Veteran Culture

Jim Sursely: Vietnam veteran and warrior mentor for 50 Years

Photos: DAV, Jim Sursely

Jim Sursely wouldn’t have it any other way. He’s been mentoring and helping wounded veterans, such as himself, for the past 50 years. He still helps veterans although now he’s semi-retired in the Orlando, FL area.

He grew up in Rochester, MN and graduated from high school in May of 1966. By his own admission, he had no intention of joining the military at the time. He planned on going to college and “maybe playing a little bit of junior college football.” But things changed. 

Vietnam was really heating up at that time, so he joined the Army in December of 1966 and went to Ft. Polk, Louisiana for basic training and AIT. He was then sent to Ft. Sill, OK for a second AIT. Growing up he was car enthusiast, “I was a guy who had a ‘57 Chevy and could take it apart and put it back together on the weekend and thought I’d be mechanic in the Army.”

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Jim Sursely wouldn’t have it any other way. He’s been mentoring and helping wounded veterans, such as himself, for the past 50 years. He still helps veterans although now he’s semi-retired in the Orlando, FL area.

He grew up in Rochester, MN and graduated from high school in May of 1966. By his own admission, he had no intention of joining the military at the time. He planned on going to college and “maybe playing a little bit of junior college football.” But things changed. 

Vietnam was really heating up at that time, so he joined the Army in December of 1966 and went to Ft. Polk, Louisiana for basic training and AIT. He was then sent to Ft. Sill, OK for a second AIT. Growing up he was car enthusiast, “I was a guy who had a ‘57 Chevy and could take it apart and put it back together on the weekend and thought I’d be mechanic in the Army.”

He was trained as a wheeled vehicle mechanic at Ft. Polk and then transitioned to tracked vehicle mechanic at Ft. Sill where the artillerymen were trained. Many of the bigger guns such as the self-propelled 175mm and 8-inch guns were mounted on tracks, and so were tanks and armored personnel carriers. 

Getting to work on all of those vehicles, and to drive most of them as well, was a very good experience for him. He said that the Army had given him everything he asked for in that regard.

His first duty assignment was with the 24th Infantry Division in Augsburg, Germany; he spent the next nine months there with a Battalion Maintenance unit. Although he enjoyed his time there and said it was staffed by great people, something was missing. Sursely said that he didn’t really feel like he was in the military, “I felt like a civilian who just wore green clothes to work.” 

Not feeling quite properly utilized, he volunteered for duty in Vietnam in early 1968. He got a 30-day leave and went back home before reporting in March of 1968. The Tet Offensive was still ongoing, (although winding down) and being assigned in the I Corps area, he was bound to see action. His unit in Vietnam was F Troop, 17th Armored Cavalry, part of the 196th Light Infantry Brigade that was part of the Americal Division. It was located in the Quế Sơn Valley, 17 kilometers southwest of Da Nang. His unit was fighting not only Viet Cong but also the NVA who was coming across the DMZ.

“After being in the military for a couple of years at this point, I wasn’t afraid of going in to report to the First Sergeant,” he said. “Top, I’m Jim Sursely, I’m a vehicle mechanic and if you point me in the direction of the Motor Pool, I’ll report to the Motor Sergeant.” 

“He said, ‘Son, we don’t actually have a motor pool, but we are going to get you a toolbox,’” Sursely added. ‘You’ll be a machine gunner in the third platoon. But be sure to use that toolbox whenever anything needs fixing when you’re out.’”

The armored Cav troops conducted daily operations and stayed in the field “about 26-28 days out of every calendar month.” he said. “We could move so much, and could get resupplied from the sky, there was no need to go back unless there was a track that was completely broke down or couldn’t be repaired in the field.”

Most of their operations were “search and clear” or “search and destroy” movements designed to seek out enemy units and draw them out in battle. The Cav moved from village to village and whenever an infantry unit was pinned down by heavy fire, the Cav could move in and lay down enough suppressive fire to allow them to pull back. “We got a lot of Army infantry guys out of trouble,” he said. “I like to tease Marines about it because we saved a lot of them too.” 

As his in-country experience grew, he moved from being the machinegunner to the track commander which was a Sergeant (E-5) slot. He did that for six months, helped break in a new CO, and was the track commander for the Command Track, an E-6, Staff-Sergeant position. He then went to combat leadership school at Chu Lai and was promoted to SSG with 22 months of service. 

