CAPT Charlie Plumb, U.S. Navy, Vietnam, POW - podcast episode cover

CAPT Charlie Plumb, U.S. Navy, Vietnam, POW

Aug 09, 202336 min
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Episode description

Charlie Plumb ended up in the U.S. Navy because money was tight for his family and it was a big economic relief when he was recommended and accepted at the U.S. Naval Academy. Upon commissioning from Annapolis and competion of flight school, Plumb would soon be flying an F-4. Little did he know what awaited him just a few years later in Vietnam.

Plumb was deployed to the war zone in November 1966. He routinely flew missions over North Vietnam, including Hanoi, which he says was the most heavily protected city in the world at that time. On each mission, he came under fire in a variety of forms.

In May 1967, Plumb was shot down by a surface-to-air missile (SAM) and taken prisoner. He was soon held prisoner at the infamous "Hanoi Hilton."

In this edition of "Veterans Chronicles," Captain Plumb recounts his memories of being shot down, his remarkable prayer while parachuting into enemy territory, the brutal torture and deprivation in the prison, and how the U.S. POW's kept each other going. Finally, he shares what it was like to breathe as a free man after nearly six years of captivity.

Transcript

Welcome to Veterans Chronicles. I'm Greg Corumbus. Our guest in this edition is retired US Navy Captain and naval aviator Charles Plum. He is also a veteran of the Vietnam War and spent nearly six years there as a prisoner of war. And Captain Plum, thank you very much for being with us. Thank you. Where were you born and raised? Sir? I was born in Gary, Indiana. During World War Two. My father was about to be drafted, so he moved with to Kansas. So I grew up in a

tiny town in Kansas. Why did you decide to attend the US Naval Academy and pursue service in the Navy? Quite honestly, it was an education. My parents were very poor and they couldn't afford to send me to college. So I started looking for scholarships. Did the old shotgun approach, you know, to everybody I could think of, Lo and behold, I got an appointment to Annapolis. Out of those four years, prepare you for what would

eventually come, you know, it was really good. Of course, there was a lot of discipline, a lot of military understanding, aerarchy, and a lot of trust with my fellow midshim at the Naval Academy and then my fellow prisoners of war. It was really important for my survival. And then after commissioning you went to a flight school, and after that you were assigned

to Miramar and what would eventually be known as Top Gun. Tell me a little bit about that and what it felt to know that you were really among the best. Well, I threw the first adversary or flights for the Top Gun School. It wasn't called Top Ben at the time. In fact,

it was just just guys having fun flying airplanes. And then they decided that we were in the wrong war that we were, that we were trained for the Cold War and flying high altitude supersunic interceptors, the F four Phantom, a mock two airplane, and suddenly we were fighting these pesky little MiGs at low altitudes that could turn inside us. And we didn't have the training or

the airplane to fight that war. And so we started to teach the pilots to dog fight fastle the World War two and Korean War kinds of tactics and and so that's how the Top Gun School got started. And h it was great fun, uh and I did feel like, you know, I was the best of the best, and I was very proud, you know,

to fly those airplanes and uh and to go to war. You were also telling us just before we started recording about how you were assigned to two very important special events right here in Washington, the inauguration of President Kennedy and his funeral. What were those moments like for you? Well, his inauguration was

very cold. It was a very cold day. And never forget that I was in the drum and bugle chorus a matter of fact, and so it was so cold that the valve on our bugle froze, and so you either had the valve in or the valve out. And so the commander of the brum and bugle Corus said, okay, every other the guy freeze your valve in the open position, and every other one the closed position. So you

sort of played every other note. Came back three years later, as a matter of fact, to the tragic death of John Kennedy, and marched in behind his case on that's, of course, November of nineteen sixty three. It would be another year or so before a Vietnam would ramp up in a significant way. You mentioned you were flying the F four. I have yet to meet a pilot who didn't love the F four. I assume that is consistent for you as well. The F four phantoms a great airplane. One

of the advantages is as duplicate everything. Two engines, two hydraulic systems, two noumatic systems. Everything was duplicated in the F four, so that when you started losing these things, you still had one left to bring you home. And I was shot up a lot of times. And so when were you deployed to Vietnam? On my wife's birthday, the fifth and November of

nineteen sixty six, And what of missions were you flying there? We had two weeks as fighters and two weeks as attack and so we alternated with our sisters squadron. So for two weeks we would carry just air to air missiles, you know, fighting the enemy airplanes, and the other two weeks we would carry bombs in rockets to do air to ground missions. And on all those missions before the one we'll talk about in just a moment. Did you

