Billy Keith Ford was born on September 28, 1945, in Boomer, Fayette County, West Virginia. Boomer is a small town of around 400 residents located on the north bank of the Kanawha River about two miles southeast of Smithers. He was born to Juanita Kilburn Ford and Henry Ford, who was a prisoner of war (POW) in France during World War II. After returning home from the war, Henry worked in the coal mines until he retired and then worked at West Virginia Institute of Technology as a carpenter. Billy was the third eldest of four boys, his brothers being James, Robert, and Bruce; and five girls, Betty (Kerwood), Brenda (Kerwood), Novagene (Lowery), Ronda (Keller), and Fonda (Washington).
According to his sister Novagene Lowery, Billy and his family spent most of their time working in the local gardens near their home. If they weren't in the garden, they were packing their gear to go camping in the state parks. As time went on, Billy took a liking to the local football games that were held almost every Friday in the fall. This is where he met a young girl by the name of Karen Sue Reese. He instantly fell in love with the fiery brunette and spent as much time with her as possible. He attended Montgomery High School; however, at the age of 18 he dropped out of high school and later received his general educational development diploma (GED). On April 6, 1964, he married Karen, who was 16 at the time, in her father's home by the Reverend Donald Fields in Nettie, Nicholas County, West Virginia.
In 1967, Billy entered the Army and completed his initial training at Fort Story, Virginia, as an 11B-Infantryman and later deployed to Vietnam on December 23, 1967.
Later, in January of 1968, the 1st Cavalry moved to Camp Evans in the province of Thua Thien, a province in the north central coastal region of Vietnam, which is approximately in the center of the country. It borders Quang Tri province to the north and Da Nang to the south, Laos to the west and the East Sea to the east. The province was known as an area of heavy fighting during the Vietnam War, as it was the second-most northerly province of South Vietnam, close to the North Vietnamese border (DMZ) at the 17th Parallel. More U.S. soldiers-2,893-died in this province than in any other province in Vietnam. (Joshua and Wilbur Bowe, "The Ground You Stand Upon: Life of a Skytrooper in Vietnam," accessed 14 April 2020, https://www.thegroundyoustandupon.org/5th-battalion-7th-cavalry.)
As a result of the Tet Offensive, which was a major counterstrike by the North Vietnamese forces from January 30 until the end of March of 1968, Billy and his unit would participate in Operation Pegasus, which began on April 1, 1968, and lasted till April 15, 1968. It was a massive operation that the 1st Air Cavalry Division kicked off against the North Vietnamese Army (NVA) regulars surrounding Khe Sanh. The Army's only airmobile division launched Operation Pegasus from its base at Camp Evans near Hue to within miles of Khe Sanh on April 1. The division's mission was to spearhead the drive with 10,000 cavalrymen to relieve pressure on the Marine garrison, which had been under siege for 78 days, by engaging the NVA and reopening Highway 9, the overland road to Khe Sanh. ("Cavalry Takes Over Khe Sanh," Cavalair, 24 April 1968, accessed 14 April 2020, https://www.thegroundyoustandupon.org/5th-battalion-7th-cavalry.)
The division's arrival altered the balance of forces in Khe Sanh area where some 6,000 Marines and Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVNs) had been defending against a large number of NVA. Estimates ran as high as 40,000 enemy surrounding Khe Sanh at one time.
The swift-moving skytroopers, fresh from their relief of Khe Sanh earlier in the month, leaped into the A Shau valley without ground support on April 19, 1965, in support of Operation Delaware-Lam Son 216, spearheaded by the airmobile 1st Cavalry. Slinging artillery pieces below giant helicopters, pouring out murderous fire from rocket-carrying gunships, they showed the NVA that there was no such thing as an enemy sanctuary in South Vietnam. While administering this lesson, the men of the 1st and 3rd Brigades seized tons of abandoned supplies and equipment.
The 5th Battalion, 7th Cavalry, assaulted into Landing Zone (LZ) Tiger and began combat patrols in search of the NVA and their supplies and caches. They began to interdict movement on Route 548 by blocking the route that entered from Laos to the West; enemy vehicle losses started to mount up. The 5/7 Cav manned the dominating position at LZ Tiger, which kept a stranglehold on the A Shau Valley, hindering the enemy's efforts at both retreat and reinforcement. The 5/7 Cav continued to secure the valley floor, clashing with enemy units and uncovering huge enemy caches of food, arms, ammunition, rockets, and Russian-made tanks and bulldozers. ("A Journey into the A Shau Valley," Air Cavalry Division, September 1968, accessed 14 April 2020, https://www.vietnam.ttu.edu/reports/images.php?img=/images/2770/2770Serial610702.pdf.)
On April 28, 1968, probably while on a combat patrol, Alpha Company came under attack from small arms fire and Pfc. Billy Keith Ford was killed. However, over the course of the next few weeks the enemy would suffer over 850 casualties and would lose huge stockpiles of weapons, ammunition and supplies. Any serious attempt by the NVA to conduct major offensive operations out of the A Shau base area would now require many months of additional preparation.
Sadly, his family has only memories of Billy as a teenager before he was sent off. During a fire after his death, all photos, records, and medals were destroyed.
Article prepared by Alyssa Groth and MAJ (Ret) T. Brad McGee, George Washington High School JROTC
March 2020
West Virginia Archives and History welcomes any additional information that can be provided about these veterans, including photographs, family names, letters and other relevant personal history.