of it, the remnant that has survived and is findable with
the new technologies (some will never be found by choice or by being excluded from
the “information superhighway” that they have not been able to navigate), to
communicate with each other some fifty years and many miles later. I noted in
one sketch done previously about a guy who photos of my old childhood
neighborhood drew praised comment praised from me that I had to marvel at some
of the communications technology that makes our work a lot easier than back in
the day. The Internet was only maybe a dream, a mad monk scientist far-fetched
science fiction dream then as we struggle with three by five cards and archaic Dewey
Decimal systems.
I admit that
for most of those fifty years since graduation I had studiously avoided
returning to the old town for any past class reunions but this one, the reasons
which not need detain us here, I had wanted to attend. Or rather wanted to
attend once the reunion committee was able to track me down and invite me to
attend. Or a better “rather” to join a NA64.com website run by a wizard
webmaster, Donna, who was also our class Vice-President to keep up to date on
progress for that reunion. Now it was not a hard task for the committee to find
me on the Internet these days since I belong to a professional organization
where information on my whereabouts is public knowledge. What is impressive
though is how simple that task proved since it would have taken much work, and
probably fruitless work at that, to track me down for let’s say the 20th,
25th or 40th reunions when they took place.
Part of the
reason I did join the class site was to keep informed about upcoming events but
also as is my wont to make commentary about various aspects of the old hometown,
the the high school then, and any other tidbit that my esteemed fellow
classmates might want to ponder after all these years. All this made simple as
pie by the act of joining. Once logged in one is provided with a personal
profile page complete with space for private e-mails, story-telling, various
vital statistics like kids and grandkids, and space for the billion photos of
the that progeny, mostly it seems for those darling grandkids that seem to pop
up everywhere. Additionally, and sadly, there
is a section, an “In Memory” section, on the website dedicated to those who
have passed on from our class as well as a section, a “For Those Who Served”
section, dedicated to those in our class, mainly guys reflecting the nature of
military service back then, who had done military service. That combination is
what drives this sketch.
Let me
explain. A while back I went on to the class website to check out a new
addition to the list of those who have joined the site recently. We can use our
personal settings to be informed of that kind of information on a more or less frequent
basis. The guy who had just joined was a guy I did not know but I had seen
around the school (you would have seen almost everybody in the four years you
were there with one thing or another even though the class had baby-boomer
times over 500 students) and so I was ready to click off the site when I
noticed that someone had placed a comment in the “In Memory” section about Jim
Slater a guy I knew somewhat who had fallen in our class’s war, the Vietnam
War. That notice got me looking over the whole “In Memory” section to see how
many more of our classmates fell during that heinous war. It turned out that
while our working-class town, high school, and class had provided its fair
share of those who had served during the war only one other classmate, David
Martin, had fallen in Vietnam. So we had lost far fewer that such other
working-class areas nearby like the Dorchester, South Boston, and Roxbury sections
of Boston that each have their own memorials to those who fell in those sections,
or farther afield, Harlem, East Los Angeles, Steubenville, Ohio, Ottumwa, Iowa,
El Paso, Texas, Topeka, Kansas and the like. Nevertheless given my own spotty
military service, although honorably done in my eyes and the eyes of others, I
felt some shyly kindred need to make a comment about my, our, fallen brothers.
Although
my military story might not reflect the average story about what went down in
those tough 1960s times when every guy had to face, one way or another, the
draft and what to do about it let me run my story and then maybe you can
understand why I am shy about commenting on our class fallen and why I also need
to speak of kindred now that the aches of that war have dissipated somewhat. My
story about getting “religion” on what the American state was all about, about
fighting the good fight against war when the deal went down.
