Vietnam

UNEXPECTED FRIENDSHIP

Air Force Maj. Fred V. Cherry, the pilot of an F-105D Thunderchief shot down by anti-aircraft fire on Oct. 22, 1965, was sitting in a dark 10-by-12-foot cell in North Vietnam. His left foot was wrapped in a cast and his left arm in a sling. Suddenly the cell door opened, and a guard ushered in another prisoner of war, Navy Lt. Porter Alexander Halyburton, a radar intercept officer on a two-seater F-4B Phantom II hit by anti-aircraft fire on Oct. 17, 1965. Cherry was the first African American service member captured in North Vietnam, while Halyburton came from a middle-class Southern family that employed Black servants.

A prison guard ordered Halyburton: “You must take care of Cherry.”

Neither man knew what to make of the other. Cherry, 37, explained that he was an Air Force major who flew an F-105. Halyburton, 24, found that hard to believe as most Blacks he knew worked as laborers. He had never met an African American who outranked him. Cherry didn’t be-lieve his new cellmate was American. He presumed that Halyburton was a Frenchman left over from France’s colonial rule, which ended in 1954, and most likely worked for the North Vietnamese as a spy.

During their first night together at Cu Loc Prison, Halyburton tried to make conversation by asking Cherry questions about his background, flight origin and the date he was shot down, which seemed to confirm Cherry’s suspicions that his cellmate was a spy. Yet it didn’t take long for Cherry to

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Vietnam

Vietnam1 min read
Vietnam
MICHAEL A. REINSTEIN CHAIRMAN & PUBLISHER ZITA BALLINGER FLETCHER EDITOR LARRY PORGES SENIOR EDITOR JERRY MORELOCK SENIOR EDITOR JON GUTTMAN RESEARCH DIRECTOR DAVID T. ZABECKI EDITOR EMERITUS HARRY SUMMERS JR. FOUNDING EDITOR BRIAN WALKER GROUP DESIG
Vietnam1 min read
An Enduring Brotherhood
Vietnam magazine is pleased to review this new 2023 edition of a 2018 classic, SOG Medic: Stories from Vietnam and Over the Fence, by Joe Parnar and Robert Dumont. This book is a must-have for anyone who is interested in Special Forces history. Clear
Vietnam11 min read
Search And Destroy
Two months after the November 1965 Battle of Ia Drang Valley, Gen. William C. Westmoreland, Commander, Military Assistance Command, Vietnam approved what was then the largest searchand-destroy operation of the Vietnam War. Originally named Masher, t

Related Books & Audiobooks