come under much fire from the ground, Yes, quite a bit. There was a first of all, a lot of anti aircraft fire flak, and then small arms fire, rifles and in anti aircraft artillery, and then probably the big one and the one that got me was surface to air missiles. So at the moment, at the time in sixty six and sixty seven, Hanoi was the most heavily defended city in the world. They had a lot of crape to throw at us. Well, let's talk about May nineteenth,

nineteen sixty seven. How did the day start and walk us through what happened. Nineteen May nineteen sixty seven started about three in the morning when I got a phone call in my cabin with the operations officer, and he I was the schedules officer, so I scheduled the pilots and in the planes and the air crews to go on these missions. So he said, you know, we got this last minute call for a big time mission. Come down to the radio room. We got a planet so od ark thirty. I showed

up at the radio room, started planning this mission. We were briefed for the targets. I was air to air at that time, I was carrying just missiles, sparrows and sidewinder missiles, and so we were to protect the attack fleet. And so we were on both sides of the guys with the bombs, so launched on the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk, rendezvoused at twenty five thousand feet, plugged into an airborne tanker, which is a trick in itself,

and took on five thousand pounds of jet fuel. Pointed the nose that airplane towards the beach and that became That became like last flight. I remember though, we had three aircraft carriers and five air force bases on that day, nineteenth of May. I didn't know it at the time, but it was the birthday of their president Ho chimen uh and I think that the psychological warfare guys thought we would catch them in celebration of their president's birthday. They

knew we were coming. They were loaded and ready to go, and so there was just an awful lot. In fact, there were eight f four phantom shot down that day. I was one of them. Take me through that moment. We were just short of the target. Things were looking pretty good. Saw a lot of flak in the air. I didn't see any missiles. I had dodged several missiles. If you can see a missile coming okay at you, and and you can wait for it to get in to

maybe a quarter of a mile, you can out turn the missile. These missiles were twenty feet long and maybe twelve fourteen inches in diameter, so they're very gangly missiles and they can't turn very fast. I could turn inside the missile, but if you start your turn too soon, the missile has a lead pursuit on it and it will lead you in your turn and knock you off in the middle of your turn. So you have to wait till the

thing. It's like a bullfight, you know, the red flag, and when the bull comes close, you know you had That's what we were after. So a quarter of a mile, make a big jink and that thing will go buy you. And I had done that six times during my seventy four missions. So this time I didn't see the missile. It came from behind. In fact, I didn't even know. I didn't even know what hit me until later in the war. All I knew was that my instrument

panel lit up like a Christmas tree. I started losing everything. Engines unwound, hydraulic pressure failed, I couldn't control the airplane anymore. I was upside down. My radar interceptor officer in the back, you know, is talking to me about what are we going to do. The only manual control on an F four Phantom is the rudder. It's hydraulic assist, but you have some power manually. My hydraulics were gone. I hit the rudder as hard as I could, set a prayer as loud as I could, shuttered upright

where I could eject my backseater could eject. Our pearachutes open, and we came floating down over intemy territory. What happened when you touched the ground? Well, first of all, before I touched the ground, they were shooting at me. I thought that was unfair. You know, they just knocked down this multi gazellon dollar airplane. Now they're trying to kill the pilot. So and I found out that when you're dodging bullets, it's tough to come

up with a long range plan. So so I took a deep breath, let about half of it out, bowed my head, and set a prayer, asked for a little extra strength that day. From above, I knew there was going to be some pain in my future. I prayed that there might be some value in the pain. I prayed for my wife because I knew it would really be tough on her. We were both twenty four years old. We had been married, let's see by that time two years.

So it was gonna be tough. As I said, I was the flight officer, and so I had all the schedule in in a little book in my pocket. I had a schedule in my book in my pocket. I pulled it out, ripped the pages of the names of the pilots, and I ate the pages from this book because I didn't want the enemy to capture my book with all the pilot's names. This while you're parachuting. Yeah, well, on parachuting death, pulled out my two way radio. I was

a couple of hundred miles inland. I didn't really want the rescue helicopter to try to come. Plus the fact that I was very close to Hannoi, the capitol city. There was no way they were going to be able to get in there. And what I had seen happen in that war is that a guy was captured, they would take his two way radio and call in for a rescue and then shoot down the helicopter. It was just automatic for

