SFC Carroll Flora

In 1970, Carol Bates Brown, a student at Cal State Northridge, started a student group called Voices in Vital America (VIVA), intending to bring attention to the plight of POWs and MIAs in Vietnam so they wouldn’t be forgotten. They sold nickel-plated and copper bracelets with the names of POWs and MIAs inscribed therein, and the recipient vowed to wear it until that POW or MIA soldier came home. The bracelets sold for $2.50 to $3.00, and five million of them were sold.

I was 14 in 1970, and nearly everyone I knew in my Los Angeles-area high school was wearing one, so I spent part of my allowance on a bracelet. My bracelet arrived and the name I got was SFC Carroll Flora. I wore my bracelet every single day, and I slept in it and showered with it. I wore it so much, I actually wore off some of the finish on the inside of the bracelet, as you can see in the photo.

I wondered about him frequently – was he single or married, where was he from, how old was he, did he have kids, was he alive, what was he doing over there, where was he, etc. Finally, in the spring of 1973, he was released as part of “Operation Homecoming,” with the return of 591 American POWs following the Paris Peace Accords. At last I could take off my bracelet, so I stuck it in my jewelry box and didn’t think about it for many years.

When computers and the Internet came to be, I looked him up to see whatever became of him, but I didn’t have any luck. Fast-forward to the passing of John McCain this past August, and I found myself thinking about Sgt. Flora again. This time I found his obituary online and it had the names of his son and daughter and I found them on Facebook. I message them and his daughter responds, so we exchange email addresses and start corresponding. She was very kind and she shared so much information with me that I became overwhelmed with emotion.

At the age of 26, Sgt. Flora went to Vietnam in 1967 as part of the 5thSpecial Forces Group MASC SOG. He and his platoon were on a mission when their helicopter, unknowingly acting on bad intel, dropped them just one mile from the Viet Cong. They radioed for a rescue and waited, as the Vietcong were getting closer.

Because there was no time to land, the rescue helicopter dropped a crude sling into which the soldiers jumped. Flora got all his men into the sling but, as he was jumping in, he got shot in the wrist and the bullet traveled up his arm and out his elbow and then he was hanging on with one arm. As the helicopter flew away, Sgt. Flora fell 120 feet and was knocked unconscious.

He was soon captured by the Viet Cong, and he was beaten and tortured. He escaped once and was beaten and tortured again. While in captivity, he was kept in holes and bamboo cages, and tied to whatever they could tie him to. Ultimately, he was a prisoner for 2,055 days (5.6 years). He came home two inches shorter, 60 pounds lighter and with permanent injuries from the torture and beatings he endured.

Before Sgt. Flora went to Vietnam, his wife was a homemaker, his daughter was eight and his son was a baby, but when he came home in 1973, everything had changed. He came home to an independent, self-sufficient wife, a teenage daughter and a seven-year old. His wife had become an activist and she was President of the Maryland chapter of POWs/MIAs and had traveled to Paris for the peace talks. They tried to make their marriage work, but it only lasted four years and although they divorced, they remained friends for the rest of their lives. He lived out his life in Arizona and died in 2013.

You’d think that would be the end of the story, but I still had the bracelet and I was trying to figure out what to do with it. His daughter said she’d take it for her grandson and keep it with her collection (she has several), but I found another place for it – the Palm Springs Air Museum (PSAM).

I did some online research and, in a chat forum, I found the name of Dave Thompson who is associated with the Palm Springs Air Museum. Dave has created a permanent exhibit for POW/MIA bracelets to honor and thank these Vietnam vets who served their country, but were never properly thanked. Dave told me that deceased Vietnam veterans have their memorial in Washington D.C., but the POWs and MIAs that survived Vietnam never got their own memorial and that’s what motivates him.

He’s collected over 1,000 bracelets so far. What’s remarkable about this exhibit is that he’s combining the story of the POW/MIA with the wearer of the bracelet to include a short bio and photograph of both, which gives the exhibit an added dimension. I didn’t hesitate to send Dave the bracelet, my photo from my sophomore year in high school, and my bio, which says:

“Susan was 14 years old and living in Palos Verdes, California, when she purchased Sgt. Flora’s bracelet with her allowance money in 1970. ‘I wore it every single day for three years – swimming, showering and sleeping with it on my wrist. I frequently wondered who this man was, where he was, how old he was, whether he was married with kids, what he was doing over there and if he was safe. It was surprising that I could care so much about a man I never met and knew nothing about. I never took my bracelet off until he was released and came back home in 1973.’ Susan kept her bracelet for 45 years before kindly donating it to the Palm Springs Air Museum and said, ‘I still hold the memory of this serviceman in my heart.’”

Between connecting with Sgt. Flora’s children, the research I’ve done, and talking with Dave Thompson at the Air Museum, it’s been an emotional journey for me. I’ve got closure now, and I’m especially honored that my bracelet can be part of this important exhibit.

* Of the 2,500 POWs and MIAs, there are still 1,200 whose bodies have never been recovered.

Written by Susan 11/13/18

10 thoughts on “SFC Carroll Flora”

  1. This was a very moving story Susan. Thank you for sharing it, and allowing us to see how small acts in our lives can have larger, inclusive, heart-warming results! Thank you!

  2. Susan
    I also have a bracelet for Carroll Flora. I wore mine while growing up in Galveston Texas. I would like to mail mine to the museum also. Please tell me how!!! Thank you
    Doris Dillon
    Farmersville Texas
    dmacdillon@yahoo.com

  3. Thanks for your kind words Susan and thanks for contributing to such a good cause. For someone without access to “official” records you were pretty close. Dad certainly didn’t embellish all the attention and lived out his final years in peace and quiet in Az. Fortunately my sister and his brother were able to join me for Dads final days and he passed in his sleep in 2013

    1. Dwayne, thank you for your comment. It was an honor to wear your dad’s POW bracelet all those years, and I didn’t take it off until he came home. Then it sat in my jewelry box for 40+ years until I found you and your sister. She was kind enough to email with me to fill in the blanks regarding your dad’s life after the war. I always wondered what his life was like after he came home. I wish I had found your dad earlier so I could have thanked him for his service and let him know how much I thought about him in the early 70’s when I wore his bracelet. I cared and wondered about him a lot even though I never knew him. I found closure after talking with your sister, and then I donated your dad’s POW bracelet to the Palm Springs’ Air Museum where he will be honored for many years to come. Thanks again for your note here Dwayne, and all blessings to you and your family.

  4. Hi Susan—don’t know if you still are keeping up with this blog but I wanted to let you know that I, too, wore Sgt Flora’s bracelet while growing up in NJ. Found it the other day and googled his name. Your blog was one of the first things to pop up and it was wonderful to learn his full story. Thanks.

    1. Hi Ann, and thanks for reaching out. How cool that we both wore the same bracelet. Be sure to read the comments above if you haven’t already. If you’re interested in donating your bracelet to the Palm Springs Air Museum where I donated mine, you can reach out to Dr. Dave Thompson at dr.dave.psam@gmail.com and he’ll tell you how (tell him I sent you). The PSAM has a fabulous display of POW bracelets and they’re being preserved for history which is really great. Dr. Thompson also wants a short bio on the people who wore these bracelets, so I wrote a little paragraph about how I was a freshman in high school in 1970 and bought my bracelet with my allowance. I never took it off and wore it for years until he came home. As I mentioned in my blog, I never knew I could care so much about someone I didn’t even know. Sgt. Flora is a hero in my eyes.

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