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Vietnam--Tet, Hue, and "The Turning Point."
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TITLE
Vietnam--Tet
,
Hue
, and "The
Turning
Point.
"
CREATOR
Abodeely
,
Joseph
SUBJECT
Arizona
Military
Museum
;
Military
Museums--Arizona--History
Browse Topic
Military and war
Society and culture
DESCRIPTION
The
Tet
Offensive
1968
Early
in
1968
the
Communists
launched
a
major
offensive
to
coincide
with the
traditional
Vietnamese
New
Year
celebrations
(29
to
31
January)
.
It
was a
time
of an
agreed
cease-fire
.
NVA/VC
suicide
troops
struck
in
Saigon
,
Hue
was
temporarily
occupied
,
news
media
reported
immense
damage
in the
South
, and
19
suicide
sappers
broke
into the
compound
of the
American
Embassy
. They were
all
killed
. In
all
80
different
cities
,
towns
or
military
bases
were
attacked
,
more
or
less
simultaneously
. The
people
of the
South
refused
to
rally
to the
cause
as the
NVA
(North
Viet
Army)
leaders
had
hoped
and the
whole
thing
was a
military
disaster
.
NVA
General
Giap
was
devastated
. He
felt
that the
gamble
was a
total
waste
.
It
was a
resounding
defeat
for the
NVA
and
VC
. And then
Walter
Cronkite
,
America's
most
respected
journalist
at that
time
,
suggested
that
America
wasn't
winning
the
war
. He was
inaccurate
,
misleading
and
demoralizing
to the
nation
as a
whole
. His
comment
was
based
on a
30
second
TV
grab
. The
figures
show
its
complete
inaccuracy
.
However
it
created
the
first
significant
crack
in
President
Johnson's
belief
that he
could
win
both
the
war
and
re-election
. As
it
turned
out
he
did
neither
.
Growing
reluctance
in
America
to
support
a
war
it
appeared
not to be
winning
,
combined
with
Johnson's
new
reticence
and a
NVA
fresh
surge
of
hope
that these
things
brought
,
meant
that the
beginning
of the
end
had been
reached
.
Losses
During
Tet
Offensive
US,
Korea
,
Australia
Killed
:
1,536
;
Wounded
:
7,764
;
Missing
:
11
South
Viet
Nam
:
Killed
:
2,788
;
Wounded
:
8,299
;
Missing
:
587
North
Viet
Nam
/
Viet
Cong
:
Killed
:
45,000
;
Wounded
:
unknown
;
Missing
:
unknown
Civilian
:
Killed:14,000
;
Wounded
:
24,000
;
630,000
Left
homeless
.
Hanoi
was
perfectly
aware
of the
growing
US
peace
movement
and of the
deep
divisions
the
war
was
causing
in
American
society
. What
Giap
needed
was a
body-blow
that would
break
Washington's
will to
carry
on and at the
same
time
would
undermine
the
growing
legitimacy
of the
Saigon
Government
once
and for
all
.
While
Hanoi
was
sure
that the
Americans
would
tire
of the
war
as the
French
had
before
them, the
longer
it
took
, the
stronger
the
Saigon
Government
might
become
.
Giap
opted
for a
quick
and
decisive
victory
that would be in
time
for the
1968
US
Presidential
campaign
.
Giap
prepared
a
bold
thrust
on
two
fronts
. With
memories
of the
victory
at
Dien
Bien
Phu
(where
he had
defeated
the
French
in
1954)
still
in
mind
, he
planned
an
attack
on the US
Marines
'
firebase
at
Khe
Sanh
. At the
same
time
the
NVA
and the
NLF
(National
Liberation
Front
/
the
Viet
Cong)
planned
coordinated
attacks
on
virtually
all
South
Vietnam's
major
cities
and
provincial
capitals
.
Forced
to
defend
themselves
everywhere
at
once
, the US
&
ARVN
(Army
of the
Republic
of
Viet
Nam)
forces
would
suffer
a
multitude
of
small
to
major
defeats
which
would
add
up
to an
overall
disaster
.
Khe
Sanh
would
distract
the
attention
of the US
commanders
while
the
NVA/VC
was
preparing
for
D-day
in
South
Vietnam's
cities
, but
when
this
full
offensive
was at its
height
,
it
was
unlikely
that the
over-stretched
American
forces
would be
able
to
keep
the
base
from
being
overrun
and
Giap
would have
repeated
his
triumph
of
fourteen
years
before
.