Until
my military service I had been an official member in good-standing of the
working-class, of the Irish working-class, a heavy drinker, whisky mainly, with
a beer chaser when I was frisky, water chaser when I was broke. I had a dream
though, a child dream, a dream to escape the damn world that I was born into
and hadn’t any say in creating, or being asked about. I would talk about my
dream just like that, in that certain Jehovah righteous tone which may explain
why I would be a prime candidate for some foreboding army stockade or the
bastinado when the deal went down, although my decision to confront the Army
head-on was a closer thing than one might think. That “had not being asked about stuff in the way
the world was run” had bothered me since about age ten or eleven. I was in a
constant civil war about almost everything with my mother from as early as I
could remember. My poor, hard-working-when-he-could-find-work father, with no
breaks in the world, straight from the hard scrabble world of coal mine
Appalachia via the World War II Marines, was a shadow figure somewhere in the
background. The main bouts were with “Ma,” over money, over going, or not going
here or there, of breathing, breathing too much to hear her tell it. Kids’
stuff but big on some kid horizon. So that “around ten or eleven” time I
started dreaming, had first started dreaming about escaping from my tumble-
down working poor boy fate, had started dreaming about the big jail breakout
from the old ways.
Where
I lived growing up in North Adamsville was near the water, near the Neptune
River. I could see across to Castle Island on a good day and so I could see the
tankers and other ships coming into the bay to leave off their product or pick
up stuff. That is where I got the idea of building a raft to go out to join a
ship moored in the channel and flee to the big wide world parts unknown. In the
end it didn’t work out since my reach exceeded my grasp, I could not, not being
very good mechanically even then, even with brother help get a sea-worthy, a
channel-worthy raft together. But that escape idea, that idea of seeing the
great big world, of seeing in person the places and persons that I had heard
about, from teachers and others heard about, read about, big sassy book poured
over and thumbed over until I was exhausted read about, and seen too on that
old black and white television screen we all were glued to which had crowded my
brain.
That
failed raft experiment, in any case, was not the end of my strivings although
it ended my attempted physical break-out for a while. I remember though one
night sneaking out the back of the family house (better to call it a shack and
when I took a special girlfriend there on one ill-advised meeting with my
mother she had to agree with me although I sensed she was always hesitant to
say anything bad about the place) on midnight runs to Harvard Square at
sixteen. Of walking a couple of miles to catch a local all-night bus to then
catch the subway at Fields Corner in Dorchester and to rumble, tumble, amble my
way over to Cambridge to the all-night open Hayes-Bickford Cafeteria. Being
there just to feel the air of the place when things were beginning to happen in
1962, to just be around the new thing, the jailbreak out thing that I sensed
was coming. And then rumble, tumble, amble back on that subway before dawn to
avoid mother worries, mother hassles and mother penalties. Thereafter though one
thing led to another and I put the dream on hold, put it on hold through
college, through hard whisky and women nights, through some personal political
dream etched out in Kennedy days splendor, in short “to get mine” while helping others to get
theirs. And so my horizon narrowed, my fervent desire to see, hear, read, be
with everything, everybody, to see how things ticked faded, childhood, young
manhood faded.
And
then came the Army. I don’t like to talk about it, talk about it all that much,
especially when early on one post-military service girlfriend (and later wife),
Josie, would go on and on about what the experience was like in order to get a
feel for who she was getting tied up with, about what happened while I was in
the military, the Army. I would cut her short with this- “I did what I had to
do, did it, and I was not sorry, nor sorry for a minute, that I did what I
did.” I would add to take the sting out of my remarks, chuckling, the worst of
it was when they threw me in solitary for a while and wouldn’t let me smoke
cigarettes in those days when I was a fairly heavy smoker (although the system
worked out among solitary prisoners allowed me to cadge a few puffs while in
the rest room, oh no what did they call it, oh yeah, the latrine). I had begun
to smoke more after I was inducted when there was so much dead time that we
trainees would just stand around smoking one cigarette after another to kill
time until some jackass sergeant sadistically decided he wanted his charges to
double- time with full backpack somewhere for some reason known only to that
self-same sergeant, for some odd national or personal security reason.
Mainly
after I got out though I would privately go back and forth in my mind about
whether before I went into the service I should have decided differently and
not allowed myself to be inducted. The back and forth really centered on that
faded dream, that faded break out dream that I let fall on the back burner at a
time when having it front and center would have counted . See, as you know, I came
from working-class people, no, working poor, a notch below that, my poor
be-draggled father, from down in Podunk Kentucky, down in white hillbilly Appalachia,
down among the poor white trash of literature. The just plain poor that I knew
needed help from when I read Michael Harrington’s The Other America for
a sociology class that I took as an under-graduate where Harrington described
the white folks left behind in the go-go America of the 1950s.
