RANDOLPH M HARRISON
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HONORED ON PANEL 49E, LINE 41 OF THE WALL

RANDOLPH MONROE HARRISON

WALL NAME

RANDOLPH M HARRISON

PANEL / LINE

49E/41

DATE OF BIRTH

11/03/1943

CASUALTY PROVINCE

QUANG TIN

DATE OF CASUALTY

04/13/1968

HOME OF RECORD

NITRO

COUNTY OF RECORD

Putnam County

STATE

WV

BRANCH OF SERVICE

ARMY

RANK

1LT

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Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR RANDOLPH MONROE HARRISON
POSTED ON 10.14.2023
POSTED BY: Sandy Winn

Homecoming at West Virginia Tech

Memories of that special Homecoming weekend ... double dating with Suzie & Jim... Sadly missed. Sandy
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POSTED ON 1.1.2023
POSTED BY: John Fabris

honoring you...

Remember to 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...
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POSTED ON 11.3.2022
POSTED BY: Jury Washington

Thank You For Your Valiant Service Soldier.

May those who served never be forgotten. Rest in peace 1LT. Harrison, I salute your brave soul. My heart goes out to you and your family.
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POSTED ON 11.3.2022
POSTED BY: Dennis Wriston

I'm Proud of Our Vietnam Veterans

First Lieutenant Randolph Monroe Harrison, Served with Company A, 3rd Battalion, 21st Infantry Regiment, 196th Infantry Brigade, Americal Division, United States Army Vietnam. Montani Semper Liberi !
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POSTED ON 8.5.2022

Final Mission of 1LT Randolph M. Harrison

Just after midnight on April 13, 1968, E Company, 3rd Battalion, 21st Infantry, 196th Infantry Brigade, Americal Division, was in an overnight position on a plateau east of LZ Center in Quang Tin Province, RVN, when they were attacked by a large enemy force. E Company, a reconnaissance unit with an attached platoon (2nd Platoon) from A/3/21, pulled in its forward observation posts after taking three rounds of mortar fire. Ten minutes later, heavy fire from the south raked the formation as small arms fire and hand grenades hit the U.S. position. Shortly after, a ground attack was launched by the enemy. The Americans fought back with unit weapons and called in gun and flare ship support. The attack aircraft came on station at 12:50 AM, including a U.S. Air Force AC-47 “Spooky” gunship; the enemy, meanwhile, brought up heavy machine guns and sprayed the aircraft with automatic weapons fire from four locations. After nearly an hour and a half of fighting, the enemy broke contact. At 1:30 AM, E/3/21 radioed that enemy fire had diminished, and no shots had been fired for thirty minutes. A Company, 3/21, acting as a reaction force, cut a trail through dense jungle to the besieged company’s location. Upon arrival, they found E Company in disarray. The battle was over, but they discovered the men had failed to dig in, and when attacked, were dispersed in a disordered manner to find cover. It was difficult in the darkness for the reaction force to find and treat the wounded, collect the dead, and organize medivacs. By daylight, all were accounted for except one, radioman SP4 Warren J. Robinson. His remains were located in a burnt out hootch on the plateau and were placed in a poncho and evacuated. The enemy force, later estimated at two Viet Cong companies, killed thirteen Americans and wounded twenty-eight. Another two sustained minor injuries. The lost personnel included (from E/3/21) SP4 John M. Bell, PFC James L. Parker Jr., SGT Paul E. Poirier, SP4 Alfred L. Powell, SGT Grady Thacker, SP4 Juan P. Valdez, and PFC George E. Winfield; and (from 2nd Platoon, A/3/21) PVT Roland L. Ballew, PFC Agapito Gonzales Jr., 1LT Randolph M. Harrison, PFC Douglas R. Heath, SSG Ernest E. Lesure, and SP4 Warren J. Robinson. Six Viet Cong were reported killed. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org, “April 1968 Americal Division TOC Journal” at americalfoundation.org and information provided by William Karp (July 2022)]
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