24 Stunning Pictures on Board «Yankee Papa 13» that Capture Ill-fated Mission During the Violent Throes of the Vietnam War
In the spring of 1965, within weeks of 3,500 American Marines arriving
in Vietnam, a 39-year-old Briton named Larry Burrows began work on a
feature for LIFE magazine, chronicling the day-to-day experience of U.S.
troops on the ground – and in the air – in the midst of the rapidly
widening war. The photographs in this gallery focus on a calamitous
March 31, 1965, helicopter mission; Burrows’ “report from Da Nang”,
featuring his pictures and his personal account of the harrowing
operation, was published two weeks later as a now-famous cover story in
the April 16, 1965, issue of LIFE.
Over the decades, of course, LIFE published dozens of photo essays by
some of the 20th century’s greatest photographers. Very few of those
essays, however, managed to combine raw intensity and technical
brilliance to such powerful effect as “One Ride With Yankee Papa 13″ –
widely regarded as the single greatest photographic achievement to
emerge from the war in Vietnam.
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