I
had turned red one time when Josie mentioned that book and that she knew, book
knew, of what my father, and his people were all about, “the wretched of the
earth” in America. I related a story to her, a school story about a project
that some classmates might remember, about how North Adamsville High was going
to reach out to the victims in Appalachia by sending food, clothing and money
down there, down to Hazard, Kentucky. Jesus, I said when the headmaster
announced the project over the loudspeaker, that was where my father was born (I
had shown her that fact listed on my birth certificate one day). In any case my
father was always out of work, out of luck, and out of my frame of reference
especially when I got older and started drifting away from the family and
started to develop my own political perspective and my own jailbreak way out of
the scene I grew up with.
But
that was exactly the problem, that from hunger bringing up, that
hand-me-down-where-is-the-rent-money-coming-from-keep-your-eyes-to-the-ground-shame
and sorry combined with three thousand pounds of plain ordinary vanilla 1950s
all ships rising teen angst and teen alienation, that came between me and all my
decisions in those days. Along with some very standard American idiotic
patriotic my-country-right-or-wrong local neighborhood mores and the drilled in
customary Roman Catholic subservience to authority, Rome or D.C. (in this life,
all was to be milk and honey socialism in the next) in that Irish neighborhood
that I grew up in. That and my very real appetite for going for the main chance
in politics. That was what I had been aiming for, a career, a regular career in
politics, “helping my people while helping myself,” is the way I put it to
Josie one time.
I
told Josie that I had spent most of 1968 working that main chance idea as I was
getting ready to graduate from college and had some time to “build my resume.” I
started out that fateful year holding my nose and committed to backing Lyndon
Johnson for re-election until Eugene McCarthy (Irish Gene, a poet and a dreamer
and thus worthy of support) pushed the envelope and Johnson backed out. I went
wild for Robert Kennedy, my idea of a beau political animal then, ruthless to
political enemies, young or old, and not forgetful about old wounds either, and
this beautiful patrician vision of “seeking a newer world.” When Bobby was
assassinated I went over to Hubert Humphrey and would up there under the
principal that Richard Noxious, uh, Nixon was the main enemy of the people of
the world (and of my political advancement). So not then the profile of a guy
who was going to chance charging windmills, or crush childhood dreams of
bourgeois break-outs, no way.
So
I went, sullenly went when drafted. After about three days I realized that I
had made a mistake, a serious mistake and that I should have chanced draft-
dodger jail instead. But see, it was hard for a guy hard-wired for a political
career like me to shift gears like that so I fumbled and bumbled with the
problem for a while. I had always been anti-war in kind of an abstract way;
kind of an “all men are brothers” way. I told Josie that I had first expressed
that opinion on the Boston Common back in the fall of 1960 when I attended a
small demonstration at the Park Street Station with a bunch of little old angel
ladies in tennis sneakers and stern-faced Jehovah-etched Quakers who were
calling for nuclear disarmament. I also told her as if to express the Janus
nature of the times, of myself, that the next week I was working the streets of
North Adamsville passing out Jack Kennedy presidential literature. Jack who was
crying out loud about the “missile gap,” arguing for more nuclear missiles. Still
I tumbled and mumbled fitfully through the problem.
Of
course if you were part of the military down in some boondock southern town, a
town like Augusta, Georgia where I took basic training at Fort Gordon and later
in Anniston, Alabama where I took AIT (Advanced Infantry Training so you already
know which way the die was cast) at Fort McClellan out in nowhere far from
northern gentility, even rough-edged northern working- class gentility, you knew
you were up the creek without a paddle. And, as well, if you were also
surrounded by guys, maybe sullen, maybe gung-ho, but mainly who like you were
kind of committed to their fate (and afraid, afraid like hell of that constant
threat, Fort Leavenworth, the main Army penal threat) then stumbling and
mumbling is what you did, and did it for a while. But the military fates were
not kind, not wartime kind, not 1969 wartime kind, when the Vietnam war was
eating up men and material at prestigious rates, while the world clamored for
shut-down and so my fate was to be a grunt, a foot soldier, and the only place
that foot soldiers were being gainfully employed in those days was in sweaty,
sullen Southeast Asia. In the normal course of events after training was completed
I was so ordered there via the Fort Lewis, Washington transfer station after a
short leave of absence to go home.
