OOIDA’s Marty Ellis Says Hauling the Wall That Heals Was Unlike Any Load He’s Ever Moved

OOIDA tour truck operator Marty Ellis reflects on transporting The Wall That Heals and why the journey became one of the most meaningful experiences of his trucking career.

Professional truck drivers haul everything from food and fuel to heavy equipment, but every so often a load carries a different kind of responsibility.

For Marty Ellis, a tour truck operator with the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association (OOIDA), transporting The Wall That Heals became one of the most meaningful trips of his career.

The traveling exhibit, a three-quarter-scale replica of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., visits communities across the country alongside a mobile education center, allowing veterans and their families to experience the memorial closer to home.

When Ellis was asked to haul the exhibit, accepting the assignment came naturally.

“I know a lot of veterans that were in Vietnam. My uncle was in the Coast Guard, and he got wounded over there,” Ellis told The Trucker. “So many people from Vietnam were treated so poorly when they came back. I felt that this is a way to show my respect for what they had to go through. Not only serving, but also when they got back — how they were treated.”

More Than Just Another Trailer

Ellis said the significance of the trip didn’t fully sink in until he was already on the road.

“Hauling the wall — you don’t think it’s going to be an emotional thing,” he said. “You’re just pulling around another trailer … until you’re driving along, thinking about all the names on that wall. It really hits hard.”

As the exhibit traveled from one community to the next, Ellis said people regularly acknowledged the truck with waves, honks, and personal stories.

One Vietnam veteran told Ellis that one of his close friends was among the names engraved on the memorial. Ellis encouraged him to visit the exhibit during its next stop.

Another encounter came from a motorcyclist who rode alongside the trailer for several moments.

“I could see the guy on the bike reaching out to touch the trailer,” Ellis recalled. “I don’t know if he ever touched it, but it was like he felt so strongly about connecting to it.”

Experiences like those reinforced the impact the traveling memorial continues to have on veterans, their families, and the communities it visits.

A Career Built Around Connecting with Drivers

Before entering the trucking industry, Ellis served in the U.S. Army. After leaving military service, he worked in his father-in-law’s beekeeping business before beginning a career in commercial trucking.

Today, he travels the country behind the wheel of OOIDA’s Spirit of the American Trucker, a mobile exhibit that visits truck stops, industry events, and trade shows to meet professional drivers and discuss issues affecting the industry.

Norita Taylor, OOIDA’s director of public relations and membership, said the association’s involvement with The Wall That Heals reflects its commitment to recognizing veterans within its membership.

“A lot of our members are veterans from all branches,” Taylor said. “We’ve been focused on making sure that we can honor that aspect of our membership.”

Meeting Drivers Where They Are

Ellis says one of the most rewarding parts of his job is having conversations with drivers where they work rather than expecting them to visit OOIDA’s headquarters.

“With this truck and trailer, we’re able to see them where they’re at, whether it’s a truck show or truck stops,” Ellis said. “I think it means a lot to our members to be able to see us and talk about some of the issues they have going on.”

As a commercial driver himself, Ellis believes that shared experience helps build trust.

“I have to deal with the same things that every driver out here has to do, whether it’s passing a physical, DOT regulations and that type of thing,” he said. “Once they realize that I drive this all over the country — it’s a different conversation after that.”

For Ellis, hauling The Wall That Heals was a reminder that trucking is about more than moving freight. Some loads leave a lasting impression long after the trip is over.

The TDUSA editorial team creates practical, driver-focused content covering trucking news, industry updates, safety, regulations, and career information for professional truck drivers across the United States. Each article is built to reflect real-world experience, industry developments, and information drivers can use on and off the road.

Last Updated: July 9, 2026

Source: The Trucker

Image Source: OOIDA