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The FReeper Foxhole Remembers Battle of Ap Tau O (6/8/1966) - June 8th, 2003
John M. Carland ^

Posted on 06/08/2003 3:48:24 AM PDT by snippy_about_it



Dear Lord,

There's a young man far from home,
called to serve his nation in time of war;
sent to defend our freedom
on some distant foreign shore.

We pray You keep him safe,
we pray You keep him strong,
we pray You send him safely home ...
for he's been away so long.

There's a young woman far from home,
serving her nation with pride.
Her step is strong, her step is sure,
there is courage in every stride.
We pray You keep her safe,
we pray You keep her strong,
we pray You send her safely home ...
for she's been away too long.

Bless those who await their safe return.
Bless those who mourn the lost.
Bless those who serve this country well,
no matter what the cost.

Author Unknown

.

FReepers from the The Foxhole
join in prayer for all those serving their country at this time.

.

.................................................................................................................................

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Double Ambush On Route 13


Not one, but two ambushes would be set up to greet the deploying armored cavalry of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division in a test of strength along National Route 13 in Binh Long Province.

Whether American armored cavalry could hold its own against the Viet Cong was a burning question in May of 1966. And June would provide the answer -- in the form of two battles fought by the U.S. 1st Infantry Division, at Ap Tau O and at Srok Dong.

Both battles took place on National Route 13, a major north-south highway in Binh Long Province, and were part of a larger campaign by the 1st Infantry to thwart the enemy’s Monsoon Offensive (supposed to run from mid-May through mid-August). By aggressively seeking out the Viet Cong, the Division commander, Maj. Gen. William DePuy, hoped to take the war to the enemy and hurt him badly. During his campaign, called El Paso II, the 1st Infantry would fight, on separate occasions, regiments of the 9th Viet Cong Division -- the 271st, 272nd, and the 273rd. Battles with the 271st and 272nd would be led by cavalry units of the First Infantry Division on June 8 and June 30.



Paradoxically, each battle was the result of a VC ambush, and one doesn’t stretch the truth by saying that the Viet Cong were masters of the ambush -- so much so that in their technique they almost turned the ambush into a work of art. Their planning-and-execution approach was the "one slow, four quick" formula. The first step, the slow one, dictated that the commander and his aides, without haste and very thoroughly, plan the ambush. The commander would study the enemy, the proposed location of the ambush, and plan the actual assault. In many cases he might actually visit the proposed area to personally check out possible locations for bunkers, gun positions, mines and troop deployment. The commander would also prepare routes to move his troops to the battlefield and withdrawal routes to move them out when the ambush was over.

Next, the commander and his men would pull back to a safe area and rehearse the ambush until all unit leaders and each individual knew the terrain, his job, and the general situation. Last, came the execution ("four quick") phase. The Viet Cong now advanced quickly to the battle area and then, assuming that their timing was good (it usually was because of their very capable intelligence organization), they would go directly into the second ("quick") step -- assault quickly.

After the actual ambush, or whenever the commander had decided the time had come, the Viet Cong would clear the battlefield quickly. They would carry off anything in the way of weapons, ammunition and supplies that might be useful in the future, destroying what they could not carry. Finally they would also carry off their dead and wounded. This led into the fourth quick step -- withdraw as fast as possible along previously selected escape routes.



In mid 1966 it was clear that the Americans in South Vietnam had yet to devise a consistently successful way of dealing with such attacks. The experience gained in El Paso II in June and July of 1966 would provide some improvement.

The events that triggered the first major battle of El Paso II, the Battle of Ap Tau O on Route 13, began to unfold early in the morning of June 8, 1966. Troop A, 1st Squadron, 4th Cavalry, left its base camp at Phu Loi -- moving north to the provincial capital of An Loc. The troop was made up of 135 men and 41 armored vehicles -- nine M48 tanks, 29 armored cavalry assault vehicles (ACAVs), including two flame-throwing vehicles and two radar vehicles, plus two engineer "dozer" tanks, and one armored recovery vehicle.

Troop A was commanded by Captain Ralph Sturgis, whose three platoons moved northward in inverted order -- the 3rd Platoon first and the 1st last. The convoy’s purpose was to place the squadron armor more centrally for operational use in El Paso II -- to help protect against an expected Viet Cong attack on An Loc. As a routine precaution the 2nd Battalion, 18th Infantry (2/18), acting as a ready-reaction force, was flown from its base camp to Lai Khe on the morning of June 8. It would be well located to react to any contact made by Captain Sturgis’ road column.



Because the enemy’s penchant for mining Route 13 was well known, the convoy at first traveled on the abandoned roadbed of an old French railway and on dirt paths in hopes of a safer ride. (After all, the enemy would hardly lay mines beneath a no-longer-used roadbed or on dirt paths -- or so it was hoped.) The roadbed and dirt paths ran roughly parallel to Route 13.

Troop A reached the intermediate destination of Lai Khe at 11 a.m. At Lai Khe, headquarters of the 3rd Brigade, the soldiers of Troop A took their lunch while the tanks and ACAVs refueled. The troop then left Lai Khe on Route 13, but quickly abandoned the highway for the relative safety of the railway roadbed. The troop’s journey northward continued without incident to Chon Thanh, capital of Chon Thanh District.

