ALAN J HETTICH
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HONORED ON PANEL 49E, LINE 32 OF THE WALL

ALAN JOSEPH HETTICH

WALL NAME

ALAN J HETTICH

PANEL / LINE

49E/32

DATE OF BIRTH

10/05/1946

CASUALTY PROVINCE

TAY NINH

DATE OF CASUALTY

04/12/1968

HOME OF RECORD

LOUISVILLE

STATE

KY

BRANCH OF SERVICE

ARMY

RANK

CPL

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Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR ALAN JOSEPH HETTICH
POSTED ON 11.11.2022
POSTED BY: John Fabris

honoring you...

Thank you for your service to our country so long ago sir. The remembrance from Dorothy Abrams He is touching and reflects her admiration and respect for you. As long as you are remembered you will remain in our hearts forever….
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POSTED ON 9.12.2022

Battle of Good Friday - April 12, 1968

On April 12, 1968, U.S. Army 25th Infantry Division forces participating in Operation Toan Thang I (“Complete Victory”) came in contact with the Viet Cong’s 9th Division, precipitating a major engagement in Tay Ninh Province, RVN. The Americans had just begun sweeping Base Area 355, a belt of woods three miles northwest of the Michelin Rubber Plantation, in search of the 9th Division. Several hours after midnight, VC sappers crept forward to probe their night defense position along Route 244 of the 3rd Battalion, 22nd Infantry, targeting B Company on the southwestern portion of the perimeter. The Americans opened fire and hunkered down in their foxholes as the first of several hundred 82mm mortar rounds began to hit. Around 4:00 AM, a battalion of insurgents poured out of the trees in a human wave attack and headed for the sector held by B Company. The Americans fought back in desperate close combat, but the enemy’s superior numbers soon began to tell. Within thirty minutes, the enemy had breached the southern perimeter lines and was threatening to overrun the battalion’s position. An unrelenting wave of air and artillery strikes plus the arrival of helicopter gunships around 5:00 AM helped stabilize the situation, giving the defending infantrymen time to eject the enemy and reestablish their perimeter. Recon Platoon from 3/22 soon arrived to help B Company, and at 6:15 AM a group of armored personnel carriers from 2/22 (Mechanized) roared onto the scene and put the Viet Cong to flight. The beaten enemy broke contact and withdrew around 7:00 AM, leaving behind 153 corpses and an assortment of weapons. Eighteen U.S. soldiers died in the battle and forty-seven were wounded. The lost personnel included (from B/3/22) SP4 Edward C. Beckwith, PFC John E. Cunningham Jr., PFC Robert W. Ellsworth, PFC William E. Maxwell, SP4 Robert L. Melton Jr., PFC Glenn L. Moller Jr., CPL Reynaldo N. Orozco, PFC David A. Strupp, CPL Donny G. Tidwell, and SP4 Douglas R. Weiher; (from D/3/22) SP4 William J. De Lisa, SP4 Morris K. James, SP4 Cleatus W. McClanahan, PFC James R. Southey (died of wounds 05/03/1968), and SGT Hubert E. Waford; (from HHC/3/22) cook PFC Alan P. Butkus and medic CPL Alan J. Hettich; and (from C Battery, 2nd Battalion, 77th Artillery) CPL Billy J. Brown. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and “Staying the Course: October 1967 to September 1968” by Erik B. Villard; article from the Madera Daily Tribune (Madera, CA), April 12, 1968]
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POSTED ON 8.15.2022
POSTED BY: Dorothy Abrams Home

St James classmate

You were such a gentle soul. When we had a reunion for our eighth grade class, you were sorely missed. We wrote all our memories down and sent them to your father. I hope you were able to see How well remembered and loved you were period. If you have any pull with God. Have him watch over our country. Call Blue Jays ! Hope you’re able to play basketball in heaven, you were good. I sit next to you in the eighth grade and have many fond memories of you take care
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POSTED ON 2.17.2021
POSTED BY: cousins by marriage

thank you alan

I did not know you, but; my late husband William Oesterritter thought you were the bravest young man that he knew. You will never be forgotten for your patriotism and loyalty. Your father Ivo was married to a Noe family member, Marguerite whose sister married Louis Oesterritter. Barbara Seekamp Oesterritter and family Feb 2021
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POSTED ON 5.28.2019
POSTED BY: Lucy Micik

Thank You

Dear Cpl Alan Hettich, Thank you for your service as a Medical NCO. Thank you for the lives you saved. Yesterday was Memorial Day when we honor you. I could not post then because this site was overwhelmed. Please watch over the USA, it still needs your courage. Rest in peace with the angels.
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