HONORED ON PANEL 1E, LINE 1 OF THE WALL
DALE RICHARD BUIS
WALL NAME
DALE R BUIS
PANEL / LINE
1E/1
DATE OF BIRTH
CASUALTY PROVINCE
DATE OF CASUALTY
HOME OF RECORD
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STATE
BRANCH OF SERVICE
RANK
REMEMBRANCES
LEFT FOR DALE RICHARD BUIS
POSTED ON 7.9.2009
POSTED BY: CLAY MARSTON
CEREMONY COMMEMORATES VIETNAM WAR'S FIRST COMBAT CASUALTIES
CEREMONY COMMEMORATES VIETNAM WAR'S FIRST COMBAT CASUALTIES
Samantha L. Quigley
AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Wednesday 8 July 2009 -
Bright blue skies above the National Mall today belied the solemnity of the ceremony commemorating the first two American combat casualties of the Vietnam War.
"On this date 50 years ago, two men lost their lives in a country that most of us here in the United States had never heard of at the time," said Jan C. Scruggs, founder of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund. "The deaths of U.S. Army military advisors Major Dale Buis and Master Sergeant Chester Ovnand marked the beginning of a lengthy war, which became a very divisive event for our society."
U.S. involvement in Vietnam ended in 1975.
By then, the fighting had claimed the lives of more than 58,0260* U.S. servicemembers and nearly 2 million Vietnamese. ( * - This figure adjusts higher almost every year as more names are approved )
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Stanley Karnow, a World War II veteran, was there from the beginning, covering Asia for Time and Life magazines.
In July 1959, he happened to be in Saigon, then the capital of South Vietnam and now known as Ho Chi Minh City, when he heard about an incident at a South Vietnamese army camp in the small town of Bien Hoa, about 25 miles to the north.
After a taxi ride to the camp, he discovered two Americans had been killed in an ambush as they watched a movie during a break in their duties as part of the U.S. Military Assistance Advisory Group.
The movie, " The Tattered Dress " was two reels long, and when Ovnand turned on the lights to change the reel, the enemy, who had surrounded the building and pushed gun muzzles through windows, opened fire.
Buis, 38, of California, had been in Bien Hoa just two days when he died in the hail of bullets.
Ovnand, of Texas, was a hair's breadth from retirement and exactly two months shy of his 45th birthday.
Army Captain Howard Boston of Iowa was seriously wounded in the incident, and two Vietnamese guards were killed.
Karnow wrote in his Time article that if it hadn't been for Army Major Jack Hellet of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, who turned the lights out again, all six Americans in the room might have died.
"I was quite astonished, but ... I'd been around wars for awhile, so the idea of a couple of guys getting killed in a remote place that nobody's ever heard of in America struck me as an interesting story," Karnow told those gathered for today's ceremony.
His dispatch to Time magazine ended up as a three-paragraph summary when the magazine was published, and as all Time stories were then, it was anonymous.
"It was just a minor incident in a faraway place. Here I was at the beginning of one of America's longest wars," Karnow said, noting that witnesses to history often don't recognize it at the time.
"I have a lot of experience of being at historic occasions, which at the time they occurred, I did not know they were historic," he said.
When Scruggs and his Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund were authorized by Congress in the late 1970s to build the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, the decision was made to list the casualties in chronological order. The question then became where to start.
Retired Army Colonel Nathaniel P. Ward III, the advisory group's chief of staff at the time of the Bien Hoa incident, took an active role in ensuring Buis and Ovnand were properly recognized as the first U.S. casualties.
Initially, the Defense Department was considering an Army captain killed in 1961 as the first name to be inscribed on The Wall, retired Army Captain Nathaniel P. Ward IV said during the ceremony.
That didn't set well with his father, who had worked with Buis and Ovnand in Bien Hoa.
"[ My father ] petitioned for about a year, and they finally agreed to go with Major Buis and Sergeant Major Ovnand," the younger Ward said.
Interestingly, Ovnand's name appears on The Wall twice, being the only name to do so.
The first time is on the first line of panel 1E, next to Buis's name. It later was re-inscribed on panel 7E, Row 46 because of a misspelling in the original inscription where his name appears as Ovnard.
The ceremony concluded with the playing of " Taps ", and the placing of a wreath at the apex of The Wall, below the names of the first two U.S. combat casualties of the Vietnam War.
SPECIAL TO -
- WWW.HISTORICALMILITARIA.COM -
BIOGRAPHER OF THE LOST OF THE VIETNAM ERA - 1955 to 1975 -
R E M E M B R A N C E
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POSTED ON 7.22.2005
POSTED BY: Bob Ross
Do not stand at my grave and weep
Do not stand at my grave and weep.
I am not there; I do not sleep.
I am a thousand winds that blow,
I am the diamond glints on snow,
I am the sun on ripened grain,
I am the gentle autumn rain.
When you awaken in the morning's hush
I am the swift uplifting rush
Of quiet birds in circled flight.
I am the soft stars that shine at night.
Do not stand at my grave and cry,
I am not there; I did not die.
Mary Frye – 1932
I am not there; I do not sleep.
I am a thousand winds that blow,
I am the diamond glints on snow,
I am the sun on ripened grain,
I am the gentle autumn rain.
When you awaken in the morning's hush
I am the swift uplifting rush
Of quiet birds in circled flight.
I am the soft stars that shine at night.
Do not stand at my grave and cry,
I am not there; I did not die.
Mary Frye – 1932
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POSTED ON 12.5.2004
POSTED BY: Robert Sage
We Remember
Dale is buried at Ft Rosecrans Nat Cem.
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POSTED ON 7.8.2003
POSTED BY: Dave Avery
Who Shall We Send
"An God said who shall we send.I answered I am here,send me."
Isaiah 6:8
Isaiah 6:8
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POSTED ON 11.2.2000
If I should die...remembrance for MAJ. Dale Richard Buis, USA...the first to die in Vietnam by enemy
If I should die and leave you here awhile, be not like others, sore undone, who keep long vigils by the silent dust, and weep...for MY sake, turn again to life, and smile...Nerving thy heart and trembling hand to do something to comfort other hearts than thine. Complete these dear, unfinished tasks of mine...and I, perchance, may therein comfort you.
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