Name: Betty Ann Olsen
Rank/Branch: U.S. Civilian
Unit: Missionary nurse/Christian
Missionary Alliance
Date of Birth: 22 October 1934
Home City of Record: New York NY
Date of Loss: 01 February 1968
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 124049N 1080235E (AQ776008)
Status (in 1973): Killed in Captivity
Category: 1
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: Ground
Other Personnel in Incident: Mike Benge (released POW);
Henry F. Blood
(captured); Rev.Griswald (killed); Carolyn Griswald (daughter
of Rev.Griswald,
survived first attack, died of wounds); Rev. Zeimer (killed);
Mrs.Robert Zeimer
(wounded, first attack, evaded, survived); Rev.&
Mrs.Thompson; Miss Ruth
Whilting (all killed)
Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 30 June 1990
from one or more of the
following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources,
correspondence with
POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews. Updated
by the P.O.W.
NETWORK.
REMARKS: DIC 29 SEP 1968
SYNOPSIS: Michael D. Benge was born in 1935 and raised
on a ranch in eastern
Oregon. After college at Oregon State, he applied to
the CIA, because he
wanted to travel the world. CIA told him to try the Agency
for International
Development (AID). AID sent him to International Voluntary
Services (IVS).
After two years in Vietnam with IVS, Benge transferred
to AID and served as
an AID agricultural advisor. By the time of the Tet offensive
of 1968, he
had been in-country five years, working almost the whole
time with the
Montagnards in the highlands. He spoke fluent Vietnamese
and several
Montagnard dialects.
On January 31, 1968, Benge was captured while riding in
a jeep near Ban Me
Thuot, South Vietnam. Learning of the Tet offensive strikes,
Benge was
checking on some IVS volunteers who were living in a
hamlet with three
companies of Montagnard rebels who had just been through
a lot of fighting
as the NVA went through the Ban Me Thuot area. His plan
was to pick up the
IVS "kids" and then go down to pick up some missionaries
in the area.
Benge was captured a few miles from the Leprosarium at
Ban Me Thuot. This
center treated anyone with a need as well as those suffering
from leprosy.
It was at the Leprosarium that Rev. Archie Mitchell,
Dr. Eleanor Vietti and
Daniel Gerber had been taken prisoner in 1962. The Viet
Cong regularly
harassed and attacked the center in spite of its humanitarian
objectives.
During the Tet offensive, the Viet Cong again tried to
wipe out the
Christian missionary influence in Dar Lac Province, and
over a three day
period attacked the hospital compound several times.
Betty Ann Olsen was born to Missionary parents in Bouake,
Ivory Coast. She
had attended a religious school and missionary college
in Nyack, New York.
Curious about the way the other part of the world lived,
she went to Vietnam
in 1964 as a missionary nurse for Christian and Missionary
Alliance, and was
assigned to the Leprosarium at Ban Me Thuot. Henry F.
Blood was a missionary
serving as translator and linguist for Wickcliff Translators
at the
Leprosarium.
During one of the earlier attacks on the hospital compound,
three staff
homes were destroyed, one housing Rev. Griswald, who
was killed, and his
grown daughter Carolyn, who survived the explosion but
later died of her
wounds. During the same attack, Rev. and Mrs. Zeimer,
Rev.and Mrs. Thompson
and Miss Ruth Whilting were trapped and machine gunned.
Only Mrs. Zeimer
survived her 20-30 wounds and was later evacuated to
Cam Ranh Bay. Blood and
Olsen escaped injury for the moment.
Two days later, on February 1, 1968, as Olsen was preparing
to escape with
the injured Griswald, she and Henry Blood were captured
during another
attack on the hospital.
For the next month or so, Benge, Blood and Olsen were
held in a POW camp in
Darlac Province, about a day's walk from Ban Me Thuot,
and were held in
cages where they had nothing to eat but boiled manioc
(a large starchy root
from which tapioca is made).
The Vietnamese kept moving their prisoners, hiking through
the jungles and
mountains. The camp areas, swept very clean of leaves
to keep the mosquito
population down (and the ensuing malaria threat), were
clearly visible from
the sky. Once, Benge reports, an American aircraft came
so close to the camp
that he could see the pilot's face. The pilot "wagged
his wings" and flew
away. The Vietnamese, fearing rescue attempts and U.S.
air strikes, kept
moving.
For months Olsen, Blood and Benge were chained together
and moved north from
one encampment to another, moving over 200 miles through
the mountainous
jungles. The trip was grueling and took its toll on the
prisoners. They were
physically depleted, sick from dysentery and malnutrition;
beset by fungus,
infection, leeches and ulcerated sores.
Mike Benge contracted cerebral malaria and nearly died.
He credits Olsen
with keeping him alive. She forced him to rouse from
his delirium to eat and
drink water and rice soup. Mike Benge describes Olsen
as "a Katherine
Hepburn type...[with] an extra bit of grit."
