Online Vietnam War roll launched for NZ Veterans
Media release
Manatu Taonga/Ministry for Culture
and Heritage
19 August 2011
Online Vietnam
War roll launched for NZ Veterans’ Remembrance Day
Every veteran a face, every family a
memory
A campaign is today being launched to mark NZ
Vietnam Veterans’ Remembrance Day, also the anniversary of
the 1966 Battle of Long Tan.
http://www.vietnamwar.govt.nz/memory/long-tan
More
than four decades on, Manatū Taonga/Ministry for Culture
and Heritage is creating a webpage for each New Zealander
who served in or visited Vietnam during the war
years.
Registered users can log in and leave comments
and memories, upload content or make contact with other
subscribers.
The online roll is searchable by name,
service number and unit and includes information on NZ
visitors and civilians in the country between 1964 and 1972.
It also contains information on honours and awards,
and NZ units in Vietnam.
“Now we want to upload a
photograph, a memory or memento of every New Zealander on
the list. That’s more than 3300 individuals - servicemen,
servicewomen and volunteers with stories of travelling into
the war zone over nearly a decade. If people have photos
please contact us.” says project coordinator Claire
Hall.
The expanded and updated Vietnam War nominal
roll has been published in full on the website www.vietnamwar.govt.nz, and has been
used to create a Facebook-style page for each New Zealander
on the list.
For example:
http://www.vietnamwar.govt.nz/veteran/cpl-h-grey
http://www.vietnamwar.govt.nz/veteran/miss-a-wilkes
http://www.vietnamwar.govt.nz/veteran/sgt-dg-roberts
Photographs
can be uploaded to the site, posted to PO Box 5364
Wellington, or sent to info@vietnamwar.govt.nz.
Extracts
from interviews recorded for the Vietnam War Oral History
project - some 140 recordings with veterans and their
families - are also being added to the website. More than
half of these interviews are now available through the
National Library.
The Vietnam War digital archive is a
valuable resource for students of social and military
history, and family history researchers.
“We’ve
seen this format work really well with the 28th Māori
Battalion site, and hope these changes will encourage our
Vietnam War community - veterans, their families and whanau
- to stay connected for many years to come,” Claire Hall
says.
The Every Veteran campaign will be promoted at
Remembrance Day events in Papakura and Manurewa this
weekend.
ENDS