357 Mags in Nam

A well-respected senior figure on this forum has told me funny stories about .357's in his division in Viet Nam. Maybe KKG will come by and speak directly...
 
For Bryan;

I spent from Thanksgiving '69 to Christmas Eve '70 "In Country" with the 1st Cav Division as a 45B20(aka:Small Arms Repair Specialist) and was promoted to being the Division Small Arm Inspector about half way through my Tour - somebody had to get stuck with the Job.

When I arrived "In Country" and completed my week at the "First Team Academy" I was assigned to a place called Phuoc Vinh(aka:'Forward Area') while the rest of the 45B20s stayed in Bein Hoa(aka:'Rear Area') and these guys were true REMFs. When I arrived I was assigned as the NCOIC of the Small Arms Shop - for those who don't know it; in those days the Army considered anything from a .22rf to a 106MM Recoilless Rifle to be a "small arm" but before long I ended up being in charge of the entire 'Weapons Shop' which include Artillery and Fire Control Devices(early Computers).

Now, back to the subject of the original Post. I also found 11 Conex containers which were stacked from floor to ceiling with small arms of all sorts. One particular container was filled to pretty much over flowing with handguns of pretty much all shapes and sizes and conditions. I had been "trained" on the Smith & Wesson Model 10(had also purchased my 1st one of these before I left the CZ) and Model 15 during my time in Maryland and there were literally "bunches and bunches" of these. I also found a very nice S&W .357 Magnum "N" Frame with a 5 inch barrel. It soon became my personal "open carry gun" while I was around the Company area. I had managed to 'modify' a holster for a Victory Model to fit my new Magnum. I had a very good friend who would ship me a box of Magnums to me each month so I had something good to shoot in it at least, once in a while! The rest of the time I shot the standard issue Military 130grain, .38 Special Hardball. It was accurate enough but certainly not what you'd call a real "killer" of a round on the other end.

The '68GCA had been past by this time and the Army had decided that no personal firearms would be allowed to be returned to the US. It seems that someone had determined that this was part of the '68 Law. Before I left the Smith got damaged and was finally torn down for parts. At 19 I didn't know much about handguns probably because we never had one at home when I was a kid - rifles and shotguns but no handguns except for my .22 caliber pellet gun which I managed to shoot as much as I could afford.

Whatever happened to all those gun I don't know. The one thing I do know is I never got around to destroying them which is what I had been told to do when I arrived.

Except for the Model 10s and 15s - most of these were all US Property marked - the bulk of the revolvers seemed to be in .357 Magnum but we did have a couple of .44 and .41 Magnums and at least one .44 Special but I didn't have any real interest in these. There were also some old 1917s - both Colts and S&Ws - but we didn't have access to half moon clips and the full moon clips were still in the 'idea' stage. Besides, my 1911A1 was all the .45ACP I needed in those days.
 
I was in the 1st Cav 67-68 everybody had a backup or hideaway gun, saw just about everything you could think of; Rugers, Smiths,cut down M2 carbine and lots of derringers, one very large one that took 22 magnums. I carried a 1911 I had put together out of eight different pistols we had found somewhere. It was ugly but would really shoot.
 
Before he retired from the USAF with 20 years and the rank of Major, an area man did a tour as a administrative officer in a military hospital somewhere in Viet Nam. During an earlier tour in Germany, he had bought a Colt Python. He took the Python to Viet Nam and wore that revolver to work every day. He said that his peers gave him a fair amount of razzing about wearing the Python, saying that they were Air Force hospital administrative officers, not B-movie cowboys or Army infantry officers.

Then one day a Viet Cong unit attacked and got inside the hospital. He found the Python useful as he and others held off the Viet Cong in their immediate area long enough for the Air Police to arrive and repulse the attackers.

Next day he wore the Python to work, as usual. His peers didn't razz him about the Python then or at any time during the rest of his tour.

I don't recall any further details; he told me the story in 1973, give or take a year.
 
I saw no .357's when I was there. The few helicopter pilots I was stood close to seemed to have a mixture of stuff, mostly Modedl 10 type revolvers. A few of my people had things shipped from home, one I remember was a very nice colt .32 with 2.5" bbl.

Never saw any of the "VC armor" where I was, a least none of the "VC" I saw had any such thing.

