HONORED ON PANEL 15W, LINE 119 OF THE WALL
STEVEN LYNN GREEN
WALL NAME
STEVEN L GREEN
PANEL / LINE
15W/119
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REMEMBRANCES
LEFT FOR STEVEN LYNN GREEN
POSTED ON 3.4.2023
POSTED BY: Dennis Wriston
I'm Proud of Our Vietnam Veterans
Private First Class Steven Lynn Green, Served with Company B, 4th Battalion, 3rd Infantry Regiment, 11th Infantry Brigade, Americal Division, United States Army Vietnam.
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POSTED ON 10.31.2022
POSTED BY: [email protected]
Final Mission of PFC Steven L. Green
On the evening of January 2, 1970, B Company,4th Battalion, 3rd Infantry, Americal Division, was in a night defensive posture on Hill 285, eight miles east of Duc Pho in Quang Ngai Province, RVN. The company was combat assaulted to the hill earlier that morning to secure it as a fire base in support of Operation Iron Mountain. The company organized its defenses, and by dark had completed its preparations with sand bags, earthen berms, Claymore mines, and trip flares. Adverse weather prevented resupply helicopters from bringing in additional defensive material. As the sun set, the company’s field strength was 118 men and officers, including three 81mm mortar tubes. Without any warning, at approximately 11:45 PM the American position received about sixty rounds of mixed 60mm and 82mm mortar fire along with heavy small arms and automatic weapons fire. This was followed by a ground attack by an estimated reinforced North Vietnamese Army (NVA) sapper company from the north and northwest. Unbeknownst to the Americans, the enemy had moved by stealth in three platoon-sized elements up the brush-covered draws on the west side of the Hill 285, silently cut the Claymore wires, then opening fire with AK-50’s, B-40 rockets, and Chicom grenades. The defenders returned fire with unit weapons and received support from helicopter gunships and artillery. The southernmost attacking groups, including the NVA commander and his three-man command group, were cut down by heavy M16 and M79 fire. The U.S. artillery forward observer attached to B Company was killed when he moved against six sappers who succeeded in permeating the perimeter on the north side. A quick reaction by a B Company platoon leader and his radioman eliminated this threat. By 3:50 AM, the NVA began to withdraw, dragging away their dead and wounded. U.S. losses were seven killed and twelve wounded. The lost Americans included infantrymen PFC Tanner M. Brown Jr., PFC Raul Garcia Jr., PFC Dallas R. Snodgrass, SP4 Joseph M. D'Angelico, PFC Steven L. Green, and medic SP4 Frank M. Dunsmore Jr.; also lost was 2LT Robert C. Wright, the forward artillery observer from A-6/11 Arty. Brown, Garcia, and Snodgrass were posthumously promoted to Corporal. Sweeps of the area at dawn yielded twenty-nine dead NVA and twelve individual weapons and one crew-served weapon captured. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and “Operational Report—Lessons Learned, Americal Division, Period Ending 31 January 1970” at archive.org]
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POSTED ON 9.11.2022
POSTED BY: John Fabris
honoring you...
Thank you for your service to our country so long ago sir. As long as you are remembered you will always be with us….
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POSTED ON 9.5.2022
POSTED BY: craig s heitke heitke
sgt
A fine man & soldier...I am proud to think of him as my brother
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