JOHN E MCCARRELL
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HONORED ON PANEL 25W, LINE 52 OF THE WALL

JOHN EDWARD MCCARRELL

WALL NAME

JOHN E MCCARRELL

PANEL / LINE

25W/52

DATE OF BIRTH

02/28/1949

CASUALTY PROVINCE

THUA THIEN

DATE OF CASUALTY

05/11/1969

HOME OF RECORD

LOUDON

COUNTY OF RECORD

Loudon County

STATE

TN

BRANCH OF SERVICE

ARMY

RANK

SGT

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Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR JOHN EDWARD MCCARRELL
POSTED ON 2.28.2024
POSTED BY: ANON

75

Your sacrifice is not forgotten.

HOOAH
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POSTED ON 7.19.2023
POSTED BY: john fabris

honoring you....

Remember to save for them a place inside of you, and save one backward glance when you are leaving, for the places they can no longer go...
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POSTED ON 5.11.2021
POSTED BY: Mike Stewart

Until we regroup

LT, Chuck and myself, we did our best so you could go home, my brother. Each May we remember. How could we ever forget? Rest easy, we will be along shortly. Thank you for your sacrifice, so we other young men could grow old and tell of your heroism, your sacrifice, and our aching hearts.
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POSTED ON 1.17.2021

Final Mission of SP4 John E. McCarrell

Operation Apache Snow was a joint U.S. Army and Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) military operation designed to keep pressure on North Vietnamese Army (NVA) units in the A Shau Valley and prevent them from mounting any attacks on the neighboring coastal provinces. The operation began on May 10, 1969, with the NVA mostly conducting a fighting retreat in the valley. The 29th Regiment eventually made a stand in elaborate previously prepared bunker positions on Ap Bia Mountain (Hill 937), a prominence 1.2 miles from the Laotian border west of the A Shau Valley. The following day, the 3rd Battalion, 187th Infantry, 101st Airborne Division, advanced on Hill 937, where intelligence indicated a significant enemy presence. The going was tough as the Americans pressed through bamboo thickets, triple-canopy jungle, and the occasional clearing choked with tall elephant grass. When Company B neared the abandoned village of A Luoi, gunfire erupted from camouflaged bunkers. The unit suffered three soldiers killed from 4th Platoon: SP4 Terry L. Larsen, SP4 John E. McCarrell (posthumously promoted to Sergeant and awarded the Silver Star for bravery), and SP4 Aaron L. Rosenstreich; nineteen others were wounded. These would be the first casualties in the battle for Hill 937, soon known to the soldiers as Hamburger Hill. The survivors withdrew, leaving the wounded where they fell. After a quick regrouping, the paratroopers dashed back to retrieve their comrades, but again Communist fire drove them off. The commander of the 3rd Battalion, LTC Weldon F. Honeycutt, ordered Company B to make another assault. Under a curtain of supporting small-arms fire, the soldiers charged the bunkers, passing the bodies of their comrades as they went. By 4:45 PM, they had cleared the enemy from the hillside. Later that evening, helicopters evacuated the wounded, but tragedy struck when a helicopter gunship accidently fired on the battalion command post, killing one, SP4 Clifford K. Taira, and wounding thirty-five. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and “Transition: November 1968-December 1969” by Adrian G. Traas]
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POSTED ON 7.26.2020
POSTED BY: Lucy Micik

Thank You

Dear Sgt John McCarrell, Thank you for your service as an Infantryman. Saying thank you isn't enough, but it is from the heart. Time passes quickly, but our world needs help. Please watch over America, it stills needs your strength, courage, guidance and faithfulness. Rest in peace with the angels.
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