Posted on Feb 24, 2017
Nicholas Mcclurken
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My grandfather is a retired Army Master Sergeant. The thing he only talks about is the Vietnam war. He was an Army medic for a total of twenty two years and I want to find a good way to honor him. Some background details is that his too highest awards were the Bronze Star and the Legion of Merit. If anyone could help my figure this out that would be great. Thank you!
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SGT Ben Keen
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Edited 7 y ago
Nicholas Mcclurken - Do you have copies of all his paperwork for starters? If not, go to National Achieve (link below) and get request a copy. From there you can look at doing things like buildng a shadow box or something like that to honor him.

https://www.archives.gov/veterans/military-service-records
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SGT Writer
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I'd suggest a memoir, video, and/or interview with Veterans History Project - http://www.loc.gov/vets/
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Sgt Field Radio Operator
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SGT (Join to see) Excellent suggestion.
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SSgt Investigative Analyst
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Hi, Nicholas.

If he likes to discuss it, have him get into writing it down or otherwise recording it. You said his memory is failing, so getting started now would be ideal.

And, from me, thank him for his service. Vietnam vets never got the honor they deserved. That will never happen on our watch again.
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What is the perfect way to remind a Vietnam Veteran about what he accomplished, while his memory is starting to fail?
SPC Sheila Lewis
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Buy a tape recorder or something like that and whenever he reminisces he can be recorded.
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MSG Mark Million
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I've always been a fan of a good Salute, a firm handshake and a heartfelt "Thank You for your service".
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CPT Gary Jugenheimer
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Nicholas.....there exists another site that is popular with former members of the military....it is called Together We Served https://army.togetherweserved.com/army/servlet/tws.webapp.WebApp?cmd=ShadowBoxProfile&type=Person&ID=338495....this is my Shadow Box that you can develop on this site for your grandfather....this would be a nice tribute and once you have developed it, it can be printed and made into a poster that I am sure he would like....let me know how this progressed and thank you for caring so much about your grandfather ( [login to see] ).....Gary
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Sgt Field Radio Operator
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CPT Gary Jugenheimer Great idea. My father was a Captain in the Air Force. My shadow box has my fathers dog tags, pilot wings, name plate, along with my service items.
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COL Charles Williams
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Edited 7 y ago
Nicholas Mcclurken If you have his DD214 then I would recommend you create him a shadow box of his medals, awards, patches and rank. If you do not, you can request his records via the national records center. I needed to get my dad's when he needed to moved to veterans home several years back. It was actually very fast. I got his DD214, and his VA Disability Rating records from the 50s.
http://nvf.org/how-to-get-a-copy-of-dd214/
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SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D
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I would contact your local DAV, VFW and American Legion and explain your situation to them and ask for their help. They have contacts, ideas and ways to accomplish the recognition your Grandfather deserves. As a Medic, I may have flown him to battles sites whenever we flew medi-vacs so from this Vietnam Nam vet to him I salute him as a true combat hero who may have been by my side and I never knew a reunion, so to speak, would happen in this manner. Also, and I am certain this would be totally acceptable to the President, please tell him all of us combat vets know that the President would salute him as well. God bless him and we will all keep him in our prayers.
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CMSgt Security Forces
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Edited 7 y ago
Nicholas Mcclurken,

You mentioned his memory was beginning to fail. My father-in-law was a WWII vet who suffered from dementia in his waning years. The only thing he would talk about was service related in the Pacific. If you plan on any type of assisted living (dementia can be hard for a family to deal with), you'll need important paperwork such as the DD214, VA disability etc. There are veterans homes (depending where you live) and the VA provides financial assistance towards long term care (depending on disability and service).

Scrapbooks, photo albums and shadowboxes as mentioned are a good start. You can get an idea by just Googling 'military shadowbox'; however the online businesses can be quite expensive. Most bases have businesses nearby that specialize in shadowboxes and are professionally done.
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SPC Member
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I like the idea of creating a shadow box and contacting the National Archives. Something you might be able to do is get with a local Veterans Organization. I know sometimes they do commemorative award ceremonies, especially for the Vietnam/Cold War Vets.

I also like the idea of him writing, a lot of our military history is lost every year. Perhaps he can preserve some of it for future generations.
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