ZIG
2005-08-11 17:33:25 UTC
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/0803051jimi1.html
Days before Private James Marshall Hendrix (Jimi to his friends) was
officially drummed out of the military, Army brass delivered withering
assessments of the 19-year-old soldier.
Hendrix, Captain Gilbert Batchman reported, slept on the job, had
little regard for regulations, and was once "apprehended masturbating"
in the latrine. Sergeant Louis Hoekstra noted that Hendrix was a
"habitual offender" when it came to missing midnight bed checks and
that the Seattle teenager was unable to "carry on an intelligent
conversation." Hoekstra added that Hendrix, who was once suspected of
"taking dope," played a musical instrument while off-duty, "or so he
says. This is one of his faults, because his mind apparently cannot
function while performing duties and thinking about his guitar."
Those are just two of the gems contained in the late rock star's nearly
100-page Army file, which TSG obtained from the Military Personnel
Records center in St. Louis. You'll find highlights from the file on
the following 18 pages. The documents track Hendrix's messy 13 months
in the Army, beginning with his May 1961 three-year enlistment, which
came with his assurance that he wasn't a Commie and a handwritten
explanation about a juvenile burglary arrest. Hendrix, records show,
was a terrible marksman and a recidivist truant. Weeks after ordering a
physical and psychiatric examination of Hendrix (who was attached to
the 101st Airborne Support Group in Fort Campbell, Kentucky), Capt.
Batchman sought to discharge a soldier who was an "extreme intravert"
and whose many problems were not treatable by "hospitalization and or
counseling."
Included in the Army's discharge request were various statements from
fellow soldiers, all of whom thought Hendrix deserved to be bounced.
James Mattox, for example, recalled an April 1961 incident in which he,
Hendrix, and four other soldiers were assigned to wash a ceiling. When
Hendrix, who occasionally napped during the cleaning assignment,
disappeared at one point, Mattox went looking for him. He quickly found
Hendrix in the latrine, where he was "sitting in the last commode. I
thought he was sitting there sleeping so I stood on the stool in the
commode next to his and...there sat Hendrix masturbating himself."
For his part, Hendrix--who apparently hated life as an enlisted
man--did not challenge the discharge request, according to a signed
statement. At the time of his expulsion, Hendrix was allowed to leave
the military with some parting gifts, including some Army-issued
clothing. He also benefited from frequent dental care at Fort Campbell
and California's Fort Ord, which probably made it easier for him to
subsequently play that black Stratocaster with his teeth.
Days before Private James Marshall Hendrix (Jimi to his friends) was
officially drummed out of the military, Army brass delivered withering
assessments of the 19-year-old soldier.
Hendrix, Captain Gilbert Batchman reported, slept on the job, had
little regard for regulations, and was once "apprehended masturbating"
in the latrine. Sergeant Louis Hoekstra noted that Hendrix was a
"habitual offender" when it came to missing midnight bed checks and
that the Seattle teenager was unable to "carry on an intelligent
conversation." Hoekstra added that Hendrix, who was once suspected of
"taking dope," played a musical instrument while off-duty, "or so he
says. This is one of his faults, because his mind apparently cannot
function while performing duties and thinking about his guitar."
Those are just two of the gems contained in the late rock star's nearly
100-page Army file, which TSG obtained from the Military Personnel
Records center in St. Louis. You'll find highlights from the file on
the following 18 pages. The documents track Hendrix's messy 13 months
in the Army, beginning with his May 1961 three-year enlistment, which
came with his assurance that he wasn't a Commie and a handwritten
explanation about a juvenile burglary arrest. Hendrix, records show,
was a terrible marksman and a recidivist truant. Weeks after ordering a
physical and psychiatric examination of Hendrix (who was attached to
the 101st Airborne Support Group in Fort Campbell, Kentucky), Capt.
Batchman sought to discharge a soldier who was an "extreme intravert"
and whose many problems were not treatable by "hospitalization and or
counseling."
Included in the Army's discharge request were various statements from
fellow soldiers, all of whom thought Hendrix deserved to be bounced.
James Mattox, for example, recalled an April 1961 incident in which he,
Hendrix, and four other soldiers were assigned to wash a ceiling. When
Hendrix, who occasionally napped during the cleaning assignment,
disappeared at one point, Mattox went looking for him. He quickly found
Hendrix in the latrine, where he was "sitting in the last commode. I
thought he was sitting there sleeping so I stood on the stool in the
commode next to his and...there sat Hendrix masturbating himself."
For his part, Hendrix--who apparently hated life as an enlisted
man--did not challenge the discharge request, according to a signed
statement. At the time of his expulsion, Hendrix was allowed to leave
the military with some parting gifts, including some Army-issued
clothing. He also benefited from frequent dental care at Fort Campbell
and California's Fort Ord, which probably made it easier for him to
subsequently play that black Stratocaster with his teeth.