DALLAS T ADAIR JR
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HONORED ON PANEL 52E, LINE 13 OF THE WALL

DALLAS TYLER ADAIR JR

WALL NAME

DALLAS T ADAIR JR

PANEL / LINE

52E/13

DATE OF BIRTH

02/24/1943

CASUALTY PROVINCE

DINH TUONG

DATE OF CASUALTY

04/26/1968

HOME OF RECORD

MESA

COUNTY OF RECORD

Maricopa County

STATE

AZ

BRANCH OF SERVICE

ARMY

RANK

CPL

Book a time
Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR DALLAS TYLER ADAIR JR
POSTED ON 11.11.2011

i remember

i didn't get the chance to know you as well as you deserved.replacements like us usually are coming and going.wayne and i had pretty much used up the luck in B25 by the time you got her.she died with you.....biggest booby-trap i ever saw.sorry i couldn't write your family....i had nothing left,but i will always remember you.
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POSTED ON 4.28.2010
POSTED BY: Robert Sage

We Remember

Dallas is buried at Mesa City Cemetery, Mesa, AZ. PH
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POSTED ON 6.10.2009
POSTED BY: mitch starks

school mates

Went through school with Dallas, kindergarte thru high school. He was just a great kid.
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POSTED ON 6.25.2007
POSTED BY: Darrell Williams

A Mesa High friend

Everyone At Mesa High School remembers and loved Dallas. The class of 1961.
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POSTED ON 2.22.2006
POSTED BY: Bill Nelson

Never Forgotten

FOREVER REMEMBERED

"If you are able, save for them a place inside of you....and save one backward glance when you are leaving for the places they can no longer go.....Be not ashamed to say you loved them....
Take what they have left and what they have taught you with their dying and keep it with your own....And in that time when men decide and feel safe to call the war insane, take one moment to embrace those gentle heroes you left behind...."

Quote from a letter home by Maj. Michael Davis O'Donnell
KIA 24 March 1970. Distinguished Flying Cross: Shot down and Killed while attempting to rescue 8 fellow soldiers surrounded by attacking enemy forces.

We Nam Brothers pause to give a backward glance, and post this remembrance to you, one of the gentle heroes lost to the War in Vietnam:

Slip off that pack. Set it down by the crooked trail. Drop your steel pot alongside. Shed those magazine-ladened bandoliers away from your sweat-soaked shirt. Lay that silent weapon down and step out of the heat. Feel the soothing cool breeze right down to your soul ... and rest forever in the shade of our love, brother.

From your Nam-Band-Of-Brothers
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