HONORED ON PANEL 54W, LINE 35 OF THE WALL
ALBERT LEROY BROMLEY
WALL NAME
ALBERT L BROMLEY
PANEL / LINE
54W/35
DATE OF BIRTH
CASUALTY PROVINCE
DATE OF CASUALTY
HOME OF RECORD
COUNTY OF RECORD
STATE
BRANCH OF SERVICE
RANK
REMEMBRANCES
LEFT FOR ALBERT LEROY BROMLEY
POSTED ON 8.6.2005
POSTED BY: Bob Pries, B Company, 2nd/47th Mech Inf
2nd/47th Mech Infantry Honors Fallen Brother
To: Albert Leroy Bromley, our 2nd/47th Brother,
We who served so proudly with you want to let you know that we have established a Memorial Scholarship to honor your memory and the ultimate sacrifice that you and the other 195 brave soldiers of the 2nd/47th Mechanized Infantry made while serving our country in Vietnam in 1966-1970.
Our wish is that this Memorial Scholarship conveys the highest tribute possible to each of you because it comes from the hearts of the soldiers who served with you. It represents the everlasting and inexpressible gratitude we feel for your sacrifice. We got to live the lives that you were deprived of, and this scholarship is one small way of expressing our sorrow for your loss and our appreciation for the magnitude of what you gave. Many of you brave young soldiers sacrificed your own lives to save one of us, and we have carried heartfelt memories of you for nearly four decades. This perpetual Memorial Scholarship is our way of being sure that the memories of love, honor, and respect we feel for you, our Panther Brothers lost in combat, will live on forever.
If you are a 2nd/47th veteran, or a friend or family member of one of our fallen Brothers, and would like more information about how to support or apply for our Memorial Scholarship, information is available at www.angelfire.com/tx3/247infantry/.
We who served so proudly with you want to let you know that we have established a Memorial Scholarship to honor your memory and the ultimate sacrifice that you and the other 195 brave soldiers of the 2nd/47th Mechanized Infantry made while serving our country in Vietnam in 1966-1970.
Our wish is that this Memorial Scholarship conveys the highest tribute possible to each of you because it comes from the hearts of the soldiers who served with you. It represents the everlasting and inexpressible gratitude we feel for your sacrifice. We got to live the lives that you were deprived of, and this scholarship is one small way of expressing our sorrow for your loss and our appreciation for the magnitude of what you gave. Many of you brave young soldiers sacrificed your own lives to save one of us, and we have carried heartfelt memories of you for nearly four decades. This perpetual Memorial Scholarship is our way of being sure that the memories of love, honor, and respect we feel for you, our Panther Brothers lost in combat, will live on forever.
If you are a 2nd/47th veteran, or a friend or family member of one of our fallen Brothers, and would like more information about how to support or apply for our Memorial Scholarship, information is available at www.angelfire.com/tx3/247infantry/.
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POSTED ON 2.12.2005
POSTED BY: Robert Sage
We Remember
Albert is buried at Beverly Nat Cem.
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POSTED ON 12.26.2004
POSTED BY: Jim McIlhenney
The Philadelphia Inquirer - July 9, 1968
Army Sp/5 Albert L. Bromley, 19, son of Mrs. Leona Patrie, 605 Union square, Woodlyn.
Sp/5 Bromley wrote his mother from the battlefront that he would be "glad to get out of this hellhole." He was killed last Thursday when a convoy truck he was driving set off an enemy land mine.
Bromley completed his junior year at Interboro High School, Glenolden, and qualified for his diploma while in the service.
He trained at Fort Bragg, N.C., and Aberdeen, Md., before he was sent overseas, first to Germany and, in October of last year, to Vietnam. He was a mechanic in the 47th Infantry Division, based in Saigon.
Sp/5 Bromley wrote his mother from the battlefront that he would be "glad to get out of this hellhole." He was killed last Thursday when a convoy truck he was driving set off an enemy land mine.
Bromley completed his junior year at Interboro High School, Glenolden, and qualified for his diploma while in the service.
He trained at Fort Bragg, N.C., and Aberdeen, Md., before he was sent overseas, first to Germany and, in October of last year, to Vietnam. He was a mechanic in the 47th Infantry Division, based in Saigon.
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POSTED ON 9.7.2004
POSTED BY: BARBARA CHRISTI
TO MY BROTHER
IT'S BEEN 35YRS AND I STILL MISS YOUR WARM EMBRACE, THE FUNNY WAY OF MAKING ME LAUGH.YOU ARE ALWAY IN MY THOUGHTS.. YOUR SISTER BARB
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