me to know, Hey, that wasn't gonna happen. So I broke the antenna off the radio through the radio one way and the antenna the other way, and it went into a rice patty. So I was, I was. I was pretty sure they were not going to be able to use my two way radio. And about that time I sunk about waist deep in the mud of a rice patty. I was just just centered upon by it seemed

like hundreds. It was probably only twenty five or thirty, but it was a bunch of farmers for the most part, and they had machetes and shovels and farming implements and started hacking at me with their farming instruments. I had a thirty eight revolver with me, but they were I had. I had five shells and flare and the revolver. I decided I'm gonna do much good, and so I threw the revolver into the rice paddy and gave up, which really bothered me, you know, for the nearly six years I was

there. Because fighter pilots are not supposed to give up. That's not part of the top gun playbook. And so so I gave up, and they tripped me of everything I had totally nude, hauled me around and showed me off to the village people there as they hit me with sticks and rocks and that kind of thing. The uh, the the army showed up with two jeeps, put my back seater in one. We were both burned, but

he had more serious burns than I did. And we were in two separate jeeps, and within thirty minutes we were in downtown Hanoi at the Wallow prison that we rename the Hannoi Hilton. When we return, Captain Plum takes us inside the infamous Wallow Prison, known better as the Hannoi Hilton. He also tells us about the brutal treatment and explains how the other prisoners gave him purpose and eased his guilt. Our guest has retired to US Navy Captain Charlie Plum,

who spent nearly six years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam. I'm Greg Corumbas and this is Veterans Chronicles. This is Veterans Chronicles. I'm Greg Corumbus. Our guest in this edition has retired US Navy Captain Charlie Plum. He served as a naval aviator and is a veteran of the Vietnam War, spending nearly six years as a prisoner of war. We've already heard the details of him being taken prisoner up. Next, Captain Plum takes us inside the

brutality of the Hanoi Hilton. When it got to the Hilton, I was tortured for two days for military information and political propaganda. I was a very junior officer. I was a lieutenant junior grade. I didn't know any of the information they wanted. They wanted future targets. They wanted information on our psyop o, our psychological warfare, and and UH and our nuclear weapons. I didn't know any of that stuff. And I started to lie to them,

and they would they would believe my lies. It was. It was really surprising, and I found out, first of all, how ignorant they. I shouldn't say ignorant, because they had a lot of natural talent, but they knew nothing about the rest of the world. For instance, they knew that I was shot down an n F four Phantom, and they said, what base did you fly from? And I told them I flew from the aircraft carrier kiddiehog Well. One of the reasons I told them. The

truth was it had been written on my parachute. You know CBA six three USS kiddie. Now the military as the code of conduct. They tell you if your captured, give only name, ranks, show the number a date of birth, then they'll right your ship on your back. I didn't see much much sense, but but I knew they knew the answer, So I said, I I flew from the aircraft carry Kitty. That's a lie, they said. They slapped me around and kicked me with their boots and hit

me with their rifle. But tell us the truth. What base did you fly from? I have flew from the aircraft and it's an aircraft carry out there in the Gulf of Tonking. We know you could never take taken a big jed airplane like that off a boat. We know you need to runway that's at least a mile long. Well, it was time for another little fib. I said, well, you know, we have a lot of ships out there in a seventh fleet. We just line them all up,

and they believe that one too. So we found that we could lie to them. And even after they had found out the truth that we had lied, they they were embarrassed to face us with the fact that we'd pull the wool over their eyes. And it was a crazy, crazy thing, but that's that's how we we answered their questions. So the torture lasted for two days. It tossed me into a little cell eight feet long and eight feet wide. I could paced three steps one way and three steps the other.

And we call that the Hanoi shuffle because we were all doing it, and we would, we would walk hundreds of miles. And I felt first of all very lonely, solitary confinement, and then very guilty. I was ashamed of the fact that I had surrendered, and ashamed of the fact that I had given them more than name, rank, show number, day to birth. It sounds crazy, but you know, uh, I'm thinking I am so ashamed of what I did that maybe maybe if this war ever ends,

