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Fathers Are Forever! Happy Father's Day! Father's Day in Vietnam! South Carolina, Condolences!
June 21, 2015

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Two Bay Area Sisters, travel thousands of miles and over 50 years in time to regain the legacy of their father, Sp5 Wyley Wright Jr., who died in the early years of the Vietnam War after completing 350 missions from 1963-1964.  March 9, 1964 Wright was chosen to be an Honor Guard for Secretary of Defense, Robert S. McNamara and died in a helicopter crash in the Mekong River along with fellow soldier PFC John Francis Shea.  Jackie Wright, San Francisco publicist and founder of Wright Enterprises and sister Phyllis Cameron, an Insurance Executive and resident of Antioch, CA went to Vietnam the week before Father's Day to research their father's legacy.

UPDATES:

Wright Sisters Find Vihn Long Gate to Shannon Wright Compound in Vietnam Honoring Sp5 Wyley Wright Jr. & Lt. Kenneth A. Shannon-Click Link

Wright Sisters Share Mekong River Ceremony Honoring Sp5 Wyley Wright Jr. & Other Heroes-Click Link

Sp5 Wyley Wright Jr.'s Service Unit-114th Aviation Company, "First to Arrive & Last to Leave Vietnam" Holds Reunion August 27-30, 2015-Media Advisory.-Click Link

"SISTER TO SISTER" INTERVIEW ON KPOO 89.5 FM SAN FRANCISCO JULY 28 RECOUNTS VIETNAM VISIT CLICK LINK!

BACKGROUND-AFTER 50 YEARS FAMILY MOVES FALLEN VIETNAM HERO TO ARLINGTON-"WHAT GOD HAS JOINED TOGETHER" -CLICK LINK

Resources for Vietnamese Tours Listed below the article. 

 

Wright Enterprises-Community Spotlight
 
Wright Enterprises-Community Spotlight Press Release
 
Happy Father's Day! 
 
May God Bless You With More than the Words that I Cannot Even Begin to Convey!  
Dads Are Forever~Dads Wherever You Are, Today is Your Day!
 
 
 
 
San Francisco-by way of Saigon-Ho Chi Minh City- Father's Day, Year of Our Lord 2015 AD- As I write this from San Francisco, the place of port, Sp5 Wyley Wright Jr., the father of Jackie, Joe, Stanley and Phyllis, would have first set foot in 1964, after successfully completing 350 aerial missions in Vietnam, his youngest Phyllis is still in Vietnam with her California State University Global Innovators MBA Class.
 
There is much to say about Fathers and Father's Day!  But in the spirit of the old Negro Song, "I Cannot Tell It All," I'm not going to try.  The search for our father, Sp5 Wyley Wright Jr. has been for most of our lives an unspoken one.  After the many years of not looking at the longing of our hearts, then finding a glimpse of an image via the internet from a mention of Sp5 Wyley Wright Jr. on a NASA chip to the 114th Aviation Company website, my sister Phyllis Wright Cameron and I found ourselves a week before Father's Day in the land where our father walked, laughed, worked and took his last breath in service to the United States of America.
 
For all of our childhood and most of our adult lives, we did not know that there was land in Vietnam that bore our father's name for many years of the Vietnam War,the "Shannon Wright Compound."  It was namedafter the first two casualties of the 114th Aviation Company-Lt. Kenneth Arthur Shannon who died March 15, 1964 and Sp5 Wyley Wright Jr. who died March 9, 1964 along with 560th Military Police volunteer PFC John Francis Shea of Willimantic, Connecticut, who would have turned 21 years old a few days later in March. The banner leading into U.S. Army camp at Vinh Long, southwest of then Saigon, was named after an officer and NCO (non commissioned officer) during  the time they were called "advisers" coined by President John F. Kennedy who had sent them to Vietnam, but who was ultimately assassinated three months before their untimely deaths.
 
There is much to say about the valor of the soldiers of the 114th Aviation Company, the first to arrive in Vietnam and the last to leave.  As I cannot tell it all.  For historians, Steve Stibbens caught some of its history in "Knights of Over the Delta."
 
WE CAME, WE SAW, WE ACCOMPLISHED-our goals of walking the land where our father last lived, seeing the Vinh Long Army base where he and his fellow soldiers worked, seeing the gate that bore the banner with our father's name and finding the studio where Dad had his eleventh anniversary gifts made for "Ouida, the love of his life," the Anh Xuan Studio, and having a short ceremony in honor of Sp5 Wyley Wright Jr., PFC John Francis Shea,  Lt. Kenneth Arthur ShannonCommander George Youngthe 58,000 fallen U.S. soldiers, men & womenthe soldiers of the 114th Aviation Company, and the people of Vietnam who suffered greatly as a result of the Vietnam War.  After 51, years, you can't expect to see much we were warned, but we saw more than our hearts could imagine.  Here's a glimpse into the Vietnam we saw:
 
Finding the Shannon Wright Gate
 
Sisters Jackie Wright of San Francisco and Phyllis Cameron of Antioch stand at the Vinh Long Gate where the entrance of Shannon Wright Compound of the U.S. Army 114th Aviation Company stood during the Vietnam War. Sp5 Wyley Wright Jr. pictured in Jackie's hand is shown with the Purple Heart he received during the war. Posthumously Sp5 Wright received the Air Medal with 13 Oak Leaves commended for completing 350 missions.
 