On an operation with the First Platoon, the unit set up in a night laager position. Sursely’s job was to check the perimeter’s security, ensure that the Claymore mines were in place, and then get the troops to set up for the evening. It was at that moment that his life would change forever.

“While walking the perimeter, I stepped on a landmine that was later thought to be about 20-25 pounds of TNT,” he recalls. The tremendous force of the explosion blast off both of his legs above the knees and his left arm above the elbow. He was just a few weeks away from returning home to the United States.

“I remember going up in the air, coming back down and landing flat on my back. And I remember reaching down with my good right hand, and I touched what would be like midthigh on my right leg, which kind of gave me a feeling that I was probably OK and still intact. I had absolutely no idea that I’d lost three limbs at that point.”

“The interesting thing about the blast,” he added, “was that there was no shrapnel in the mine, just an enormous bag of powder. The fireball from which partially cauterized my wounds and no doubt saved my life.” That allowed the medics to work out Sursely before the helicopters brought him to an evac hospital. The explosive may have been in the ground for an extended period of time since Sursely had unexploded powder from the TNT inside his body from the blast, indicating it may have gotten wet after prolonged exposure to the elements.

He spent a few days at the 95th Evac Hospital in Da Nang where the doctors stabilized him and conducted debridement of his injuries. From there he was evacuated to Yokohama, Japan at the 106th Hospital where they conducted 12 major surgeries on him. He returned to the states of February 22, 1969, and was transported to Fitzsimmons Hospital in Aurora, Colorado. 

He spent another nine months in the hospital in Colorado and was discharged in November 1969. He was excited to get home to Minnesota, but he quickly learned that living in a wheelchair, while difficult under normal circumstances, was even harder when dealing with winter conditions such as snow and ice. 

He was fit with a prosthetic arm which he used to facilitate driving a car, but the extent of his injuries prohibited the use of prosthetic legs. The blast tore his left leg off at the hip, where there was no femur to drive a prosthetic leg, and his right leg had such a short stump, it wasn’t possible for him to get anywhere efficiently enough, so he has been confined to a chair for the past 50 years.

He met a woman while in Colorado. She quit her job and moved to be with him in Minnesota. The two were married in February of 1970. They had two sons and moved to Florida but divorced ten years later. “It was one of those things where we were much better friends when we weren’t married than when we were.”

Life is difficult and transitioning from an athlete and combat soldier to a wounded vet in a wheelchair was a hard time, as it would be for anyone. He met his second wife Jeannie and the two started a real estate business in Apopka, FL — they have been married for 35 years. At her urging, he transferred to the DAV in Chapter 30 in Sanford. He currently belongs to the DAV Chapter in Orlando that has 2,800 members. 

“We know how important our wives are in our recovery,” he said referencing Bobby Barrera, who we spoke to a few days ago. “And as much as I kid my wife (Jeannie) about me being her caregiver, we both know who is the indispensable one here.”  

His wife accompanies him on trips to Walter Reed and other hospitals, speaking with the wives, mothers and girlfriends of the injured veterans, giving the message that while life will change, it is going to be ok. 

Sursely was very active in the DAV. His fellow veterans recognized his leadership and he is the current Chapter Commander, a position he also held in Sanford. He was then given positions of more and more responsibility at the state and national level even becoming the National Commander of the DAV.

“Our mission is tied to service to veterans,” he said. “Whether it be at the local VA hospital or the Assisted Community Center and just all kinds of activities in the state. We try to do anything we can to enhance the lives of veterans in the area of Central Florida.” 

He says that the 260 National Service Officers and Transition Assistance Officers who are there for veterans are a big part of what the DAV does. He added that “Jim Sursely is happy to be just a small part of it.” 

The DAV is celebrating its 100th Anniversary this year. Each year, DAV (Disabled American Veterans) helps more than one million veterans and their families get the benefits they’ve earned. To learn more, visit www.DAV.org.

 

About Steve Balestrieri View All Posts

Steve is a SOFREP Senior Editor. He has served as a Special Forces NCO and Warrant Officer before injuries forced his early separation. He writes for SOFREP and covers the NFL for PatsFans.com and his work was regularly featured in the Millbury-Sutton Chronicle and Grafton News newspapers.

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