Huggins, one of six brothers to serve, recalls war in Korea

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Dwight Huggins served with the 7th Infantry Division of the U.S. Army during the Korean War and took part in the 2011 Jasper County Freedom Flight. Huggins is one of ten brothers, six of whom served in the U.S. armed forces. (Submitted Photo)

For Huggins, the “worst part of it all” was being apart from his bride so soon after being married.

“Korea was one of the places you couldn’t bring your wife,” he said. “If I had been stationed in Japan I could bring her over there, but not in Korea.”

Instead, they couple wrote letters back and forth to one another over the course of Huggins’ two years of active duty.

“You might not get it real soon, sometimes a letter could be two or three weeks old, but I eventually got all the letters,” he added. “Jacquie is probably the only one I corresponded with. “I spent this morning looking through a scrapbook she put together, and she has a photo of all the letters I wrote her and there are just stacks and stacks.”

It wouldn’t be until the 2011 Jasper County Freedom Flight, however, that Huggins would receive one final letter from Jacquie to complete his collection.

“We finished up everything on the plane coming home, and all the sudden we had mail call,” he said. “Doug (Bishop) did it just like they did in the service and none of us knew what he was doing for a bit until we realized he was passing out letters. There wasn’t anybody that didn’t get one.”

Of the letters that Huggins received, two were from his children, one from his wife and one each from a student at Berg Elementary and an older Newton resident.

“They were just nice letters basically thanking you for serving,” Huggins said, adding that the trip to D.C. comprised “two of the best days of (his) life.”

“Walking around all the memorials, we had Freedom Flight shirts on, and people by the hundreds came up to congratulate us,” he said. “It’s an experience you’ll never forget.”

Huggins took photos with both the Korean and Vietnam War memorials to pay tribute to his five brothers: Smoke, who served in Korea; Bill, who served in Germany; Tom, a “gung-ho Marine from the start” who died shortly after returning from Vietnam, and Max and Gary, both of whom also served during Vietnam.

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