HONORED ON PANEL 47E, LINE 21 OF THE WALL
JAMES FRANCIS GALATI
WALL NAME
JAMES F GALATI
PANEL / LINE
47E/21
DATE OF BIRTH
CASUALTY PROVINCE
DATE OF CASUALTY
HOME OF RECORD
COUNTY OF RECORD
STATE
BRANCH OF SERVICE
RANK
REMEMBRANCES
LEFT FOR JAMES FRANCIS GALATI
POSTED ON 4.1.2023
POSTED BY: Cathy
The day you were taken
Today is the day we lost you your always in my heart
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POSTED ON 9.26.2022
POSTED BY: John Fabris
honoring you...
Thank you for your service to our country so long ago sir. We should be forever thankful for the sacrifices of you and so many others to ensure the freedoms we so often take for granted.
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POSTED ON 9.1.2022
POSTED BY: [email protected]
Final Mission of CMGCN James F. Galati
Three miles northwest of Phu Bai in Thu Thien Province, RVN, U.S. Navy Seabees built and maintained a quarry cantonment and rock crusher on Hill 494. The facility produced material for road and airfield construction projects. On the early morning of March 31, 1968, the installation came under an enemy mortar and recoilless rifle attack. The Seabees immediately manned an 81mm mortar position and commenced a sustained countermortar barrage which reportedly destroyed two enemy gun positions and broke the attack. Five hours later, as a second attack on the quarry transpired, the Seabees again manning their mortars, standing their ground despite the enemy having bracketed their position. The navymen continued countermortar fire until the enemy scored two direct hits on their position. Six Seabees from Detachment Echo, Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 9 (NMCB-9), 3rd Naval Construction Brigade were killed. The lost personnel included BUL3 George R. De Shurley, CMGCN James F. Galati, BUL3 Mark E. Hodel, BUL3 Allan L. Mair, BUL3 John F. Peek, and BUHCN James R. Retzloff Jr. Several other Navy and Marine personnel were wounded. During medical evacuation operations, a UH-34D helicopter (#148792) chase aircraft from Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 362 (HMM-362), Marine Aircraft Group 36 (MAG-36), 1st Marine Aircraft Wing (1ST MAW), crashed and burned at approximately 4:00 AM after taking hostile small arms groundfire. Two crewmen, crew chief CPL Kenneth R. Yantis and gunner SGT Daniel Pesimer, perished in the crash. Both pilots were recovered five hours later, suffering from first- and second-degree burns. Six days later, on April 6, 1968, the Hill 494 facility was dedicated as Camp De Shurley by Rear Admiral J.V. Bartlett, commander, 3rd Naval Construction Brigade, and CDR J.A. Wright, commanding officer of NMCB-9, in honor of mortar crew leader BUL3 De Shurley and the five other Seabees of Detail Echo, killed in action in the defense of the facility on the morning of March 31st. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and seabeemagazine.mil]
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POSTED ON 5.30.2022
POSTED BY: Cathy Tricocci
Memorial day
You are in my heart Cathy
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