ARTHUR J MENN
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HONORED ON PANEL 6W, LINE 94 OF THE WALL

ARTHUR JOHN MENN

WALL NAME

ARTHUR J MENN

PANEL / LINE

6W/94

DATE OF BIRTH

03/10/1949

CASUALTY PROVINCE

NIHN THUAN

DATE OF CASUALTY

11/29/1970

HOME OF RECORD

SAN ANTONIO

COUNTY OF RECORD

Bexar County

STATE

TX

BRANCH OF SERVICE

ARMY

RANK

PFC

Book a table
Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR ARTHUR JOHN MENN
POSTED ON 2.28.2025
POSTED BY: ANON

Burial Information

PFC Arthur John Menn is buried in Block 34, Lot 40, Space 4 of the San Fernando Cemetery #2 in San Antonio, TX.

Your sacrifice is not forgotten.
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POSTED ON 7.23.2023
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 5.3.2021
POSTED BY: Charles Janson

John Marshall High School, San Antonio, TX Alum

This recognizes Arthur Menn as a JMHS alum hero (1969 JMHS Yearbook)
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POSTED ON 9.24.2020
POSTED BY: Lucy Micik

Thank You

Dear PFC Arthur Menn, Thank you for your service as a Field Artillery Basic. Saying thank you isn't enough, but it is from the heart. It is another autumn. Time passes quickly. Please watch over America, it stills needs your strength, courage and faithfulness, especially now. Rest in peace with the angels.
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POSTED ON 6.21.2016

Final Mission of PFC Arthur J. Menn

On November 29, 1970, a USAF C-123K Provider (#54-0649), Flight Bookie 540, from the 310th Tactical Airlift Squadron, was on a routine milk run (passenger) mission from Phan Rang to Cam Rahn Bay when it crashed into a mountain ridge 14 miles outside Cam Rahn Bay. The Provider crashed in poor weather, striking high ground at an altitude of 2700 feet in thick clouds. On board the aircraft were 44 people, consisting of 5 crewmen and 39 passengers. There were 32 U.S. military and 12 South Vietnamese. Two ARVN survivors were found five days later walking toward a road. The crash site was located after a week on December 5th by U.S. Army Rangers and South Vietnamese Rangers. They found two U.S. survivors, CAPT Vincent J. Fairbrother Jr. and SGT Gary Aldredge, who had endured the week with no food or water. Thirty U.S. military plus ten ARVN troops were killed. The lost crew included pilot CAPT Cecil G. Moyer Jr., co-pilot 1LT James F. Saxby, and crewmen SSGT Grayson H. Newberry, SSGT Harry A. Watson, and CAPT Norbert A. Podhajsky. The U.S. passengers killed were SGT Jack R. Gibbs, TSGT Robert B. Johnson, SGT James E. Stubblefield, SMS Bobby D. Seay, SSGT James C. Starnes, 1LT Elmon C. Caudill II, 1LT Jon M. King, PVT Gary Anderson, A1C James B. Young, CWO Franklin D. Defenbaugh, SP4 Samuel A. Grayson III, SP4 Charles A. Johnson, SP4 Donald A. Slate, 1LT Charles L. Kollenberg, SGT Ronnie C. Teschendorf, SP4 George Beedy, SGT Billy J. Hogan Jr., SGT Raymond H. Gray, SGT Joseph C. Blackwell, PFC Joseph A. Jacques, PFC Arthur J. Menn, SP4 Ronald R. Greenhouse, SSGT Ralph S. Guck, CAPT William D. Kennedy III, and CAPT Robert J. Polniak. [Taken from c123sinsea.org and bswett.com]
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