Vietnam veteran, others receive ‘overwhelming’ support from Fenwick High School students, staff

Veterans greeted by flag-wavers, cheers as they depart school’s Veteran’s Day Breakfast.
Mark Eckart, 73, a 1969 Fenwick High School graduate, served two tours of duty that lasted 11 months in Vietnam. He attended the school's annual Veteran's Day Breakfast Tuesday morning. SUBMITTED PHOTO

Mark Eckart, 73, a 1969 Fenwick High School graduate, served two tours of duty that lasted 11 months in Vietnam. He attended the school's annual Veteran's Day Breakfast Tuesday morning. SUBMITTED PHOTO

Fifty-four years after returning to the United States from two tours of duty in Vietnam, Mark Eckart received a welcome home celebration from complete strangers.

As part of Fenwick High School’s annual Veteran’s Day Breakfast, when the veterans — many of them Fenwick graduates — were excused from the cafeteria, they were greeted by students and staff lining both sides of the hallway waving small American flags and applauding.

“It was completely overwhelming,” Eckart, a 1969 Fenwick graduate and U.S. Army veteran, said later. “I never envisioned something like this.”

Mark Eckart, a 1969 Fenwick High School graduates, waves to the students who lined the halls to show their appreciation for the veterans after the school's annual Veteran's Day Breakfast. RICK McCRABB/CONTRIBUTOR

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In 1970, Eckart said those who had fought during the Vietnam War, a controversial conflict that divided the country, landed in Dayton and Cincinnati airports in the middle of the night to reduce the possibilities of protesters.

Earlier this year, Eckart participated in an Honor Flight where veterans are flown to Washington, D.C. for the day, then return home that night. When the 85 veterans, including 64 from the Vietnam War, landed at John Glenn Columbus International Airport, they received letters and thank-you cards from Fenwick students.

After graduating from high school, Eckart said he wasn’t mentally prepared for college. He comes from a military family: his father served in the Navy; two of his brothers served in the Air Force; and another brother served in the Army.

So he followed in his family’s footstep.

His first day of boot camp at Fort Dix, N.J., was on Aug. 15, 1969, which happened to be the first day of The Woodstock Music Festival when 500,000 people waited on a dairy farm in Bethel, N.Y., for the three-day music festival to start.

Instead of listening to live rock-n-roll music, drinking adult beverages, and who knows what else like those at Woodstock, Eckart completed what he called “the longest day” of his life. His hair was buzzed, his arms were stuck several times with needles, he passed a physical and his civilian clothes were replaced by an Army uniform.

All of the possessions were stuffed in a small box and mailed back to Middletown.

He now was Army property.

The recruits were told to “get used to a new way of living,” Eckart said.

After more than three months of training and a Christmas leave, Eckart received his orders to report to Vietnam.

He served 11 months during two Vietnam tours, and he fondly remembers seeing Vietnam from the airplane for the last time on Jan. 5, 1970.

“No desire to go back there,” the 73-year-old said when asked about time in Vietnam. “You have to grow up over there. You have to make the best of the situation.”

He got so “homesick,” he said, his mother sent him a subscription to the Middletown Journal so he could follow his hometown news and sports.

After the war, Eckart said it was “a big adjustment period” to return to civilian life.

“Each day over there was so intense,” he said.

He took advantage of the GI Bill and graduated from Miami University in 1976, and later received his business management degree from Mount St Joseph University. He was hired at Armco in 1976 and worked there for 33 years.

Eckart and his wife of 41 years, Rose Ann, also a 1969 FHS graduate, have two daughters and one son, all Fenwick graduates.

“Fenwick has been very good to my family,” he said.

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