We were issued a Ruger standard model .22, 4" bbl, with our "tunnel kit".

rayb
 
While serving in RVN in 1970 I was assigned to 191st AHC, Gun Plt. The enlisted crewmembers were not issued pistols, just an M-16 or what ever other type of weapon we could trade for or scrounge. Every one of us had an odd assortment as our downed weapon. I thought I needed a pistol and had the chance to buy a Ruger 357 Blackhawk from a agency guy. He also had a Hi-power for sale. Being young I wanted the 357 so I got it with 3 boxes of Federal JHP. I carried it while flying for a couple of months and had just received the required paperwork from BATF to bring it home as a war trophy when a Captain offered me a deal that I could'nt refuse so I know it was still in country when I left in 1971. Mike
 
During my time "In Country" most of the Pilots I dealt with were either carrying M-1911A1s usually in a modified holster on their Survival Vest or nothing. I think the Vest was designed for use with a .38 with a four inch barrel. I did a fair amount of flying while I was there but since most of my time was spent standing behind a door gun I used an old style "Cavalry" Holster for the M-1911A1 that was on my web belt. I also carried another one behind my Right Hip with a 'Grip Clip' that a friend had sent to me when I was in the CZ. The 'Grip Clip' came home with me and ended up being fitted to my "Kustom" Detonics .45ACP while I was working for them in the '70s.

Right-Side.jpg


It's a "parts Kit gun" that I purchased and built and which spent some time with a Detonics Collector for several Years until his death and then it came home again.
 
During the early 1980's, a then co-worker told me that he had bought or traded for a Ruger .357 Blackhawk while serving as a rifleman in a combat infantry unit in Viet Nam. After a month or so, he sold the revolver to another soldier. He said that his M-16 met all his needs for a firearm. Therefore the weight and bulk of the Blackhawk, holster and ammo, plus the daily maintenance required to keep the revolver combat ready, were not worth his time and effort.
 
The only non issue side arm I personally know of being carried in Viet Nam is one carried by a old friend during his tour. It is a 1922 Browning he carried in a shoulder holster. Said he bought it in Nam and liked it because it was light weight and easy to carry.
 
The Conex I referred to earlier must have had 75 to 100 different models of handguns in it when I arrived. Someone, before me, seemed to have 'gathered' the Smiths somewhere near the Front. Most of the "Issue" 1911A1s were also somewhat 'gathered' together - also near the front - but I never managed to make my way all the way to the end of that box. I did find a couple of Mauser Broomhandles, including one that was a full auto version. It became part of the "Museum of Full Autos" that I assembled while I wasn't doing anything else. Browning High Powers, Commercial models of Colts(revolvers and 1911A1s including a couple in 9MM and at least one in .38 Super), Smith & Wessons(including M-39s and many "N" Frame guns), Rugers(I don't remember anything but Single Actions but I did see several in calibers other than .357 Magnum) and I'm sure many others I never got around to identifying.

I had a pretty much endless supply of .45ACP Hardball and I had no trouble getting 9MM Hardball but the .38 Special stuff didn't come in near as often but I didn't have much "demand" for that stuff so I wasn't worried. I always had more than enough 'on hand' for my own shooting.
 
keith44spl:

Rechambering your .38-44 Heavy Duty from .38 Special to .357 Magnum MAY have been done officially or unofficially at the Smith & Wesson plant. If you get a factory letter for your revolver, it would't hurt to ask whether the observed chamber alteration had been recorded as having been done in house.

I write this because a deceased friend, while on one of his tours of the Smith & Wesson works, paused to chat with one of the gunsmiths as he worked at his bench. The gunsmith noticed that Bob was carrying a Heavy Duty and asked if he could examine it. After Bob handed him the revolver, the gunsmith inspected it quickly and carefully and then looked up its serial number. The gunsmith asked Bob whether he'd like his Heavy Duty rechambered to .357 Magnum right then and there. Bob said OK and the job was quickly and properly done.

Bob was a pistolsmith at the Rock Island Arsenal. Among other things that he did while working at the arsenal, Bob helped to develop the M-1911-based General Officer's Pistol that the Army started to issue after its supply of Colt .32 ACP and .380 ACP pistols had been exhausted.

Bob went to the Smith & Wesson works multiple times for training in his capacity as a federal employee. After he retired from the arsenal, he returned for training several more times because he was the armorer for the Scott County (Iowa) Sheriff's Department.