Finding the daughter of the Vietnamese Artist who made the anniversary gifts for Wyley to send to Ouida for their January 17, 1964 11th wedding anniversary, shortly before his death, March 9, 1964.
 
Quang Thi Anh Dao, retired photographer, daughter of Quang Van Phat, Phyllis, Mrs. Quang, widow of Quang Van Phat andJackie stand in front of family altar in honor of Mr. Quang, who hand painted the photographs of Sp5 Wyley Wright Jr. and Ouida F. Wright for their 11th wedding anniversary.
 
 
Wyley & Ouida Wright
 
Sp5 Wyley Wright Jr., shortly before his death March 9, 1964 commissioned Quang Van Phat at the Anh Xuan Studio to reproduce a wallet sized photo he carried of Ouida Fay Wright to an 8.5x11 portrait and one of himself for their 11th Anniversary, January 17, 1964. Mrs. Wright died March 9, 1970. The Quangs were informed that copies of the artwork is in each of the four siblings homes and are highly treasured.
 
Safe travels to my sister, who was six months old when our father died, and was just two weeks away from a new life at Fort Hamilton, New York. Never holding his youngest, He died as honor guard for then Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara. Phyllis, there you are in Vietnam on Father's Day, to continue your journey with cohorts and instructors of the University of California East Bay Global Innovators MBA Program. What a great "life moves on" testament!
 
As I said there is so much to be said "I cannot tell it all."...All I can truly say is "Thank You, Father God" for this incredible gift of a lifetime.  There was so much given that I could not even have thought to ask for, like, Mr. Hung, a very well-versed and talented tour guide who survived the Vietnam War living near DaNang with his protective father, mother and eight siblings.
...Can you imagine being greeted in Vietnam with songs by Louie Armstrong- seranaded by Mr. Hung imitating Louie Armstrong, "What a Wonderful World!"  So I think to myself and I say to you, "what a wonderful world!  Oh, Yeaaah!"

 
What A Wonderful World-Louie Armstrong
What A Wonderful World-Louie Armstrong

 
HAPPY FATHERS DAY TO FATHERS ALL AROUND THE WORLD!
 
 
 
View from 30th Floor-Pullman Hotel-Saigon Centre, 
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
(Hope to have video of Vietnam mission to share in the future)
SPECIAL THANKS

 
Joe Lucero, Hung Phan Ngoc, Quang Thi Anh Dao,The Quang Family, Gina Snow, GIL Whelan, Noah Dills, Mike Schrumpf, Mrs. Ginger Shannon Young, Laura Shannon McDaniel, George Saxton, Mr. Chuong,Staff at Pullman Hotel-Saigon Centre, Donna Nguyen, University of California East Bay Global Innovators MBA Program and everyone for your positive thoughts and prayers!  

 
God bless you, all!
 
Condolences to the People of Emmanuel AME Church, 
the People of Charleston, South Carolina and the nation.
 
 
"Come Ye Disconsolate"
Come, ye disconsolate, where'er ye languish,
Come to the mercy seat, fervently kneel.
Here bring your wounded hearts, here tell your anguish;
Earth has no sorrow that heav'n cannot heal.

 
Joy of the desolate, light of the straying,
Hope of the penitent, fadeless and pure!
Here speaks the Comforter, tenderly saying,
"Earth has no sorrow that heav'n cannot cure."

 
Here see the bread of life, see waters flowing
Forth from the throne of God, pure from above.
Come to the feast of love; come, ever knowing
Earth has no sorrow but heav'n can remove.
Thomas Moore, 1816
 
   
 
 

 

Resources for Tours to Vietnam

Joe Lucero  劉逸男 | Director, Services  ( He put us in touch with Mr. Hung)

Real China | Immersion Trips by Insiders

 

1450 Lodge Ln. | Boulder, CO 80303 | USA

p: +1 (720) 266-4666 x 810

e: jlucero@realchinagroup.com

w: http://www.realchinagroup.com/

 

Hung, Phan Ngoc  ( Direct Guide-very knowledgeable & personable)
Expert Tour Guide of Veteran Tours
cell phone: 0903 00 66 02
Overseas: +84903 00 66 02
 
Gil Whelan ( cultural info resource...but they arrange tours as well)
Gilbert Whelan
President
VIETNAM MICE-Club
VinaMedia 
54 Nguyen Thai Binh St
District 1, HCMC
Vietnam
+84 (0) 969 713 626
US mobile 650 722 2323
 
Ho Chi Minh San Francisco Sister City Committee
George Saxton, Executive Director
415 240 1551
SFHCMCSCC@aol.com
 

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