The objective was part of , intended to clear North Vietnamese Army (NVA) forces from the valley.

The name "Hamburger Hill" didn't come from a strategist; it came from the grunts on the ground. During the 10-day battle in May 1969, American paratroopers from the faced a literal meat grinder.

Sergeant James Spears famously asked a reporter, "Have you ever been inside a hamburger machine? We just got cut to pieces".

Soldiers dubbed it "Hamburger Hill" because they felt they were being "ground up like hamburger meat" by intense, accurate machine-gun fire and entrenched NVA positions.

A cardboard sign pinned to a tree by a soldier after the battle simply read: "Hamburger Hill. Was it worth it?". A Battle of Attrition

The Meat Grinder: Why They Called It "Hamburger Hill" In the history of the Vietnam War, few names carry as much grim weight as . Officially known to the military as Hill 937 and to the local Degar people as Dong Ap Bia ("the mountain of the crouching beast"), this 3,000-foot-tall peak in the A Shau Valley became a symbol of both extraordinary valor and tactical futility. Origins of a Brutal Nickname

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Subtitle Hamburger Hill Apr 2026

The objective was part of , intended to clear North Vietnamese Army (NVA) forces from the valley.

The name "Hamburger Hill" didn't come from a strategist; it came from the grunts on the ground. During the 10-day battle in May 1969, American paratroopers from the faced a literal meat grinder.

Sergeant James Spears famously asked a reporter, "Have you ever been inside a hamburger machine? We just got cut to pieces".

Soldiers dubbed it "Hamburger Hill" because they felt they were being "ground up like hamburger meat" by intense, accurate machine-gun fire and entrenched NVA positions.

A cardboard sign pinned to a tree by a soldier after the battle simply read: "Hamburger Hill. Was it worth it?". A Battle of Attrition

The Meat Grinder: Why They Called It "Hamburger Hill" In the history of the Vietnam War, few names carry as much grim weight as . Officially known to the military as Hill 937 and to the local Degar people as Dong Ap Bia ("the mountain of the crouching beast"), this 3,000-foot-tall peak in the A Shau Valley became a symbol of both extraordinary valor and tactical futility. Origins of a Brutal Nickname

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