It's
highly
doubtful
that the
NVA/VC
expected
to
hold
all
or
even
some
of the
cities
and
towns
they
attacked
, but the
NLF
apparently
did
expect
large
sections
of the
urban
populace
to
rise
up
in
revolt
.
South
Vietnam's
city
dwellers
were
generally
indifferent
to
both
the
NLF
and the
Saigon
Government
, but the
VC
clearly
expected
more
support
than
it
actually
got
. The
object
of
attacking
the
cities
was not
so
much
to
win
in a
single
blow
as
it
was to
inflict
a
series
of
humiliating
defeats
on the
Americans
and to
destroy
the
authority
of the
Saigon
Government
.
When
the
US/ARVN
forces
finally
drove
the
NVA/VC
back
into the
jungle
, there would be
left
behind
a
wasteland
of
rubble
,
refugees
, and
simmering
discontent
. This
offensive
would
begin
in
January
1968
at the
time
of the
Vietnamese
Tet
(New
Year)
holidays
.
The
first
attack
on
Khe
Sanh
began
shortly
before
dawn
on
January
21st
,
when
the
NVA
attempted
to
cross
the
river
running
past
the
base
.
It
was
beaten
back
but
followed
by an
artillery
barrage
which
damaged
the
runway
,
blew
up
the
main
ammunition
stores
, and
damaged
a
few
aircraft
.
Secondary
attacks
were
launched
against
the
Special
Forces
'
defenses
at
Lang
Vei
and
against
the
Marines
dug-in
on the
hills
surrounding
Khe
Sanh
, but these
attacks
were
aimed
more
at
testing
the
defenses
than
anything
else
. The
next
day
,
helicopters
and
light
cargo
aircraft
flew
in
virtually
every
few
minutes
replacing
lost
ammunition
, but the
weather
was
bad
.
While
the
world
was
watching
the
drama
unfolding
at
Khe
Sanh
,
however
,
NVA
and
VC
regulars
were also
drifting
into
Saigon
,
Hue
, and
most
of
South
Vietnam's
cities
. They
came
in
twos
and
threes
,
disguised
as
refugees
,
peasants
,
workers
, and
ARVN
soldiers
on
holiday
leave
. In
Saigon
,
roughly
the
equivalent
of
five
battalions
of
NVA/VC
gradually
infiltrated
the
city
without
anyone
informing
or any of the
countless
security
police
taking
undue
notice
.
Weapons
came
separately
in
flower
carts
,
coffins
, and
trucks
apparently
filled
with
vegetables
and
rice
. There was also a
VC
network
in
Saigon
and the
other
major
cities
which
had
long
stockpiled
stores
of
arms
and
ammunition
drawn
from
hit-and-run
raids
or
bought
openly
on the
black-market
.
It
was also
no
secret
that
VC
drifted
in and
out
of the
cities
to
see
relatives
and on
general
leave
from their
units
.
Viet
Cong
who
were
captured
during
the
pre
Tet
build
up
were
mistaken
for
regular
holiday-makers
or
deserters
. In the
general
pattern
of the
New
Year
merry-makers
, the
VC's
secret
army
of
infiltrators
went
completely
unnoticed
.
In the
early
morning
hours
of
January
31st
, the
first
day
of the
Vietnamese
New
Year
,
NLF/NVA
troops
and
commandos
attacked
virtually
every
major
town
and
city
in
South
Vietnam
as
well
as
most
of the
important
American
bases
and
airfields
.
Almost
everywhere
the
attacks
came
as a
total
surprise
.
Vast
areas
of
Saigon
and
Hue
were "
liberated
", and
parades
of
gun-waving
NVA/VC
marched
through
the
streets
proclaiming
the
revolution
while
their
grimmer-minded
comrades
rounded
up
prepared
lists
of
collaborators
and
government
sympathizers
for
show
trials
and
quick
executions
. In
Saigon
,
nineteen
VC
commandos
blew
their
way
through
the
outer
walls
of the US
Embassy
and
overran
the
five
MP's
on
duty
in the
early
hours
of that
morning
.
