Monday, October 11, 2010
Friday, March 12, 2010
The beginning.
In 1967 I was on the verge of being drafted and the Vietnam conflict was raging. I decided to take control rather than have the military decide my destiny. I went to the local Army recruiting office and began to look at the types of schools I could sign up for if I enlisted. This would mean an extra year of active duty but I believed it was the only way I could have some control of where I was going.
At the recruiting office I looked through the book that listed all of the Army service jobs. The book listed every job in the Army and it was as thick as a big city phone book. When I got to P I came across a listing for Motion Picture Photography and Still Photography. Now these sounded like great jobs and much more interesting and safer than being in the infantry.
I enlisted in the Army with a written contract giving me a guarantee that I would be enrolled in the Army school for Motion Picture Photography. I was on my way. I had learned about the "contract" from my older brother who had a bad experience in the military but had gained valuable knowledge which he passed on to his younger brother. Thanks Perry, for this invaluable information. It gave me the control I was looking for.
Off I went to Basic Training at Fort Benning, Georgia where I would see lots of red clay that turned into red dust in the heat of late Spring. After completing Basic Training I came back to Rochester for a short leave then headed for the Army School of Photography at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. When I arrived I was told that the Motion Picture school was closed out and I would have to wait several weeks to get in. If I was willing to take Still Photography instead I could start within a week. Remember, I had a contract, so it was my choice.
I decided that I didn't want to wait several weeks for the motion picture program so I decided to take Still Photography. That was the beginning of my new love. When I started I had no knowledge of photography but quickly found that it was a way to express my heart and soul and my view of the world in the images I created.
After completing the Army's 13 week Still Photography training program I received my first assignment. When I was at the end of Basic Training we were asked to fill out a "Dream Sheet" indicating where we would like to be assigned when we completed our advanced training. I thought if this is a real dream sheet why not shoot for the moon. So I put down Germany. My thought was if I choose somewhere other than the US I would have a better chance and maybe I could avoid Vietnam. Well, my dream came true and my first assignment was just outside of Frankfort, Germany.
For the next year I served as a photographer and assistant editor of a battalion newspaper. For the most part, my job was a lot of fun. I continued to learn more about photography as well as how to write and publish our little paper. During this year I also had opportunities to shoot several sports car races including the Grand Prix of Germany. Somehow my buddies and I found a way to get free press passes into the pits for these races as Army Press Photographers. Go figure. Well, I was still managing to have some control of my life.
As I neared the end of my year in Germany I had been told (by trusted friends) to avoid spending more than a year in any duty station. The reason being, once they got to know you, the people in charge would find more for you to do that may not be so enjoyable. So it was nearing my time to move on. The one place that I knew I could volunteer to go was Vietnam. That was a slam dunk. By this time I had done enough research to know that a photographer was no more in danger in Vietnam than living in most big cities in the US.
After calculating the time needed to process my request, I submitted my paperwork, asking to be reassigned to Vietnam. My request was approved, what a surprise, and my orders were ready to be cut for my departure from Germany. The great thing was that I had many friends in Headquarters Company. They asked me when I would like to depart and how long of a leave I wanted in the US before being trained and shipped of to Southeast Asia. Again I had some control of my situation. I departed from Germany just before Thanksgiving and was home until the first week of January. What a great stroke of luck and good planning. I was home for Thanksgiving, my birthday, Christmas and New Year's.
One other benefit of my timing was something that President LBJ had done. He had legislation passed that said that anyone serving in Vietnam that returned with less than 6 months remaining on active duty would be discharged early. Well, I knew a good thing when I saw it. Of course, my planing to be reassigned to Vietnam included returning to the U.S. with less than 6 months left. Bingo!
