GLEN A ZEIGLER
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HONORED ON PANEL 34E, LINE 26 OF THE WALL

GLEN ALLEN ZEIGLER

WALL NAME

GLEN A ZEIGLER

PANEL / LINE

34E/26

DATE OF BIRTH

12/04/1946

CASUALTY PROVINCE

GO CONG

DATE OF CASUALTY

01/10/1968

HOME OF RECORD

MANNING

COUNTY OF RECORD

Clarendon County

STATE

SC

BRANCH OF SERVICE

ARMY

RANK

SP4

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Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR GLEN ALLEN ZEIGLER
POSTED ON 4.3.2024
POSTED BY: John Fabris

honoring you.....

“Those who have long enjoyed such privileges as we enjoy forget in time that men have died to win them.” Franklin Delano Roosevelt
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POSTED ON 3.20.2023
POSTED BY: Lucy Micik

Thank You

Dear Sp4 Glen Zeigler Thank you for your service as an Infantryman. The 56th anniversary of the start of your tour is in 8 days. Saying thank you isn't enough, but it is from the heart. Today, spring begins, and it is Lent. 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 2.17.2023

Final Mission of SP4 Glen A. Zeigler

On January 10, 1968, Mobile Riverine soldiers of the U.S. Army’s 9th Infantry Division’s 2nd Brigade engaged in bitter fighting in the Cai Be District in western Dinh Tuong Province, approximately fifty miles southwest of Saigon. The contact targeted the 261st Main Force (VC) Battalion, considered the best equipped and toughest enemy force in the Mekong Delta. The fighting broke out shortly after 1:00 PM as A Company, 3rd Battalion, 60th Infantry was inserted by helicopter and met stiff resistance when landed in a VC base area. The Americans were caught out in the open by the VC's well-prepared, camouflaged positions and sustained moderate casualties from automatic weapons, small arms, and rifle grenade fire. C Company, 3/60th immediately moved overland toward the battleground and ran into a VC platoon headed in the opposite direction. The U.S. troops forced the enemy to return southward where they were pounded by artillery and air strikes. As the battle progressed into the late afternoon, all elements of 3/60th and the 4/47th plus Company A, 3/47th were drawn into positions completely encircling the enemy forces. Contact ranged from sporadic to heavy until 10:30 PM. Just before midnight, a flotilla of fleeing enemy sampans was hit by U.S. gunship and artillery fire. When the combat ceased, twenty-six enemy bodies were found. Continued sweep operations the next day located twenty-one fresh graves believed to have been from the sampan engagement. U.S. losses were nineteen killed and fifty wounded. The lost personnel included (3rd Bn, 34th Arty) 1LT Edward W. Argy, PVT Norman W. Bates, and PFC Gordon L. Goins (posthumously promoted to Corporal); (HHC, 3/60th) medic PFC Lee R. Birden; (A-3/60th) PFC William B. Cameron, PFC Herman R. Fletcher, SGT David H. Hershberger, SGT Anthony J. Lederer, 1LT Harry P. McFalls, PVT Richard W. Shiver, and SP4 Glen A. Zeigler; (C-3/60th) PFC William M. Bridgeford, SSG Willie J. Cottrell, PFC David C. Daily (posthumously promoted to Corporal), SGT Henry J. Doneski, PFC Alex J. Hernandez, SSG Robert L. Hutchison, and SP4 Robert I. Moore; (43rd Inf Plt Scout Dog) SGT Bobby D. Crawford; and (240th Assault Helicopter Company) SP5 Martin D. Klann, the crew chief of a UH-1H (#66-16185) helicopter hit in flight by groundfire. Klann was taken to the 24th Evacuation Hospital where he expired. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and “MRF soldiers slay 47 enemy in Delta.” The Old Reliable (9th Inf Div publication), January 24, 1968]
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POSTED ON 12.4.2021
POSTED BY: Jury Washington

Thank You For Your Valiant Service Soldier.

May those who served never be forgotten. Rest in peace SP4. Zeigler, I salute your brave soul. My heart goes out to you and your family.
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POSTED ON 12.3.2021
POSTED BY: Donna Moore

Happy Heavenly Birthday

You will forever remain in our hearts and prayers
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