Two
MP's
were
killed
immediately
as the
action-team
tried
to
blast
their
way
through
the
main
Embassy
doors
with
anti-tank
rockets
. They
failed
and were
pinned-down
by the
Marine
guards
who
kept
the
VC
in an
intense
firefight
until
a
relief
force
landed
by
helicopter
. By
mid-morning
, the
battle
had
turned
.
All
nineteen
VC
were
killed
, their
bodies
scattered
around
the
Embassy
courtyard
.
Five
Americans
and
two
Vietnamese
civilians
were also
dead
. The
commandos
had been
dressed
in
civilian
clothing
and had
rolled-up
to the
Embassy
in an
ancient
truck
. The
security
of the
Embassy
was not in
serious
danger
, and the
damage
was
slight
; but this
attack
on "
American
soil
"
captured
the
imagination
of the
media
, and the
battle
became
symbolic
of the
Tet
Offensive
throughout
the
world
. This
incident
was
fodder
for
Walter
Cronkite's
catastrophic
comments
.
When
the
fighting
at
Tan
Son
Nhut
was
over
,
twenty-three
Americans
were
dead
,
eighty-five
were
wounded
and
up
to
fifteen
aircraft
had
suffered
serious
damage
.
Further
fighting
at
Bien
Hoa
during
the
Tet
offensive
would
take
the
NVA/VC
death
total
in
Saigon
to
nearly
1200
. The
fighting
within
Saigon
itself
was
pretty
much
over
by
February
5th
but
it
carried
on in
Cholon
until
the
last
week
of the
month
.
Cholon
was
strafed
,
bombed
, and
shelled
; but the
NVA/VC
held
on and
even
mounted
sporadic
counter-offensives
against
US/ARVN
positions
within
the
city
and
against
Tan
Son
Nhut
airport
.
B-52
strikes
against
communist
positions
outside
Saigon
came
within
a
few
miles
of the
city
When
the
NVA/VC
were
finally
driven
out
of
Saigon's
suburbs
, they
retreated
into the
surrounding
government
villages
and
fought
there. US and
ARVN
artillery
and
strike-aircraft
bombed
and
shelled
these
supposedly
pacified
villages
before
troops
moved
in to
reoccupy
them. The
NVA/VC
repeated
this
tactic
again
and
again
in a
clear
effort
to
make
the
Saigon
Government
destroy
their
own
fortified
villages
and, by
doing
so
,
further
alienate
the
rural
population
. A
month
after
the
offensive
began
, US
estimates
put
the
number
of
civilian
dead
at
some
15,000
and the
number
of
new
refugees
at
anything
up
to
two
million
and
still
the
battles
went
on .
Elsewhere
in
South
Vietnam
, the
success
of the
Tet
offensive
was
erratic
.
Many
of the
attacks
on the
provincial
cities
and US
bases
were
easily
beaten
back
within
the
first
minutes
or
hours
, but
others
involved
bitter
fighting
. In the
resort
city
of
Dalat
, the
ARVN
put
up
a
spirited
defense
of the
Vietnamese
Military
Academy
and the
Pasteur
Institute
.
Fighting
in
Dalat
went
on
until
mid-February
and
left
over
200
VC
dead
.
South
Vietnamese
officials
sifting
through
the
rubble
found
mass
graves
after
Hue
was
finally
recaptured
at the
end
of
February
. The
total
number
of
bodies
unearthed
came
to
around
2500
, but the
number
of
civilians
estimated
as
missing
after
the
Hue
battle
was
nearly
6000
.
Many
of the
victims
found
were
Catholics
who
sought
sanctuary
in a
church
but were
taken
out
and
later
shot
.
Others
were
apparently
being
marched
off
for
political
"
re-education
" but were
shot
when
American
or
ARVN
units
came
too
close
. The
mass
graves
within
Hue
itself
were
largely
of those
who
had been
picked
up
and
executed
for
various
"
enemy
of the
people
"
offenses
. There
is
some
doubt
that the
NVA/VC
had
planned
all
these
executions
beforehand
, but
unquestionably
it
was the
largest
communist
purge
of the
war
.
Giap's
ambition
to
win
a
massive
victory
against
the
Americans
was
thwarted
by
massive
aerial
bombardments
of
NVA
positions
.
