Browse Items (774 total)

Meeting of veterans of the Vietnam War. The support group formed to help with Agent Orange problems.

Series of photographs of Vietnam veterans and their families who suffer from diseases believed to be related to the veteran's contact with Agent Orange in Vietnam.

Series of photographs showing Vietnam veterans and their families that have illness believed to be caused by Agent Orange.

Series of photographs showing Vietnam veterans and their families that have illness believed to be caused by Agent Orange.

Mike Milne, 36, He was in Vietnam from 1967-69 with a search and destroy unit attached to the 36th Engineers. He remembers being in areas that were sprayed with defoliants from helicopters. He returned from Vietnam with a rash and urinary tract…

Mike Milne, 36, was in Vietnam from '67-'69 with a search and destroy unit attached to the 36th Engineers. He remembers being in areas sprayed with defoliants. He returned with a rash and urinary infections. Four years ago his legs and hands went…

Jim Roxby, 35, Vietnam Veteran in '66-'67 in the U.S. Army First Cavalry Division was involved with the use of Agent Orange while clearing land for army bases. He has reoccurring health problems--extreme muscle and joint pain, 20% loss of movement…

Jim Roxby, 35, Vietnam veteran in 1966-67 cleared land for three base camps spraying Agent Orange. Once he received an accidental dose from high-powered hoses spraying from trucks. He was sick for three weeks--nauseous, bleeding from eyes and ears.…

Michael 8, and Chad Jordon, 10, were born missing fingers and bones in their wrists and arms. Their father, Dan Jordan, served in Vietnam. 'We were eating, drinking, breathing and sleeping in Agent Orange,' Jordon says.

Jim Roxby was sprayed in the face with Agent Orange. When hospitalized, he was bleeding from the eyes and blind for nine days. Since his return to the U.S., his eyesight and health continue to deteriorate.