Francis Stanley Devine, Jr
Corporal
F CO, 2ND BN, 4TH MARINES, 3RD MARDIV, III MAF
United States Marine Corps
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
January 15, 1948 to May 02, 1968
FRANCIS S DEVINE Jr is on the Wall at Panel 54E, Line 5

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Combat Action Ribbon
 
Francis S Devine
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22 Apr 2000

ALWAYS IN MY HEART

My name is Michael Dadabo. I was with Frank when he died. We became good friends real fast. I was wounded the same day. Our girlfriends had the same name (Jean) we enjoyed comparing letters from them, and who's girl could write the most.

Frank died on a grave mound; we believe that is what it was. He was shot three times.

I always think of him and go to the Wall every chance I get. I am sorry I never contacted his family, because I would have told them what a brave young man he was. Frank will always be in my heart. I love you Frank.

If anyone would like to contact me, my number is 845-621-5575 or e-mail me at miked161@comcast.net. Family welcome.

Jean, if you see this please call me. Never forget him. Your letters he loved, and I know he loved you.

Mike Dadabo,
miked161@comcast.net


 

Notes from The Virtual Wall

In May of 1968, the North Vietnamese launched what has been called the "Tet II" offensive, striking 119 provincial and district capitals, military installations, and major cities including Saigon. Unlike Tet I, which was primarily a Viet Cong uprising, Tet II was almost entirely an NVA affair.

The battle of Dai Do actually began on April 30 with the ambush of a US Navy utility boat by elements of the 320th NVA Division at the junction of the Bo Dieu and Cua Viet rivers. Since Battalion Landing Team 2/4 was in the area, it was ordered to eliminate the threat to the crucial waterway.

"The Battle of Dai Do was a fierce and bloody struggle between an understrength Marine battalion landing team (2nd Bn, 4th Marines {BLT 2/4}) and major elements of the 320th North Vietnamese Army (NVA) Division during three hot, humid spring days in 1968 (30 April - 3 May). I was privileged to command those magnificent Marines and Sailors who stopped the well-equipped 320th in its tracks on the north bank of the Bo Dieu River and drove it back toward the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).

I would like to say that our success was part of a carefully orchestrated plan. It was not. We reacted first to hasty orders from higher headquarters, then to targets of opportunity, and finally to one desperate situation after another. That we succeeded was more a tribute to the extraordinary performance of individual Marines and Sailors and their small unit leaders than to brilliance or insight by higher echelons. Bravery, competence, initiative, toughness, and selflessness carried the day."

Then-LT COL William Weise, Commanding Officer, BLT 2/4
Brigadier General, USMC, Retired
From Memories of Dai Do

Faced by three Regiments of the 320th NVA Division, BLT 2/4 was forced to fall back to defensive positions north of the river, but they stopped the enemy attack. NVA reinforcements were turned back by the Army's 3rd Bn, 21st Infantry, Americal Division, who occupied blocking positions at Nhi Ha to the northeast.

The NVA attempt to open an invasion corridor into South Vietnam had failed. The "Magnificent Bastards" of 2/4 Marines and the 3/21st Infantry had saved the day, for if they had failed the NVA would have been free to overrun the major supply bases at Dong Ha and Quang Tri and the entire DMZ defenses would have been undermined. However, the cost had been high. The Marines and sailors suffered 89 dead and another 297 seriously wounded, while Army forces at Nhi Ha sustained 28 deaths and 130 wounded. But the enemy suffered even greater losses - not only did the NVA fail to achieve their objective, they also left 1,568 bodies on the battlefield.

After regrouping, 2nd Bn, 4th Marines was able to field four rifle companies of 1 officer and 40 men each.


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