In January 1969 I arrived at the 124th Signal Company on a large Army base in the central highlands of Vietnam. While attending photography school someone, who had just come back from Vietnam, told me how he had become a scavenger for scarce supplies. This gave him the opportunity to travel all over Vietnam. He told me how he was able to catch rides on choppers and planes to where ever he needed to go. Shortly after getting settled in my new home I told the officer in charge of the photographers that if he needed anything I would be able to get it for him. Because many of my friends had been reassigned to Vietnam I had contacts all over the country and they were more than willing to help me get what ever I needed and would put me up for a week or so while I was visiting their unit. For the rest of my year in Vietnam I spent as much as a week or two every month visiting my friends in many exotic locations in Vietnam.
In January 1970, I was returned to the reality of the U.S. to a rude and unexpected cold shoulder from my country and friends. While I was gone the "war" had become very unpopular. Anyone who served in Vietnam was guilty by association of supporting the war. I quickly learned to keep my mouth shut and not mention my service in Vietnam. I was back and that was all that mattered.
More to come in my next posting. I have posted a couple of images I was able to keep as a reminder of my work as an Army Photographer in Vietnam.
This was the beginning of my journey as a photographer. Much more to come as I fill in the next forty two years. Stay tuned.
At the recruiting office I looked through the book that listed all of the Army service jobs. The book listed every job in the Army and it was as thick as a big city phone book. When I got to P I came across a listing for Motion Picture Photography and Still Photography. Now these sounded like great jobs and much more interesting and safer than being in the infantry.
I enlisted in the Army with a written contract giving me a guarantee that I would be enrolled in the Army school for Motion Picture Photography. I was on my way. I had learned about the "contract" from my older brother who had a bad experience in the military but had gained valuable knowledge which he passed on to his younger brother. Thanks Perry, for this invaluable information. It gave me the control I was looking for.
Off I went to Basic Training at Fort Benning, Georgia where I would see lots of red clay that turned into red dust in the heat of late Spring. After completing Basic Training I came back to Rochester for a short leave then headed for the Army School of Photography at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. When I arrived I was told that the Motion Picture school was closed out and I would have to wait several weeks to get in. If I was willing to take Still Photography instead I could start within a week. Remember, I had a contract, so it was my choice.
I decided that I didn't want to wait several weeks for the motion picture program so I decided to take Still Photography. That was the beginning of my new love. When I started I had no knowledge of photography but quickly found that it was a way to express my heart and soul and my view of the world in the images I created.
After completing the Army's 13 week Still Photography training program I received my first assignment. When I was at the end of Basic Training we were asked to fill out a "Dream Sheet" indicating where we would like to be assigned when we completed our advanced training. I thought if this is a real dream sheet why not shoot for the moon. So I put down Germany. My thought was if I choose somewhere other than the US I would have a better chance and maybe I could avoid Vietnam. Well, my dream came true and my first assignment was just outside of Frankfort, Germany.
For the next year I served as a photographer and assistant editor of a battalion newspaper. For the most part, my job was a lot of fun. I continued to learn more about photography as well as how to write and publish our little paper. During this year I also had opportunities to shoot several sports car races including the Grand Prix of Germany. Somehow my buddies and I found a way to get free press passes into the pits for these races as Army Press Photographers. Go figure. Well, I was still managing to have some control of my life.
As I neared the end of my year in Germany I had been told (by trusted friends) to avoid spending more than a year in any duty station. The reason being, once they got to know you, the people in charge would find more for you to do that may not be so enjoyable. So it was nearing my time to move on. The one place that I knew I could volunteer to go was Vietnam. That was a slam dunk. By this time I had done enough research to know that a photographer was no more in danger in Vietnam than living in most big cities in the US.
After calculating the time needed to process my request, I submitted my paperwork, asking to be reassigned to Vietnam. My request was approved, what a surprise, and my orders were ready to be cut for my departure from Germany. The great thing was that I had many friends in Headquarters Company. They asked me when I would like to depart and how long of a leave I wanted in the US before being trained and shipped of to Southeast Asia. Again I had some control of my situation. I departed from Germany just before Thanksgiving and was home until the first week of January. What a great stroke of luck and good planning. I was home for Thanksgiving, my birthday, Christmas and New Year's.
