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I attended the American Community School in Saigon, South Vietnam, for my sophomore year, between July 1960 and March 1961 (the "normal" school year in that hot tropical part of the world).
The '''American Community School in Saigon''' was created in 1954, providing American style schooling for the dependent children of Americans working for U.S. government organizations in Saigon, South Vietnam (now a part of [[Ho Chi Minh City]] of the Socialist Republic of [[Vietnam]]). Some of those organizations included the U.S. Embassy, the U.S. aid mission (USOM), the U.S. Information Service (USIS), and the Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG). The school also accepted for enrollment the dependent children of private American firms operating in Saigon, as well as some non-U.S. diplomatic families. Some Vietnamese children also attended the school. The school grew rapidly as U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War escalated, but was permanently closed in February 1965 when all dependents of U.S. government personnel were ordered out of Vietnam by President Lyndon Johnson.
== Overview of school history ==
The American Community School (ACS) in Saigon had its beginning in 1954, providing schooling for younger dependent children of American government employees and military personnel stationed there<ref name="milpamph">{{cite book |title=Vietnam General Information Brochure|date=December 1964|publisher=Commanding Officer, Headquarters Support Activity, Saigon|page=13}}</ref>. In 1957 it expanded to include high school students and continued to grow rapidly as more U.S. government and military advisory personnel were committed to South Vietnam.

By order of President Lyndon Johnson, dependents of U.S. diplomatic, aid mission, and military personnel were ordered to leave Vietnam in February 1965, one week after U.S. combat troops were sent to Vietnam. Having lost the bulk of its enrollment, as well as most of the teaching staff (many of whom were U.S. dependent wives with teaching credentials), the school closed its doors.

Dependents of Americans working for private firms in Vietnam were not covered by the presidential order, and so the education of those choosing to remain in Saigon was later provided by several private schools established in Saigon after the evacuation. One of these schools was called the “Phoenix Study Group”, whose students were described as “children of diplomats, wealthy businessmen and American civilians.”<ref name="PSG">{{cite news |title=Americans Study at Saigon School|newspaper=The New York Times|year=1967|date=October 1, 1967|page=5}}</ref> This follow-on school remained in existence until the fall of South Vietnam to forces of North Vietnam in April 1975.

== Instructional format ==
The teachers at ACS were, for the most part, wives of U.S. government employees stationed in Saigon. They possessed teaching certificates or degrees from American educational institutions. French language instruction was provided by qualified local French citizens. The elementary school classes were taught using the [[Calvert School|Calvert method]]. For the first several years, high school instruction was via correspondence course material graded by the high school division of the University of California. Consequently, the high school teachers generally served in the role of tutors rather than lecturing. But by the 1962-63 school year, ACS had grown to the status of a college preparatory high school with high academic standards. Testing programs showed that ACS high school students were at a level 20% higher than their contemporaries in Stateside schools<ref name="gecko63">{{cite book |title=The Gecko|year=1963|publisher=American Community School|location=Saigon|page=11}}</ref>.

== Growth and locations of the school ==
=== Home schooling ===
The school began in the Saigon home of the wife of a U.S. government employee, in 1954. (This was the year of the defeat of French military forces at Dien Bien Phu.) Students were all younger elementary age children<ref name="gecko60">{{cite book |title=The Gecko|year=1960|publisher=American Community School|location=Saigon|page=6}}</ref>.

=== Norodom Compound ===
A second dependent wife soon joined in teaching elementary age students. This second class of pupils met in a small building in the Norodom Compound (one of several U.S. government facilities located in Saigon), situated near the Presidential Palace. The next academic year, two Quonset hut buildings were erected in the compound, and the home-schooled elementary school students joined those already at Norodom Compound. Shortly thereafter, near the end of 1955, one of the Quonset huts burned to the ground, and most of the students’ books were destroyed. While the hut was being rebuilt for the 1956-57 academic year (an additional and larger Quonset hut was also erected), the school temporarily moved into a Dutch-owned oil company's property in Saigon, the Stanvac building. When the rebuilding in the Norodom Compound was complete, this expansion made it possible for the creation of a high school for American dependent children in Saigon.