As Troop A arrived at Chon Thanh, the 2/18 moved by helicopter from its own earlier stop at Lai Khe to Hon Quan airfield at An Loc, so as to be better positioned to provide assistance should Troop A need it. As further safety precaution, a trail party was left behind at Chon Thanh and would catch up later.

The troop now found it slow going off the highway. After it reached and passed through Chon Thanh, the jungle foliage made traveling and defending against a potential ambush so difficult that Troop A -- balancing safety against the need to move on -- returned to Route 13. The 135 men of Troop A were now on the last leg of their journey to An Loc -- and, although they did not know it, just about to enter the killing zone of an enemy ambush.



Strung out along the west side of Route 13, from the village of Ap Tau O to a point about three kilometers to the north, the 272nd regiment of the 9th Viet Cong Division was waiting for the Americans. The VC had dug in the previous night and formed an L-shaped ambush. A small number of the guerrillas positioned themselves on the east side of the road. From north to south the regiment’s 1st, 2nd and 3rd Battalions massed along Route 13, while the regiment’s reconnaissance company arranged itself across the base of the L. The location was just beyond, or at the maximum range of, nearby friendly artillery. The Viet Cong commander and his staff had selected an excellent place for an ambush. They also had fulfilled another Viet Cong tactical requirement -- substantial and in this case enormous, numerical superiority over the Americans. In addition, the American cavalry troop was strung out for almost three kilometers.

Accounts differ as to precisely when and how the battle began. Most likely, it was about 2:30 p.m. when a recoilless rifle or a mine (or both) hit the column’s lead tank and triggered the ambush. Immediately, according to the cavalry squadron’s annual historical report, "the entire column came under intense small arms, automatic weapons, mortar and recoilless rifle fire." The logical next step would have been for the Viet Cong to attempt overrunning the column. However, a captured enemy document indicates that the U.S. troops reacted so quickly that the VC were themselves pinned down by heavy American fire. Within Troop A, the 3rd Platoon came under the most intense fire, the 2nd Platoon received less intense fire, and the trailing 1st Platoon suffered hardly any.

Captain Sturgis, whose command ACAV was in the middle of the column, quickly began moving toward its head. As he did, the left side of his vehicle received a direct hit from a recoilless rifle. With no great damage done, he continued. Then a second recoilless-rifle team began taking a bead on Sturgis’ ACAV. Fortunately, the commander of an American M132 flame-thrower vehicle saw the VC team and quickly turned his weapon on the guerrillas, with devastating results. Sturgis was saved.


HERRINGBONE FORMATION - This formation gave vehicles best all-round firepower when they were ambushed in a restricted area.


In the confusion surrounding the first minutes of battle the troopers could not ascertain the origin of enemy fire -- the east or west side of the road. Third Platoon’s vehicles automatically went into a herringbone formation so as to cover both sides. The 2nd Platoon meanwhile, acting on Sturgis’ order, moved up to reinforce the lead 3rd Platoon, while the 1st Platoon, much farther back, began moving toward the sounds of gunfire. Shortly thereafter it became clear that almost all enemy fire came from west of the road, from an area of trees and secondary growth about a hundred meters back. Sturgis ordered his men to organize the vehicles into a circular defensive perimeter -- a laager -- on a slight rise a bit to the right, i.e. east, of the highway. Almost simultaneously he called for air support through the on-station Forward Air Controller (FAC), Captain Richard Wetzel. Within 11 minutes the first USAF flight had arrived.

The situation was fluid for a while, as the inevitable confusion that attends the start -- and sometimes all -- of a battle prevailed. Even though Sturgis had ordered the formation of a laager, it could not -- because elements of his Troop extended along 3,000 meters of Route 13 -- be accomplished immediately. As the 1st Platoon attempted to make its way toward the laager area, its commander Lieutenant Louis Bouault, noticed a large number of Viet Cong moving parallel to his platoon. Presumably from the 272nd’s Second Battalion, they presented an inviting target. Bouault ordered his men to open fire, which they did, causing a good number of casualties among the advancing Viet Cong. Indeed, his fire caused the enemy to attack his own platoon. In the ensuing fight one ACAV was damaged and another destroyed. However, Bouault’s platoon, now within 500 to 800 meters of the laager, continued on and soon reached the laager’s southern edge. There, he attached his platoon to the rest of the troop. As vehicles in the now-completed defensive perimeter continued firing, the laager obviously became the main focus of enemy attention. Although it is unlikely that the Viet Cong so intended, the battle, in the main, soon became one of fire, not maneuver, and a pattern of static conflict emerged.

At this point the enemy commander had two options -- retreat or stay and inflict as much damage and take as many American lives as possible. The American armored force, on the other hand, had three options -- attack, retreat or stand pat. Given the substantial firepower of an armored cavalry troop, one might have expected the option of attack. The squadron commander, Lt. Col. Leonard Lewane was overhead in his helicopter throughout the battle -- he in fact landed and walked the perimeter twice. In addition, the 3rd Brigade commander and both assistant divisional commanders and the division commander, General DePuy, were all kept abreast of events. None ordered an attack, and in the division’s after-action report, that decision was indirectly criticized.




Regarding the second option, meanwhile, there was obviously no reason to retreat. Not only is an armored cavalry troop in and of itself a powerful entity, but in this case the Air Force presence made it certain that the troop would not be overrun. Further, the 2/18th Infantry was at An Loc as a ready-reaction force. Additionally, elements of the 5th ARVN (South Vietnamese) Division at An Loc were ready to move south on Route 13 to reinforce Troop A.