B-52's
and
strike
aircraft
dropped
tons
of
bombs
and
napalm
within
a
few
hundred
feet
of
Khe
Sanh's
perimeter
. The
NVA
launched
further
attacks
on
February
17th
,
18th
, and
29th
but
massed
artillery
and
air-strikes
broke-up
the
first
fairly
easily
while
the
second
involved
heavy
fighting
. In
early
April
,
relief
forces
reached
the
base
. A
1st
Cavalry
helicopter
assault
force
landed
near
Khe
Sanh
as
American
and
ARVN
forces
hit
NVA
positions
along
Route
9
. On
April
8
,
Route
9
was
cleared
from
two
miles
outside
of
Khe
Sanh
to the
firebase
,
itself
; and
Khe
Sanh
was
relieved
. On
April
10th
,
Lang
Vei
was
reoccupied
.
Fighting
continued
around
Khe
Sanh
for a
time
but
Giap
had
long
since
given
up
any
hope
of
overrunning
the
base
.
Giap
had been
frustrated
at
Khe
Sanh
and
defeated
in
South
Vietnam's
cities
.
NVA/VC
dead
totaled
some
45,000
and the
number
of
prisoners
nearly
7,000
. But the
shockwave
of the
battle
finished
Johnson's
willingness
to
carry
on.
Westmoreland
was
pressuring
Washington
for
206,000
troops
to
carry
on the
campaign
in the
South
and to
make
a
limited
invasion
of
North
Vietnam
just
above
the
DMZ
.
Clifford
and an
advisor
group
looked
at the
war
to
date
and
consulted
CIA
Director
Richard
Helms
who
presented
the
Agency's
gloomy
forecasts
in
great
detail
. On
March
4th
Clifford
told
Johnson
that the
war
was
far
from
won
and that
more
men
would
make
little
difference
.
Johnson
then
turned
to his
chief
group
of
informal
advisors
. He
learned
that they,
too
,
like
Clifford
, had
turned
against
the
war
.
Johnson's
"
wise
old
men
" had been
told
that
recent
CIA
studies
showed
that the
pacification
program
was
failing
in
forty
of
South
Vietnam's
forty-four
provinces
, and that the
NLF's
manpower
was
actually
twice
the
number
that had been
estimated
previously
.
Tet
had
shown
that the
optimism
of the
previous
year
had been an
illusion
, and
it
now
seemed
that the
enemy
was
far
stronger
and that the
long
efforts
to
win
Vietnamese
"
hearts
and
minds
" had
largely
been a
disaster
.
Johnson
couldn't
meet
the
generals
'
manpower
requests
without
either
depleting
Europe
of
American
troops
or
without
calling
up
the
active
reserves
. His
most
senior
advisors
had
turned
against
the
war
.
Johnson
went
on
TV
to
announce
a
bombing
halt
of the
North
and
America's
willingness
to
meet
with the
North
Vietnamese
to
seek
a
peace
settlement
.
Johnson
then
said
that he was not a
candidate
for
re-election
and would
search
for
peace
in
Indochina
.
General
Creighton
Abrams
,
Westmoreland's
deputy
commander
,
replaced
Westmoreland
as
head
of US
forces
in
Vietnam
. "
Vietnamization
"
is
usually
credited
to
Nixon
, but
it
began
in the
wake
of the
Tet
Offensive
and
Johnson's
turnabout
.
Giap's
gamble
had
another
side
effect
.
When
the
Tet
Offensive
began
,
many
US
officials
believed
that the
NLF
had
offered
the
Americans
a
golden
opportunity
by
fighting
a
pitched
battle
where
it
could
be
defeated
in
open
combat
. The
massive
losses
it
suffered
bear
this
out
. The
VC
was not
broken
by the
Tet
Offensive
, but
it
was
severely
crippled
by
it
; and, from then on, the
North
took
on the
main
burden
of the
war
.
Further
fighting
in
1968
and the
increasing
activity
of the
Phoenix
Program
(Delta
team's
mission
to
assasinate
high-level
NLF/VC
officials)
further
decimated
the
NLF's
ranks
and the
role
of the
North
grew
even
larger
.