I won't go back to the country, to my home. I can't face my fellow fighter pilots. I can't face my family and admit to them how weak I was, and uh, and that really troubled me. Maybe I'll go to some foreign country and change my name and live the rest of my life and never have to tell anybody about about my history. I got communication with Bob Shoemaker, POW number two. He was there over eight years. He pieced a little wire out his cell wall and across a storeroom into my

cell wall with a note in the tap code. On the note to teach me that we could we could indicate any of the letters the alphabet by two numbers of tugs, the number of the five by five matrix, a number of the line than the number of the road, and so we would. We started commun indicating this very cumbersome, our cake code, but it worked. It became our became our lifeline in a lot of ways, what we called the tap code. I found out who he was, He found out

who I was. We exchanged rank and dative rank because it was really important that we always knew who was senior to whom. The military standard was absolutely vital in my survival. That somebody had control, somebody was in charge, somebody gave us direction and a purpose. At first I thought, I, you know, I don't want to be commanded by somebody else. But by the way, that discipline brought unity in our survival. So we were on

this tugging on wires and communicating with each other. For I don't know. A few weeks and I finally decided at a better fess up, and I said, Shoe as cal Saime was, Shoe, Mine was Plumber, could have been Maverick, but it was Plumber. So so I said, she I've got I've got a confession to make to you. And when I tell you what I did, you might not want to communicate with me anymore, because if our roles were reversed and you did what I did, I wouldn't

want to talk to you. He said, what'd you do, Plumber? I said, I broke. I tried to be strong, but I broke. She Maakers said, hell, everybody broke. There's not a man in this prison who was as strong as he wanted to be, So pull up your big boy pants. We got a war to fight. That turned the whole thing around it. It gave me, It gave me permission to be

weak. And it was interesting that I found out that most everybody in that camp had gone through the same guilt feelings about not being as strong as everybody else had been. I've heard so many people talk about the value of the tap code and how the communication like you called it a lifeline mentally strong teamwork. But a moment like that where it absolves you of the guilty you had been feeling and really changes your mindset for however long you had left, had

to be just life changing. Another interesting value of the tap code and the communication system it turned out to be the value was not necessarily the words we were using, or top secret plans for escape or any of that. The value of tap coot and communication any system, is the simple validation of another human being. Because in those prison cells, if you were alone in solitary confinement and it was dark, especially if it was dark and you were in

solitary, you'd lose track. You wouldn't know what was a real memory, what was a hallucination. Sometimes you wondered if you were alive or dead. There was nothing to validate my existence. The tugging on a wire or tapping on a wall, and they have somebody else tug back or tap back meant two things. Number one, somebody's responding something I'm doing physically. Thus I

exist, I'm real, I'm alive. Number two, somebody cares. And so it was that part of the communication that really validated my existence and and and made me whole. So it was absolutely vital. You had hundreds of prisoners here at certain points, and so did the captors not catch out or did they just not do anything about the tap code. It depended on the

camp that you were in. Of course, communication was restricted. In fact, guys were tortured because they were communicating with each other, and so they were really serious about us not communicating with each other. But they knew that knew that we were communicating. One of the things our senior leaders came up with with what they called the Plums, had nothing to do with Charlie Plumb. It was just I don't know why the code name was the plums.

And these were levels of resistance and it went from refusing to bow to the enemy all the way up to a prison riot. And so the senior officers could command resistance level number three and we would go into that level. Sound silly, especially the first level refusing to bow. That was one of the things we had to do. We had to do a very low, ceremonious bow. Anytime a guard came to our door and opened the flap and peeked in on us, we'd go bow to the guard, or anytime you know,

we would We would see any of the enemy. We had to bow subservience. Okay, that was the camp commander, you know, our leader, Jim Stockdale or Jeremiad or John McCain or whoever was in charge, would call for resistance level number one, and everybody in the heart maybe two hundred guys stopped bowing at the same moment, and it really scared them to death to know that we had that kind of communication and that kind of discipline that

all of a sudden nobody would bow. And so the resistant we never got to the prison riot. Lucky for me, because a lot of guys would have gotten killed, I'm sure had we start to riot. But we sure showed them that we had unity and we had purpose, and we had our

discipline through our rank structure. Coming up, retired Navy Captain Charlie Plum offers more detail about the agony his Vietnamese captors inflicted on him through an effort to create propaganda on their behalf, and he also tells us what it was like to be free again after nearly six years of captivity. I'm Greg Corumbas and this is Veterans Chronicles. This is Veterans Chronicles. I'm Greg Corumbus. Our guest in this edition has retired US Navy Captain Charlie Plum, who also spent

six years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam. In a moment, we'll conclude our conversation with Plumb explaining what freedom now means to him. But first he shares the horrors of more torture at the hand of the Vietnamese as they demanded Americans create propaganda against their own cause. Is it turned out they felt that what they could get from the prisoners of war was propaganda, and that became really a mainstay of Ho Chi Min's dealing with us and are dealing with

them. And that's sort of bad news good news, because guys were tortured to say that the treatment was good. It was just that crazy. But the good news was it gave us a purpose, a reason, a way to not only defend ourselves, but to take action against the enemy. We could be on the offense by refusing to allow their propaganda and so and so. You know, obviously it was difficult to refuse because you're gonna be tortured

to do something, and you're you're probably gonna do it. But then we found out that if you could endure the torture until you thought it was close to permanent physical damage, and then started to ease up and do little things and lie a lot, like if we would make a tape or Jeremiah didn't was the acts an example? Uh? And he's gone. I wish you could interview him, because he's the guy that was tortured to see a delegation.