As it turned out, the option chosen was to stand pat. Troop A in its own defensive perimeter with its own tanks and ACAVs -- in conjunction with the Air Force and, to a lesser degree, artillery -- blasted away at the enemy in the woods across Route 13 for hours. In the late afternoon the Viet Cong commander decided his troops had inflicted -- and absorbed -- all the damage they could. He began withdrawing to the west, effectively to end the main portion of the battle.

At an earlier lull, Captain Sturgis had ordered the trail party, under the command of his executive officer, Lieutenant Ronald Copes, to leave Chon Thanh, where it had stayed when the rest of the troop moved on toward An Loc. On reaching the southern edge of the battle area, it was to pick up any tank or other Troop A vehicle that had been dropped off along the way. While so engaged, the trail party itself encountered a small ambush, set up by the VC 3rd/272, which resulted in the loss of an American tank to a recoilless rifle -- possibly the only time that the 272nd’s 3rd Battalion participated in the battle. With the aid of close air support, the trail party drove the enemy away in a firefight that lasted about 30 minutes and then proceeded to link up with the main body of Troop A.

Meanwhile the 2/18th was ordered, as the ready-reaction force, to the battle area to relieve and reinforce Troop A. Since the closest landing zone (LZ) was four miles to the north, by the time the helicopter-lifted battalion landed and swept down to the battle area, the enemy had withdrawn. The ARVN units, coming south on Route 13 by truck, also arrived too late to be of materiel assistance.


M113 AFTER HITS BY VIET CONG 57-mm. RECOILLESS RIFLE


Troop A and the 2nd Battalion, 18th Infantry, remained near the battle site overnight. On June 9, they policed the battlefield and then moved on to Hon Quan to provide security for an artillery battery and the divisional command post being established there.

The Air Force contribution to repulse off the ambush had been a key factor. Not only did a flight arrive just minutes after the ambush opened, but air sorties consisting of 17 flights of bombers delivered 27 tons of high explosives and napalm, six tons of fragmentation bombs and 24 canisters of cluster bomb units over the next several hours. On the few occasions when the Air Force did not have a flight on station, helicopter gunships filled the void. In short, the enemy was under constant bombardment from 11 minutes after he triggered the ambush until he began disengaging. For the most part, the Air Force pounded the area to the immediate west of the troop’s perimeter. The 3rd Brigade’s after-action report gave generous praise -- "Close air support was considered the decisive factor in the success of the battle on June 8 along Highway 13." There were still some rough spots to be worked out in the procedures by which tactical air support could help the 1st Infantry, but basically the job had been done well.

Evaluating the battle later, the planners saw an engagement which started as an ambush and continued long enough to become a fierce fire fight. At its end, 14 Americans were dead and approximately 40 wounded. The enemy had taken much higher casualties -- approximately 100 killed in action (by body count), with an additional 200 to 250 estimated killed, and doubtlessly a large number of wounded. On balance the Americans saw the engagement as a success. The 1st VC Battalion had suffered 90 percent casualties and the 2nd Battalion, 50 percent. (The 3rd Battalion had been considerably south of the main attack and only participated in peripheral action. This accounts for its having only minimal casualties.)


SHERIDAN M551 AND CREW MEMBERS


At the very beginning, a VC mistake helped Troop A. The Viet Cong laid out the ambush in such a way that their own lines extended for at least three kilometers. Over-extended, the enemy could not easily maneuver against Troop A once the ambush was triggered. But the Americans also made mistakes. The divisional after-action report makes it clear that, instead of going into a tight circular defense perimeter as soon as the battle began, Troop A should have maneuvered and attacked aggressively. Among other improvements adopted, the report disclosed "Communications were tightened up, the coordination of air and artillery was improved by the simple means of preplanning artillery support on one side of the road and air support on the other so these two decisive weapons could be used continuously and simultaneously. It was also decided that the infantry reaction would be divided into two elements. First, a battlefield relief force to preclude a defeat in the area of the main attack, and second, a battlefield-exploitation force which would be landed along the routes of withdrawal in order to destroy VC forces some distance from the ambush site." Members of the division at all levels felt that the enemy had been soundly defeated in the battle at Ap Tau O, but they also felt that important lessons had been learned. The 1st Infantry battles fought later in the same campaign seem to bear this out.

Thanks to Freeper RasterMaster for suggesting this thread

This thread is dedicated to the memory of his Uncle - KIA - Battle of Ap Tau-O, June 8, 1966



TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: 14cavarly; 1stinfantry; aptauo; battleofanloc; benchmark69; bifredone; freeperfoxhole; veterans; vietnam
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On 8 June 1966 A Troop, 4th Cavalry, moves through Lai Khe enroute to Hon Quan. Just north of chon Thanh, the lead vehicle hit a mine, halting the column. The Battle of AP Tau O had started.

The Battle of Ap Tau O was fought on the afternoon of 8 June 1966, some 85 miles north of Saigon, just south of Quan Loi and Hon Quan on National Highway 13. As A Troop, 1st Squadron, 4th Cavalry (reinforced), was moving north on Highway 13, an air observer flying over the convoy spotted Viet Cong along the road. A Trp immediately engaged the enemy. It was 1440 hours and the cavalry unit had tied into what was later identified as the 272d Main Force VC Regiment, three battalions strong. The battle occured during the 1st Infantry Division's Operation El Paso II-a massive search and destroy, road runner, airfield and basecamp security mission. It began 2 June 1966, and concentrated on an extensive area north of Saigon in Binh Long Province and portions of Phouc Long Province.