The
NLF
had
gone
into the
Tet
Offensive
in the
hope
of
giving
a
death-blow
to the
Saigon
Government
and, if
it
couldn't
capture
power
directly
,
it
could
at
least
gain
a
coalition
leading
to
ultimate
authority
. The
NLF's
dream
vanished
in the
rubble
of
South
Vietnam's
cities
and
it
would be
Hanoi
that
conquered
Saigon
two
years
after
U.S
.
combat
troops
left
Viet
Nam
on
April
30
,
1975
.
TYPE
Image
RIGHTS MANAGEMENT
This is the property of the Arizona Military Museum
DATE ORIGINAL
1968
Time Period
1960s (1960-1969)
ORIGINAL FORMAT
Museum
exhibit
DIGITAL IDENTIFIER
18.JPG
Date Digital
2009
DIGITAL FORMAT
JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group)
REPOSITORY
Arizona Military Museum 5636 East McDowell Road Phoenix. Arizona 85008
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A
A Celebration of the Human Spirit - Japanese-American Relocation Camps in AZ
Adjutants General of Arizona
Alpine Area Family History Preservation Project
American Flag Ranch and Acadia Ranch - The Story of Oracle's Post Offices
AMP Training
APS Childs-Irving Collection
Arizona's Saints and Shady Ladies
Arizona Appellate Briefs
Arizona Attorney General Opinions
Arizona Aviation History - The Ruth Reinhold Collection
Arizona Bushmasters
Arizona County and Local Publications
Arizona Executive Orders
Arizona Highways Online
Arizona Latina Trailblazers
Arizona Latinos in Public Service
Arizona Memory Project - Collection Statistics
Arizona Military Museum Images
Arizona Mines
Arizona Photograph Company Collection - A Centennial Legacy Project
Arizona Related Federal Publications
Arizona State Agency Publications
Arizona State Archives - State, County and Local Government Records
Arizona State Archives Historic Photographs
Arizona State Archives Legislative Oral History Project
Arizona State Archives Manuscript Collections
Arizona Territorial Post Offices
Arizona Women's Hall of Fame
ASU Science Pioneers 1955-1970
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company (Albq Division) Collection
B
Basketry from the Pueblo Grande Museum
Between the Tracks - The Story of the Old Vail Post Office
C
CAMA International Museum Day Collection
Capturing Arizona's Stories
City of Glendale Council Minutes of 1910-1914
Cochise College Libraries-Cochise County Historical & Archeological Collection
Cochise College Library Digital Collection - Rock Art of Cochise County
Cochise County Clerk's Office - Bisbee Deportation Documents
Cochise County Territorial Documents
Cochise County Territorial Tax Roll Index
Colorado Plateau Digital Archives Selections
Colossal Cave Mountain Park's Civilian Conservation Corps Images
Congressman John Rhodes Collection
Courtship, Wedding and Marriage Beads
Curtis the Collector - Native American Baskets, Pottery and Miscellany
D
David Swing Painting Collection at the Arizona Capitol Museum
Day Family Collection
Day Family Records
E
Earle Forrest Collection
Early Cave Creek, Arizona
Early Life in Taylor, Arizona
Early Publications of Yavapai College
Early Southwest Archaeology at Point of Pines
Early Years of Sun City, Arizona
F
Father Augustine Schwarz Photograph Collection
Flagstaff Telephone and City Directories
Forman Hanna - Selected Photographs from the Arizona State Museum's Collection
Frank Lloyd Wright in Arizona 1929-1959
From Lizard Acres to Lush Oasis - The Building of Sun City West, Arizona
G
George Burr Etchings at the Arizona Capitol Museum
Geronimo! Revered and Reviled
GFWC Desert Jade Woman's Club (Phoenix, AZ)
Gila County Maps
Girl Scouts in Arizona, 1920-1940
Glendale Community College Archives
Glendale Public Library History
H
Harvey Girls of the Winslow Harvey Houses
Highlights of the Catholic Diocese of Tucson
Historic Arizona County Road Maps
Historic Downtown Glendale
Hopi Artists and the Museum of Northern Arizona
I
Images from the Edward Curtis Collection at the Arizona Capitol Museum
Images of the Arizona Capitol Museum
Images of the Catholic Diocese of Tucson
Images of Tohono O'odham Polychrome Pottery Making Study
