Freed Vietnam POW makes it home (Seeber, Stockdale, Sigler, Newell)

For the past few weeks, the Pekin Public Library has displayed a gallery of photographs taken in Japan in 1945 by World War II veteran A. Dean Riedlinger of Pekin, who served in the Occupation Forces in Japan immediately after the war’s end. His photos of Japan will remain on display opposite the staircase in the lobby through next week.

In keeping with the observance of Veterans Day, the library’s Local History Room is also displaying a group of articles, photos, cards, scrapbooks and other mementos about U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Stanley A. Newell, 69, a Vietnam War veteran from Pekin who was held as a prisoner of war by the Vietcong from 1969 to 1973. The articles and photos come from a collection provided by Newell’s sister Amy Werner of Pekin, and will be displayed for the next four weeks.

Like many young men of his generation, Newell was drafted during America’s war on behalf of South Vietnam against the Communist forces of North Vietnam, which raged from the summer of 1964 through early 1973. About 2.6 million U.S. soldiers served within the borders of South Vietnam, with about half of them seeing combat or being exposed to enemy attack. About 282,000 American and allied soldiers aiding South Vietnam were killed during the war.

Drafted in 1966, Newell left Pekin on Sept. 14 of that year. As an Army private first class sent to fight in Vietnam in Jan. 1967, Newell was captured by the Vietcong on July 12, 1967 while on a search and destroy patrol in the Ia Drang Valley in South Vietnam’s Pleiku Province along the Cambodian border. On that date, the Army classified him as missing in action (MIA). He was held as a POW until the war’s end, suffering indignities at the hands of his captors, and making a failed escape attempt on Nov. 6, 1967, along with four other POWs. Following the withdrawal of American forces (which would lead to North Vietnam’s conquest of South Vietnam in 1975), the Paris Peace Accords in 1973 provided for the return of American POWs held in Vietnam. Newell was among those POWs who were released in March 1973.

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Red Warriors – STANLEY ARTHUR NEWELL

In the spring of 1973, 591 American Prisoners of War were released from prisons and camps in Vietnam. Among them were six of a group of nine U.S. Army 4th Infantry Division personnel captured in and near Pleiku Province, South Vietnam during the year of 1967 whose lives had been

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Airmanship (Richard Brunhaver)

In 1967, there was a “unit” of approximately 300 Americans fighting the Vietnam Warfrom within a Hanoi prison. The unit—later named the 4th Allied POW Wing—waslocated in the drab North Vietnamese capital. Within this unit, every man had thesame job: prisoner of war.All—except three enlisted airmen—were officers, including me. Our

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