ROBERT E BARDACH
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HONORED ON PANEL 27E, LINE 105 OF THE WALL

ROBERT ERLE BARDACH

WALL NAME

ROBERT E BARDACH

PANEL / LINE

27E/105

DATE OF BIRTH

07/05/1944

CASUALTY PROVINCE

QUANG TRI

DATE OF CASUALTY

10/14/1967

HOME OF RECORD

ARLINGTON HEIGHTS

COUNTY OF RECORD

Cook County

STATE

IL

BRANCH OF SERVICE

NAVY

RANK

HM2

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Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR ROBERT ERLE BARDACH
POSTED ON 2.12.2012
POSTED BY: Jim and Tom Reece and Rosa King

Salute to a Fellow Veteran

You gave your life for your country and for this we Salute You.
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POSTED ON 9.14.2009
POSTED BY: Robert Sage

We Remember

Robert is buried at Oak Hill Cemetery, Lewistown, IL.
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POSTED ON 9.21.2005
POSTED BY: Robert A Crider, HM3 - USN

A “Magnificent Bastard”

Robert Erle Bardach - HM2 – USN – was the Senior Corpsman, in the field, and assigned to H&S Company, 2nd Battalion 4th Marines, 3rd Marine Division, FMF.

On Wednesday, October 11, 1967 I coppered from 2/4’s BAS in Dong Ha to 2/4’s encampment, and this is were I met Bob.

Description of the battle that took Bob’s life has been taken from OPERATION KINGFISHER Report

In the second week of October 1967 the 2nd Battalion, 4th Marines, relieved BLT 2/3 as the defense force for the recently built bridge north of Strongpoint C-2. The construction of the bridge had permitted the reopening of the vital road to Con Thien washed out by the heavy September rains. The battalion defended the bridge because the 3rd Marine Division was concerned that if the enemy destroyed the bridge they would cut the only supply line to Con Thien.
The defense of the bridge was no easy task for Lieutenant Colonel Hammond's battalion. Since its move north from Camp Evans on 11 September, constant combat around Con Thien had worn the battalion down from”foxhole strength" of 952 to about 462. The 2nd Battalion, 4th Marines had great difficulty in manning all the defensive positions prepared by the departed full-strength BLT-2/3.
The defensive position around the bridge was divided into quadrants by virtue of the road, which ran roughly north and south, and the stream, which ran east and west. Golf Company had the northwest quadrant; Hotel Company was on the same side of the road but across the stream in the southwest quadrant. Fox Company was in the northeast; Echo Company in the southeast. The battalion command group set up beside the stream in Golf Company's area and near the center of the position.
At 0125 on 14 October, 25 artillery rounds, rockets, and 135-150 mortar rounds hit Hotel Company. An ambush squad posted in front of the company reported an enemy force moving toward it, and immediately took the advancing enemy under fire. The Marine squad leader notified his company that he had three casualties and that the enemy seriously outnumbered his squad. The company commander, Captain Arthur P. Brill, Jr., ordered the squad to pull back and, at the same time, called for night defensive fires to block the avenues of approach to his position. The battalion requested flare ships to illuminate the area. Using starlight scopes, sniper teams watched the enemy as they massed only 50 meters in front of the company. The snipers and two tanks attached to the company opened fire, forcing the North Vietnamese to start their assault prematurely. The rest of the Hotel Compan held fire until the NVA troops reached a clearing 20 meters from the wire. Of the entire attacking unit, only two NVA soldiers reached the wire and Marines killed both as they tried to breach that obstacle.
The enemy withdrew, leaving bodies behind, but they were far from finished. At 0230, enemy mortars shelled Golf Company. Direct hits by RPGs destroyed a machine gun emplacement and several backup positions on the primary avenue of approach into the company position. The NVA force attacked through this break, overran the company command post, and killed the company commander, Captain Jack W. Phillips, and his forward observer. Three platoon leaders, two of who had just arrived in Vietnam that morning, also died. The battalion sent its S-3A, Captain James W. McCarter, Jr., to replace Phillips, but enemy fire killed him before he reached Golf Company. During the confused, hand-to-hand combat some of the North Vietnamese fought their way within grenade range of the battalion command post in the center of the position.
In the command post, although wounded by a grenade, Sergeant Paul H. Foster, a member of the fire support coordination center, continued to direct mortar and artillery fire upon the enemy. Another grenade landed among a group of six Marines. Sergeant Foster threw his flak jacket over the grenade and jumped on top of the jacket. The grenade blast mortally wounded him, but this action saved his fellow Marines. Before the melee ended, the North Vietnamese killed or wounded the entire for ward air control team. The enemy also killed Robert Erle Bardach, battalion Senior Corpsman, and wounded the fire support coordinator, headquarters commandant, and battalion sergeant major.
Lieutenant Colonel Hammond moved what was left of his command group to a better location within Hotel Company's position. He ordered Fox Company to move to Golf Company's right flank and counterattack to push the NVA forces out of the perimeter. Illumination and automatic weapons fire from "Puff," the AC-47 requested at the beginning of the fight and which arrived about 0330, aided the counterattack. By 0430, the enemy began retreating out of the position, pursued by Echo Company.
The next morning the 2nd Battalion reconsolidated and evacuated casualties. There were twenty-five dead (18 from 2/4 Marines) and two-dozen or more wounded. The NVA lost at least 24 killed. That afternoon, Lieutenant General Cushman and Major General Hochmuth visited the bridge site. They granted a request from Lieutenant Colonel Hammond that the new bridge be named "Bastard's Bridge" to honor the 18 Marines of the 2nd Battalion who gave their lives in its defense. At 1400, Hammond's battalion turned over the bridge to Lieutenant Colonel Needham's 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marines and then moved to Dong Ha where it assumed the mission of regimental reserve after 42 days of close combat.
The men killed in action at Bastard's Bridge were
· E Btry, 2nd Bn, 12th Marines:
o Pfc Roger G. Carey, Windom, MN