On 8 June the operation for A Trp had begun as a road clearing mission from Phu Loi along Highway 13, through Lai Khe and on to Hon Quan, which is situated just to the southwest of Quan Loi.

Elements of the 2nd Battalion, 18th Infantry, commanded by LTC Herbert J. McChrystal Jr., had been moved to Lai Khe as a rapid reaction force and subsquent to the column's passage through Lai Khe, the battalion closed at Quan Loi to assume the rapid reaction mission from that location. Meanwhile, the convoy progressed without incident through Lai Khe and continued toward Hon Quan. Just north of Chon Thanh, the lead vehicle hit a mine, halting the column. Waves of enemy infantry attacked the column from both sides of the road, employing the tradition VC technique of a brief firefight with maximum firepower. The 272d Regt was in position to the west of Highway 13 with it's 1st, 2d and 3d Battalions aligned north to south. The 1st and 2d Battalions were primarily engaged, while the 3d Bn to the south of the battle had engage the cavalry trail party.

When PFC Avery G. Smith's tank took a mortar hit that disabled it, he voluntarily left his position as loader and climbed out of the turret onto the back deck to defend his vehicle. Throughout the battle, the Russell Springs, KY., native fought off repeated attacks as the VC tried to overrun his tank. During the heaviest hours of fighting, PFC Smith remained exposed as he protected his tank and other vehicles nearby. Even after suffereing painful facial wounds, he continued to fight, often engaging the enemy at point blank range. Finally, all the vehicle's weapons became inoperative and it was Smith's efforts alone that saved it from being taken. When the tank took it fourth direct mortar hit, PFC Smith absorbed the burnt of the explosion, thus saving the lives of at least two of his fellow crewmen. He was posthumously awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.

As the tanks and armored personnel carriers (APC's) poured a heavy and steady stream of fire into the enemy, artillery and air strikes pounded the Viet Cong. Forty-three sorties were logged in by Air Force fighter bombers. After the size of the enemy force was determined, the 2nd BN, 18th Inf, was committed to the battle. The 2/18 Inf was heli-lifted to a landing zone south of Hon Quan and it proceeded to sweep south along Highway 13, attacking the northern VC flank and disrupting the enemy's attack.


ACAV PREPARES TO ESCORT A TRUCK CONVOY


Specialist 4 Wayne C. Stone, Columbia, SC, was an assistant machinegunner in A Co, 2/18 Inf, moving to assist the engaged cavalry troop. As his unit moved through the terrain spotted with dense growth, it encountered a VC force that opened fire from three directions. Taking defensive positions, the infantrymen began fighting back. When the VC threatened to overrun the position and capture a machinegun and several hundred of ammounition, SP4 Stone volunteered to rescue the ordnance. Racing some 50 yards through heavy small arms fire and flying mortar fragments, he came to within 25 feet of the VC. Gathering the weopon and ammo, Stone made a frantic dash for cover and was within a few feet of it when he fell, a large chunk of metal lodged in his back. SP4 Stone spent nearly two months in a hospital recuperating from the wound that almost crippled him. For his actions, he was awarded the Bronze Star Medal with "V" (Valor) device.

SP4 Edward L. Guilliams, Hampton, VA., was serving as a crew member on an APC which had taken hits that inflicted casualties. SP4 Guilliams gave first aid to his comrades and continued fighting, even when the only available weapons were a .45 caliber pistol and a M-79 grenade launcher. When the APC's radio became inoperative, he voluntarily exposed himself to heavy fire to pass on messages. Later SP4 Guilliams risked death to gather and redistribute ammunition. He also was awarded the Bronze Star with "V" device.

The battle raged from 1440 hours until 1930 hours along a road bordered by thick jungle on either side and was at the onset of the yearly monsoon season-the season during which the enemy hopes and plans for massive offensives and victory. When the division troops, now reinforced by the 2 Battalion, 2d Infantry, under the command of LTC Jack L. Conn, swept the battlefield, they counted, among the enemy dead, the Commander of the 1st Bn, 272d Regt. On his body they found a document on which was sketched an ambush plan-an ambush that had been foiled by the Big Red One. The VC suffered a total of 93 killed in action; whereas US casualties amounted to only 13 KIA and 38 WIA.

"Danger Forward", August 1967

1 posted on 06/08/2003 3:48:25 AM PDT by snippy_about_it
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To: SAMWolf; All
BATTLE OF AP TAU O, 8 June 1966
aka: Benchmark 69 or Battle of An Loc
Gary Warne, A Troop Maintanence, 65-66


The Troop moved out from Phu Loi our base camp at the time. We were moving North to Lai Kai but not by the main road (13) we were on a dirt road. I am not sure what it was or why we were going that way. We had two M113 hit mines. CPT Sturgis,A6, told the Xo in A50, my crew and I in A8, the VTR A9, the 34 tank and 2 other 113, not sure who they were, and an AVLB, To stay with the mined 113's and get them to Lai Kai. We got the Track back on one and it was back in service. The other I towed to Lai Kai. We dropped it off and moved up to join the main body of the troop.


