ROBERT J ROSENOW
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HONORED ON PANEL 23W, LINE 18 OF THE WALL

ROBERT JAMES ROSENOW

WALL NAME

ROBERT J ROSENOW

PANEL / LINE

23W/18

DATE OF BIRTH

08/10/1948

CASUALTY PROVINCE

GIA DINH

DATE OF CASUALTY

05/29/1969

HOME OF RECORD

LA FARGE

COUNTY OF RECORD

Vernon County

STATE

WI

BRANCH OF SERVICE

ARMY

RANK

CPL

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Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR ROBERT JAMES ROSENOW
POSTED ON 11.3.2023
POSTED BY: john fabris

we will remember

They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning,
We will remember them.
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POSTED ON 10.16.2021
POSTED BY: Lucy Micik

Thank You

Dear Cpl Robert Rosenow, Thank you for your service as an Infantryman. Saying thank you isn't enough, but it is from the heart. It is Agent Orange Awareness month. Time passes quickly. Please watch over America, it stills needs your strength, courage, guidance, and faithfulness, especially now. Rest in peace with the angels.
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POSTED ON 11.30.2018

Final Mission of PFC Robert J. Rosenow

On the evening of May 29-30, 1969, a squad-sized element of the 3rd Brigade, U.S. 82nd Airborne Division was conducting an ambush patrol when they were attacked shortly after midnight by an unknown size enemy force with rocket-propelled grenades, small arms fire, and hand grenades. Seven Americans were killed in the assault. An eighth trooper died after he managed to make his way away from the action but wandered into an ambush site established by another U.S. Army patrol. The lost personnel, all from B Company, 2/505th Infantry, were PFC James W. Clay, PFC Cris Holliday, PFC Herman L. Judy Jr., 1LT Richard L. Patterson, PFC Joe Rodriguez, and PFC Robert J. Rosenow; the friendly-fire victim was PFC Harry Massey. An article from Pacific Stars & Stripes dated June 8, 1969, reported on U.S. military denials of the “assassination” of the eight B/2-505th soldiers after a U.S. television network broadcast that the enemy came upon the American ambush patrol as they slept and that no one came to their aid. According to the military, another patrol from the same company heard the firing from 1,800 feet away and came to assist. Furthermore, the military insisted that there was “no indication that any personnel were killed by a bullet to the back of the head.” Military officials said they pieced together their account of the incident after interviewing three survivors of the patrol. Four of the troopers, Holliday, Judy, Rodriguez, and Rosenow, were posthumously promoted to Corporal. For members of B Company who served with those from the lost squad, they had their own ideas of what happened. On the morning before the ill-fated patrol went out, one of their senior squad leaders was sent to the rear to have two teeth extracted. He returned to the firebase in significant pain and bleeding gums. His Platoon leader, a Lieutenant, told him he would stay in that night while his squad, call sign Tiger, was sent out on ambush. Insisting on going out with his squad, the Lieutenant ordered him to stay behind. The squad leader remained on the perimeter of the base while Tiger set up about a half-mile out. What he feared occurred is that they set up in daylight but failed to move to a different location after dark as was standard procedure since the enemy is always watching. He believes the Lieutenant, who had only been in country a short time and was with Tiger on ambush, made the fatal mistake of remaining in place. Three senior members of the squad probably didn’t challenge him because he was the Platoon leader. At about midnight, gunfire and explosions were heard, and the white tracers of the enemy could be seen from the firebase as Tiger was attacked from three sides by a probable North Vietnamese Army sapper team. A small reaction force from the base went out immediately to assist, but it was too late. To this day, Tiger’s senior squad leader still carries guilt that he was not with his men that night. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and “Military Denies TV Report Of Assassination of 8 GIs.” Pacific Stars & Stripes, June 8, 1969; also from information provided by Jim Maskell (November 2018)]
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POSTED ON 6.20.2018
POSTED BY: Daniel Cogné

we remember

PFC Rosenow is buried at Forest-Burr Cemetery
Hillsboro, Vernon County, Wisconsin, USA
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POSTED ON 8.10.2016
POSTED BY: Dennis Wriston

I'm proud of our Vietnam Veterans

Corporal Robert James Rosenow, Served with Company B, 2nd Battalion, 505th Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division.
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