Chattanooga Times Free Press

Volunteers seek photos of area’s fallen Vietnam veterans

Volunteers seek photos of area’s fallen Vietnam veterans for memorial

- BY LISA DENTON STAFF WRITER

Eighty-eight names. By the time the Vietnam War ended, the 10-year conflict had claimed the lives of 58,315 Americans — 88 of them from Hamilton County.

U.S. Army Sgt. Jimmy Richard Griffin was the first from Chattanoog­a to die, March 22, 1963, two months shy of his 27th birthday. Military records report he took his own life.

Eighty-seven more would follow, falling in places with names like Binh Dinh, Quang Nam and Kontum. Little more than points on a map for many Americans. Then or now.

Janna Hoehn knows none of the 88 men from Hamilton County who lost their lives. Has no ties.

But the 62-year-old Hawaii resident is on a mission to remember them in pictures.

As a volunteer with the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, Hoehn is collecting photos of each veteran for a new education center to be built at the Wall in Washington, D.C. The black granite monolith contains the names of all the men and women who gave their lives in the war or remain missing. The new education center will give more personal histories.

So far, she has collected 66 photos of the 88 fallen veterans from Hamilton County, which are already included in an online tribute. She is hoping for community help to get the last 22 images.

“I have always hoped I could do something for the Vietnam veterans, as the way they were treated when they returned, it was disgracefu­l,” she says.

Her mission started by accident on a trip to D.C. eight years ago with her husband.

“Because Vietnam was the war that was going on while I was in high school, the first memorial on my list was the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall,” she says. “Even though I never knew anyone killed in Vietnam, I wanted a rubbing of one of the names.”

She chose a name at random, Gregory John Crossman, an Air Force major from Sturgis, Michigan, who went missing in action on April 25, 1968. When she returned home to Hawaii, she began researchin­g Crossman to find his family. She hoped to send them the etching she made of his name “in the event they were never able to go to the Wall.”

For six months, she researched “every way possible,” she says, and found no informatio­n. Frustrated and disappoint­ed, she turned to a cousin, the “family historian,” who produced a college photo of Crossman six weeks later.

Two years later, a Maui news station aired a story on the Faces Never Forgotten project for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, whose goal is to put a face with every name etched on the Wall. She immediatel­y sent her photo of Crossman. Jan Scruggs, the founder and president emeritus of the Wall, responded with a request: Would she help the organizati­on find photos for the 42 Maui County fallen?

“It would be an honor,” she told him.

After six months of searching, aided by local news reports of her progress, Hoehn had found a photo of each of Maui County’s fallen heroes. Then, she cast her sights on her native California and found the five soldiers from her childhood home, Hemet. With those done, she began searching for photos of all the missing soldiers in California.

State by state, she has moved east, collecting more than 6,000 photos since 2011, she says.

Hoehn is one of about two dozen volunteers who devote thousands of hours to the project, and there are many more who dabble, says Heidi Zimmerman, director of communicat­ions for the VVMF.

“Everybody goes about it differentl­y,” Zimmerman says. “Janna’s way is reaching out to the media. There’s a gentleman in Indiana who has a Facebook page to find all the Hoosiers.”

Hoehn says even with just 42 names in her Maui search, the research was complicate­d. She began by combing through phone books and calling every like surname of each soldier. Then she consulted yearbooks archived at high schools and obituaries at libraries.

Zimmerman says photos of 156 Tennessean­s are still missing. The numbers are higher in Georgia (378) and Alabama (239), which have not yet been the subject of Hoehn’s media attention. In the tri-state region around Chattanoog­a, there are 53 missing photos.

Bill Norton, president of the Chattanoog­a Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter 203, says he had not heard of any efforts to locate photos, but has one of the missing, his brother, John E. Norton of Fort Oglethorpe. The Marine corporal was killed in action on Dec. 29, 1970.

As of Thursday, 54,892 photos have been located since 2009, according to Zimmerman. And funds are still being raised for the center, $42 million so far of a $130 million total price tag. Much of the expense, she explains, comes from locating the center undergroun­d to preserve sight lines between the Lincoln Memorial and the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall.

Hoehn says she and the other volunteers won’t stop until they track down the rest of the 3,423 photos.

“Putting a face with a name changes the whole dynamic of the Wall,” she says. “It keeps our fallen heroes’ memories alive and will honor them. Our heroes’ stories and sacrifice will never be forgotten.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A visitor to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall in Washington, D.C., touches the name of a fallen soldier etched into the black granite. The memorial contains the names of the 58,315 men and women who gave their lives in the war or remain missing. A...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A visitor to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall in Washington, D.C., touches the name of a fallen soldier etched into the black granite. The memorial contains the names of the 58,315 men and women who gave their lives in the war or remain missing. A...
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO BY SUE HUDDELSON ?? Janna Hoehn sits with some of the photos she has gathered for the new education center to be built at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO BY SUE HUDDELSON Janna Hoehn sits with some of the photos she has gathered for the new education center to be built at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States