JACK C BOGARD
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HONORED ON PANEL 37E, LINE 31 OF THE WALL

JACK CROSBY BOGARD

WALL NAME

JACK C BOGARD

PANEL / LINE

37E/31

DATE OF BIRTH

12/16/1946

CASUALTY PROVINCE

QUANG TRI

DATE OF CASUALTY

02/05/1968

HOME OF RECORD

SYCAMORE

COUNTY OF RECORD

Wyandot County

STATE

OH

BRANCH OF SERVICE

MARINE CORPS

RANK

PFC

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Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR JACK CROSBY BOGARD
POSTED ON 11.13.2022

Battle for Hill 861A - February 5, 1968

Khe Sanh Combat Base was a U.S. Marine Corps outpost south of the Vietnamese Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) in Quang Tri Province, RVN. Several thousand yards from its perimeter, hills 881 South, 861, 861A, and 558 figured prominently in the defense of the base. In early February 1968, Company E, 2nd Battalion, 26th Marines held Hill 861A. When they arrived, the area was nothing more than elephant grass and blown-out banana trees. After a week of working on their defenses, the company had completed some sand bagging, dug a waist-deep trench, and installed a roll of concertina wire around the perimeter. Time had not permitted for the construction of overhead bunkers. Around 2:00 AM on February 5th, listening posts about 30 yards out detected movement. The four-man teams were pulled in, and the 100+ Marines and Navy corpsmen on 861A hunkered down as several hundred North Vietnamese Army (NVA) troops surrounded their position. A sapper unit armed with Chicom grenades and Bangalore torpedoes struck first, followed by an infantry attack. The company mortar section fired 60mm mortars and artillery from Khe Sanh Combat Base helped disorganize and disperse the enemy. A U.S. Air Force AC-47 “Spooky” gunship came overhead but withheld firing due to heavy fog. By 6:30 AM, Company E had beaten back the attack using small arms, M79 fire, and aggressive hand-to-hand combat. Accounts of CS (tear gas) grenades being deployed was erroneously reported; the gas was discharged but after the canisters were hit by frags from enemy mortars requiring some Marine to temporarily don masks. Seven Americans died in the fighting and twenty-four were wounded. The lost personnel included PFC Jack C. Bogard, LCPL Tyrone F. Lamitie, LCPL Joseph A. Molettiere, LCPL Louis F. Staples, PFC Martin L. Rimson (died of wounds after evacuation), PFC Alan R. Smith, PFC Charles R. Stevenson, and PFC Ernest V. Taylor. Marine CH-46 helicopters arrived at first light and carried the dead and wounded to the 3rd Medical Battalion station at Khe Sanh, later transferred to the hospital at Dong Ha or naval hospital ships offshore. NVA losses were reported at 109 killed; however, Marines present at the battle believe this to be an exaggeration and recall a much lower number. Engineers brought C4 explosive up to the hill that they used to blow open a pit where they buried the enemy bodies. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org, historynet.com, virtualwall.org, and information provided by Doug Simons (November 2022)]
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POSTED ON 2.15.2022
POSTED BY: Doug Simons

My Marine Brother and friend

I was with Jack the 5th of Feb 1968. Jack was a great man, a great Marine and a great friend. You are not forgotten. Semper Fi Sgt/Maj Doug Simons USMC e-mail [email protected]
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POSTED ON 12.9.2021
POSTED BY: ANON

75

Never forgotten.

Semper Fi, Marine
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POSTED ON 9.12.2021
POSTED BY: John Fabris

honoring you...

Thank you for your service to our country so long ago sir. The remembrance from your cousin is especially poignant. As long as you are remembered you will remain in our hearts forever...
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POSTED ON 12.12.2020
POSTED BY: ANON

Never forgotten

On the remembrance of your 74th birthday, your sacrifice is not forgotten.

Semper Fi, Marine.
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