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English 111: Dr. Van Nort

This guide has primary and secondary resources that capture and contextualize the prisoner of war (POW) experience for USAFA graduates during the Vietnam War.

This page offers additional resources that are more specific to individual prisoners of war (POWs), oral history projects, and contextual secondary sources. Due to the amount of information, we recommend browsing these resources with a research librarian, your course instructor, and/or course volunteers. 

Additional Resources

Bibliographies

Books

Autobiographies, biographies and stories of USAFA graduates (and AF airmen) held as POWs in Vietnam and the Persian Gulf War.  Some recommended keyword and subject terms for searching:

  • Vietnam War 1961-1975
  • Vietnam War 1961-1975 Prisoners and prisons
  • Vietnam War 1961-1975 Prisoners and prisons American
  • Vietnam War 1961-1975 Poetry
  • Persian Gulf War 1991 Prisoners and prisons
  • Persian Gulf War 1991 Personal narratives
  • Persian Gulf War 1991 Poetry
  • Iraq War 2003-2011 Prisoners and prisons
  • "Prisoners of War" or "Prisoner treatment"
  • Interviews or "oral history" or "personal narratives"
  • War poetry American or "war poetry"
  • "War and literature" or "war in literature"
  • Prisoners of war in literature

Film and Video Resources

Oral History

Special Collections

Websites

Biographies from the website include the following Air Force officers:

Southeast Asia/Vietnam War

The Vietnam War (1954–1975) was a protracted conflict that pitted the communist government of North Vietnam and its allies in South Vietnam, known as the Viet Cong, against the government of South Vietnam and its principal ally, the United States. Called the “American War” in Vietnam (or, in full, the “War Against the Americans to Save the Nation”), the war was also part of a larger regional conflict and a manifestation of the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union and their respective allies.

During the conflict 766 Americans are known to have been prisoners of war (POWs), of which 114 died during captivity. More than 200 Americans were reported missing in action (MIA). Unlike previous wars, the length of time spent as a POW was extensive for many, with some being imprisoned for more than seven years. Torture was common and the Geneva Convention was not followed, as the North Vietnamese claimed the Americans were political criminals, not prisoners of war. Americans gave nicknames like Alcatraz, the Hanoi Hilton, Briarpatch, the Zoo, and Dogpatch to many of the prison camps where they were kept. After American forces raided one camp, Son Tay, the North Vietnamese moved POWs from the countryside of North Vietnam into Hanoi. American POWs were released and returned home as part of Operation Homecoming in 1973. Perhaps more than any other war, Vietnam continues to illustrate the complexity of the POW/MIA issue.

Clark Special Collections holds valuable and unique resources regarding Southeast Asia, the Vietnam War, and the prisoner of war experience. Efforts are currently underway to make those resources available to Academy Cadets and other researchers, and the finding aids for some of our Southeast Asia collections can be found at the links below. More of our Vietnam POW collections are also available in Clark Special Collections on the sixth floor of the McDermott Library.

Research Tools:

 

Image: "They Got Colonel Larson" by Maxine McCaffrey. Clark Special Collections, McDermott Library.

Military Reports and Websites

Oral Histories

Film and Video Resources