Barry George BartleSergeantL CO, 3RD BN, 3RD MARINES, 3RD MARDIV United States Marine Corps 15 April 1946 - 28 May 1968 Longwood, Florida Panel 64W Line 005 |
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The database page for Barry George Bartle
Sergeant Bartle was stationed with me from 1966 until 1967 aboard ship. He was always squared away and was a hard charger. We used to share some stories from home together and I can say that I know Sergeant Bartle was doing his job above and beyond at the time of his death. I heard about his death later, and was both surprised and will always miss the time we shared on duty. If I hadn't had a role model such as he and some others, I would have never made Corporal. That is a fact. Semper Fi, Barry.
From a buddy, |
A Note from The Virtual WallOn 22 May 1968 a Marine company "dawn patrol" just south of the DMZ came across a large North Vietnamese Army unit in its bivouac area. Many of the NVA soldiers were still asleep, while others were going about their early morning affairs. The Marines promptly attacked the NVA, forcing them to withdraw in disarray with heavy casualties. Other Marine forces were brought in and the contact developed into a full-fledged battle with a reinforced NVA battalion. By 27 May the surviving NVA had been cordoned into an area around the hamlets of Ky Lam and Ky Truc. On 28 May Lima Company, 3/3 Marines, assaulted the NVA position at Ky Lam. The 3/3 after-action report contains the following entry:"At 1400H at YD245670 after heavy preparation fires Company "L" attacked and encountered heavy resistance from an unknown size enemy unit fighting from a well prepared position. Tanks and gunships were used to break contact. Company "L" at YD247673 broke contact at 1815H."Following Lima 3/3's withdrawal additional heavy supporting fires were brought in on the NVA positions while the five Marine companies which formed the cordon consolidated their positions. During the night of 28/29 and throughout 29 May NVA troops attempted, and in some cases managed, to work their way through the Marines lines. At sun-up on 30 May the Marines swept the battle area, meeting little resistance. Many NVA dead were found, dozens of "dazed, demoralized, and exhausted" prisoners were taken, and considerable amounts of weaponry and supplies captured. Although the fight was considered a significant victory for the Marines, Lima 3/3 had lost ten men in the attack on Ky Lam:
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With all respect
Jim Schueckler, former CW2, US Army
Ken Davis, Commander, United States Navy (Ret)
Memorial first published on 28 Apr 2008
Last updated 05/16/2008