Indigenous Peoples Near Winslow
J
J.W. Hoover Lantern Slide Collection - A Centennial Legacy Project
Jerome Postal History
Jewish Life in Arizona
L
Left for Interpretation - Petroglyphs & Artifacts
Legal and Court History of Cochise County
Lesson Plans for the Arizona Memory Project
Listening to Glendale's Past
Lon Megargee Paintings at the Arizona Capitol Museum
M
Maricopa County Land Ownership Maps, 1903-1929
Maricopa Pottery (Connell Collection)
Mecham Impeachment Hearings
Medallion Papers
Men, Mines and Money
Mexican Heritage Project
Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society 1904-1954
Mohave Museum - History of Transportation in Mohave County
Mohave Museum - U.S. Presidents and the History of Arizona
Montezuma's Castle Historic Photo Archive
Murder & Mayhem - The Strange Saga of Winnie Ruth Judd
N
Navajo County Historical Society Collection Highlights
O
Oasis - Frank Lloyd Wright's Designs for the Arizona Capitol
Old Trails Museum Collection Highlights
Oral Histories of Gila County
Oral Histories of Gila County Ranchers
Oral Histories of Pinetop, Lakeside, McNary and Whiteriver, Arizona
Oral Histories of the White Mountains
P
Perspectives of the Past - Pima County Oral History Project
Phoenix City Building Drawings, 1919-1991
Phoenix College - The Early Years
Phoenix Jewish News Photograph Collection
Portraits of Poets by LaVerne Harrell Clark
Postal Campaign - Tucson, AZ and Surrounding Areas
Powwow Photographs by Ann Leonard
Prescription for Health, 1983-1997, Pima County Medical Society
R
Richard Schaus Ranching Collection
Rosa Ronquillo Rhodes - The Life of the Redington Ranch Postmistress
S
Sahuaro Ranch History
San Luis Takes its Place in Arizona's History - The Migrant Worker Experience
Scottsdale's History in Images
Scottsdale Remembers - Recollections of Our Past
Select Images from Wetherill Family Photographic Collection
Selections from the A.P. Miller Photograph Collection
Selections from the Morris K. Udall Papers
Selections from the Stewart L. Udall Papers
Selections of Photographs from Helga Teiwes’ Hopi Basket Weaving Project
Selections of Rosamond Spicer's Tohono O'odham Photographs
Select Photos from Arizona Native Basketry Traditions
Senator Barry M. Goldwater - An Arizona Legend
Sharlot Hall Museum Audio Collection
Sharlot Hall Museum Map Collection
Sharlot Hall Museum Military Image Collection
Sharlot Hall Museum Mining Image Collection
Sharlot M. Hall - Arizona's Curator
Show Low Historical Society Collection Highlights
Sonoran Heritage - A Learning Library Program
T
Territorial and Early Statehood Arizona Postcards
The Bass Photo Collection - Grand Canyon and Colorado Plateau Lantern Slides
The Bead Museum Collection Highlights
The History of Sedona
The History of the Powwow in Flagstaff
The Hohokam of Pueblo Grande
The Many Personas of Stephen Shadegg
The Seal and Symbols of Arizona
The Voices of the Cienega Watershed Partnership
This Day in Arizona History
Thunderbird School of Global Management - Alumni Magazine Archive
Thunderbird School of Global Management - Historical Collections
Thunderbird School of Global Management - Yearbooks
Tohono O'odham Collection, 1970-1980, Helga Teiwes Photographer
Town of Marana
Trading Post Families of Winslow, AZ
Tucson High School Memories 1906-1939
Tucson Museum of Art, A History - Posters, Print and Photographs
Tucson Museum of Art Historic Block Homes, A Window on Bygone Days
Tucson Territorial Pioneer Project
U
University of Arizona Poetry Center - Celebrating 50 Years
USS Arizona Silver Service Collection
V
Video Histories of Arizona Jewish Residents
Views of Old Morenci and Metcalf
Vintage Poetry Center Posters
W
Walter Runke Collection, 1901-1903
Watercolor Paintings of Maricopa Pottery from the Arizona State Museum
Western Ways Features Company Photographs
Why Arizona
William P. Jones Collection
Williams, Arizona Photo History Project
Writers of the Purple Sage - Origins of a National Myth
Y
Yavapai College Creative Arts Magazines
500
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