One other benefit of my timing was something that President LBJ had done. He had legislation passed that said that anyone serving in Vietnam that returned with less than 6 months remaining on active duty would be discharged early. Well, I knew a good thing when I saw it. Of course, my planing to be reassigned to Vietnam included returning to the U.S. with less than 6 months left. Bingo!
In January 1969 I arrived at the 124th Signal Company on a large Army base in the central highlands of Vietnam. While attending photography school someone, who had just come back from Vietnam, told me how he had become a scavenger for scarce supplies. This gave him the opportunity to travel all over Vietnam. He told me how he was able to catch rides on choppers and planes to where ever he needed to go. Shortly after getting settled in my new home I told the officer in charge of the photographers that if he needed anything I would be able to get it for him. Because many of my friends had been reassigned to Vietnam I had contacts all over the country and they were more than willing to help me get what ever I needed and would put me up for a week or so while I was visiting their unit. For the rest of my year in Vietnam I spent as much as a week or two every month visiting my friends in many exotic locations in Vietnam.
In January 1970, I was returned to the reality of the U.S. to a rude and unexpected cold shoulder from my country and friends. While I was gone the "war" had become very unpopular. Anyone who served in Vietnam was guilty by association of supporting the war. I quickly learned to keep my mouth shut and not mention my service in Vietnam. I was back and that was all that mattered.
More to come in my next posting. I have posted a couple of images I was able to keep as a reminder of my work as an Army Photographer in Vietnam.
This was the beginning of my journey as a photographer. Much more to come as I fill in the next forty two years. Stay tuned.
Thursday, March 11, 2010
After Vietnam
When my tour ended I was flown back to Seattle, Washington. After several days of paperwork I was discharged and sent on my way. I decided not to go back to Rochester, New York right away. I headed to LA to spend some time with my friend Howard Sokol. I was stationed with Howard in Germany and kept in contact with him in Vietnam.
Howard had been wounded and was sent home early and discharged. His recovery was progressing and he had started a college program in photography. Of all of my Army buddies that went through the Army photography school, Howard would be the only one who went on to become a Professional Photographer. I contacted him a couple of years ago and he has been running his own studio in Denver, Colorado since completing his degree.
After spending about a week in Southern California I flew back home to Rochester, New York. I had hoped to start a photography business right away without going to college. Big mistake. I had no idea what I was doing. On top of that I was trained in black and white photography and I wanted to shoot color. I set up a black and white lab in my basement and took on a few jobs using back and white film. After shooting a couple of weddings I was frustrated by limiting myself to black and white photography. That's when I should have used my G.I. Bill and enrolled in college. That was where my career in photography took a long hiatus.
Shortly after returning home I hooked up with another army photographer, Daniel Chaldekas and we traveled around the country for a couple of months. One one trip we drove to California to visit Howard. He was still at school and doing well. That was the last time I saw Howard or had any contact with him until I looked him up on the Internet a couple of years ago.
I am not going to go into all of the details of my life after my travels with my friend Dan. In 1972 I married a woman I met while traveling the local party circuit with old high school friends. Christine Moore was working at a department store and spending time with her friends doing the same, going to parties and spending free time in local pubs.
In 1974 I started an automotive accessory installation business with my brother Ralph. In 1979 our Daughter Katherine was born. Eighteen months later ours son Andrew was born. By the time our children were born we had purchased a house in the suburbs and I was mowing the lawn and raking leaves.
Over the years I made a few attempts to complete a college degree but could never stay focused on my studies. I sold my share of the business and moved on to other employment with mixed results. Because of my mixed results with employment and attempting to start other businesses we ended up having to sell the house and move first into a rental house then into an apartment.
Those were difficult and dark years. By the end of the 1980's I had started a management consulting business that was generating more income. Life was getting a little better. In 1998 Andrew and Katherine (Andy and Katie) were getting close to college age so I decided to get a job with steady paychecks. That was when I began to work for Radio Shack as a Store Manager.
