Ernest William Strehle
Corporal
F CO, 2ND BN, 4TH MARINES, 3RD MARDIV, III MAF United States Marine Corps Mundelein, Illinois April 10, 1946 to June 25, 1966 ERNEST W STREHLE is on the Wall at Panel 8E, Line 95 |
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Cpl Strehle was the company armorer with Golf 2/1 and then G 2/1 was redesignated F 2/4. He was killed in action on Operation JAY, earning the Silver Star for his bravery that day. We miss him.
From a Marine brother, |
A Note from The Virtual WallOperation JAY was a joint ARVN/USMC search and destroy mission in Thua Thien Province aimed at rooting out the 806th and 812th VC Main Force Battalions. The operation kicked off at 1015 25 June 1966.The Marines were airlifted into two landing zones, the 2nd Bn, 4th Marines into LZ RAVEN to the north and the 1st Bn, 1st Marines into LZ SHRIKE to the south. On landing, both forces began to move toward the other with the intention of catching the VC in between. Although both battalions encountered stiff resistance, 2/4 at Ap Chinh An and 1/2 at My Phu, the VC were forced to withdraw. At 1630 a medevac helicopter (UH-34D BuNo 148053, HMM-161) was brought down by ground fire; a platoon from 2/1 Marines was dispatched to the scene of the crash. In addition, the 2/1 Marines began to move from their blocking position toward the area where Fox and Hotel 2/4 were engaged, hoping to take the enemy positions from the rear. By nightfall, Echo 2/4 was within sight of the 2/1 Marines, but the two units were separated by an area held by enemy forces. Fox and Hotel had forced the enemy to withdraw but had not been able to destroy the forces to their front. Rather than press a night engagement the Marines were halted in place. Air and artillery fire was maintained throught the night on the enemy-held areas. When the Marines began again at daybreak only scattered resistance was encountered - the VC apparently had been able to withdraw through the gap between Echo 2/4 and the 2/1 positions. Thirtynine VC bodies were recovered from the battleground, and there was evidence that many more had been killed or wounded. Significant quantities of weapons, munitions, and supplies were captured. However, the actions on 25 June cost the lives of 17 Marines, five more were killed in action on the 26th, and on 27 June two Marines died of wounds received earlier. The American dead were
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