In the summer of 1968, the prisoners, again on the trail,
were left exposed
to the rain during the rainy season. Hank Blood contracted
pneumonia,
weakened steadily, and eventually died in July. (July
1968 is one of the
dates given by the Vietnamese - the other, according
to classified
information the U.S. gave to the Vietnamese through General
John Vessey
indicates that Mr. Blood died on October 17, 1972. Mike
Benge says Blood
died around July 4.) Blood was buried in a shallow grave
along the trail,
with Olsen conducting grave-side services.
Benge and Olsen were kept moving. Their bodies were covered
with sores, and
they had pyorrhea from beri-beri. Their teeth were loosening
and gums
infected. They spent a lot of time talking about good
meals and good places
to eat, planning to visit their favorite restaurants
together when they went
home. They moved every two or three days.
Benge and Olsen were moved near Tay Ninh Province, almost
to Da Lat, then
back to Quang Duc Province. Olsen was getting weak, and
the Vietnamese began
to kick and drag her to keep her moving. Benge, trying
to defend her, was
beaten with rifle butts.
Just before crossing the border into Cambodia, Olsen weakened
to the point
that she could no longer move. Ironically, in this area,
near a tributary to
the Mekong river, fish and livestock abounded, and there
was a garden, but
the food was denied to the prisoners. They were allowed
to gather bamboo
shoots, but were not told how to cook it.
Bamboo needs to be boiled in two waters to extract an
acid substance. Not
knowing this, Olsen and Benge boiled their food only
once and were beset
with immobilizing stomach cramps within a half-hour;
diarrhea soon followed.
Betty Ann Olsen weakened and finally died September 29,
1968 (Vessey
information indicates this date as September 26), and
was buried by Benge.
Finally, Benge was taken to Cambodia, turned over to the
North Vietnamese,
and another long, grueling trek began. Benge, however,
had made his mind up
that he wouldn't die. He treated his ulcerated body by
lying in creeks and
allowed small fish to feed off the dead tissue (a primitive
debridement),
then caught the fish and ate them raw. He caught small,
green frogs and
swallowed them whole. He did everything he could to supplement
his meager
food ration.
By the time he reached the camp the Vietnamese called
"the land of milk and
honey" his hair was white and he was so dehydrated and
emaciated that other
POWs estimated his age to be over seventy years old.
He was, at the time,
only thirty-three.
After a year in Cambodia, Benge was marched north on the
Ho Chi Minh Trail
to Hanoi. He spent over three years in camps there, including
a total of
twenty-seven months in solitary confinement. Upon his
return, he verified
collaboration charges against eight of his fellow POWs,
in a prosecution
effort initiated by Col. Theodore Guy (this action was
discouraged by the
U.S. Government and the effort was subsequently abandoned.)
Mike Benge then
returned to Vietnam and worked with the Montagnards until
the end of the
war.
The Vietnamese have never attempted return the remains
of Henry Blood and
Betty Olsen. They are two individuals that the Vietnamese
could provide a
wealth of information on. Since they pride themselves
on being
"humanitarians," it would not be in keeping with this
image to reveal the
horror Olsen and Blood endured in their hands. It is
not surprising, then,
that the Vietnamese have not publicly told their stories.
Olsen and Blood are among nearly 2500 Americans, including
several
civilians, who are still unaccounted for, missing or
prisoner from the
Vietnam war. Since the war ended, over 10,000 reports
have been received
concerning these missing Americans which have convinced
many authorities
that hundreds are still alive in communist hands. While
Blood and Olsen may
not be among them, they went to Vietnam to help. They
would not turn their
backs on their fellow man. Why has their own country
turned its back on
them?
Thu Jan 29 1998
The book CAPTIVE ON THE HO CHI MINH TRAIL was authored
by Marjorie Clark as
told to her by POW Sam Mattix. It is the story of Sam
Mattix, Cetralia,
Washington and Lloyd Oppel (Canadian) captured in Southern
Laos near
Savanaket in October 1972. The two woman in that town,
Bea Kosin and Evelyn
Anderson, hid from the NVN soldiers for at least two
days as Sam and Lloyd
were taken off. According to the accounts of the villagers
the girls were
executed just before the Royal Laos troops retook the
town about a week
later. Betty Olson was in a village up the road and hid
under a hut. She was
shot as she crawled out after a couple of days. Their
bodies were found in
the smoldering ruins of one of the huts the NVN burned
down. Sam and Lloyd
joined the LuLus in the Snake Pit, (4+4 cells behind
the Golden Nugget) in
December 1972. Lloyd was taken to the Canadian Embassy
a day before our
release on 28 March. He rejoined us at Gai Lam to go
to Clarke with us on
the 141.
Ernie Brace
|
|
FOR VETERANS ONLY
|
|
THIS SITE CREATED BY NAM VET WEB DESIGN
© 2001 & 2005
|