The Unit crest was designed by SFC Luis Gallardo who was responsible for many of the memorable signs around the hospital. We were delighted he could join us in San Antonio in 2002 ,in Arlington 2004 Las Vegas 2006 and Rock Island 2008.

Luis will plan the next reunion 2010 in San Juan Puerto Rico  Hola!!

Hospital Personnel Found

Hospital Personnel Missing

Hospital History

The Hospital

VungTau

1966-67

1967-1968

1968-1969

Links

Memories

36TH EVAC AUTHORS

Patients

PATIENT'S COMMENTS

Now

POETRY

Past Reunions

AGENT ORANGE ALERT

OLD GUEST LOG

 

Webmistress: Annie Philiben
webbie@36thevac.com

 

 

 

The 36th Evacuation Hospital Vung Tau Vietnam served in Vietnam from 1966 until 1969. This page is dedicated to the Nurses, Physicians, Dentists, Corpsmen, X-ray Techs, Lab Techs, PT's and Techs, supply personnel, admin personnel, cooks, truck drivers, Red Cross Workers and all the people it takes to operate a hospital and the patients who spent time with the hospital.


The 36th Evac Hospital from the air. Note that this was early in the hospital's existence as the EM are still quartered in tents.

Hospital Layout

The 36th Evacuation Hospital served with valor during WWII in Leyte, New Guinea and Luzon and was deactivated in Tokyo Japan in 1945. The hospital was reactivated at Ft. Meade Maryland in the summer of 1965 and remained there until January 1966.

Spec. Peter Bailey by the Hospital HQ sign in front of the hospital. LTC Siebert was the hospital commander.

The Vungtau Peninsula from the air.

My thanks to Skip davis for his assistance, graphics and ideas in developing this site. Thanks Skip




 

My apologies to all who may have been looking for the website.  The Webhost we had previously, unceremoniously stopped providing free webhosting.   Finding a new host is not my favorite thing and uploading the website is not easy.  But I am very busy with Central Oregon Veterans Outreach, Inc. We care for homeless and at risk vets in our area.  It has become a full time (unpaid...just like this one) job.  We have a 6 bedroom house as a transitional facility for homeless vets.  Many of them are in recovery.  We provide outreach to vets living rough in the wilds of Central Oregon and our Vietnam Vet Stu Steinberg has been extremely successful in obtaining benefits of vets.   So I haven't made many changes since the site was taken down.

Let me know if you have any ideas...or if you find links that don't work.   Annie

 

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