WILLIAM R CLEMENTS
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HONORED ON PANEL 11E, LINE 106 OF THE WALL

WILLIAM RICHARD CLEMENTS

WALL NAME

WILLIAM R CLEMENTS

PANEL / LINE

11E/106

DATE OF BIRTH

02/25/1940

CASUALTY PROVINCE

NZ

DATE OF CASUALTY

10/26/1966

HOME OF RECORD

HAYWARD

COUNTY OF RECORD

Alameda County

STATE

CA

BRANCH OF SERVICE

NAVY

RANK

LTJG

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Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR WILLIAM RICHARD CLEMENTS
POSTED ON 11.20.2021
POSTED BY: John Fabris

honoring you...

Thank you for your service to our country so long ago sir. May you rest in eternal peace.
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POSTED ON 4.23.2021
POSTED BY: Richard Ross

VAW-11 Shipmate

I remember talking to Lt Clements the day before the fire. We were discussing the possibility of extending my enlistment. I was an electronics technician and this was my 3rd cruise to Vietnam. I did not extend my enlistment and entered in to civilian life. Rest in peace my friend.
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POSTED ON 12.12.2017
POSTED BY: Lucy Conte Micik

THANK YOU

Dear LT JG William Clements,
Thank you for your service as a Restricted Line Officer (Aviation Maintenance Officer) from the U.S.S. ORISKANY. December has begun, along with all the preparations. It is so important for us all to acknowledge the sacrifices of those like you who answered our nation's call. Please watch over America, it stills needs your strength, courage and faithfulness. Rest in peace with the angels.
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POSTED ON 8.19.2017

Casualty at Sea

On October 26, 1966, there was a flare fire aboard the aircraft carrier USS Oriskany operating in the Gulf of Tonkin off the coast of Vietnam. Two sailors were re-stowing unexpended MK-24 Mod 3 flares when one was accidentally dropped. The igniter had not been reset to SAFE. As it fell, the safety lanyard was inadvertently pulled, actuating the flare. For reasons known only to him, one of the sailors picked up the armed flare, threw it into the magazine locker, and closed the door. Some 2.75-inch rocket warheads loaded with Composition B were stowed in the locker. Shortly after the flare ignited in the locker, the intense heat caused a 2.75 rocket warhead in the locker to detonate, sending fire and smoke into the hangar bay. This was followed by a second warhead explosion that spread fire throughout the entire hangar deck and in the forward portion of the ship. Finally, heat caused a liquid oxygen tank to explode. Before the fires were completely under control, 44 sailors had died (43 from asphyxiation and one from burns) and 156 had been injured. Beside the material damage to the ship, two helicopters and an A-4E aircraft were destroyed and three A-4E aircraft were damaged. The estimated cost of the material damage was $11 million. The following officers and men of Oriskany died in or as a result of the fires: CDR Jack H. Harris, CDR Richard E. Donahue, CDR Harry W. Juntilla (DOW 10/31/66), LCDR William J. Garrity Jr., LCDR Walter F. Merrick, LCDR Omar R. Ford, LT Frank M. Gardner, LTJG Dewey L. Alexander, LTJG Ramon A. Copple, LTJG James B. Hudis, LTJG James A. Kelly Jr., LTJG Franklin M. Tunick, BM3 Donald W. Shanks, BM3 Alvin M. Shifflett Jr., SN Robert L. Dyke, SN James K. Gray, SN James A. Lee, FN William Walling, AA Greg E. Hart, CDR Rodney B. Carter, LT Lloyd P. Hyde, LTJG William R. Clements, CDR George K. Farris, LCDR James A. Smith, LT John F. Francis, CDR John J. Nussbaumer, AZAN David A. Liste, LCDR Clement J. Morisette, LT Clarence D. Miller, LTJG Thomas E. Spitzer, ENS Ronald E. Tardio, CDR Clyde R. Welch, LCDR Daniel L. Strong, LTJG James L. Brewer, LTJG William A. Johnson, LCDR Norman S. Levy, LTJG Cody A. Balisteri, LTJG William G. McWilliams III, ENS Charles W. Boggs, LT Josslyn F. Blakely Jr., LT Julian D. Hammond Jr., LTJG Gerald W. Siebe, LTJG James R. Welsh, and ENS Daniel O. Kern. [Taken from insensitivemunitions.org and virtualwall.org]
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POSTED ON 5.19.2017
POSTED BY: James P. Harter

William Richard Clements

Bill died in the fire on the USS Oriskany in 1966. Bill and I were on different detachments of VAW-11, and I was on the USS Constellation on station a short distance from the Oriskany at the time of the fire, we could see it burning. It was only later we learned that Bill was one of those killed. May his memory live on.
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