And in the delegation he blinked out with his eyes tea. Oh, our torture as he blinked out, and they didn't catch this, and so and so the world suddenly knew that we were being tortured. And so these turned out to be great victories of our POW unit was to be able to play these things. And uh. And and if you wrote a confession, you know, little buzzwords you would use that the Vietnamese would not know, and yet our intelligence here would would understand. So the torture for political reasons

became another fight. You know that we could fight and that we could win, and we did. They gave and you know, the morale was really great when we could play something like that and get by with it. What kind of things did they do to torture you? And do you still suffer injuries from that today. The main torture was what we call the rope trick. It was manacles around your wrist behind your back, and then they wrapped your elbows actually together behind your back. Okay, that hurts a lot,

but you're not not over yet. Shackles on your ankles, and a bar through the shackles, and then they ran a rope from the shackles. If your ankles up over your back and down to your wrist, then they tightened up the rope. The result is your feet are right up in your face. Your wrists, remember your shoulder, Your elbows are actually tied together, and your wrists are are are coming back over your head. Your shoulders by this time are out of joint. You know, they're out of the socket.

And I remember at one point looking up and seeing my wrists backwards above my head, wrapped up like a human pretzel. And and it hurts a lot. And if that's not enough, then they'll take that rope and tie it to another rope and throw it across a hook in the ceiling and and haul you up off the floor in this position. So I don't have the after effects that a lot of guys do. Fortunately, I've got a few little scars here and there, and my and my shoulders. Of course,

we're out of joint and so I've got it's a little bit difficult. He saw John McCain couldn't comb his own hair. I can comb my own hair, but my shoulders still a little painful. You mentioned your faith on the parachute down from being shot down. Your faith played a major role also in you being able to sustain this imprisonment for so many years, and you were

even serving as a chaplain for a couple of those years. So talk about the role you're faith played and how you were able to serve as a chaplain given the restrictions you had. Faith played a major role. I was a man of faith when I was shot down, but it was always kind of an efferial, kind of a disastereally work, and I think I proved to myself in the prison situation that faith does work. My mother was mother Teresa,

absolutely wonderful lady. All the years I knew my mother, I never I never heard her complain about anybody or she taught me a lot about forgiveness. In the prison camp, I learned that forgiveness is not just a good Christian principle, it's a survival technique. Even we passed around Bible versus and patriotic quotes and poetry and all this stuff. One of the quotes that really meant a lot to me was this acid does more harm in the vessel it's

stored than on the subject it's poured. What that meant to me was all this hate and vitriol within me is gonna hurt me more than it's gonna hurt the person I'm mad at. And I'm better get over this. I better forgive the guards for torturing me. I better forgive the camp commander for making this happen. I better forgive the mechanically put my opinion. I better forgive myself for being so weak, And so forgiveness was a vital part I think

of my survival. At one point, when we got together in bigger rooms after the Sante raid, they were very afraid to put us all back into Hanoi. And I found myself in a group of fifty seven guys, and I was appointed by our senior guy as chapman of that of the unit. I had had some experience at the Naval Academy with the Officers Christian Union to

serve as lay leaders aboard ships where Chaplains weren't available. So I knew some of the techniques, and so I started polling all the other guys in that cell. The Catholic boys were really good because they knew a lot of Bible verses through their Catechism that the Protestants didn't know. And so I collected Bible verses and patriotic quotes, and at one point we actually went on a hunger

strike to get a Bible. And that was a very interesting experience because the senior guy was a very devout Christian, the second guy was a Jew. The third guy in command considered himself an atheist. And so we stopped eating, said give us a Bible and west start eating. Well, they withdrew our drinking water. Uh, now you can, you can. You can live a long time without rice and and sewer soup. But when they cut

