Former POW from Jay held in the Vietnam jungle gives rare interview (Charles Craft)

“They stripped me of everything I had.” So began Charlie Crafts’ 26-month odyssey as a prisoner of war in the jungles of Vietnam.

Crafts, who now lives in Livermore, consented to a rare interview on his experience as Maine’s first Vietnam POW, and the only one to be imprisoned in the jungle. This is his story.

In the spring of 1964 Pfc. Crafts had been on the laboratory staff at International Paper since his graduation four years earlier from Jay High School. A draft notice from legendary draft board monarch Sgt.  Eddie Berry arrived. After basic training Crafts was sent to communications school. Graduating near the top of his class made him eligible for the military’s most challenging assignment, the war in Southeast Asia.

After being in Vietnam only a month, Crafts experienced the event that utterly changed his life. On Dec. 29, 1964, he and Sgt. Harold Bennett had just been dispatched as advisers to some 360 Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) rangers trying to defend the Catholic village of Binh Gia, about 70 miles south of Saigon. American intelligence at this early point in the war was so limited it had no inkling that five thousand Viet Cong, “VC,” were close at hand, some of them disguised as ARVN soldiers.

Other Publications You Might Be Interested In

P.O.W.S: At Last the Story Can Be Told (Rodney Knutson)

For weeks the returned P.O.W.s had been stepping from “freedom birds” onto the television screens—most of them saluting crisply, walking smartly, looking physically fit and acting mentally alert. As the nation’s early apprehensions faded, a new idea set in: perhaps the P.O.W.s had been humanely treated after all. That illusion

Read More »

Ex POW’s Mull Lessons (Raymond Vissotzky)

When the agony ended and everyone had told his story of horror, did anything come out of the tragedy that could be a lesson to others? That is the question being studied by a team of ex-prisoners of war, led by Col. Raymond W. Vissotzky, at the Survival School at

Read More »