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The West Point Center for Oral History
  • Home
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    • USMA Leaders Through History
    • The Vietnam War
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    • Soldier to Citizen: Life After the Service
    • Honor And Integrity
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Memories Of A Man She’s Never Met: Trying To Piece Together The Life Of LT Jim Gardner Or Trying To Know Lieutenant Jim Gardner

Kim Pruitt

Description

Lieutenant Jim Gardner died on his 23rd birthday, on February 7, 1966, in My Canh, Vietnam, in a place his Soldiers still refer to as “Tiger Field.” He earned the Medal of Honor for his actions that day, ordering his troops to “fix bayonets” and charge across a dry rice paddy, rescuing another company that was pinned down. In the process, he destroyed five enemy bunkers with hand grenades. That night, his Soldiers recovered his body, and he was returned to Dyersburg, Tennessee. In this interview, Kim Pruitt describes what she has learned about her Uncle Jim from his mother (her grandmother), her mom (his sister), or from Veterans who served with him. She recounts several stories about his childhood and his service. She describes how a cuckoo clock Jim made for his mother stopped at the instant of his death, and his mother feeling a sharp pain in her side and knowing that her son had been killed. She recalls how Jim had been a member of the Class of ’65 at West Point but had left the Academy and commissioned through OCS before his former USMA classmates. She describes meeting members of Tiger Force and hearing their memories about her uncle. In 2009, Jim Gardner’s Medal of Honor was donated to the 101st Airborne Division, where it is displayed prominently in the Division Headquarters.

Video Details Interview Date:21-May-24
Published Date:4-Jun-24
Biographical Details Name:Kim Pruitt
Specialty:LT Jim Gardner’s niece
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