Lance Corporal Ken Crouse
Lance Corporal Ken Crouse
Secretary of the Fall of Saigon Marines Association
Ken Crouse
answering a letter to a Student
Front Row (L-R): Gary Mellinger,
J.D. Sneed,
Lamar Holmes,
John Ghilain,
Doug
Potratz,
Randy Smith, Terry Bennington,
Duane Gevers,
Ken Crouse.
Second Row = Ted Murray,
Kevin Maloney,
Steve Moore,
Larry Killens,
John
Kirchner, Bill Newell,
Colin Broussard,
Mike Sweeny,
John Valdez,
Steve
Stratton, Dean Kinzie,
John Moya and
Chris Woods.
Ken Crouse, Secretary of the Fall of Saigon Marines
Association attends the Scholarship in Marshalltown, Iowa. From left to
right Lori Judge, Ida Judge, the two scholarship awardees, Ken Crouse.
LCpl Darwin Judge's Annual Scholarship Awards
Ken Crouse is on first person on the left.
Hi Michael - Thanks for your note and request. One of the best ways to
get some first-hand information is the "Our Story" section of the
website, http://www.fallofsaigon.org - another site that I have not
spent much time on but came to my attention recently is
http:://www.teachvietnam.org
As for me, I was 19 years old when I went to Henderson Hall in
Arlington, VA to attend Marine Security Guard School (the school is now
located at Quantico, VA). I had been in the Marine Corps for about a
year and a half at that time, having entered two weeks after high school
graduation and spent my first year in an infantry platoon, "A" Co., 1st
Battalion, 4th Marines, on Okinawa and aboard ship in the Far East. At
guard school we were organized into "detachments" of about 8 - 10
Marines each. Also in my detachment at guard school were
Dean Kinzey and Darwin Judge, Marines who would also be assigned to Saigon.
Steve
Stratton, Jerome Thomas and Thomas Cole were also in that class I
believe.
Ken Crouse with hands up next to wife talking to the Fall of Saigon Marines at
our 25th Reunion in Marshalltown, Iowa.
I arrived in Saigon in February, 1975. There were many posts for new
detachment members to learn and we were assigned to one
of the more
experienced Marines that would help us "snap in" and learn the various
responsibilities assigned to each
post - Manny Bispo was assigned to help
me through this process.
25th Reunion - Marshalltown, Iowa.
Ken Crouse is on the top row 4th from left
One of the off-duty things that Saigon MSG's did that has not received
any attention is volunteer work at an orphanage that was several miles
out of town. we would load up into the Marine van (a panel truck about
the size of a bread delivery truck) and Ken Geagley or one of the
Sergeants would drive us there. I believe that the orphanage was run by
a priest from one of the European countries and they needed quite a bit
of help with various construction projects around the facility. We went
up there a couple of times a week and it was good to get out into the
countryside.
Ken Crouse on left side of tables with hands up.
In early April I was on Post 4 late one day (the vehicle entrance to the
embassy compound) and secured the gate after the charge de affairs left
(he was in charge when the ambassador was out of country). While on my
way to the main building, I received a radio report to return to the
gate as the charge would be returning. I found out later that Operation
Baby Lift, the evacuation of several hundred orphans, nurses and
secretaries who were accompanying them had crashed and all had died.
This incident for me was the beginning of the end.
Things went downhill rapidly from there and fixed wing evacuations
(regular air planes flying out of Tan San Nhut airbase) began and were
carried out on a daily basis. Several thousand people were evacuated
through these means in the weeks prior to the helicopter evacuation. The
Marine Guards at one point moved out of the Marine House and into the
Embassy compound working non-stop from then until the evacuation. About
a dozen Marines, including Darwin Judge with whom I went to guard
school, were assigned to Tan San Nhut and remained there providing
security at the airport.
Ken Crouse third from the left for reunion in San Diego.
On the morning of April 29th I was standing a night-shift on the
roof of
the embassy when I saw a large explosion out towards Tan San Nhut (about
5 miles away). From the roof of the embassy I could not tell exactly
what it was, but felt that it somehow affected our Marines - I would
learn about an hour later that my friend, Darwin Judge, and another
Marine, Charles McMahon, Jr., were killed by one of the incoming
rockets. They had been walking a security patrol around the exterior of
the fence at the airport and a rocket had landed in between them. My
friend, Steve Stratton, would be one of the Marines who helped recover
the bodies.
The next day and a half were very hectic as the helicopters
came and
left with the thousands of Americans, third country nationals
(non-Vietnamese foreigners) and Vietnamese families that were evacuated.
After the embassy was secured, the only people remaining on the embassy
roof were Marine Security Guards and I left on a helicopter that l lifted
off shortly before sunlight. This would be the next-to-the-last
helicopter to evacuate Marines from the roof.
From Vietnam, we traveled by ship, the U.S.S. Blue Ridge, to Manila and
from there I was assigned to the American Consulate General in Asmara,
Ethiopia (now the country of Eritrea in northern Africa) and then later
to Brussels, Belgium.
I trust that helps, Michael. Thanks again for writing - as you know from
our website, those experiences in Vietnam helped to form a bond that
remains to this day - I will be 46 years old in October. I've been
working with some of the other Marines since 1992 trying to locate other
members of our Saigon detachment and I think we've done a pretty good
job to date having found or them finding us of about 75% of the Marines
who were stationed there 26 years ago.
I had the privilege of meeting Darwin's parents last year for the first
time and sent them a plant this year, the 26th anniversary of their
family's sacrifice in the name of freedom.
Ken Crouse, Secretary
Fall of Saigon Marines Association
Fall of Saigon Marines at the Vietnam Wall near our KIA
Names
From Left to Right: Kevin Maloney,
Don Nicholas, Ken
Crouse and Doug Potratz
From Left to Right: Kevin Maloney,
Doug Potratz, Ken Crouse,
Don Nicholas at
Iwo Jima Monument after the Marine Corps Marathon
Ken Crouse's trip back to Vietnam
The one north of Dong Ha, but South of Hanoi
got up in DaNang -the DMZ flick was taken
the day before - flew to Saigon, then Singapore, Hong Kong and then SFO - got
home about 9PM on Thanksgiving night.... exactly 30 years to the day that I got
home from a year with A/1/4 before going on Embassy Duty...
Lance Corporal Ken Crouse USMC,
Sgt Ted Murray USMC
and MGySgt John Valdez Retired
near the
Lincoln Memorial
More pictures from the trip