WESTFIELD, Ind. (BP) — The following was posted by Baptist Press on Feb. 18, 1966, under the heading, “Navy Seeks Ministers as Chaplains:”
“The Southern Baptist Chaplains Commission has put out a call for Baptist ministers ready for immediate commission and active duty in the United States Navy. The demand was brought on by a Navy adjustment of the number of Baptist chaplains and by the stepped-up manpower needs resulting from the war in Vietnam.”
One of those who responded to this call was William “Billy” E. Dodson who was commissioned as a Navy chaplain in 1967. His 89-year-old widow, Ray Dean “Teen” Dodson said, “I remember the day Billy came walking through the door with a copy of The Alabama Baptist in his hand reading me the story.”
The Alabama natives were members of the last graduating class of Howard College (Samford University) where they had met. After college, they moved to Fort Worth, Texas, where Billy completed a degree at the Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. Following seminary, he became the pastor of First Baptist Church of Wilmer, Ala., where he was serving when he entered the Navy.
During his first tour in Vietnam in 1967, he was assigned to the Marine Seabee Construction Unit, MCB 11, stationed at Camp Barnes near the DMZ. It was to be a baptism by fire. During their 1967 tour, the MCB 11 was involved in 128 firefights, resulting in 102 wounded and 12 killed in action. Because of their actions in 1967, the unit became the most decorated Seabee Battalion in history.
One night a firefight ensued at Camp Barnes. Dodson said it was the most scared he had been in his entire life. They were being hit with mortars and heavy gunfire when someone came looking for him. A Marine had been badly wounded and was asking for a chaplain.
“I didn’t want to leave that fox hole,” Dodson said. But he knew his duty, he prayed for strength, scrambled out of the foxhole and went to attend the wounded Marine.
The following morning, after the sun had chased away the cover of darkness, Chaplain Dodson began surveying the smoldering damage from the battle the night before. As he walked by the first foxhole, he discovered it had taken a direct mortar hit. Had he stayed, he would have been killed. It bolstered his faith for battles to come.
During another firefight at Camp Barnes, Dodson and a doctor slid into a bunker located near a large trench where the ammunition was stored. The ammunition took a direct enemy hit and began exploding. The ammunition continued to explode for eight long excruciating hours. They were not able to leave the bunker because of the explosions. At times they were literally being tossed around the bunker.
Following the battle, the U.S. military altered the way munitions were stored, dividing the ordnance, and placing earthen barriers between the stores of ammunition. Unfortunately for Dodson, the concussions had already done their damage.
Dodson continued to faithfully serve as a chaplain, taking care of those who were frightened, wounded and dying. A cherished photo of the family is Dodson baptizing a Marine in a foxhole at Camp Barnes. Dodson would eventually serve a total of three tours of duty in Vietnam.
At this point in Chaplain Dodson’s story, one would hope the next lines would read something to this effect: Chaplain Dodson returned home to his loving wife and family, and they lived happily ever after. Unfortunately, that’s not the way it worked. Returning home would be the beginning of another long battle.
After Vietnam, the family began to note changes in his personality. On the outside he appeared fine; the enemy would be an unseen foe lying within. At first Teen said she thought it was PTSD, though it eventually proved to be something more.
Dodson continued to serve in the Navy as a chaplain, retiring in 1984. The family returned to Alabama where he pastored Benton Baptist Church. Teen said the church was very patient, but eventually his problems led to their departure.
After years of tests, examinations, uncertainty, frustrations and anxiety, he was finally diagnosed with Pick’s disease. It’s a form of dementia due to deterioration of the brain. Deterioration in Dodson’s case was due to the concussions experienced during battle, specifically the eight hours spent in the bunker as artillery exploded at Camp Barnes.
Teen continued to take care of him as long as she could, even as his mind, memories and body slipped away. After she could no longer physically care for him, he spent the final two years of his life living in veterans’ homes in Alabama. In 2008, 41 years after his first tour in Vietnam, he succumbed to the wounds suffered in battle. He was 73.
Memorial Day is set aside as a time to honor the memory of those who, in the words of President Lincoln at Gettysburg, “gave the last full measure of devotion.” Some of those who died in Vietnam have their names etched upon the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, D.C. Others, like Chaplain William “Billy” E. Dodson, do not. But he and others like him deserved to be remembered and honored this Memorial Day too.
(EDITOR’S NOTE — Charles Jones is a Baptist historical researcher and freelance writer. He is currently serving as transitional interim pastor at Oak Grove Baptist Church in Gainesville, Ga.)