=== Tan Son Hoa ===
[[File:American_Community_School_Saigon_circa_1960.jpg|thumb|right|''American Community School, Saigon'', circa 1960]]
For the 1958-59 school year the school moved out of the Norodom Compound into newly built permanent buildings near Saigon’s Tan Son Nhut international airport, at the street address 10 Tan Son Hoa (today the street address is 247 Hoang Van Thu). The extra space at this new location was quickly put to use as the school continued to expand, enrolling high school age children who previously had been sent to private boarding schools elsewhere (including the Philippines). At the beginning of the 1959-60 school year, the high school enrollment stood at 28 students, as noted in the school’s first yearbook (named '''''The Gecko''''') that year<ref name="gecko2">{{cite book |title=The Gecko|year=1960|publisher=American Community School|location=Saigon|page=87}}</ref>. The following school year, 1960-61, a count of the number of high school students pictured in the second yearbook shows that the high school enrollment had doubled to at least 56<ref name="gecko3">{{cite book |title=The Gecko|year=1961|publisher=American Community School|location=Saigon|pages=20-43}}</ref>. When opened for the 1958-59 school year, the school had 5 classroom wings. During the 1962-63 school year a 2-story wing was added.

In February 1965, the school was permanently closed when President Lyndon Johnson ordered all dependents of U.S. government and military personnel to be evacuated from Vietnam. Contemporaneous news accounts of that evacuation reported the enrollment of the school (both high school and elementary grades) to have been 750<ref name="evac">{{cite news |title=Children Weep at Evacuation|newspaper=Oakland Tribune|place=Oakland, California|year=1965|date=February 8, 1965|page=1}}</ref>. An additional building wing had been completed the previous weekend, never to be occupied by any students of ACS<ref name="evac2">{{cite news |title=Saigon School Closes|newspaper=Brazosport Facts|place=Freeport, Texas|year=1965|date=February 8, 1965|page=8}}</ref>.

== Later use of the ACS buildings ==
Within three months of the departure of U.S. government dependents from Saigon, and closing of the American Community School, the buildings that had been ACS were converted into a medical facility for the U.S. Army’s 3rd Field Hospital<ref name="TFH">{{cite book |last1=Wettlaufer|first1=John Nichols|last2=Weigel|first2=John W.|title=Urology in the Vietnam War: Casualty Management and Lessons Learned|publisher=The Borden Institute, U.S. Army Medical Department|location=Washington, DC|page=11|year=2005|url=http://www.bordeninstitute.army.mil/other_pub/urology/Urol1.pdf|accessdate=26 August 2009}}</ref>. The complex underwent extensive expansion, and this hospital continued to function as a major military medical facility of the Vietnam War until 1973. Upon departure of U.S. military forces after the [[Paris Peace Accords]], the facility became a new location for the existing [[Saigon Adventist Hospital]], remaining such until April 1975, with the fall of Saigon to the military forces of [[North Vietnam]]<ref name="SAH">{{cite journal |last=Branson|first=Bruce|title=Saigon Journal: The Last 15 Days|journal=Spectrum|volume=7|issue=3|pages=34-44|url=http://spectrummagazine.org/files/archive/archive06-10/7-3branson.pdf|accessdate=26 August 2009}}</ref>. The facilities are now occupied by the 7th Military Zone museum of the People’s Army of the Socialist Republic of [[Vietnam]]<ref name="7MH">Website of the {{cite web |title=Viet Nam Military History Museum|url=http://www.btlsqsvn.org.vn/He_thong_bao_tang_chi_tiet_E/?^?=12|accessdate=25 August 2009}}</ref>.

== References ==
{{reflist}}
== External Links ==
http://www.saigonkids.com serves as a central information base for an informal alumni organization called "Saigon Kids," people who as youngsters, during the period 1954-1965, shared the experience of living and being in school together in the capital city of South Vietnam. This website includes a private directory of alumni as well as information about periodic reunions.<p>
http://www.saigonkidsamericancommunityschool.com is an active and moderated blog where Saigon Kids (as well as others who as youngsters lived in Saigon during the years of the American Community School, e.g., French and Vietnamese friends) can share memories of their years at the school and living in Saigon, as well as news of their present-day lives.

Revision as of 12:23, 26 August 2009

I attended the American Community School in Saigon, South Vietnam, for my sophomore year, between July 1960 and March 1961 (the "normal" school year in that hot tropical part of the world).