ARMORED PERSONNEL CARRIER, M113, firing .50-caliber machine gun during South Vietnamese training exercise. Barrel of side-mounted .30-caliber machine gun can be seen on far side of M113.


While on our way to join them, they were hit by the 722nd NVA regiment. We were within about 3 miles of them near an ARVIN camp. A6 told us to leave the AVLB at the ARVIN camp, and move up. There was a damaged tank that was alone and needed help. We found the tank hit but still fighting. The VTR with Ron Cooley driving hooked up to it we began taking some incoming. As we started to move up, the 34 tank took some hits in the turret killing all but the driver. He had been hit, I am not sure how bad but he went out the bottom escape hatch. We were pined down on the road. We could not get off and the brush on the roadside was right next to us. Charley could run right up to us.

By this time we were taking a lot of small arms fire. A Vc ran up to A50 and lobed a grenade into her. SP4 Corbin in A50 lobed it back out. He received the Army commendation with "V" device. SP5 King, my TC, shot the VC with his M14. Our 50 would not fire. We could not move because we did not know the status of the 34 tank. Charley was right on top of us. I stood up in my drivers hatch and fired 40 magazines (30 rounds each) out of my Grease Gun. When I ran out of magazines for the Grease Gun I used my 45 and the M79. Everyone on my PC was firing every thing we had except the damn 50. Standing up in a drivers hatch is not what a driver should do, but when you think we could have been over run at anytime I just did it. I don't remember thinking a lot I just remembering doing.




I took several small arms hits around my hatch ring and two AP rounds pierced the side of the PC in the driver's compartment and having no velocity and dropping harmlessly. By this time the XO decided to go around the 34 tank and link up with the main body. We had no idea what happened to the driver of 34 but he was on foot. By the time we joined the main body things had quieted down. Dust off's were starting to come in and choppers with ammo on them. It was awhile before we were able to get our dead out. I still see them lined up next to each other covered with ponchos it seemed there were so many. I remember asking about who we lost. who I asked, I don't remember. Then out of no where the 34-tank came roaring in. We weren't sure if it was our driver or the VC. But it was our driver. He had gotten back in the tank started it and drove it to us.

Several years ago I got the Book "Armor Combat in Viet Nam". It tells about our unit at Ap Bau Bang and Ap Tau. According to that book Divison sent A troop in as bait at Ap Tau knowing two reinforced Regiments of the 722nd NVA were operating in the area. The plan was for A troop to draw them out and then B and C troop would close on them. GOOD PLAN! But B and C Troops had problems and were not able to get to us. This is what the book said. A troop will never forget the 722nd NVA and I am sure they will never forget A Troop. We lost a lot of good men that day and two stand out in my mind like SGT Claude (pop) Tharp. He was on his 3rd war (WWII, Korea and Viet Nam) and SP5 Oakey and his crew and a lot of WIA. A close friend of mine in the troop, James Dempsey - Driver of 66 the Old Mans Track, took a RPG round low in the track area going in the drivers compartment. I believe he lost his left foot.




It's been 34 years. The memories are fading but not the pain. I still feel that when I remember. In June I visited the traveling wall. It was in Canton, Michigan not to far from me. I was at the closing. Just before it started I walked up to the wall and was just looking at the names. An old couple in their 80's came up and they looked a little lost. One of the VVA aids asked if he could help them. They were looking for their only son killed two years after I was in country. Seeing them hit me hard. 32 years later their grief was the same as if it had just happened. The man was about 5'7", real thin, and it looked as if he was not doing too well. The lady was very small. They looked just like my parents whom I had just lost in the last year. Then it hit me. I was an only child. By the grace of God my Mom and Dad were spared that. When my parents were old and ill I took care of them. Who will take care of this mans parents? I was compelled to go talk to them. I told them I did not know their son and said I was sorry for their loss. They both held my hand (by then I had big tears running down my face). They talked to me and I told them about Mom and Dad. It was like I was talking to my parents. It helped me a lot. And I think in some way I helped them a little. That was the first time I have seen a parents grieve over one of our brothers.

Additional Sources:

www.1-4cav.com
www.army.mil
www.pieceuniquegallery.com

2 posted on 06/08/2003 3:49:25 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: SAMWolf; All
'On 8 June 1966, Troop A, 1st Battalion, 4th Cavalry Regiment was caught in an ambush at Ap Tau O by the elite 9th Vietcong Division's 272d Regiment. Lieutenant Colonel Leonard LeWane, the squadron commander, supported the ambushed troops from his observation helicopter. He directed units to the right position, adjusted fires and called for close air support. But that was not enough: "On two occasions in the heat of battle, LTC LeWane landed his OH-13 inside the laager under heavy fire. He wanted to eyeball his troops and determine the state of their ammunition. He walked from vehicle to vehicle and found the troops full of fight and with plenty to shoot. His presence in the thick of battle was just what the troopers expected of their commander."'

Leadership for the New Millennium
Lieutenant General Paul E. Blackwell
and
Lieutenant Colonel Gregory J. Bozek


3 posted on 06/08/2003 3:50:41 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: All

4 posted on 06/08/2003 3:51:52 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: 4.1O dana super trac pak; 4integrity; Al B.; Alberta's Child; Alkhin; Alouette; AnAmericanMother; ..
.......FALL IN to the FReeper Foxhole!

.......Good Morning Everyone!

