Name: ROGERS WAYNE JOHNATHEN Branch: ARMY
Rate: E03 Rank: PRIVATE 1ST CLASS MOS: 11B MOS Title:
Infantryman Entered: Discharged: 681127 Service Number: 56669342
State: CALIFORNIA Race: CAUCASIAN |
Age: 23 Race: Caucasian Sex: Male
Date of Birth Dec 31, 1944 From: HANFORD, CA Religion: ROMAN
CATHOLIC Marital Status: Married
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WAYNE JOHNATHEN ROGERS CPL - E4 - Army -
Selective Service 1st Cav Division (AMBL) Length of service 1 years His
tour began on Mar 8, 1968 Casualty was on Nov 27, 1968 In TAY NINH,
SOUTH VIETNAM HOSTILE, GROUND CASUALTY ARTILLERY, ROCKET, or MORTAR Body
was recovered Panel 38W - Line 78 |
Wayne J Rogers 27 November
1968
Born on New Years Eve, 1944, Waynes draft number
came up in 1968. At 23, he would be a lot older than most of the other men
being pulled into the escalating war that everyone was being told that the US
was winning. The enemys TET offensive in January left some Units in
Vietnam almost empty, and fresh replacements were needed.
At the Army
induction center, Wayne met Kevan Mynderup also from Hanford. Six years
younger than Wayne, they would share a lifelong bond. Both were sent to Ft
Lewis, Washington for basic training and then onto Ft Polk, LA for Advanced
Infantry Training. Both of them were destined to Vietnam, and arrived there the
first week of March/1968. |
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Both men were handed orders to different Units at
different locations but fate would intervene. After 3 days at Saigon,
they were told that their names were thrown back into the replacement pool.
After another couple of confusing days, they were told that both of them would
be assigned to the infamous 1st Calvary Division. They became the
newbies of Charley Company, 1st Battalion, 8th Calvary
Regiment
In March/68, major large-scale operations were in process to
rout out any of the existing NVA from their unsuccessful TET offensive only a
month earlier. In late March, Kevan was wounded, and Wayne was sent far north
to Quang Tri the Unit had marching orders to help support the Marines to
stop the never-ending enemy infusion across the invisible DMZ. Kevan
recuperated from his wounds and shipped back to his Unit. The two men were
reunited once again.
Soul-mates for life, the two soldiers lived in the
jungles, climbed the huge hills in the north, and slogged through the heavy
monsoon rains together. By November/68, C/1/8 had ended up in Tay Ninh Province
an area NW of Saigon next to the Cambodian border. Unbeknownst to them
at the time, the NVA had crossed the border and had established a huge bunker
complex to protect their comrades that were entering the South for various
destinations. On 21 Nov, Charley Company set up camp for the night. The 2nd
Platoon was ordered to scout the area surrounding the camp, and grudgingly
headed out. It didnt take long to spot some sandals fabricated from a
tire for the soles. Next to it was a communications wire. Suddenly, a machine
gun erupted from the left
..hitting 8 men from the platoon and killing
one. Kevans wounds were serious this time, and he would never return back
to the Company.
For almost a week, various Companies of 1/8Cav tried to
find a way into the bunker complex. Every day search-and-destroy missions were
mounted and more lives lost. On the morning of 27 November, the weather report
was miserable: over 4 inches of rain with winds gusting to 65 knots. Another
day in Nam. By 10:00AM, C Company had already had two casualties
one from heat exhaustion, another wounded in the head. By noon, the storm had
started in full force, and the 2nd Platoon was ordered out on another mission.
The location was the same trail where they had been hit hard a week before
still trying to find a way into the huge complex. The team was led by
Richard Hammett, Wayne Rogers, and a Scout Dog with his handler. The dog barked
loudly, and again, machine-gun fire came crashing through. It was intense yet
short. Both the Handler and his beloved dog were dead, and 5 soldiers had been
wounded. The remainder of the group got up and started to probe down the trail
further. For two hours, helicopters strafed the area with periodic kills. At
4PM, the 2nd Platoon again was hit from their left side, and within minutes
bullets were flying towards them from both sides. Pinned down, orders were
dispatched to move D Company to their location for additional support. Heavy
fighting ensued, with most of the 2nd Platoon wounded. At 4:21, the enemy
detonated a claymore mine, scattering metal fragments through the soldiers.
Elements of D Company arrive, and the fighting intensified. A medic is
seriously wounded trying to treat these men, and two soldiers are pinned down
only 10 feet from the enemy machine-gun. Assault helicopters are called in, and
snipers are spotted hiding up in the trees. The battle rages on for another 3
hours. More ammunition is dropped in, but the fighting is so intense Medivac
helicopters cant get into the area to get the wounded out. By 9PM, the
storm, and the fighting, subsided as darkness fell. The next morning teams were
sent in to retrieve their dead and wounded that had been missing through the
night. It was determined that Wayne Rogers had become another Vietnam casualty
due to the claymore mine explosion.
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