From the same producers as WWII in HD, the program focuses on the firsthand experiences of thirteen Americans during the Vietnam War.
Anne is a founding member of the National League of Families, an organization that publicized the issue of MIAs and POWs in Vietnam.
She is portrayed by Jennifer Love Hewitt A recently graduated lieutenant in the 196th Infantry Brigade, serving in Vietnam from Summer 1967 - Spring 1968.
He returned to Vietnam in 1969 for his second tour of duty, this time flying an F-4 Phantom bombing the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
As a platoon sergeant in the 173rd Airborne Brigade, Brown led search and destroy missions until being injured by a booby trap.
Brown later returned to his unit and fought in the Battle of Đắk Tô in November 1967, including the bloody fight on the slopes of Hill 875.
Monticello, New York U.S. Army, 1st Division Service: Spring 1969 – Summer 1969 Like thousands of other young American men, Don DeVore struggled intensely with what he would do if he were drafted to serve in Vietnam.
In the late summer of 1968, DeVore’s number was called and within weeks he was shipped off to basic training at Fort Jackson, South Carolina.
Arriving in Vietnam in March 1969, DeVore was assigned to an artillery unit at a fire support base known as Firebase Jim.
His job was to provide accurate fire support for the search and destroy patrols that were taking place on a near daily basis in the surrounding jungles.
In September 1969, the Viet Cong infiltrated Firebase Jim and DeVore was severely wounded by an RPG (rocket propelled grenade), sustaining an injury to his left arm that kept him hospitalized for nearly two years.