DANIEL W KENT
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HONORED ON PANEL 35E, LINE 23 OF THE WALL

DANIEL WILDER KENT

WALL NAME

DANIEL W KENT

PANEL / LINE

35E/23

DATE OF BIRTH

04/26/1943

CASUALTY PROVINCE

QUANG TRI

DATE OF CASUALTY

01/24/1968

HOME OF RECORD

AUBURNDALE

COUNTY OF RECORD

Middlesex County

STATE

MA

BRANCH OF SERVICE

MARINE CORPS

RANK

CAPT

Book a time
Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR DANIEL WILDER KENT
POSTED ON 5.29.2023
POSTED BY: Lt. Col. G. Alan Knight, US Army (Ret)

Always to be Remembered

Danny and I were friends and classmates in high school...both 1961 grads. Only years later did I learn of his death due to hostile fire and the circumstances.........truly a Marine. I recall him as an always loyal, dependable "straight shooter." On this Memorial Day, had he lived, he would also have been 80. It saddens me to reflect on the years of life he never experienced and the family he left behind. At the same time I am proud to have known this outstanding young American, the best of the best.
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POSTED ON 3.8.2023
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 remain in our hearts forever….
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POSTED ON 3.6.2023
POSTED BY: Nicholas

From a grateful grandson

I never knew you, we never had the chance to know you, but your actions will forever reverberate through history. I will live up to what you bled for.
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POSTED ON 8.18.2022
POSTED BY: Palmer Brown

Neighbors and Brothers

Danny and Abbie were our neighbors in Tarawa Terrance at Camp LeJeune in 1956. His first daughter was "almost" born in the backseat of my Volkswagen bug. We were in 'nam at the same time; me in Danang are and Danny in the DMZ. 'til the last landings made, and we stand unafraid, on a shore no mortal has seen, 'til the last bugle call sounds taps for is all; it's Semper Fidelis, MARINE!
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POSTED ON 4.2.2020

Final Mission of CAPT Daniel W. Kent

On January 24, 1968, elements of the 320th North Vietnamese Army Division, an elite unit and veterans of the 1954 Dien Bien Phu campaign and newly arrived in the Demilitarized Zone sector, ambushed a U.S. Marine "Rough Rider" convoy. The convoy was on a routine artillery resupply mission from Dong Ha to Camp Carroll. It consisted of three trucks and a jeep armed with quad .50-caliber machine guns. At 1:30 PM, when the trucks were about to turn into the Camp Carroll access road, some 3,000 meters above the Marine base, the North Vietnamese sprang their ambush. The enemy soldiers opened up with small arms, mortars, machine guns, and recoilless rifles, immediately immobilizing all four vehicles. Using their weapons, including the quad .50, to defend themselves, and taking what cover they could, the Marines in the convoy called for assistance. The 4th Marines sent a reaction force from Camp Carroll consisting of a platoon from Company H, 2nd Battalion, 9th Marines; two tanks, one a flame tank, from Company B, 3rd Tank Battalion; and two U.S. Army M42 Dusters from Battery C, 1st Battalion, 44th Artillery. The North Vietnamese, however, were waiting for the reaction column. An enemy gunner fired on the lead tank, stopping it with a recoilless rifle round and killing the reaction force commander, CAPT Daniel W. Kent, who was also the tank company commander. Again, the Marines fought back and called for support. When two UH-1E gunships appeared overhead around 6:30 PM, the North Vietnamese troops broke contact and disappeared. A second relief column of two more Dusters and two trucks armed with quad .50s arrived from Dong Ha and assisted with the evacuation of the dead and wounded. The Marines suffered casualties of six men dead and forty-four wounded. The lost Marines included CAPT Kent, PFC Gilbert Ayala Jr., LCPL Gilbert Diaz, PFC Clayton M. Holland, CPL Robert J. McCarl, and CPL John H. Neal Jr. One U.S. Army Duster crewman, PFC Billy L. Strickland, was also killed. Three enemy dead were confirmed. Not only did the vehicles of the original convoy require extensive repairs, but two of the Dusters and the tank hit by the RPG round also sustained damage. Strickland, the Army Duster crewman, was posthumously promoted to Corporal. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and the publication “U.S. Marines in
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