LARRY A WOODBURN
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HONORED ON PANEL 5W, LINE 80 OF THE WALL

LARRY ALBERT WOODBURN

WALL NAME

LARRY A WOODBURN

PANEL / LINE

5W/80

DATE OF BIRTH

12/04/1950

CASUALTY PROVINCE

QUANG NAM

DATE OF CASUALTY

02/05/1971

HOME OF RECORD

SILVER SPRING

COUNTY OF RECORD

Montgomery County

STATE

MD

BRANCH OF SERVICE

MARINE CORPS

RANK

PFC

Book a time
Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR LARRY ALBERT WOODBURN
POSTED ON 2.5.2015
POSTED BY: A Marine, USMC, Vietnam

Semper Fi

Semper Fi, Marine.
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POSTED ON 11.12.2013
POSTED BY: Curt Carter [email protected]

Remembering An American Hero

Dear PFC Larry Albert Woodburn, sir

As an American, I would like to thank you for your service and for your sacrifice made on behalf of our wonderful country. The youth of today could gain much by learning of heroes such as yourself, men and women whose courage and heart can never be questioned.

May God allow you to read this, and may He allow me to someday shake your hand when I get to Heaven to personally thank you. May he also allow my father to find you and shake your hand now to say thank you; for America, and for those who love you.

With respect, and the best salute a civilian can muster for you, Sir

Curt Carter
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POSTED ON 7.24.2012
POSTED BY: jim ligman

16 hours before

There were three of us in the



hole that morning.Woody has been at peace for 41 years now.I still search for ken



tucker.I have been wanting to



let his family know he never felt anything, it happened so



fast.

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POSTED ON 10.24.2011
POSTED BY: Robert Sager

We Remember

Larry is buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
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POSTED ON 1.11.2006
POSTED BY: Bill Nelson

Never Forgotten

FOREVER REMEMBERED

"If you are able, 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.....Be not ashamed to say you loved them....
Take what they have left and what they have taught you with their dying and keep it with your own....And in that time when men decide and feel safe to call the war insane, take one moment to embrace those gentle heroes you left behind...."

Quote from a letter home by Maj. Michael Davis O'Donnell
KIA 24 March 1970. Distinguished Flying Cross: Shot down and Killed while attempting to rescue 8 fellow soldiers surrounded by attacking enemy forces.

We Nam Brothers pause to give a backward glance, and post this remembrance to you, one of the gentle heroes lost to the War in Vietnam:

Slip off that pack. Set it down by the crooked trail. Drop your steel pot alongside. Shed those magazine-ladened bandoliers away from your sweat-soaked shirt. Lay that silent weapon down and step out of the heat. Feel the soothing cool breeze right down to your soul ... and rest forever in the shade of our love, brother.

From your Nam-Band-Of-Brothers

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