I want to remind everyone and those that might have missed SAM's notice that this is obviously SAMWolf's work and I'm just posting it for him while he has in-laws visiting the next two weeks.

He will be stopping in but his time is limited.

Nice work as always SAM!



If you would like added or removed from our ping list let me know.
5 posted on 06/08/2003 4:02:07 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: SAMWolf; RasterMaster
SAM,

I've just finished reading your work for today and I'm reminded of the statement you made a couple days ago to our readers on your sixth month anniversary.

It's the Freepers who contribute and read the Foxhole who make it what it is.

If the Foxhole makes someone appreciate, even a little, what others have sacrificed for us, then it has accomplished one of it's missions.

I hope the Foxhole in some small way helps us to remember and honor those who came before us.

Today's thread is a perfect example of accomplishing your mission. Thank you.

Rastermaster, thank you for telling SAMWolf about your uncle and sharing with us.

Thank you SAM for getting the story out here for all to see.

6 posted on 06/08/2003 4:41:08 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: snippy_about_it
BTTT!!!!!
7 posted on 06/08/2003 5:09:04 AM PDT by E.G.C.
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To: E.G.C.
:)
8 posted on 06/08/2003 5:20:54 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: snippy_about_it
On This Day In History


Birthdates which occurred on June 08:
1625 Giovanni Domenico Cassini discovered 4 satellites of Saturn
1810 Robert Schumann Zwickau Saxony Germany, composer
1813 David D Porter US Admiral (Civil War)
1814 Charles Reade England, novelist (The Cloister & the Hearth)
1829 Sir John Everett Millais England, painter (Order of Release)
1847 Ida Sazton McKinley 1st lady
1867 Frank Lloyd Wright Richland Center, Wisc, master builder
1903 Marguerite Yourcenard author (Memoirs of Hadrien)
1911 Van Lingle Mungo SC, pitcher (Dodgers, Giants)
1914 Joseph de Pietro US, 56kg weightlifter (Olympic-gold-1948)
1916 Francis Crick codiscovered DNA's structure (Nobel 1962)
1917 Byron R (Whizzer) White Ft Collins CO, Supreme Court Justice
1918 Robert Preston Newton MA, actor (Music Man, Mame, Last Starfighter)
1921 Alexis Smith Penticton BC Canada, actress (Jessica-Dallas, Follies)
1922 Myron Healy Petalumus Calif, actor (Wyatt Earp)
1924 George Kirby Chicago, comedian (ABC Comedy Hour)
1924 Sheldon Allman Chicago, actor (Norm-Harris Against the World)
1925 Barbara Pierce Bush Rye NY, 1st lady (1989- )
1925 Eddie Gaedel 3'7" St Louis Browns pinch-hitter (he walked)
1929 Jerry Stiller Bkln NY, comedian/actor (Stiller & Meara, Hairspray)
1930 Bo Gunnar Widerberg Malm” Sweden, director (Elvira Madigan)
1930 Dana Wynter London, actress (Airport, Invasion of the Body Snatchers)
1933 Joan Rivers Brooklyn, comedian (The Late Show, Hollywood Squares)
1934 Millicent Martin Romford Eng, actress (Alfie, Nothing but the Best)
1936 James Darren Phila, actor (TJ Hooker, Diamond Head, Venus in Furs)
1937 Bruce McCandless II Boston, Cap USN/astronaut (STS 41B, STS-31)
1939 Bernie Casey Wyco WV, actor (Boxcar Bertha, Rent-a-Cop)
1939 Herb Adderley Phila, NFL hall of famer (Packers, Cowboys)
1940 Nancy Sinatra Jersey City, singer, her boots were made for walkin'
1942 Chuck Negron singer (3 Dog Night-Joy to the World)
1943 Willie Davenport US, 110m hurdler (Olympic-gold-1968)
1944 Don Grady actor (Robbie Douglas-My 3 Sons)
1944 William Royce "Boz" Scaggs Dallas Tx, rocker (Steve Miller Band)
1949 Emanuel Ax Lvov Poland, pianist (Artur Rubinstein Comp -1974)
1950 Alex Van Halen drummer (Van Halen-Jump, 1984)
1950 Elmar Oliveira Waterbury Connecticut, violinist (Naumburg 1978)
1950 Kathy Whitton Baker Midland Tx, actress (Right Stuff, 16 Candles)
1955 Griffin Dunne actor (American Werewolf in London, Who's That Girl)
1958 Keenen Ivory Wayans comedian (In Living Color)
1960 Mike Hucknail rocker (Simply Red-Every Time We Say Goodbye)
1961 Ursula Buchfellner Munich W Germany, playmate (Oct, 1979)
1962 Nick Rhodes rocker (Duran, Duran-Hungry Like the Wolf)
1965 Robert Platus NYC, rocker (Milli Vanilli-Girl You Know This)
1966 Doris Pearson rocker (5 Star-Silk & Steel)
1967 Neil Mitchell rocker (Wet, Wet, Wet-Wishing I Was)
1972 P(eter) J(ason) Farley Hackensack, bass (Trixter-Give It To Me Good)




Deaths which occurred on June 08:
632 Mohammed prophet of Islam (Koran), dies (according to tradition)
1809 Thomas Paine writer (Age of Reason, Common Sense), dies at 72
1969 Robert Taylor actor (Death Valley Days), dies at 57
1979 Herb Polesie producer/playwright (20 Questions), dies at 79
1991 Mary Bacon jockey, dying of cancer, commits suicide by gun at 43



