Skip to main content
Skip to Search & Browse Collection Listing

Anthony (Tony) Thompson oral history interview

 Collection
Identifier: DOH-674
DOH-674

  • Staff Only

Description

Anthony “Tony” Thompson, Dartmouth Class of 1964, enlisted in the US Army in 1963 after taking a hiatus from college on the recommendation of his dean. He went to Vietnam to support US military advisory operations there during 1963-1964.He spent six months rotating in and out of A Loui and Tabat in the A Shau valley. During the latter part of his deployment he was attached to the decorated ARVN 1st regiment, which operated near the demilitarized zone between North and South Vietnam. He witnessed the destruction of that unit in a battle in March of 1964. He earned a bronze star and the South Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry. In the interview, Thompson discusses the executions of civilians and prisoners that he witnessed in Vietnam. He also talks about criticism he faced from antiwar students after he returned to Dartmouth, and how this prompted him to move off campus. He eventually left the United States and spent several years in the more congenial environment of Australia, before returning to Vermont to work in business in the 1990s. Finally, Thompson discusses his current perspectives on the war and his disagreements with those who say that it was not worth fighting.

Dates

  • 2023-05-06

Language of Materials

English

Extent

2 Digital File(s)

Additional Description

Related Materials

This oral history interview is also included in the Dartmouth Vietnam Project online exhibit (https://dvp.dartmouth.edu/s/dvp : accessed 2024 Oct 10).

Part of the Rauner Library Archives and Manuscripts Repository

Contact:
6065 Webster Hall
Hanover NH 03755 USA

Back to top