vietnamgrunts.org - Home - Vietnam Museum

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Through his own personal involvement with America’s Veterans Foundation, San Antonio resident Mr. Michael Lynd Sr., who served as an Infantry Officer in Vietnam during 1968 and 1969 and participated in Operation Fayette Canyon in Quang Nam Province as part of the 196th Light Infantry Brigade, Americal Division had his own vision. Inspired also by the efforts of his friends at Southwest Florida Military Museum & Library (SFMML) located in Cape Coral, Florida, Mr. Lynd recognized the importance of acknowledgi

We are honored and thankful for the friends who support us and ask that you also help us by visiting and financially supporting the museum, as well as encouraging the soldiers of the Vietnam War and their families to contribute cherished items and testimonials from their experiences during their time of combat, where they might be housed and displayed permanently to benefit the thousands of future visitors as well as perpetually honor those brave Army soldiers. The museum charges no admission and is staffed

“For the soldiers who served in the Vietnam War, the word grunt was not just a nickname but also a commentary on their status in the hierarchy of war. To be a grunt was to be in the infantry. It meant leaping out of helicopters into landing zones that were sometimes under enemy fire. It meant marching through elephant grass taller than a man and as sharp as a knife or slogging across streams and rivers so deep and muddy that men sometimes disappeared beneath the surface or found themselves mired in mud so t

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