HONORED ON PANEL 15W, LINE 4 OF THE WALL
HENRY NICHOLAS HEIDE II
WALL NAME
HENRY N HEIDE II
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15W/4
DATE OF BIRTH
CASUALTY PROVINCE
DATE OF CASUALTY
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LEFT FOR HENRY NICHOLAS HEIDE II
POSTED ON 12.23.2022
POSTED BY: John Housley
Honoring You
I am a high school teacher. On behalf of my students who are here with me I wanted to thank you for your service and your sacrifice. I hope your loved ones know that your story is still being told
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POSTED ON 12.23.2022
POSTED BY: Dennis Wriston
I'm Proud of Our Vietnam Veterans
Specialist Four Henry Nicholas Heide II, Served with the 371st Radio Research Company, 509th United States Army Security Agency Group, United States Army Security Agency, United States Army Vietnam.
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POSTED ON 10.26.2022
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 7.8.2022
POSTED BY: [email protected]
Final Mission of PFC Henry N. Heide II
Radio Research Units (RRU’s) operated in Vietnam under the direction of the U.S. Army Security Agency and conducted classified missions. Their work included intercepting radio communications of the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army, then forwarding the captured intelligence to division commanders in pursuit of their tactical war-fighting operations. The airborne platforms for RRU’s included Project Left Bank UH-1H helicopters configured with radio direction finding equipment. The ships were unarmed except for personal weapons and maintained a crew of four, two pilots and two Radio Intercept Operators. They tracked the enemy via radio transmissions intercepts and fixed their locations with triangulation. This required slow flying with many turning patterns. During one such radio direction finding mission on November 29, 1969, a Left Bank flight from the 11th General Support Aviation Company at Phouc Vinh flying in support of the 371st Radio Research Company was brought down by enemy fire six miles northwest of Song Be in Phuoc Long Province, RVN. The helicopter went low, purportedly to treetop level to drop a smoke grenade on the enemy position for the “Pink Team” hunter-killer aircraft covering them, when they were caught in the crossfire of enemy .51 caliber machine guns; however, it was a rocket-propelled grenade round through the chin bubble that brought the aircraft down. There were no survivors. The lost crew included aircraft commander CW2 Jack D. Knepp, pilot WO1 Dennis D. Bogle, and Radio Intercept Operators SP4 James R. Smith and PFC Henry N. Heide II. The post-crash fire destroyed the helicopter and made identifying remains difficult for the aero rifle team sent to secure the site. A Pink Team AH-1G Cobra (#68-15188) aircraft B Troop, 1st Squadron, 9th Cavalry, 1st Cavalry Division, covering the flight was also shot down in the hail of fire, resulting in further casualties. WO1 Kenneth A. Luse and CW2 Lawrence J. Babyak died when their Cobra crashed after sustaining .51 caliber hits while trying to suppress the enemy fire near the downed Left Bank flight. Luce was posthumously awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross. U.S. Air Force jets were scrambled and napalmed the area to keep the classified out of enemy hands. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and vhpa.org]
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