Reported: MISSING in ACTION

1963 KRAUSE ARTHUR E. ONARGA IL.
[11/18/63 RELEASED]
1967 APODACA VICTOR J. ENGLEWOOD CO.
[POSS DEAD]
1967 BUSCH JON T. COLUMBUS OH.
[REMAINS RETURNED 10/88 CONTESTED]
1967 MYERS DAVID GEPHART STATE COLLEGE PA.
1969 HARRIS JESSIE B. PORT CHESTER NY.
[10/20/69 RELEASED]
1972 MURPHY JOHN S. JR. WACO TX.
[03/27/73 RELEASED BY PRG, ALIVE AND WELL 98]

POW / MIA Data & Bios supplied by
the P.O.W. NETWORK. Skidmore, MO. USA.





On this day...
452 Italy invaded by Attila the Hun
536 St Silverius begins his reign as Catholic Pope
570 Relgion of Islam (submission) founded in Mecca
1783 Laki Volcano in southern Iceland begins 8-month eruption
1786 1st commercially-made ice cream sold (NY)
1815 39 German states unite under the Act of Confederation
1824 Washing machine patented by Noah Cushing of Quebec
1861 People of Tennessee vote to succeed from Union
1862 Valley Campaign-Battle of Cross Keys, Virginia
1869 Ives W McGaffey of Chicago patents 1st vacuum cleaner (it sucks)
1875 A Borrelly discovers asteroid #146 Lucina
1887 A Borrelly discovers asteroid #268 Adorea
1889 Cable Cars begin service in LA
1889 Start of Sherlock Holmes Adventure "The Boscombe Valley Mystery" (BG)
1900 Start of Sherlock Holmes "The Adventure of the 6 Napoleons" (BG)
1904 U.S. Marines land in Tangiers, Morocco, to protect U.S. citizen
1908 King Edward VII of England visits Czar Nicholas II of Russia in an effort to improve relations between the two countries.
1915 William Jennings Bryan quits as Secretary of State
1917 Walt Disney graduates from Benton High School
1918 Nova Aquila, brightest nova since Kepler's nova of 1604, discovered
1923 S Belyavskij discovers asteroid #995 Sternberga
1927 Tony Lazzeri hits 3 HRs Yanks beat White Sox 12-11
1928 1st US-to-Australia flight lands (Sir Charles Kingford)
1937 World's largest flower blooms in NY Botonical Garden, 12' calla lily
1940 Discovery of element 93, neptunium, announced
1948 "The Milton Berle Show" premiers on NBC TV
1948 John Rudder becomes 1st negro commissioned officer in US marines
1950 Boston Red Sox beats St Louis Browns 29-4
1953 Cluster of 6 tornaodes touch down in Flint Michigan killing 113
1953 Segregated lunch counters in DC forbidden by Supreme Court
1953 Tornadoes kill 110 in Mich & Ohio
1959 1st official "missile mail" lands (Jacksonville, Fla)
1959 X-15 makes 1st unpowered flight, from a B-52 at 11,500 m
1960 1st date in James Clavell's novel "Nobel House"
1965 US troops ordered to fight offensively in Vietnam
1965 USSR launches Luna 6; missed Moon
1966 NFL & AFL announce plans to become NFC & AFC in 1970
1967 Israel attacks USS Liberty in Mediterranean, killing 34 US crewmen
1968 Don Drysdale pitches a record 58th consecutive scoreless inning
1968 Gary Puckett & The Union Gap release "Lady Will Power"
1968 James Earl Ray, alleged assassin of Martin Luther King Jr, captured
1968 New colonial constitution for Bermuda adopted
1968 Rolling Stones release "Jumpin' Jack Flash"
1969 Mickey Mantle Day, 60,096 saw #7 retired (I was there-BTG)
1969 Rolling Stones guitarist Mick Taylor replaces Brian Jones
1972 N Chernykh discovers asteroid #3230
1974 Keyboardist Rick Wakeman quits the rock group "Yes"
1975 2 passenger trains collided near Munich Germany killing 35
1975 USSR launches Venera 9 for Venus landing
1979 The Source, 1st computer public information service, goes online
1979 Wings release "Back to the Egg" album
1982 Los Angeles beats Phila 76ers, for the NBA championship
1982 Reagan addresses joint session of British Parliament
1983 Charlos Vieira begins 191 hr "nonstop" cycling in Leiria, Portugal
1985 Pirates score 10 in top of 1st, but lose 15-11 to Phillies, as Steve
becomes 1st Phillie to switch hit HRs in the same game
1986 Alleged Nazi Kurt Waldheim elected pres of Austria
1986 Boston Celtics win NBA championship #16 over Houston Rockets
1986 Longest 9 inning AL game (4h16m), Balt Orioles beat Yankees 18-9
1998: Charlton Heston is elected president of the National Rifle Association
1990 Phil Bradley hits the 18th inside-the-park HR in Oriole history
1991 Former NY Jet Mark Gastineau wins 1st pro boxing fight in 12 seconds
1991 Monica Seles beats Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, 6-3, 6-4 for French Open
1995: U.S. Marines rescue F16-C fighter pilot Capt. Scott O'Grady from his six days in Bosnia (ate bugs to survive)
2004 Transit of Venus (between Earth & Sun) occurs



