23 Days of Valor: The Hero of Straight Creek
A young soldier's courage. A mother's thirty-year wait. A community's promise kept.
In 1968, PFC Samuel "Sammy" Johnson Jr. left the winding roads of Pennington Gap, Virginia, for the dense jungles of Vietnam. He wasn't chasing glory; he was a young man driven by a singular, selfless mission: to provide for his mother, Margaret, and his eleven siblings following the death of his father.
Sammy's combat service lasted only twenty-three days. On October 23, 1968, near Katum Airfield, he displayed extraordinary bravery under fire—earning the Bronze Star with "V" Device for Valor. It was a rare distinction for a soldier with less than a month in-country, yet for fifty-five years, the full scope of his heroism was lost to "missing paperwork" and the fog of history.
23 Days of Valor is the moving account of a half-century journey to bring a soldier's legacy home. Told through three intimate lenses, the book explores:
Today, the Samuel Johnson Jr. Memorial Bridge stands over Straight Creek in St. Charles. It overlooks the very school parking lot where Sammy once rode his bike and told jokes—a permanent bridge between a soldier's sacrifice and the family that never forgot him.
A story of honor, Southern roots, and the enduring bond of family, 23 Days of Valor ensures that PFC Samuel Johnson Jr. will never be lost to history again.