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- Dennis and Cynthia are twins.
U.S. Public Records Index
Name: Dennis W Drullinger
Birth Date: 6 Nov 1945
Phone Number: 437-5348
Address: 11936 E 20th St, Tulsa, OK, 74128-6420 (1993)
http://www.tulsaworld.com/site/printerfriendlystory.aspx?articleid=20091111_12_A15_Dennis677754
Tulsa World
(Ref photo of Dennis attached to this website)
Hero humbled
BY MANNY GAMALLO World Staff Writer
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
11/11/09 at 4:30 AM
Dennis Wayne Drullinger has never been shy talking about his wartime experiences in Vietnam nor his country's commitment to that war, which he described as a noble cause.
Yet somehow the native Tulsan, who was awarded a Silver Star for gallantry in Vietnam, is short for words about his induction into Oklahoma's Military Hall of Fame.
He's humbled by the honor, "dumbfounded," as he put it.
Drullinger, 64, will join nine other honorees, among them three Medal of Honor recipients, during induction ceremonies Wednesday night in Edmond.
"I'm dumbfounded to be honored with these same people - colonels and generals, Medal of Honor winners. And here I am, an Army specialist 4," Drullinger said.
"When you think of those who fought in World War II and Korea, for me to be inducted into the Hall of Fame is an honor above and beyond."
A 1964 graduate of Hale High School, Drullinger served in the Army from 1966 to 1968 with the 2nd Platoon, Delta Company, 3rd Battalion, 21st Infantry Regiment of the 196th Light Brigade.
He knows what above and beyond means, probably better than most people.
He learned it in Vietnam, a lesson that came to him during the events surrounding Jan. 8, 1968, and in the days afterward.
On that date, Drullinger was with his platoon in a little village along a river in the Que Son Valley.
The platoon headed out to meet the enemy, with Drullinger and Sgt. Lee Marvin Capers of New York taking up a flanking position.
North Vietnamese soldiers took a plateau overlooking much of the platoon and began raining bullets and mortars on them.
Much of the main body of the platoon was killed trying to get back to the village, but Drullinger and Capers pressed on with their attack as the enemy came down at them from the plateau.
Drullinger blew up a machine-gun nest with a grenade.
With the enemy still in hot pursuit, he was shot through the right shoulder.
"I saw the guy who shot me," Drullinger said. "He had one of those 'gotcha moments' in his eyes."
Drullinger said he and Capers decided to return to the village and, while they were doing that, Capers was killed.
Still, Drullinger pressed on, running into comrades who had been badly wounded and were dying, while he continued to shoot and kill enemy soldiers.
In pain and weakened from his loss of blood, Drullinger lost consciousness, only to be reawakened in the hands of enemy soldiers, who dragged him through the brush and threw his body atop a pile of dead Americans.
He remembered that they were pulling on him and shouting at him to see if he were still alive.
Then they went through his pockets, looking for valuables.
Drullinger is a peanut-butter junkie, and that fact might have saved his life.
When the enemy soldiers went through his pockets, they discovered Drullinger's five cans of peanut-butter rations, and to them it was like manna from heaven.
He said the enemy soldiers wrestled each other for the peanut butter and quickly forgot about him as he lay atop the pile.
As night fell, Drullinger said he was able to crawl away from the pile and made his way through the jungle to a village where he hid in a hog pen until the next day.
While he hid, he spotted the North Vietnamese setting up ambush points for incoming Americans.
As evening fell, Drullinger said he heard helicopters and began to crawl in the direction of the noise.
The next morning, Drullinger finally crawled into the arms of American soldiers, and he briefed them on the enemy fortifications, providing them with coordinates and thus possibly saving more American lives.
Drullinger was more badly wounded than he thought. In addition to a broken collarbone, the bullet tore apart his shoulder muscles.
He spent months in rehabilitation. While he was convalescing at Fort Sill, he received the Silver Star for gallantry.
He was credited with killing 10 enemy soldiers while never leaving his position.
Drullinger's other awards include the Purple Heart Medal, the Combat Infantry Badge and the POW Medal.
Looking back on the events of Jan. 8, 1968, Drullinger said it's a date he'll never forget.
Exactly one year to the day later, his son, Tommy Wayne Drullinger, was born.
196th LIGHT INFANTRY BRIGADE
A Courageous Vietnam Story from Dennis Drullinger
This recollection is from Dennis W. Drullinger, member of the 196th Light Infantry Brigade, 3rd Battalion and 21st Infantry, Delta Company 2nd Platoon, describing the operation he was a part of with his unit as a Fire Team Leader during the period of January 5-11, 1968. Dennis was stationed in Vietnam about 5 months with Delta Company prior to this operation.
