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PFC Thomas Edward Hartung

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PFC Thomas Edward Hartung Veteran

Birth
Illinois, USA
Death
24 Feb 1966 (aged 19)
Vietnam
Burial
Elwood, Will County, Illinois, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section 1 Site 1066
Memorial ID
View Source

PFC Hartung's body was moved from Rock Island National Cemetery to be closer to his family.


Private First Class Thomas Edward Hartung, Served with B Troop, 1st Squadron, 4th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division, United States Army Vietnam


BATTLE AT TAN BINH - FEBRUARY 24, 1966

On February 11, 1966, the 1st Infantry Division launched Operation Rolling Stone, a security mission for the 1st Engineer Battalion as it built an all-weather road linking National Highway QL-13 with Route 16 north of Saigon in Binh Duong Province, RVN. Anticipating a violent response by insurgents, the job was given to the 1st Brigade. At first, all went smoothly, the only adversary the dry season's oppressive heat. Nearly two weeks into the operation, the Viet Cong (VC) struck, massing nearly eighteen hundred soldiers from the VC's 9th Division. The command post for the operation was established outside of Tan Binh, a hamlet just north of the new roadway, three miles west of Route 16. Early on the morning of February 24, 1966, American soldiers at listening posts outside the perimeter detected small groups of VC moving about. One outpost opened fire, killing two enemy soldiers. The action alerted those inside the camp. The VC, however, receded into the night, and for the next forty-five minutes the Americans waited nervously in position. Then, at 1:45 AM, a barrage of mortar and small arms fire shattered the stillness. Over the next hour, the firing gradually intensified until, at 3:00 AM, the enemy shifted fires, now augmented by recoilless rifles, to the northwest side of the perimeter. Fearing a ground assault, the VC held back, intimidated by the American artillery batteries which lowered their tubes and fired directly into enemy positions. As daybreak neared, the VC seemed confused, unwilling either to attack or to withdraw. At 5:30 AM they made their move. But there was no mass assault, only a series of disjointed attacks, none of which contained more than forty soldiers. The Americans repelled them without difficulty, and by 6:45 AM, the insurgents began to withdraw. The battle at Tan Binh cost eleven U.S. dead and seventy-four wounded. The lost personnel included: (1/5 Artillery) PFC George A. Morgan, SGT Willie Pippins Sr., and SSG Cecil Y. Ware; (B/1/28) SP4 James R. Foley, SP4 Gentry Graham, PVT Charles C. Whitfield, and PFC Tommie L. Williams; (B/1-4 Cav) PFC Jimmie L. Foster, SP5 Robert K. Lowe, SP4 Joe C. Lile II, and PFC Thomas E. Hartung; and (A Co, 1 Eng Bn) PFC Donald C. Piper. The cost to the VC was much higher: at least 142 insurgents died in the assault, and blood trails indicated that the toll was probably far higher. [Taken from virtualwall.org and "Stemming the Tide" by John M. Carland] [vvmf.org/wall-of-faces]

PFC Hartung's body was moved from Rock Island National Cemetery to be closer to his family.


Private First Class Thomas Edward Hartung, Served with B Troop, 1st Squadron, 4th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division, United States Army Vietnam


BATTLE AT TAN BINH - FEBRUARY 24, 1966

On February 11, 1966, the 1st Infantry Division launched Operation Rolling Stone, a security mission for the 1st Engineer Battalion as it built an all-weather road linking National Highway QL-13 with Route 16 north of Saigon in Binh Duong Province, RVN. Anticipating a violent response by insurgents, the job was given to the 1st Brigade. At first, all went smoothly, the only adversary the dry season's oppressive heat. Nearly two weeks into the operation, the Viet Cong (VC) struck, massing nearly eighteen hundred soldiers from the VC's 9th Division. The command post for the operation was established outside of Tan Binh, a hamlet just north of the new roadway, three miles west of Route 16. Early on the morning of February 24, 1966, American soldiers at listening posts outside the perimeter detected small groups of VC moving about. One outpost opened fire, killing two enemy soldiers. The action alerted those inside the camp. The VC, however, receded into the night, and for the next forty-five minutes the Americans waited nervously in position. Then, at 1:45 AM, a barrage of mortar and small arms fire shattered the stillness. Over the next hour, the firing gradually intensified until, at 3:00 AM, the enemy shifted fires, now augmented by recoilless rifles, to the northwest side of the perimeter. Fearing a ground assault, the VC held back, intimidated by the American artillery batteries which lowered their tubes and fired directly into enemy positions. As daybreak neared, the VC seemed confused, unwilling either to attack or to withdraw. At 5:30 AM they made their move. But there was no mass assault, only a series of disjointed attacks, none of which contained more than forty soldiers. The Americans repelled them without difficulty, and by 6:45 AM, the insurgents began to withdraw. The battle at Tan Binh cost eleven U.S. dead and seventy-four wounded. The lost personnel included: (1/5 Artillery) PFC George A. Morgan, SGT Willie Pippins Sr., and SSG Cecil Y. Ware; (B/1/28) SP4 James R. Foley, SP4 Gentry Graham, PVT Charles C. Whitfield, and PFC Tommie L. Williams; (B/1-4 Cav) PFC Jimmie L. Foster, SP5 Robert K. Lowe, SP4 Joe C. Lile II, and PFC Thomas E. Hartung; and (A Co, 1 Eng Bn) PFC Donald C. Piper. The cost to the VC was much higher: at least 142 insurgents died in the assault, and blood trails indicated that the toll was probably far higher. [Taken from virtualwall.org and "Stemming the Tide" by John M. Carland] [vvmf.org/wall-of-faces]


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