04/30/2026
Fifty-one years ago today...
April 30, 1975
Thiếu Tá Lê Anh Tuấn
In the final act of the tragedy that would forever be known as Black April, the people of the Republic of Vietnam looked to one another and then each alone in the mirror to chose their roles as the curtain fell.
A flotilla of small ships at a narrow bend in a river was where Le Anh Tuan entered history.
His life story is a eulogy of heroism and achievement, but it is also one of devotion to family - not only to his kin, but to the people of his country. It was these people he dedicated himself to serving and protecting. And, it was for their safety and honor that he gave his life.
In the spring of 1975, Le Anh Tuan held the rank of major in the Republic of Vietnam Navy, serving as commander of the 43rd Riverine Group based at Tuyen Nhon in the Mekong Delta. The 43rd along with the 64th River Patrol Group comprised Task Force 214.1, which guarded the many waterways meandering throughout that region of the delta.
On April 30, 1975, over two dozen small river vessels remained of the task force at Tuyen Nhon. They had endured weeks of increasing enemy attacks. Fuel and supplies were desperately short. The boats were not made for ocean sailing, but they were the only hope for the families of the sailors and other civilians who clung to these vessels and their crews in the forlorn hope of reaching safety. Le Anh Tuan was the highest ranking officer among them and assumed command.
Roughly a mile down river from the base at Tuyen Nhon the waterway narrows into a twisting turn. It was an ideal spot for an ambush. Le Anh Tuan gave the order for the boats to continue as fast as possible, and to only return fire against the enemy if necessary to protect themselves.
They never made it passed the bend in the river. Point blank gunfire from the shoreline destroyed the first two boats, bringing the journey of the others to an abrupt halt.
It was clear any attempt to continue would have meant a similar fate for the remaining vessels.
A radio message was broadcast on a navy frequency from the enemy. The message demanded they turn and beach their boats on the river shoreline to surrender.
The flotilla had no choice but to comply. Any hope of a breakout was impossible. To keep resisting would have only have guaranteed further loss of life among the people Le Anh Tuan was trying to protect.
His heart filled with devotion to the people in his care and his conscience having pledged his own life in honorable loyalty to the Republic of Vietnam, Le Anh Tuan chose his own terms. In doing so, he simultaneously saved the lives of his people while also denying the enemy his surrender.
The radio message repeated several times.
After a brief moment of quiet reflection, Major Le Anh Tuan stood to attention on the bridge of his command ship, took out his sidearm from its holster, and fired.
His body fell across the operational map on the navigation table, his blood flowing along the rivers, canals, and tributaries of the country he gave his life to defend.
He was thirty-two years old.
During his time in Tuyen Nhon, the young naval officer was a popular figure many of the locals considered a good friend. Civilians from a nearby village retrieved his remains and laid him to rest in their village cemetery. The grave was unmarked out of fear of Communist reprisal. But, the villagers tended to the grave with deep care and knew the spot well.
In 1997, twenty-two years after his death, Republic of Vietnam naval veterans who had been forced to seek asylum abroad, traveled back to Vietnam and visited the village where they exhumed the grave of Le Anh Tuan. His remains were cremated and an urn along with artifacts discovered with them were given to his family who likewise had been forced to resettle in the United States to escape persecution.
Exhibited here are the artifacts belonging to Major Le Anh Tuan recovered from the village grave in 1997.
These include a dog tag with chain, a military identification card with waterproof cover, trouser belt and buckle, the thick cotton backing of the 43rd Riverine Group patch he wore, and a funerary tag identifying his remains.
The museum is privileged to serve as caretaker of these artifacts so that they may be shared with all through their public exhibition to assure the noble sacrifice of Major Le Anh Tuan and the history of the Republic of Vietnam is forever honored and never forgotten.