Before
that though I still mumbled, stumbled, and tumbled on other fronts. I,
political animal I, tried, frantically tried using many up many coins on one of
the base public telephones at Fort McClellan in doing some, to work around it
administratively, pulling some chips dues in with my erstwhile political cronies,
no go. I tried to do an end- around by claiming conscientious objector status
which held up my orders to Fort Lewis for a while as that process unfolded,
although I was uneasy about doing so since I believed that there were some just
wars and that position was not grounds for discharge at that moment, no go.
Then one night, one night, a Sunday night, a hot and sweaty Sunday night,
sitting in the base PX after the library had closed I decided to take a stand,
decided that some form of resistance was the only way out. Personal resistance
since I saw no other kindred.
I
went out in the sultry night and started walking and planning, and
half-hesitating. I would not do any action in the south where I know I would be
swallowed up without a trace. That was not mere speculation either. A few of us, mainly Yankee boys and a couple of
Midwestern guys, had vaguely threatened to balk at firing machines guns at the
range in protest and some stoolie must have told the command because we were
threatened with the bastinado and having the keys thrown away, forever. That
stopped us from any action then. Once I got home on leave to North Adamsville I
went over to Cambridge over to see the Quakers, or rather their American
Friends Service Committee organization that was offering advice to G.I.s, and
G.I. resisters. As a result of the information options presented I determined
that I would make a public display, a very public of my anti-war opposition so
that I would not be left in some unnamed hell-hole and forgotten. The Friends
and others were delighted. First though I would go AWOL (absent without leave,
okay) and then make a splash at some public civilian anti-war rally.
That
AWOL, absent without leave part, was important for me, and interestingly later
Josie, since I had stayed away just long enough from the Replacement Center at
Fort Lewis in Washington to be “dropped
for the rolls,” meaning that I could turn himself in at Fort Devens about forty
miles from Boston and stay there pending punishment and new orders. The
importance of that decision for Josie was, unknowingly, or half knowingly, that
she had been one of the demonstrators clamoring for my release in a rally in
front of the fort after I was incarcerated for taking part in a Quaker-led
anti-war rally in front of the fort while in uniform and while on duty. I was
to meet her later after I got of the military at an anti-war event in Cambridge.
Other soldiers I had heard had done such actions prodded on by those same
Jehovah Quakers who had formed the backdrop of my political coming of age in
Boston Common as a boy. I had finally said a defiant no. That particular
violation brought on my first trip to the stockade (with a stay in solidarity
for a while but I was always in some form of isolation since the Army though I
was contagious or something, and they were right since I was haranguing whoever
was around once I got “religion.”) Because of a fair amount of publicity
generated by the Quakers and some alternative newspapers looking for an
off-beat story I received only a special court-martial (maximum six month
sentence) rather than a general court-martial which could have given me an
indeterminate sentence. I served five months on that one. As my resolve firmed
up, first to do the first action and then to take the hard time, and as I got
courage, got some well-spring of Appalachia hunker- down father genes- bought
courage I thought later when I had plenty of time to think, I decided that I
would make a showing in front of my fellow soldiers once I got out of my first
tour of the stockade.
So
one Monday morning in the late spring of 1970, having been assigned to
Headquarters Company after being sprung from the stockade pending orders, as
the base gathered for its weekly gathering of troops on the parade ground for
inspection (and to see who was missing, if anybody) I walked out, walked out of
my nearby barracks in civilian clothes, carrying a simple homemade sign “Bring
The Troops Home.” I was immediately seized and man-handled by some what I would
call ‘lifer’ sergeants (who, when I thought about it later probably didn’t know
if I was a soldier or just a damn hippie protester trespasser and I therefore
should have been in uniform with my sign).
