JOEL D FENDLEY
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HONORED ON PANEL 24E, LINE 94 OF THE WALL

JOEL DAVID FENDLEY

WALL NAME

JOEL D FENDLEY

PANEL / LINE

24E/94

DATE OF BIRTH

07/15/1946

CASUALTY PROVINCE

QUANG NGAI

DATE OF CASUALTY

08/09/1967

HOME OF RECORD

RICHMOND

COUNTY OF RECORD

Fort Bend County

STATE

TX

BRANCH OF SERVICE

ARMY

RANK

CPL

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Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR JOEL DAVID FENDLEY
POSTED ON 7.15.2023
POSTED BY: Dennis Wriston

I'm Proud of Our Vietnam Veterans

Corporal Joel David Fendley, Served with Company A, 2nd Battalion, 8th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division, United States Army Vietnam.
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POSTED ON 8.9.2022
POSTED BY: John Fabris

honoring you...

Thank you for your service to our country so long ago sir. That you died exactly 55 years ago is especially poignant. As long as you are remembered you will remain in our hearts forever…..
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POSTED ON 7.15.2022
POSTED BY: James Barbee

Never forgotten

Thank you for your service. According to John 5:28,29 we will see him again. Any questions you can email me at jamesbarbee@hotmail. Com
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POSTED ON 7.5.2022
POSTED BY: ANON

76

Never forgotten.

HOOAH
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POSTED ON 4.7.2021

Final Mission of PFC Joel D. Fendley

On August 7, 1967, during Operation Pershing, U.S. 1st Cavalry Division troops were moved into the Song Re Valley, twelve miles west of Ba To in Quang Ngai Province, RVN. Stretching some twenty-four miles north to south, the narrow valley was laced with carefully cultivated rice paddies and well-fed livestock but seemed devoid of people. Troopers advanced cautiously from Gia Vuc, site of a U.S. Army Special Forces camp located astride a major North Vietnamese Army (NVA) infiltration route off the Ho Chi Minh trail. While the leapfrogging battalions established intermediate firebases, they encountered no one in the first two days; however, they had the uneasy feeling they were not alone. On the morning of August 9th, a single cavalry company, A Company, 2nd Battalion, 8th Cavalry, conducted an air assault onto three small hills, an objective called Landing Zone Pat, nine miles north of Gia Vuc. As the last six UH-1 helicopters lifted off, the NVA opened fire with heavy machine guns. Bullets riddled all the aircraft, bringing three down, while the other three limped back to Gia Vuc. On the ground, the NVA swarmed the lone company. One group, hidden at the base of the hill area, surged out of its trenches and bunkers at the same time another unit, hidden midway up the western slope of the valley, fired down on the isolated American soldiers. While the cavalry troopers sought cover and returned fire, their company commander called in artillery and air strikes. They rained down quickly on the attackers, saving the American company from certain destruction. When the fight ended four hours later, a third of the company were casualties. Eleven U.S. were killed and twenty-seven wounded in the battle, while only a few enemy dead and some weapons were found. The lost personnel included the crew of a UH-1C gunship shot down: aircraft commander WO1 Francis A. Rochkes, co-pilot CPT Robert A. Thompson, crew chief SP4 Ray E. Moran Jr., and observer 1LT Honorio M. Fidel; SP4 John M. Beyrand, a gunner on one of the lift aircraft; SP5 Andrew C. Conrad Jr., a medic from HHC, 2/8; and five infantrymen from A-2/8: PFC Joel D. Fendley (posthumously promoted to Corporal), PFC Joseph J. Harrison (posthumously promoted to Corporal), SP4 Michael J. Hotchkiss, SP4 Prentice D. LeClair, and SGT Robert J. Maxwell. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and wikipedia.org]
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