"My company was to help Charlie Company who had run into trouble around the 4th or 5th of January. Our operation was to search for them and provide necessary support and backup for a couple of days in Que Son Valley, better known as Happy Valley (must have been reverse psychology, because it was anything but happy). Members of Delta Company had found the helicopter that was downed and it had been booby-trapped. We also found the co-pilot dead and a few NVA (North Vietnamese Army) that had also been killed. We didn't find the other pilot. We took a short lunch break in a nearby village and awaited the arrival of a couple of new replacements and
c-rations. On January 8, 1968, I was with the Captain, known as Black Death. Our platoon joined up with the rest of the company at a village along a river in Happy Valley (Que Son Valley). The village was up high and the paddies were lower along the river. Black Death brought with him an artillery forward observer, two radiomen and other members of the 2nd platoon, including Lee Marvin Capers and myself.
Black Death had quite a reputation since he had gone on a lot of Search and Destroy missions in Vietnam. He was well liked by the headquarters commander, Steel Gimlet. He always provided a lot of body counts and was considered an aggressive captain. We had lunch at the village and Black Death had received word from Charlie Company that they were in contact with the NVA but didn't need any assistance even though Black Death had offered. It was at this point that we started receiving unfriendly fire. We had received a report that they were pushing some NVAs down toward us. Black Death said we were to move up cross the river. The rest of the Company would remain in the village. He led about twenty of us across the river, including his two RTOs, artillery observer, myself and Capers. Capers and I took the left flank as we crossed the river and set up a reactionary force. Then all of a sudden all hell broke loose. Mortars started flying and exploding all around us. The NVA was on top of the plateau and could see us hiding below them.
Black Death and his two RTO's, forward observer and many others were killed trying to get back across the river toward the village. Capers and I had the NVA coming right down the plateau on top of us. We kept shooting them as they came down the path from the upper plateau. On top of where we were was another plateau with a path blocking it from the NVA to get down to us. At the same time, the NVA set up a machine gun on top of the plateau. The NVA started spraying machine gun fire across the rice paddies below. From their position, they couldn't see Capers and I. I threw a grenade and it blew up their machine gun position.
Down along river, we could see the NVA trying to cross the river. They were covered with camouflage and many of them were carrying little trees. Capers and I were picking the NVA off one at a time (8 to 10) as they tried to cross the river, however they kept moving across the river farther downstream. Then Capers and I saw two NVA grenades, that had come from the top plateau, landing in the mud in front of us. Luckily, they used a type of grenade that wasn't as powerful as ours. However it felt like we got a concussion from the grenade going off. We were glad it was mostly mud instead of shrapnel. Due to this commotion, the NVA troops crossing the river in front of us were now able to see us. I was shot in the shoulder at that time and actually saw the NVA person that shot me. Capers asked me how bad I was hit. I thought I have been hit twice, but actually it was where the bullet entered and came out of my shoulder.
We then decided it was time to leave our position and try to make it back to the village where the others were supposed to be. There were a couple of dikes we needed to cross. Capers and I moved together to cross the dikes and Capers was killed as we both were crossing the second dike. I went up the creek to the top of the paddies to locate the Company. I ran into Sgt. Williams, Booker, Cannon and someone else. They were all huddled in the corner of a paddy, seeking cover from machine gun fire. Each of them had been wounded. With little room for me, I told them that I was going up the creek. At that time I ran into one of the new replacements that had come in that day at lunch. I told him I was going up the creek and he could go toward the other flank. Downstream, I ran into 3 NVAs along the creek picking up bandoleers. I shot them with my muddy M-16, not knowing if it would work. Thank God it did. I spotted another NVA in the creek that appeared to be dying. He was covering up as they typically do, before dying. He looked at me and I looked at him, and we chose not to shoot each other. Since darkness was approaching, I searched for cover in the river because I was becoming very weak from loss of blood.
My next recollection was waking up with the NVA dragging me back through the creek. They placed me on a pile of dead bodies. I was wearing a rain poncho as they pulled my arms back and forth. Suddenly, one of them began to yell at me, speaking broken English, "surrender in the name of the Republic". I wasn't about to answer. They didn't know for sure if I was alive or dead. I had no pulse and had leeches all over my body. They took my watch off. Since I had lost so much weight in Vietnam, I had switched my wedding ring from my left finger to my right. I was concerned that it would not come off when they tried to take it. Typically, they would cut off a finger to get the jewelry. However, I was lucky once again as the ring slid off easily. They continued to toss me back and forth, searching for anything I had on me. I am not sure how I kept silent with my broken collarbone, shoulder and scapula from the gunshot wound.
