Today,
after 36 years of service, Dennis Haines will retire from Hershey
Medical Center, Hershey, Pa. People retire everyday. Many people
give this many years and some many more. For Dennis it was not an
easy road.
Dennis was drafted into the Army in
Oct.1967 at the age of 18 and had graduated from high school in
1966. After completing Basic Training and Advanced Infantry
Training, he arrived in Vietnam on 24 March 1968, at the 90th
Replacement Center in Long Binh. After two weeks there he was
assigned to the 199th Light Infantry Brigade, Company C, 3rd
Battalion 7th Infantry. He first served as a radioman for the 3rd
platoon. On 9 May 68 a very close friend of his from a town in PA,
not far from his hometown, was killed only a few feet from him in an
intense battle in the Delta, south of Saigon. When Jack, his friend,
was hit, he thought that he was too, as rounds were going everywhere
from bunkers right in front of them. One round even hit the antenna
of his radio, only inches above his head.
They
would pull back for cover and attempt to get in to get his body out
three times before being successful. They dragged him out under
constant heavy fire, put him into a poncho that quickly filled with
his blood, carried him to the LZ (landing zone) and placed his
lifeless body onto the evacuation helicopter. Years later while I
stood beside him, kneeling at The Wall at Washington DC, Dennis
touched his name and recalled how the blood was draining from the
body bag as he helped to load him onto the chopper.
Eventually he became radioman (RTO) for the entire Company and the
Commanding officer. Later he gave up the radio to become the M-60
machine gunner and then machine gun team leader. While doing this he
received a promotion to Specialist (E-4) rank. He was made a squad
leader in July 1968, held this job until December 1968 and had been
put in for promotion to Sergeant (E-5) rank. On the night of Dec. 6,
while his squad was leading the entire Company on a cordon of a
suspected VC occupied village, he was severely wounded by two gun
shot wounds to the right side of his head.
http://iwvpa.net/hainesde/where_i_.php
He was evacuated by helicopter to
the 24th Evacuation Hospital, stayed there about five days, was
transferred to the 249th Army hospital in Japan and was there two
weeks before being sent to Walter Reed Army Medical Center,
Washington, DC. He was medically retired with a 100% disability
rating in March 1969 and spent more than a year in hospitals. After
his retirement he was transferred to Lebanon, Pa. VA Medical Center
close to where he lives. He wears a full leg brace with locking knee
on his left leg and a splint on his left wrist and hand that
provides some use of it. He can walk short distances, but uses his
wheelchair for longer distances and when he's on the go for most of
the day.
Dennis
ended up being a hemiplegic from his wounds and years later would
find that he also contracted hep-c from the 20+ blood transfusions
he received during his surgery in Vietnam.
With
the help of the VA, Dennis was able to return to work. The job was
an entry-level job at the Penn State’s Hershey Medical Center. This
position was a very basic clerical job and was a newly created one
tailored to his abilities. After high school and graduation from a
vocational school in 1966, he was working as an architectural
draftsman for a local company that sold building material and also
manufactured prefabricated residential and commercial buildings of
all types. It was a job he loved, but one he could never return to
after being wounded. In his mind he always wanted to try getting
back into drafting again, but doing everything with only one arm and
one hand left him at a huge disadvantage.
During the ten years in this
clerical position, he kept working at enhancing his skills to do
manual drafting using only his right arm and hand. He was becoming
confident with doing this and even did some drafting jobs on the
side using equipment he had at home. Things were really going well
with that, and when a drafting position opened up in the Engineering
and Projects division of the Maintenance Department he applied for
the job. With his recent samples of drawings he had done, a
recommendation from a friend there, and the VA purchasing him a
drafting machine that could be used one handed, he was hired into
this job that he has continued doing until today. In 1993 computers
came along and computer aided drafting made his life so much easier.
His job incorporated coordinating renovation and construction
projects from beginning to end, at Penn State's Hershey Medical
Center, along with all the various types of drafting, Dennis Haines
made the decision to be self sufficient and successful. He did not
lay down and exist as many others have done. Instead he pushed
himself to the limit to achieve all that was possible. Quitting was
never in Dennis' mentality or vocabulary. The treatments that he
takes for the Hep-C made it nearly impossible for Dennis to continue
showing up for work, but he pushed himself and went to work anyhow.
There
have been some highlights in his life in the past few years.
Probably becoming a Grandpa to Max and Marley Haines was at the top
of his list.
In
June of 2004, he was nominated to receive the Images of Bravery
Award from Chapter 391, Sonora California.
http://www.geocities.com/dennis_haines_199th/IOB.html What
made this award so special was the person who nominated him for it.
It was, Dr. John Baldwin, the surgeon who operated on him in
Vietnam. On June 3, 2004, surgeon and patient were reunited at
Ontario, California. Dennis had found Dr. John from a post on a
website for the 24th Evac Hospital.
Then
on July 3, 2004, Dennis had another dream fulfilled. Though he
always wanted to drive race cars, Vietnam ended that dream. As I
said, he doesn't give up. He and a friend bought a race car
together. When his friend passed away from cancer, he left the race
car to Dennis. Although he had to have someone else drive the car,
he continued with his love of the sport of racing. So, on that day,
Dennis Haines was the feature attraction at Maple Grove Speedway.
http://www.geocities.com/dennis_haines_199th/dennis_ride.html Thanks
to a devoted group of friends and racers at the track, who arranged
for him to experience the thrill of thundering down the speedway's
drag strip at speeds topping 100 mph. With close friend and driver,
Rod Royer of Lebanon, behind the wheel of his McDonald sponsored
car, he sped down a section of Maple Grove at over 100 mph for 10
seconds. Part of this day was for Dennis, but the rest of it was for
his favorite charity, which also benefited from the race. Over $2000
was raised for The Ronald McDonald House, via a $20 fee that was
charged for signing Dennis' helmet.
Then
on Memorial Day 2006, the 4 remaining men who were in Dennis' squad
presented him with his Bronze Star, that he was put in for but had
never received.
http://www.geocities.com/dennis_haines_199th/reunion_photos.html He
had received his Purple Heart but never received this medal. The
medal was pinned on him by his good friend, Nancy Sinatra, with his
friend, Paul Revere, of Paul Revere and the Raiders looking on.
http://www.geocities.com/dennis_haines_199th/memorial_day_2006.html
This
past summer, Dennis got to meet another friend. Anthony Pahl, from
Murray Bridge, Australia, came to visit with Dennis for a few days.
Vietnam Veterans from different countries, but brothers none the
less. Anthony Pahl owns and operates the IWVPA, an international war
veterans poetry site. This past year, Anthony was awarded The Order
Of Australia Medal for his service to Veterans.
http://www.geocities.com/dennis_haines_199th/tony_dennis.html
Dennis
is a tribute to what the living spirit can achieve with perseverance
and the refusal to give up. Dennis Haines could have laid down and
existed and been waited on and the world would have been a much
lesser place.
Even
though he does not call himself a hero, he is a hero in every sense
of the word. At least to me he is.
Now
what will Dennis do with all of his time? He will be volunteering at
the Lebanon Veterans Hospital in Lebanon, Pa.
©
12/2006 by Mary E. Rogers