The
rest of the story after that was mainly legal military trial proceedings (another special court-martial with
six month sentence), parallel civilian court actions by my lawyer, and doing
the hard time, doing the rest of almost a year in the base stockade. This the
way the military part of the story ends. The outside civilian parallel legal
proceedings on my behalf involved my civilian lawyer going to the Federal
District Court in Boston to gain a writ of habeas corpus based the Army’s
arbitrary denial of my conscientious objector application. The Army could not sent
me to Fort Leavenworth without violating the civilian judge’s temporary
restraining order pending disposition of my case. Strangely I finally was
granted an honorable discharge through the civilian judge’s favorable granting
of my writ. Like I said, I don’t like to talk about that time all that much,
except I had plenty of time to think, think those ancient break-out thoughts
that had had me in their thrall as a kid.
So
now you can understand why I might be a bit shy about commenting on guys, on
fellow classmates, who fell doing their duty the way they saw it, a way
different far different than mine, in those bloody times. But listen, maybe Jim
Slater and David Martin had the same kid dreams, the same trying to get ahead
in the world dreams too. Over the years I have come to see that those fallen
brothers are kindred like I hope a lot of people from our generation, the
generation of ’68, that raised hell, or tried to against the monsters, against
those who would hard-heartedly sent
young men, our fellow classmates now fallen, off on worthless adventures that
proved nothing, do. I fervently hoped so when I put my comments on their “In
Memory” pages. Here are Jim’s and except for personally knowing him and
therefore able to make some specific comments I used part of the remarks David’s
too. Here’s Jim’s:
“I have held off from making a comment about
Jim Slater assuming that somebody who knew him better than I would do so.
Someone from his old neighborhood, from among his old corner boys, or maybe an
old flame since a class yearbook photograph of him shows a guy who would have
no trouble getting women to want to be around him. I knew Jim slightly in
school and around North Adamsville. You know, maybe we played some pick-up
game, maybe basketball down at the old Parker courts where his guys would take
on my guys in three or five man ball or maybe slo-pitch softball in hot dusty summer
at the local “dust bowl” and then adjourn for sodas (and later beers, illegal smile
beers cadged from some father’s stash). Or we hung around together for a minute
at some corner before that all got separated out in about ninth grade when he
went with his corner boys holding up the wall in front of Doc’s Drugstore “up
the Downs” and I, tied by a thousand strings to Frankie Riley, the king hell
king of the corner boy night holding up the wall at Salducci’s Pizza Parlor.
Better yet let’s put it this way we gave each other the guy “nod” in the
corridors at school, or maybe in the cafeteria. That nod, that eternal nod recognizing
a guy’s guy-ness, recognizing a righteous guy, a straight-shooting guy without
being a fellow corner boy. You know the nod, know it if you are a guy of a certain
age.”
"So here goes for Jim- I
agree with Professor Garfield (a fellow classmate who is a professor of education
up at the University of New Hampshire and who knew David Martin, had been something
like his girlfriend in high school, and had written something about the terrible
cost of war on David’s “In Memory” page) that my brothers, and they were mostly
brothers then before everybody got a chance to go to war, who did not make it
back from 'Nam (or name your war), or came back broken and hurt, or who could
not adjust to the "real world " and took to drugs, alcohol, the
road (and I don't mean the storybook road of Jack Kerouac's "On The
Road" but the Sally shelters, the railroad hobo jungle camps, the ravines,
and under the bridges of this country) deserve respect and honor. As a result
of my own military experiences, perhaps very much different from those of Jim’s, I
am now an active member of Veterans for Peace whose goal is to make sure
that our sons and daughters, our grandsons and granddaughters, Jesus, our
great-grandsons and granddaughters in some cases from a glance at some of the
profile pages on this site, are not used as cannon fodder for some
ill-conceived military adventure. Whatever differences we have on the questions
of war and peace it was guys like Jim [and David], guys from old working-class
towns like ours, from the ghettos, from the barrios, and from the
wheat fields of Kansas, who did their duty as they saw it, maybe kicking and
screaming, maybe gladly, whose names are now honorably etched for all
eternity on that black marble down in Washington and on the Adamsville Vietnam
Veterans Memorial over at Marina Bay."
I have posted a YouTube
link to Bruce Springsteen's Brothers
Under The Bridge that brings a tear to my eye every time I hear it in honor
of our fallen.
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