
In October 1969, I received my orders to Vietnam where I was assigned to the 14th Combat Engineer Battalion at Fire Support Base Nancy. After getting a temporary assignment as the battalion mail truck driver, I was given my first truck — a deuce and a half. I drove that deuce for several weeks before settling into my regular duty as Courier Driver for the battalion, with a daily run from Firebase Nancy to 45th Engineer Group Headquarters in Phu Bai. But this time, my truck was a mid-’60s Dodge M37.
Introduced in 1951, the M37 was used extensively in the Korean War, and then again in Vietnam by the U.S. military. The basic body style remained unchanged from 1951 through 1968 and was ultimately replaced in the mid-seventies.
The M37 was powered by a 78-hp Dodge straight-six mated to a four-speed manual transmission and four-wheel drive. It’s top speed of 40-45 mph created no problems for me in Vietnam. My 70-mile round-trip took me through several villages and the city of Hue where my speeds were lucky to reach 25 mph.
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