Fast forward 10 years. It's 2008. My daughter has graduated from college with a Bachelor Degree in English and my Son has an Associates Degree and is attending Rochester Institute of Technology. Andy and I are having a conversation about finishing his Bachelor Degree at RIT with a concentration in photography. He was a little upset because his program started with studies in film photography but then changed in mid stream to digital photography. As we talked and he showed me his digital SLR camera, a Canon D20, It suddenly dawn on me that with digital I could shoot in color and print my own work.
Within days I had ordered a Canon Rebel XT digital SLR. I was more excited than I had been in years. I immediately knew that my passion for photography had laid dormant all these years but the passion was still there. As soon as my new camera arrived I took it out of the box and read the instructions as fast as I could. Well the instructions were not the greatest. I learned enough to take my first picture with my first digital SLR. When I heard the mirror and shutter release I knew how much I had missed photography. Seeing the world through the lens of the camera. My passion for photography was back!
Howard had been wounded and was sent home early and discharged. His recovery was progressing and he had started a college program in photography. Of all of my Army buddies that went through the Army photography school, Howard would be the only one who went on to become a Professional Photographer. I contacted him a couple of years ago and he has been running his own studio in Denver, Colorado since completing his degree.
After spending about a week in Southern California I flew back home to Rochester, New York. I had hoped to start a photography business right away without going to college. Big mistake. I had no idea what I was doing. On top of that I was trained in black and white photography and I wanted to shoot color. I set up a black and white lab in my basement and took on a few jobs using back and white film. After shooting a couple of weddings I was frustrated by limiting myself to black and white photography. That's when I should have used my G.I. Bill and enrolled in college. That was where my career in photography took a long hiatus.
Shortly after returning home I hooked up with another army photographer, Daniel Chaldekas and we traveled around the country for a couple of months. One one trip we drove to California to visit Howard. He was still at school and doing well. That was the last time I saw Howard or had any contact with him until I looked him up on the Internet a couple of years ago.
I am not going to go into all of the details of my life after my travels with my friend Dan. In 1972 I married a woman I met while traveling the local party circuit with old high school friends. Christine Moore was working at a department store and spending time with her friends doing the same, going to parties and spending free time in local pubs.
In 1974 I started an automotive accessory installation business with my brother Ralph. In 1979 our Daughter Katherine was born. Eighteen months later ours son Andrew was born. By the time our children were born we had purchased a house in the suburbs and I was mowing the lawn and raking leaves.
Over the years I made a few attempts to complete a college degree but could never stay focused on my studies. I sold my share of the business and moved on to other employment with mixed results. Because of my mixed results with employment and attempting to start other businesses we ended up having to sell the house and move first into a rental house then into an apartment.
Those were difficult and dark years. By the end of the 1980's I had started a management consulting business that was generating more income. Life was getting a little better. In 1998 Andrew and Katherine (Andy and Katie) were getting close to college age so I decided to get a job with steady paychecks. That was when I began to work for Radio Shack as a Store Manager.
Fast forward 10 years. It's 2008. My daughter has graduated from college with a Bachelor Degree in English and my Son has an Associates Degree and is attending Rochester Institute of Technology. Andy and I are having a conversation about finishing his Bachelor Degree at RIT with a concentration in photography. He was a little upset because his program started with studies in film photography but then changed in mid stream to digital photography. As we talked and he showed me his digital SLR camera, a Canon D20, It suddenly dawn on me that with digital I could shoot in color and print my own work.
Within days I had ordered a Canon Rebel XT digital SLR. I was more excited than I had been in years. I immediately knew that my passion for photography had laid dormant all these years but the passion was still there. As soon as my new camera arrived I took it out of the box and read the instructions as fast as I could. Well the instructions were not the greatest. I learned enough to take my first picture with my first digital SLR. When I heard the mirror and shutter release I knew how much I had missed photography. Seeing the world through the lens of the camera. My passion for photography was back!
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