Bob was a great guy. I still miss him.
 
S&W38, are you talking about Bob M.? If you are, I knew and liked him very much also. I spent the late 60's and early 70's in that area and thought it was a gunner's paradise with all the talented gunsmiths and shooters in the area.
 
I spent some time back in that area this Summer and have to say that things have changed a great deal. Everything from what is going on at the Arsenal to the number of Gun Shops/Gunsmiths still in the area.
 
I was there 69-70. I had learned to reload as a teenager, and had bought and shot a variety of guns before the Army days, so I knew guns.
I moved around a lot during my tour. I was around both Marine and Army units, ARVN's, and ROK's. I flew a lot, on both Marine and Army choppers of all kinds, and AF C-130's, C-123's, and Caribou's, so you might say I saw a lot of flight crews. I never recall seeing a 357.
45's and 38's is all I recall.
This is the first MENTION of body armor I have ever heard related to the VC or NVA troops. I don't believe that any of them ever wore any.
I suppose it would have been possible to find anything there, since it had been a busy area for decades.
My CO handed me a 1911A1 one day, saying I "might need it to protect him". No paper, no receipt. He also handed me a Mod 37 Ithaca Trench gun and lots of 00 for the same reason. Again, no paper, no receipt. I liked it- one of the old ones that fired as you pumped it if you held the trigger. I loaned it to one of my men, and he let it get confiscated by an MP one sad day. The MP made no charges, and did not even take his name, so he was just flat swiping my Ithaca! We went looking for him, but could not find him.....
 
Originally posted by handejector: ...This is the first MENTION of body armor I have ever heard related to the VC or NVA troops. I don't believe that any of them ever wore any....
Me too. I also got my share of travel time - mostly via aircraft - and as I stated most all were carrying M-1911A1s, at least, in the 1st Air Cav. I knew a bit about guns but not much about handguns but the Big "N" Frame .357 with the 5 inch tube was my favorite. Also, was really tough to find another one once I got back here. But, I finally did.
 
Originally posted by Lionhound:
Here's the link to Paco Kelly's article that mentions use of primitive body armor by the Vietnamese:http://www.leverguns.com/articles/paco/special_handguns.htm
I read part of that link, but eventually started laughing so hard I could not focus. His reference to body armor:
"I did two TDY tours in Southeast Asia...and had occasion to use the magnum several times. Once firing thru a boiler plated idiot with a sword that came screaming into our A-Camp one night." Now I remember- MANY VC wore boiler plate around. It made them easy to ID. That, and the long swords......
He talks of being an "Intel Officer" that trained troops in Africa- in small arms! He mentions that he took this with him- "A Colt S/A in 45 Colt and a second barrel and cylinder for 44 special." Interesting- I guess he just grabbed that ol' barrel, and unscrewed it by hand whenever he hankered for a change.

The clencher-
" trained their training personnel, in the use of the small arms the U.S. was giving them. From the 38 Special up thru the 105 Recoilless Rifle. The Recoilless was mounted on jeeps and the aiming system was a 50 cal. Browning Machine Gun. You would walk the 50 BMG rounds into the target and then fire the 105..."

He MEANT to say the 106mm Recoiless Rifle. They do NOT have a 50 cal MACHINE gun mounted on them- they have a 50 cal Semi-Auto, that takes a shorter cartridge than the 50 BMG. Trust me- I HAVE actually fired them....
 
I lost it when he made this remark:

"<span class="ev_code_RED">The 173 grain hard cast bullets...punched right thru the old iron plate, leaving some good sized holes exiting his body. Which amazed all the Vietnamese G.I.s when they gathered around to gawk at the dead V.C. I remember one youngster asking..."Gowd Lt. what you got in that gun...?"</span>"

This guy certainly has his higher education degrees:

BS, MS & PHD!!!
 
You don't remember the boiler plated Banzai charges in VN?
I'm surprised. We used to trade the iron we picked up afterwards to papa-san for Tiger beer. Then papa-san would sell it back to the VC, and we could pick it up again, and trade it for more Tiger beer.
This is how I invented recycling. If Al Gore claims he invented recycling too, well....

Sorry for the thread drift.
icon_biggrin.gif
 
Back
Top