VALENTINE TUCKER
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HONORED ON PANEL 51W, LINE 36 OF THE WALL

VALENTINE TUCKER

WALL NAME

VALENTINE TUCKER

PANEL / LINE

51W/36

DATE OF BIRTH

03/21/1938

CASUALTY PROVINCE

BINH DINH

DATE OF CASUALTY

07/22/1968

HOME OF RECORD

CHICAGO

COUNTY OF RECORD

Cook County

STATE

IL

BRANCH OF SERVICE

ARMY

RANK

SSGT

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Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR VALENTINE TUCKER
POSTED ON 12.6.2023
POSTED BY: john fabris

honoring you.....

Thank you for your service to our country so long ago sir. The remembrance from your son Darryl is moving and reflects his enduring love for you. As long as you are remembered you will remain in our hearts forever….
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POSTED ON 8.26.2022
POSTED BY: Lucy Micik

Thank You

Dear SSgt Valentine Tucker, Thank you for your service as a Heavy Construction Equipment Operator. 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 still needs your strength, courage, guidance and faithfulness, especially now. Rest in peace with the angels.
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POSTED ON 3.8.2022
POSTED BY: Heavenly Tucker-Fontimayor

I’m proud you are being remembered

Herman Tucker was your big brother and my grand father. I remember him telling me about his younger brother killed in Vietnam. Im proud of you. Im so glad you are being remembered. I will tell your story to my children.
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POSTED ON 6.26.2021

Final Mission of SSG Valentine Tucker

During the summer of 1968, the 19th Engineer Battalion was tasked with upgrading National Highway QL-1 between Bong Son and Mo Duc, RVN. The work included road-widening, bridge building, and placing a sand-asphalt seal coat on a forty-kilometer stretch of QL-1. North Vietnamese Army and Viet Cong forces were active in the area, and frequent contact with the enemy occurred. On the afternoon of July 22, 1968, elements of the 137th Engineer Company were traveling on QL-1 near Dai Duong, three miles south of Tam Quan, when they were caught in an ambush. The 4:15 PM attack raked the convoy with intense fire from the east and west sides of the highway. The engineers fought back with unit weapons and radioed for assistance. Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) armored personnel carriers, gunships, aerial rocket ships, and artillery were called in on the area; however, due to the intense enemy contact, the ambush site could not be immediately reached. The 137th suffered devastating personnel losses with twelve killed. They were PVT George N. Davis, SSG Hugh M. Davis, 1LT David M. Drob, CPT Siegfried L. Graebner, SP4 David B. Kelley, PFC Gerald D. Kiesling, SP5 Roger D. Shafer, SP4 William L. Shrum, SP4 Jerry L. Shultz, SSG Valentine Tucker, PFC Marc G. Van Dalsem, and SGT Gary R. Willeke. A thirteenth engineer was wounded, and two ARVN’s were reportedly killed. The equipment losses included one lowboy trailer with a 5000-gallon tank, another lowboy trailer carrying a D7 dozer, two jeeps, and one three-quarter-ton truck. A reaction force consisting of one platoon from E Company, 17th Cavalry, and another platoon from A Company, 137th Engineer Company, finally reached the ambush site at 11:00 PM and retrieved the dead and wounded. They were unable to ascertain whether the casualties were wearing flak jackets or steel helmets during the attack as all the bodies had been stripped of their gear by the enemy. The twelve men killed during the ambush was one of the largest single engineer event losses during the Vietnam War. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and “19th Engineer Battalion United States Army” at 19engrvn.org]
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POSTED ON 3.20.2021
POSTED BY: Donna Moore

Happy Heavenly Birthday

You will forever remain in our hearts and prayers
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