The Way We Were: The POWs came home in 1973 (Felix Neco-Quinones)

Almost 50 years ago this month, they began to arrive.

It was called Operation Homecoming, and it saw 591 American military prisoners of war finally free after years of often brutal captivity in Vietnam.

Over several weeks in February and March of 1973, they were returned to military bases in the United States for medical care and evaluation, and 12 of them came to Fort Gordon.

That first group, which landed Feb. 18 at Augusta’s Bush Field, was greeted by cheering crowds and a red carpet.

More than 3,000 were there to welcome Maj. Raymond C. Schrump and Maj. William H. Hardy, both of Fayetteville, N.C.; and Spc. Frederick Crowson, of Pensacola, Fla.

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The Vietnam-Era Prisoner-of-War/Missing-in-Action Database

This database is designed to assist researchers in accessing U.S. government documents related to American military personnel who are unaccounted for from the Vietnam War. The formal title of this collection is “Correlated and Uncorrelated Information Relating to Missing Americans in Southeast Asia.” The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA; formerly

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