HONORED ON PANEL 41E, LINE 44 OF THE WALL
ROY STEPHEN SPURGEON
WALL NAME
ROY S SPURGEON
PANEL / LINE
41E/44
DATE OF BIRTH
CASUALTY PROVINCE
DATE OF CASUALTY
HOME OF RECORD
COUNTY OF RECORD
STATE
BRANCH OF SERVICE
RANK
REMEMBRANCES
LEFT FOR ROY STEPHEN SPURGEON
POSTED ON 1.9.2024
POSTED BY: John Fabris
honoring you.....
Thank you for your service to our country so long ago sir. You died at 18 years of age. I am 74 and have lived a long and fulfilling life. It is tragic you never had that same opportunity. May you rest in eternal peace.
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POSTED ON 4.25.2022
POSTED BY: Lucy Micik
Thank You
Dear PFC Roy Spurgeon, Thank you for your service as a Rifleman. Saying thank you isn't enough, but it is from the heart. Happy Spring. Time moves 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 7.18.2020
POSTED BY: ANON
Never forgotten
On the remembrance of your birthday, your sacrifice is not forgotten.
Forever 18.
Semper Fi, Marine.
Forever 18.
Semper Fi, Marine.
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POSTED ON 6.25.2019
POSTED BY: [email protected]
Misadventure (Friendly Fire)
PFC William M. Bagshaw, PFC Roy S. Spurgeon, and PFC Miles B. Stuart were riflemen, and PFC Michael S. Garrett a machine gunner, all serving with Hotel Company, 2nd Battalion, 5th Marines, 1st Marine Division in the Battle for Hue in Thua Thien Province, RVN, during the 1968 Tet Offensive. On the afternoon of February 26, 1968, H Company was engaged by North Vietnamese Army and Viet Cong soldiers firing automatic weapons and small arms mixed with dozens of rounds of 60mm mortar fire. The Marines returned fire and placed 40 rounds of high explosive 81mm mortar of the NVA/VC positions. A Forward Air Controller, Trail 30, came on station above H Company, and directed two flights of Marine A-4 Skyhawk attack jets, call signs Hellborne 532 and 533 from Marine Attack Squadron 121 (VMA-121), which dropped 20 MK-81 Snake Eye 250lb. bombs on the enemy positions. The grid coordinates cited in 2nd Battalion, 5th Marines Command Chronology after-action reports indicate that the Marines were within 100 meters of the enemy positions when the air strikes were authorized by the ground commander, whose judgement undoubtedly was that the known risk from enemy machine guns and mortars outweighed the potential risk of friendly-fire casualties. Twenty-one NVA/VC combatants were killed in the strike; however, fragments from the exploding ordinance hit Marine positions, killing Bagshaw, Spurgeon, Stuart, and Garrett. Hotel Company's Commanding Officer both won and lost in the engagement—the strikes destroyed men and weapons which could have inflicted heavy losses on his Marines but at the cost of four Marines dead and two more wounded. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and virtualwall.org]
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