Fortunately, I was a peanut butter junkie, and had 5 or 6 cans of peanut butter rations in my right fatigue leg pocket. This probably saved my life. They started playing "grab ass" for the peanut butter and forgot about me. While lying on the pile of bodies, I could see their shadows moving in the dark. They appeared to think I was dead and therefore left me alone.
Later, as it got darker, our guys started shooting flares. It seemed like it would take 15 minutes for it to come down all the way. As it came down, the NVA would go and hide, so they wouldn't be seen in the open. As the flare reached the ground, it magnified with light the area it was close to. I started counting how long it was before a flare was shot and how long it would take to get down to the ground. This would help me determine when I would make my move to escape.
I did this for a couple of hours and then decided to head towards the creek. I planned to go back where Booker and Cannon were. Hopefully, I would run into our guys and reinforce-ments. I remembered all the training we had in AIT and didn't really think we would ever use. "Escape in the dark" and "avoid your enemy" training really paid off. Finally, I picked a time when it was dark and quietly crawled off the pile of dead bodies and headed towards the creek.
I made it back to Booker and the others, only to find them dead. Williams and Cannon weren't there and I didn't know what had happened to them. I continued to the village where we had a lunch break. My position was on the outskirts of the village, trying to find cover in some banana brush. Since it was in the middle of the night, I planned to rest until morning. All of a sudden, I felt someone grabbing the back of my leg with both hands, and couldn't see who it was, since it was extremely dark. I decided not to speak since I was wounded and wasn't sure who it was. Evidently, whoever it was didn't speak either. After what seemed like an eternity, the grasp of my leg finally was released. I decided to leave and continue up closer to the village. I found a spot in some bushes outside the village.
As the sun rose, I spotted 6 NVAs picking up rifles and bandoleers, and setting up an ambush across from the village. I was hiding in a hog pen at the end of a hutch. There was high brush and I was still in good position with my camouflaged rain gear. I stayed there all day and watched them as they were building their fortifications. Our helicopters would fly over and the NVA would shoot at them, but our helicopters didn't return fire since they didn't know where any of us were.
I could see the jets making scraping runs with their doors open and could even see our pilots, but they weren't dropping bombs. Our artillery was shooting but it was going about 150 to 200 yards to the south of us. This took place all day. I was lying on my shoulder and the pressure evidently stopped the bleeding from my gunshot wound. That night, I heard choppers landing way back in the distance. The noise was coming from where we had been earlier, by the ARVN camp, at the beginning of our operation. I thought if I headed in that direction I could run into our guys that were landing the helicopters. There was still heavy artillery firing from our guys, and the NVA was mortaring toward our positions. Whenever the NVA had a bad round, it would come close to where I was hiding. Several times the bad rounds would blow bamboo sticks that would land all around me, but not make a direct hit.
The next morning I could hear our GIs talking in the field saying "spread out and get on line". I crawled back through the village and got to them. The solider got his Captain, who knew what outfit I was with. I told him where the NVA fortifications were. The Captain wanted to get artillery or a mortar company to hit their fortifications and I went with this soldier to describe our position. I didn't have any weapons on me, so the solider gave me one grenade. Since I couldn't throw left-handed, I decided to go with him. We went by a village and finally got the mortar platoon and took them to the Captain. Then, the soldier took me back to where the night position was for the helicopters.
This is where I ran into Lt. Landry and Sgt. Page. The artillery fire was still landing in the wrong place, so I gave Lt. Landry the coordinates to adjust their fire, where the NVA fortifications were, from where I was hiding the previous night. Lt. Landry got hold of Belock, Guichoni and Doc Preski. They were out of medical supplies and all they had was a couple of Band-Aid plastic strips. They put them on my back and shoulder.
Belock and Guichoni had put my stuff on the death ship the day before. They were friends of mine and couldn't believe I was still alive. We all cried in disbelief. It was good to see a familiar face. They then tried to get me on the next Red Cross helicopter out of the bush. Doc Preski fixed me a cup of coffee while we were waiting on the helicopter. As they got ready to throw flares for the chopper, the NVA popped smoke too. They had evidently captured the flares and radio when they killed Black Death.
Fortunately, they didn't know the right color of flares to throw so whenever we turned around, they threw the wrong color. They didn't realize when the Red Cross ship made a pass, it would be accompanied by a gunship. The NVA was trying to position themselves to shoot the Red Cross ship, and the gunship was able to fire on their position and get quite a few of them.
