EVERETT L ANDERSON
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HONORED ON PANEL 1E, LINE 88 OF THE WALL

EVERETT LEE ANDERSON

WALL NAME

EVERETT L ANDERSON

PANEL / LINE

1E/88

DATE OF BIRTH

05/03/1932

CASUALTY PROVINCE

PR & MR UNKNOWN

DATE OF CASUALTY

02/10/1965

HOME OF RECORD

NEW HAVEN

COUNTY OF RECORD

New Haven County

STATE

CT

BRANCH OF SERVICE

ARMY

RANK

SP5

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Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR EVERETT LEE ANDERSON
POSTED ON 2.6.2024

Attack on the Viet Cuong Hotel - February 10, 1965

On the evening of February 10, 1965, the bachelor’s enlisted men’s quarters for the 140th Transportation Detachment (Cargo Helicopter Field Maintenance) at the Viet Cuong Hotel in Qui Nhon in Binh Dinh Province, RVN, was the target of a Viet Cong (VC) terrorist attack. At 8:05 PM, two VC killed the South Vietnamese guards posted outside the building enabling two more VC to place satchel charges at the main door. A 100-pound plastic charge destroyed the central staircase supporting the hotel. Lacking reinforced concrete or reinforcing bars, the four-story building immediately crumbled into a pile of rubble 30 feet high. Forty-three men were in their rooms or the bar on the ground floor when the blast occurred. Effective rescue operations were delayed until dawn after the VC took out the local power station causing a blackout. Without proper equipment, recovery of the trapped enlisted men moved slowly. Rescuers dug for eight straight hours while trapped men cried out for their mothers, putting some rescuers in tears while searching for them. One rescuer was awarded the Silver Star medal for risking his life crawling through the twisted wreckage as it shifted and settled. It took 35 hours before the last trapped American was taken out alive. A total of 23 GI’s were killed. All but one belonged to the 140th Transportation Detachment. The other was a Green Beret whose remains took six days to find. Special Forces Staff Sergeant Merle O. Van Alstine, on his third tour of Vietnam, was in the bar when the attack occurred. He reportedly engaged two VC on a motorbike with his sidearm seconds before the explosion. In addition, seven South Vietnamese women and children were killed by the explosion. The lost U.S. personnel included SP5 James B. Alexander Jr., SP5 Everett L. Anderson, PFC Paul E. Bays, SP4 Tommy J. Belcher, PFC Robert J. Betz, SP5 David N. Clayton, SP5 Clarence L Coleman, PFC Delmer L. Ferris, SP5 Glenn H. Kelley, PFC Dallas Lawson, PFC Larry B. McClanahan, SP5 Robert S Mosier, PFC Walter L. Rickard, SP5 Harry E. Rowley, SP5 Ernest M. Schultz, PFC Peter A. Semmer (died of injuries 02/11/1965), SP4 Robert L. Simon, SP4 Harry L. Summers, SSG Francis J. Valkos, SSG Merle O. Van Alstine, PVT Melvin L. Waters, SP4 Lavon S. Wilson, and PFC Floyd Wynn. All 21 of the surviving 140th members required evacuation stateside for their injuries. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and a VFW Magazine article by Richard Fournier (February 2015)]
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POSTED ON 3.26.2021
POSTED BY: John Fabris

honoring you....

Do not stand at my grave and weep
I am not there; I do not sleep.
I am a thousand winds that blow,
I am the diamond glints on snow,
I am the sun on ripened grain,
I am the gentle autumn rain.
When you awaken in the morning's hush
I am the swift uplifting rush
Of quiet birds in circled flight.
I am the soft stars that shine at night.
Do not stand at my grave and cry,
I am not there; I did not die.
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POSTED ON 1.20.2021
POSTED BY: mikedanz

I have read thru all that have said your name in remanber.

Everett, your are my uncle, my mothers brother.I can not walk the wall,it is to pain full.only your name gives me the will to have to do this.your loss to this family is never forgotten.Do I know a name on the wall, For ever in my soul, Everett lee Anderson,rest in peace, soldier.
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POSTED ON 1.18.2021
POSTED BY: Ann Butler

MY UNCLE

Everett was my uncle my mother Joan Danz was his sister.You are remembered in our hearts every day even though it’s been a long time we love you and we are so proud of you rest in peace love you.
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POSTED ON 5.25.2019
POSTED BY: Roderick Bertrand

My great uncle.

Everett was my great uncle. I followed in his army aviation footsteps. RIP.
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