HONORED ON PANEL 36W, LINE 67 OF THE WALL
DENNIS GUY BENSON
WALL NAME
DENNIS G BENSON
PANEL / LINE
36W/67
DATE OF BIRTH
CASUALTY PROVINCE
DATE OF CASUALTY
HOME OF RECORD
COUNTY OF RECORD
STATE
BRANCH OF SERVICE
RANK
REMEMBRANCES
LEFT FOR DENNIS GUY BENSON
POSTED ON 7.15.2021
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....
read more
read less
POSTED ON 10.6.2020
POSTED BY: William West
William H. West
Only met you a couple of times before you shipped out for training. You and i didn't hit it off, because of your girl friend D. Morin. But respected you highly. and was sorry and saddened by the news of your dealt. I enlisted in the Marines soon afterwards, partly because of you. R.I.P.
read more
read less
POSTED ON 3.31.2018
POSTED BY: [email protected]
Air Loss - Fixed-Wing
On December 17, 1968, a USAF Fairchild C-123K Provider (#54-0708) from the 309th Special Operations Squadron with 44 persons onboard crashed shortly after takeoff from Chu Lai Air Base after reportedly encountering an engine failure following fuel transfer problems. Three crewmen and nine passengers were killed in the crash. The lost crewmen included aircraft commander LTC Richard A. Brown, co-pilot 1LT Roger H. Strout, and flight engineer SSGT Jesse J. Bradshaw. The lost passengers were U.S. Army personnel: 1LT John A. Blaco Jr., PFC Bradley J. Bourque, SGT Ramon Castro-Morales, CPT Richard C. Drewes, CPT John K. Hayward, CWO John P. Koob, 1LT John D. Krouslis, SSGT Wallace F. Simpkin, and CPT Morton H. Singer. Five other passengers died subsequent to the injuries they received. They included two Marines, SGT Mancol R. Clifton, who died the following day due to burns he suffered; and PVT George W. Brown, who passed away January 13, 1969, also from burns. The three other lost passengers were soldiers: SP4 Dennis G. Benson, who died December 23, 1968, from burns after being evacuated to a burn unit at the 106th Army General Hospital in Yokohama, Japan; SFC Richard H. Sweger, who died January 2, 1969, from bilateral pneumonia due to his injuries; and SP4 Henry E. Russell, who died May 7, 1969, after spending 135 days at Brooke Army General Hospital at Fort Sam Houston, TX, where he was being treated for burns he suffered over 35% of his body. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and aviation-safety.net]
read more
read less
POSTED ON 2.14.2017
POSTED BY: Lucy Micik
PLEASE, SOMEONE POST HIS PHOTO
I HOPE SOMEONE WILL POST YOUR PICTURE BECAUSE THIS IS A WALL OF FACES AND YOURS IS NEEDED.
read more
read less
POSTED ON 2.14.2017
POSTED BY: Lucy Conte Micik
Remembered
DEAR SPEC 4 BENSON,
THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE AS A CHEMICAL EQUIPMENT REPAIRER. HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY. IT IS 2017, WHICH MAKES IT FAR TOO LONG FOR YOU TO HAVE BEEN GONE. WE APPRECIATE ALL YOU HAVE DONE, AND YOUR SACRIFICE. WATCH OVER THE U.S.A., IT STILL NEEDS YOUR COURAGE.. GOD BLESS YOU. MAY THE SAINTS AND ANGELS BE AT YOUR SIDE. REST IN PEACE.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE AS A CHEMICAL EQUIPMENT REPAIRER. HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY. IT IS 2017, WHICH MAKES IT FAR TOO LONG FOR YOU TO HAVE BEEN GONE. WE APPRECIATE ALL YOU HAVE DONE, AND YOUR SACRIFICE. WATCH OVER THE U.S.A., IT STILL NEEDS YOUR COURAGE.. GOD BLESS YOU. MAY THE SAINTS AND ANGELS BE AT YOUR SIDE. REST IN PEACE.
read more
read less