The Red Cross ship landed hard and they got all the wounded locked in the back of the helicopter. They put me in the gunner chair, to hold all the weapons. Since many of our troops were killed or wounded, they needed to get their rifles and firearms out of the field. This prevented Charlie from scavenging more of our weapons. Of course, I was in no position to shoot, holding all the rifles in my arms. Luckily, we received only small arms gunfire as we departed the position, with no gunfire hitting the helicopter.
We then went to Hill 35, to a MASH or hospital unit. I had lost my dog tags about the second week in Vietnam. They asked me what my name was, since I didn't have dog tags. I told them "Drullinger", and that I was allergic to Novocain, so they decided not to give my anything for pain. Holman, a Chaplain's Assistant, was there to see me. He was a buddy of mine from Lawton, Oklahoma. He had noticed that they were sending the letter to my family advising them that I was "missing in action". He ran to stop the letter. The Chaplain soon came by and used a grease pencil to put my name on my chest. This helped the doctors, who were always asking me who I was, and why I didn't have my dog tags.
While I was on Hill 35, I realized my wound was a lot worse than I expected. They operated on me there, and then sent me to Da Nang. After Da Nang, they sent me on to the Philippines, and then on to Japan. In Japan, they put me into a body cast, since I had broken by shoulder, my scapula and my collar bone. From there, they sent me on to California, then on to Fort Sam Houston, where they took the wire stitches out of my shoulder. Finally, they transported me to Fort Sill, Oklahoma. I was in the hospital almost a year, doing physical therapy and rehab.
Looking back on my experiences, I realized a lot of things happened to me while in Vietnam. Why was I one of the few that got shot, captured and escaped? While in basic training, I was the only one, of over 270 men, that made the maximum on the proficiency test. This test included escape and evasion training. Another unique coincidence was that a year, to the day, that I was shot and captured, my son was born. It makes you think about what you were doing then, and what you are doing now, and how God has a plan for your life. Then you go back and think about what gave you the drive to escape. Perhaps, my high school football coach, Larry Miller, and one of his many teachings...."that you can, if you think you can". This mental toughness paid off for me. Also, I have to think about getting through all the trials and tribulations of my experience in Vietnam, and where I am now. Here, I have had a good life with my wife, Tommie Lyn (married 37 years now), who has stayed with me through thick and thin, and always supported me. As I previously said, having my son (Tommy Wayne), born, to the day, one year from my being shot and captured. Having a daughter-in-law (Shelly) and twin granddaughters, Macey and Darcey. I just feel lucky to be alive, and they make living all worthwhile.
In closing, I would like to thank Tony May, who works with "Locate a Brother" for the 196th. I understand that he has been doing this work for about 16 years. He contacted me and I had no clue about the book that Zalin Grant wrote named, "Survivors".
Additionally, I would like to thank Zalin Grant for writing this book. If it had not been for this book, and reading the stories of the 9 guys and what they had been through as a POW, I wouldn't have known what happened to Williams and Cannon, who were on the same operation as me. It hurt to learn that they were wounded, captured, and still didn't make it back alive. Without books like "Survivors", the American people would not know the personal stories and human sacrifices made during Vietnam. This was a war, not a conflict. People need to know the living hell that Dave Harker, Jim Strickland, Willie Watkins and James Daley all went through. After hearing their story, I now realize how lucky I was to have escaped after being captured.
You can contact Dennis at ddrullinger@cox.net
Oklahoma Military Hall of Fame inductee
Specialist 4
Dennis W. Drullinger
Army
Inducted 2009
Specialist Fourth Class Dennis W. Drullinger, U.S. Army served in Vietnam 1966-1968 with the U.S. Army 21st Infantry Regiment, and the 196th Light Infantry Brigade. In January 1968, his unit, while operating in the Que Son Valley was viciously attacked by North Vietnamese Forces. Specialist Fourth Class Drullinger refused to leave his position and opened fire on the enemy with his rifle and with hand grenades giving his fellow soldiers time to regroup and counterattack. He was wounded, captured, and later escaped during the enemy attack.
He personally destroyed a machine gun position and killed ten enemy soldiers. For his performance in this action, he was awarded the Silver Star, Purple Heart and Combat Infantry Badge. Specialist Fourth Class Drullinger was discharged in 1968 because of disabilities caused by wounds suffered in Vietnam.
Specialist Fourth Class Drullinger has given numerous talks about his Vietnam experiences to various organizations in Tulsa. He has coached Little League Baseball and held Gun Safety Classes for our youth. In April 2004 the Governor of the State of Oklahoma awarded Specialist Fourth Class Drullinger the Oklahoma Cross of Valor.
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