Mike Galloway arrived in Vietnam October 1967 after having been drafted by the United States Army shortly after graduation from Marshall High School in 1966.
Mike said he remembers that after being drafted, many Marshall young men traveled together by bus to Detroit.
“Many of those people were guys I graduated with from Marshall High School,” he said. “We all went together and none of us stayed together.”
Mike went to Missouri for basic training with one other person from Marshall.
From there, Mike went to MP school at Ft. Hood in Texas.
“I was not an MP, but I was there for almost a year and then I went to Vietnam, ending up in Long Binh, which is very close to Saigon,” he said. “When I got on the plane, I flew into Cam Ranh Bay which is up north and we kept flying north, dropping people off along the way. I was thinking, ‘My God, I’m going to be in North Vietnam before I get off this plane.’ But we turned around and I ended up at Long Bihn, which was the largest American complex in Vietnam at the time.”
Mike worked in supply for the first five months he was there, a job he said he “loved.” He. then was told he would be a general’s aide for the last seven months of his tour.
“I was told I was going to be an aide to a brigadier general who was leading the country,” said Mike, “I was told I was going to be his driver. I didn’t have any choice in the matter.”
After a few weeks, that general left and a new one took over.
“What we mostly did was have a lot of parade ceremonies,” said Mike. “Every morning, I’d take the general’s helmet, pistol and flak jacket to his office and then I’d find out what we were doing that day…We traveled all over, but it was for ceremonies for people who were being awarded…We wouldn’t be there 10 minutes, and after the general presented the awards, we’d get in the helicopter and head back.”
Mike also worked with a couple of other aides in the mess hall for the generals and 28 officers.
Mike said the Tet Offensive in January 1968 “changed everything.”
“That took place right across the highway from us,” he said. “We took a couple hits but that was really the only close call that we had.”
Mike was still working in supply at the time of the Tet Offensive where he and another soldier would take laundry to Saigon two days a week.
“Nobody was on us to get right back, so we’d spend the day in Saigon until it was time to pick up the laundry,” said Mike. “After Tet, we dropped off the laundry and went straight back.”
In 2017, Mike and his wife of more than 50 years, Cathy, visited Vietnam.
“I didn’t recognize a thing,” said Mike. “We stayed in Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon) three nights, but we hired a driver and translator. When I was there during the war it was nothing but jungle and now it’s all built up between Long Binh and Ho Chi Minh City.”
When in Hanoi, they visited the prison that housed U.S. POWs. Sitting on a park bench near the prison, Cathy and Mike were approached by a woman.
“She asked if he was in the war and it kind gave me a chill,” said Cathy, who told the woman to ask Mike directly. The answer was no. “I think one of the most moving things was when we were walking to the park, there was this upscale mall. It was so nice, and I was thinking I can’t believe this is in Hanoi. We were up on the second level and this old Vietnamese man saw Mike and came up to him with a big smile and shook Mike’s hand. It was like he was trying to say something. He just kept shaking Mike’s hand and these kids from his family, probably grandchildren went up to Mike and wrapped their arms around Mike’s legs and they hugged him. I was thinking, “We have come a long way.’ It was very moving. That man could have been in the war at the same time as Mike.”
Looking back, Mike said he was “very fortunate” to be stationed where he was during the war.
“I had to wear starched uniforms and polished boots and I’d see these guys come in from the field and their headquarters was where I was stationed, and I’d go into the PX, and these guys would look at me like “What the hell do you do?’” said Mike. “We had swimming pools, an amphitheater where we saw Bob Hope and Ann Margret…Those guys out in the field went through hell and I’m fortunate I didn’t. I was lucky.”
After returning home from Vietnam, Mike worked downtown at the bar today known as Mike’s Place for several years and then he worked at Barney’s Glass in Battle Creek until he retired in 2001. Mike has also done some landscaping on the side.
Mike said to this day, thinking about the war does bring back sadness.
“For me, personally, I grew up a lot there,” he said. “But it makes me sick that we lost so many people and that so many of us are living with problems because of being there.”