JUAN J GONZALEZ
VIEW ALL PHOTOS (8)
HONORED ON PANEL 21E, LINE 105 OF THE WALL

JUAN JOSE GONZALEZ

WALL NAME

JUAN J GONZALEZ

PANEL / LINE

21E/105

DATE OF BIRTH

07/08/1947

CASUALTY PROVINCE

QUANG NGAI

DATE OF CASUALTY

06/15/1967

HOME OF RECORD

LAREDO

COUNTY OF RECORD

Webb County

STATE

TX

BRANCH OF SERVICE

ARMY

RANK

PFC

Book a table
Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR JUAN JOSE GONZALEZ
POSTED ON 10.4.2022
POSTED BY: John Fabris

honoring you...

Thank you for your service to our country so long ago sir. The remembrance from Mary Brouhard is touching. As long as you are remembered you will always be with us….
read more read less
POSTED ON 7.8.2020
POSTED BY: Dennis Wriston

I'm proud of our Vietnam Veterans

Private First Class Juan Jose Gonzalez, Served with C Troop, 3rd Squadron, 4th Cavalry Regiment, 25th Infantry Division, United States Army Vietnam.
read more read less
POSTED ON 5.23.2020

Final Mission of PFC Juan J. Gonzalez

On June 15, 1967, 2nd Battalion, 35th Infantry was assigned security for a round-trip resupply convoy from Chu Lai Combat Base to Duc Pho Base Camp. Units were placed at critical points along Highway QL-1, and A Company, 1st Battalion, 14th Infantry was placed on alert as a quick response force with lift helicopters on (air)strip alert. The convoy left Chu Lai at 7:30 AM and arrived at Duc Pho at 2:00 PM. The return from Duc Pho began at 3:00 PM when the convoy began moving back north, stopping at Quang Ngai Airfield at 7:00 PM. At this time, 2-35 Infantry was released from the assigned mission. At 6:45 PM, C Troop, 3rd Squadron, 4th Cavalry, 25th Infantry Division was returning to LZ Liz on a dike road above some dry rice paddies with members of Recon 2-35 from the day’s convoy operation when one of their M113A armored personnel carriers (APC) detonated a pressure-release mine estimated at two hundred and fifty pounds. The blast occurred approximately three hundred yards from the gates to LZ Liz. The explosion killed eleven personnel from 2/35 Infantry and 3/4 Cavalry, and the APC was totally destroyed. The lost personnel included PFC Barry L. Adam, SP4 Paul Bowman Jr., SSG Joe R. DeBault, PFC Juan J. Gonzalez, SP4 Lawrence A. Hurd, PFC Michael R. Ojile, PFC Louis J. Purdy, PFC Floyd H. Russell Jr., SP5 Valentino Tauaese, PFC Herbert Wigfall Jr., and SGT Frederick J. Williams. One survivor was seriously wounded. Personnel were riding inside and atop the APC when the mine was hit. The blast spread the APC over an area estimated at 100 yards in radius. Initially thought to be from a command detonated mine, a later inspection of the blast zone revealed no wires, indicating the mine was pressure detonated. There was early confusion on this issue as another APC had crossed the same area without incident. As darkness fell, flare ships provided illumination over the incident area. All the bodies were extracted by 7:45 PM. Some thirty Vietnamese suspects from a nearby village were taken into custody for interrogation and were flown from the site in three helicopter lifts. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and 2nd Battalion, 35th Infantry Operational Reports - Lessons Learned (ORLL) for May-June 1967]
read more read less
POSTED ON 6.13.2019
POSTED BY: Janice Current

An American Hero

Thank you for your service and your sacrifice. Thank you for stepping up and answering your country's call. Rest easy knowing you will never be forgotten.
read more read less
POSTED ON 1.6.2019
POSTED BY: Mary Brouhard

Juan was my first love .

Juan and I were in the 3rd grade and I loved him as a child loves their first love. I imagined marrying him and living happily ever after. Our moms were good friends and we were all broken hearted when we lost him.i loved him forever. He never knew.But I did.
read more read less
1 2 3 4