Contact Charles Patton - Author of Colt Terry, Green Beret
About Colt Terry, Green Beret
About Charles Patton, Author of Colt Terry, Green Beret
The author's brother, Geoff, a Vietnam Army veteran, wrote after reading Colt's story, "Colt Terry is the epitome of a dedicated, single-minded patriot who wants only to make his mark by serving in whatever humble capacity comes his way.

The views of the inner workings of how Green Beret Ops worked clandestinely in the field is quite illuminating. There was a Green Beret assigned to my outfit in VN who was an officer who also cared not with whom he shared a drink in off-hours and I had a number of them with him.

He was a great guy, a good comrade-in-arms and I thought the world of him for just being a regular fella - much as Colt was to all the NCOs who knew him."
 

Colt Terry, Green Beret
Colt's biography written by Charles D. Patton

This book recounts the military career of one of the original Green Berets the military experiences of a 23-year instructor and officer who never shied from dangerous combat situations.

The 10th Special Forces Group was the first of the Green Beret units. Its five hundred men, all Airborne and mostly Rangers, received extensive training in everything from specialized weapons to uncommon languages. Their primary mission was to train and lead indigenous guerillas in enemy territory. Second Lieutenant Colt Terry, who had joined the 82nd Airborne in 1947, had already trained indigenous in Korea, where he served his second combat tour behind enemy lines. As a volunteer in the 10th SFG, he was one of their first instructors and carried on this kind of service, working with Montagnards in Vietnam and the Khmer in Cambodia. He fought at Pleiku, Duc Co, and Plei Me, and he ferried supplies and weapons on elephants to agents he had secreted in Cambodia.

From his enlistment as a buck private in 1945 to his retirement as a lieutenant colonel in 1970, Terry served five tours in combat, trained guerillas, clashed with the CIA, and earned two combat infantry badges, a Purple Heart, and two Bronze Stars. His experiences contributed to Special Forces' expertise in ambushes, sabotage and killing techniques. Even as an officer, Terry never shied away from going deep into the jungle in search of the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army. He personally organized a successful effort to save hundreds of men in one of Special Forces' most critical A-Team camps.

As one of the original Green Berets, Terry helped set the standards by which these units have become known. Anyone who has ever wondered what the Green Berets were like during their first two decades will appreciate the riveting action and close-up detail of Terry's true-life story.