Evansville POW: ‘Why did I make it and they didn’t?’ (James Pfister)

Dennis Hammond’s death came with little warning.

The Marine staff sergeant laid down on his bamboo mat beside the other American prisoners of war one evening in the spring of 1970. James Pfister, an Evansville native, found him the next morning.

Hammond was still.

Pfister shook his friend. When he didn’t move, Pfister screamed at him to get up. Kicked the bunk. Grabbed his shoulder and rolled him over.

A cluster of flies shot out of Hammond’s mouth.

Hammond was the eighth man to die in that Vietnamese prisoner of war camp in less than two years.

‘I still have this dream where I see the faces of the guys I buried. They’re right there,’ Pfister said, holding his hand up just in front of his face. ‘Just their faces. I often wonder, why did I make it and they didn’t? I was sick just like they were. What’s the reason behind it?’

More than 40 years after Pfister left that prison camp and returned home to Evansville, he still thinks of those eight men every single day.

This, and every, Memorial Day, Pfister thinks of all those who gave their lives. Though, for the eight men he buried, he doesn’t need a holiday to remember.

‘I carry them with me every day,’ he said, sitting in his Carmi, Illinois home. ‘I want them to know, I’m with them. They will never be forgotten.’

Through him and others survivors their stories can be told.

Other Publications You Might Be Interested In

The Great Warhawk Nation (Donald R. Spoon, M.D.)

I was born in Mound City, Missouri on 22 December 1941. I lived there until 1952, then moved to Trenton, Missouri where I graduated from high school. While there I was active in the high school band (trombone 6 years), glee club, mixed chorus, and sports (football and track). I was also active

Read More »

Save Me Some Trout (Gerald Gerndt)

‘Save Me Some Trout,’ Suring POW Writes By gerry Mcdowell Press-Gazette Staff Writer SURING “I hope you save a few of those trout in the pond for me.” This was a message in the Christmas letter from Capt. Gerald Gerndt, whose parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Gerndt of Suring, are

Read More »