· H Btry, 3rd Bn, 12th Marines:
o Sgt Paul H. Foster, San Francisco, CA (Medal of Honor)
o Pfc Robert J. Araujo, New York, NY

· B Company, 1st Bn, 1st Marines:
o Pfc Dennis A. Carlson, Charles City, IA
o Pfc John W. Roberts, South Portland, ME

· C Company, 1st Bn, 1st Marines:
o Cpl Quinton M. Bice, Texas City, TX
o Pfc Oliver Bell, Pompano Beach, FL

· G Company, 2nd Bn, 4th Marines:
o Capt Jack W. Phillips, Mission, KS (Silver Star)
o 1stLt Charles Yaghoobian, Pawtucket, RI
o 2ndLt Eric C. Egge, Hopkins, MN
o LCpl John P. Avery, Elizabethton, TN
o LCpl Duane J. Foss, Hastings, MN
o LCpl Frank Foster, Meridian, MS
o LCpl Phillip S. France, Baltimore, MD (Silver Star)
o LCpl Donald A. Gehling, Grand Meadow, MN
o HN Doyle G. King, Vinemont, AL (Bronze Star "V") (H&S with Golf 2/4)
o LCpl Morris J. Sensat, Egan, LA
o Pfc Robert D. Buchanan, Bristol, VA
o Pfc Gary C. Griswold, Bethel, CT
o Pfc David A. Hamilton, Springfield, OH (Silver Star)
o Pfc William I. White, North Vandergrift, PA
o Pfc Stephen R. Worley, West Monroe, LA

· H&S Company, 2nd Bn, 4th Marines:
o Capt James W. McCarter, New Orleans, LA (Silver Star)
o HM2 Robert E. Bardach, Arlington Heights, IL
o HN John I. Higgins, Chula Vista, CA


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POSTED ON 5.29.2003
POSTED BY: Donald Lytle

Thank you Doc

Although we never met personally, I want to thank you Robert Erle Bardach, for your courageous and valiant service, faithful contribution, and most holy sacrifice, given to this great country of ours!

Your Spirit is alive--and strong, therefore, you shall never be forgotten, nor has your death been in vain!

Again, thank you Doc Bardach, for a job well done!

FAIR WINDS, AND ETERNAL PEACE MY FRIEND
'

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POSTED ON 6.2.2002
POSTED BY: HMCM John Bruneel, Retired

I'm the One Called "Doc..."

I'm the One Called "Doc…"


I shall not walk in your footsteps,
but I will walk by your side.
I shall not walk in your image,
I've earned my own title of pride.
We've answered the call together,
on sea and foreign land.
When the cry for help was given,
I've been there right at hand.
Whether I am on the ocean
or in the jungle wearing greens,
Giving aid to my fellow man,
be it Sailors or Marines.
So the next time you see a corpsman
and you thing of calling him "squid",
Think of the job he's doing
as those before him did.
And if you ever have to go out there
and you life is on the block,
Look at the one right next to you…
I'm the one called "Doc".


Harry D. Penny, Jr. HMC(AC)USN
Copyright 1975

"Permission to reprint granted
by the author/copyright owner".
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