Holidays
Note: Some Holidays are only applicable on a given "day of the week"

Swaziland, Botswana : Commonwealth Day
Massachusett : Children's Day - - - - - ( Sunday )
Shelby, Mich : National Asparagus Festival - - - - - ( Thursday )
Great Britain : Queen's official birthday (National Day) - - - - - ( Saturday )



Religious Observances
Christian : Feast of St Chlodulph
Luth-Manheim, Penn : Rose Day anniversary
Methodist : Student Day (2nd Sunday in June)
RC : Feast of St. Medard, bishop/confessor



Religious History
1536 Ten Articles of Religion were published by the English clergy, in support of Henry VIII's Declaration of Supremacy. The Anglican Church had begun defining its doctrinal distinctions, after breaking with Roman Catholicism.
1810 Birth of German composer Robert A. Schumann, who composed the sacred tune CANONBURY, to which is commonly sung the hymn, 'Lord Speak to Me That I May Speak.'
1942 Unevangelized Fields Mission (UFM) was incorporated in Philadelphia. Today this interdenominational mission agency works in a dozen countries in Latin America, Europe and Africa.
1973 The American Society of Missiology was founded in St. Louis. The ecumenical organization seeks to stimulate an academic interest in Christian missions, and publishes the journal 'Missiology: An International Review.'
1978 Through the voice of its president Spencer W. Kimball, the Mormon Church reversed a 148-year- long policy of spiritual discrimination against African-American leadership within the denomination.

Source: William D. Blake. ALMANAC OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1987.



Thought for the day :
"Would that government spent our money like it was their own."
9 posted on 06/08/2003 5:31:50 AM PDT by Valin (Age and deceit beat youth and skill)
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To: Valin
1995: U.S. Marines rescue F16-C fighter pilot Capt. Scott O'Grady from his six days in Bosnia


:)
10 posted on 06/08/2003 5:39:50 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf; All
Good morning snippy, SAM and FOXHOLE residents! WOW, the sun is really shining in my world today!!
We have not seen the sun for days and days now, this is a treat! I almost forgot what he looked like.
11 posted on 06/08/2003 7:15:57 AM PDT by Soaring Feather
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To: bentfeather
Good morning feather!
12 posted on 06/08/2003 7:29:00 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: snippy_about_it; I think therefore I am; AntiJen; SAMWolf; coteblanche
Morning Snippy!!! I'm still lurking...but I truly enjoy this thread so make sure you keep pinging me.

I wanted to introduce you to my buddy in the Army, "I think therefore I am". He joined FR last night (well, in the wee hours of the morning).

Can you please include him on this thread???

Thanks so much!

13 posted on 06/08/2003 7:57:09 AM PDT by cherry_bomb88 ("It's easier to fight for one's principals than to live up to them" ~Alfred Adler)
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To: snippy_about_it
I seem to recall a movie was made based on this.
14 posted on 06/08/2003 8:12:19 AM PDT by Valin (Age and deceit beat youth and skill)
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To: cherry_bomb88; I think therefore I am; SAMWolf
Welcome I think therefore I am! Boy, I'm going to have to find a way to shorten that name up! LOL.

Welcome to FR and Welcome to The FReeper Foxhole.

Let me refer you to post #6 of today's thread to see what the Foxhole is all about and also take a look at our opening.

I will add you to our ping list. SAMWolf is the creator of most of the threads but for two weeks I am posting his threads for him.

There is also a link on FR's home page to the Foxhole, clic there and you can see all the threads over the last six months.

Thanks cherry for the introduction.

I see that "I think there for I am", hasn't created a homepage here yet. You're going to have to help him out. :)

WELCOME "I Think Therefore I am"
and thank you for serving in the Army!

15 posted on 06/08/2003 8:17:11 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: snippy_about_it; I think therefore I am
Yes, when I got him to join last night I told him he's REALLY going to hate having a long screen name after awhile....LOL ....or at least others will be annoyed! :o)

On the home page, one step at a time, I'm still teaching him how to post & reply!!! LOL

16 posted on 06/08/2003 8:19:19 AM PDT by cherry_bomb88 ("It's easier to fight for one's principals than to live up to them" ~Alfred Adler)
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To: Valin
Hi Valin,

A movie on the rescue of Capt. Scott O'Grady? I think you're right.
17 posted on 06/08/2003 8:20:31 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: snippy_about_it
Good Morning Snippy.

Thank you for making sure the thread was posted 3 1/2 hours before my In-laws crawled out of bed.

Obviously my work? If you didn't say anything, no one would know whether you or I had done the thread.


18 posted on 06/08/2003 9:15:33 AM PDT by SAMWolf (Individualists unite!)
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To: snippy_about_it
Thank you Snippy. You trying to make me hide in a corner again today?
19 posted on 06/08/2003 9:19:11 AM PDT by SAMWolf (Individualists unite!)
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To: SAMWolf
3 1/2 hours before my In-laws crawled out of bed

LOL! Is it driving you crazy? I can't imagine being in the same house with my computer and not be able to use it!!!!

LOL on the know one would know 'stuff', you flatter me and humor me.

Trust me, they'd know. LOL.

Stop it you're cracking me up.

Thank you, I LOVE the flowers!!!!!!!

20 posted on 06/08/2003 9:19:52 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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