Manuel Martinez GonzalesCorporalA CO, 1ST BN, 50TH INFANTRY, 1 CAV DIV Army of the United States 15 April 1947 - 10 December 1967 Pecos, Texas Panel 31E Line 074 |
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The database page for Manuel Martinez Gonzales
Manual was born and raised in Pecos, Texas. He was the 5th of eleven children. He attended schools in Pecos and dropped out of Pecos High School after his junior year. He was drafted into the Army in April 1967. He joined the 50th Infantry stateside and shipped with the unit to Vietnam in October 1967. He was killed on December 19, 1967 when an RPG struck his APC. He received a posthumous promotion to Corporal. He was buried with full military honors in the Santa Rosa Cemetery in his home town of Pecos, Texas. His parents are now deceased as are two of his older sisters. He is remembered by his surving brothers and sisters and by the Permian Basin Vietnam Veterans' Memorial located in Midland, Texas. May his sacrifice not be forgotten.
From a PBVVM representative, The photo at the top of the page was taken aboard the troop ship which carried the 50th Infantry to Vietnam. The two photos immediately above were taken in Vietnam. |
A Note from The Virtual WallOn 06 December 1967 a reconnaissance helicopter of the 1st Bn, 9th Cavalry spotted a radio antenna sticking out of a hut near the village of Dai Dong (2), about 12 miles from Qui Nhon. "A" Troop, 1/9 Cav, sent an infantry platoon to investigate. At 1630 hours, as the infantrymen approaching the village, the platoon came under intense automatic and small arms fire and was pinned down. The Weapons Platoon of the 1/9 was sent in to help and they also were pinned down and unable to move. The two platoons had stumbled on a large element of the 22nd NVA Regiment and were in considerable danger of being overrun and destroyed. Additional troops from 1/9 Cavalry, 1/8 Cavalry, and 1/50 Infantry were inserted in order to extricate the two endangered platoons. Although the combined force encountered stiff resistance the 1/50's armored personnel carriers provided the necessary edge and the 1/9 platoons were extracted by 2100. Four US soldiers were killed in the fight.This engagement was the beginning of the Battle of Tam Quan, a running battle which continued until 20 December and which resulted in the destruction of the 22nd NVA Regiment as a fighting force - but which also cost the lives of several dozen Americans and an unknown number of ARVN troops. A major engagement on 10 December resulted in 18 Americans killed in action and many others wounded. The dead were
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The point-of-contact for this memorial is a PBVVM representative, Billy M. Brown 4015 Melody Lane, Odessa, Texas 79762 bmbrown@grandecom.net |
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With all respect
Jim Schueckler, former CW2, US Army
Ken Davis, Commander, United States Navy (Ret)
Memorial first published on 07 May 2006
Last updated 05/20/2006