off your water, you start to get real thirsty. Unbelievably, we found that the guys in the next cell, they weren't on a hunger strike. We passed a tar paper tube through a hole and they poured half of their ration of water into that tube. And we caught the drops on the other side. We're gonna survive. But while this was happening, they pulled out our senior guy and put him in the stockade. That you guy said, continue the hunger strike. We're gonna get ourselves a Bible. They pulled him

out of there, the atheist guy, continue the hunger strike. You know. It was that kind of military discipline we had that you know, it was beyond politics, beyond religion and anything else. You know, we were gonna we you know, we were gonna do what was the right thing to do. They finally brought us a Bible. They gave us a Bible for a day and a half. It was a tattered, old I don't where they even got it. King James version. And we copied from two sides

of a page on pieces of toilet paper with ink made from ashes. We copied down that the Nativity scene that you know, the Matthew Mark, Luke John. We we copied down the Book of Job. We felt like that we we didn't have as bad as Job did, but gave us confidence, you know, to know that somebody had made it through this. Uh. And of course the Easter and so we copied those things down. They took the Bible away then, and we tried to hide our copies. They eventually

found the copies and tore those up. So but it was it was a great morale boost just to have the Bible in that prison camp for a day. Well, I got a couple of minutes left, sir, But tell me about how you learned you would be free and what it was like to be free. Wondered for years how we would find out, how would we react. They came in and put a piece of toilet paper on the floor and said, put your foot on this. They traced around our foot.

We're gonna get some shoes. Hadn't seen a pair of shoes, and nearly six years, get some shoes, sharing if they had brought us shoes, announced that the war was over, were trading prisoners. We got on a bus over the dike. We'd see the runway, the Geelom's run with the enemy's runway, with the US Air Force one forty one ready to wing us away to freedom. But there was no response. Were we were kind of afraid to cry or cheer, hugging and kiss everybody else. And it wasn't

really until we got aboard that airplane lifted off enemy. So it wasn't really until we were airborne and over the water that we all started hugging and kissing the Air Force nurses, so we knew we were going home. What was it like to talk to your fellow prisoners after not being able to actually talk to them for so long? It was really neat, because, you know, we with a communication system. I knew an awful lot about an awful

a lot of these guys, but had never seen them. You know, I knew Bob Shoemakers growing up, and every book he'd ever read, and every movie he'd ever seen, every girl he had ever dated. I knew his cat was named Matilda, and and so and so, when I didn't know who, I didn't know what he looked like. When I finally saw him and he introduced him, Say, Bob Shimgraham, Charlie bum, how's

Matilda? He said? Kia, Charlie, Kia. Last question. You're among a select number of Americans who knows what it's like to lose freedom and then get it back. For those who will probably never know what it's like to lose it, what do you tell them about how to value the freedom that we have. There is great value in getting your freedom taken away for a while. In fact, I have four kids. I've told all four of these kids, if they ever get in jail, don't expect me to

bail them out. I'm gonna let them at least stay one night in jail to let them know what freedom is like. It's like being reborn to be free. It's very simple, simple things like having a door knob on the inside of your or you know, to be able to just to walk outside

in the air. You know, just to take a hot shower. You know, all these things still remind me, fifty years later, still remind me how valuable freedom really is. And I wish I could give a person a pill, you know, to experience something that I have experienced and then come back to life after having been We used to we used to ask a guy, hey, when did you die? That meant when we were shot down, because we kind of felt that the nineteenth of May nineteen sixty seven,

the world kept turning. But I got off. You know, I was, I was dead, you know I was I was just not part of the culture for nearly six years. And if you could give a person a pill to have that feeling and and realize how wonderful it is to be free. And and and we're free primarily because of all the men and women who have fought for this. Freedom didn't come easy. And so yep, freedom is. It's a wonderful thing. And I enjoyed every day. Sir.

It's an incredible story. I thank you for your time today, and I especially thank you for your incredible service and sacrifice for our nation. Thanks for helping us tell our story. Thank you, sir. Let's retired US Navy captain and Naval aviator Charlie Plum. He's a veteran of the Vietnam More spent nearly six years as a prisoner of war. I'm Greg Corumbus. This is Veteran's Chronicles. Hi, this is Greg Corumbus, and thanks for listening

to Veterans Chronicles, a presentation of the American Veterans Center. For more information, please visit American Veterans Center dot org. You can also follow the American Veterans Center on Facebook and on Twitter. We're at AVC update. Subscribe to the American Veterans Center YouTube channel for full oral histories and special features, and of course please subscribe to the Veterans Chronicle podcast wherever you get your podcasts.

Thanks again for listening, and please join us next time for Veterans Chronicles

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