James Thomas Hembree, Jr
Staff Sergeant
2ND PLT, D CO, 2ND BN, 501ST INFANTRY, 101ST ABN DIV, USARV
Army of the United States
Commerce, Georgia
February 20, 1944 to July 14, 1970
JAMES T HEMBREE Jr is on the Wall at Panel W8, Line 16

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25 Dec 2004



Jim Hembree on the left; Lt Arndt on the right

Jim Hembree was one of the finest and bravest people I ever met. He transferred from the relative safety of Korea to Vietnam to advance his military career. Jim was a career soldier assigned to an infantry unit filled with draftees. Yet Jim soon came to realize everything he had learned in non-combat zones had little or nothing to do with the realities of northern I Corps. On July 14, 1970 Jim was the Platoon Sergeant of the 2nd Platoon of D/2/501. Delta company was occupying Hill 805 and the NVA wanted very much for them to leave. The 1st platoon sector came under heavy fire and had taken several KIA and WIA.

Sgt Hembree ordered 3 men from the 2nd Platoon, including a machine gunner, to reinforce the 1st platoon sector. Jim, seeing the fear in the eyes of the machine gunner, took Sgt Warren Hanrahan, PFC Keith Utter, and the gun to reinforce the 1st platoon. They advanced beyond the bunker line and suppressed enemy fire. However both Sgt Hembree and Utter were killed in this action. Both were awarded the Silver Star. Sgt Hanrahan was shot through the neck, narrowly escaping death.

I never thought Jim Hembree would ever be killed in combat, he had his stuff together and knew how to lead men in combat. His death still hurts and his friendship is forever missed.

From a fellow "Delta Raider",
Gary Goeckel
Towanda Pa 18848
wggoeckel@epix.net


 

A Note from The Virtual Wall

Hill 927 was located 20 miles due west of Hue and about 7 miles northeast of the northern end of the A Shau Valley. The 1st Cavalry Division built Fire Support Base Carol on Hill 927 in 1968, and it was used by elements of the 101st Airborne as early as January 1969. The position was of considerable importance because it lay only 5 miles north of Hill 1615, also known as Co Pung Mountain or "The Warehouse", wherein was hidden a major logistics complex which supported the North Vietnamese Army's 29th and 803rd Regiments.

Hill 927 was abandoned, then reopened by ground assault on 11 Apr 1970. Elements of the 101st Airborne took up residence in what was now known as Fire Support Base Ripcord and proceeded to make life miserable for the NVA commands in and around the Co Pung. This situation elicited a violent response from the NVA leading to the "Siege of FSB Ripcord" in June-July 1970. The three-week period covering the siege cost the 101st Airborne 75 killed and 345 wounded in action before FSB Ripcord was again abandoned on 23 July 1970.

On the morning of 12 July 1970 Company D, 2/501st Infantry, took up positions on Hill 805, about a mile southeast of FSB Ripcord. While the assault itself was unopposed, the company perimeter was heavily attacked at about 2130, a fight that resulted in 13 US medevacs but no deaths. The next day was quieter, but at about 0100 on the 14th the perimeter again came under heavy attack; this time there were six US soldiers killed in action.

Once again the daylight hours passed without major incident, and once again the NVA came calling after midnight on 14/15 July - and once again the NVA assault was beaten off. The defenders lost one soldier in the attack.

Fire exchanges continued through the 15th and 16th of July, and late on the 16th an NVA radio transmission was intercepted suggesting that a massed NVA attack was being prepared. Delta 2/501 was instructed to abandon Hill 805 and began to move out at about 1630 17 July. The main body halted a short distance from the company's perimeter while waiting for the rear guard to complete destruction of materials left behind. While waiting, a Vietnamese scout detonated a hand grenade which killed him and wounded five Americans. After medevac had been completed, Company D moved to a new night defensive perimeter, and on the morning of 18 July Delta 2/501 was airlifted back to Camp Evans.

Delta 2/501 had been on Hill 805 for six days - in on 12 July, out the morning of 18 July. During that time, dozens of men had been wounded, nine fatally:

  • 13/14 Jul 1970:
    • 1LT Terry A. Palm, Williamsburg, VA
    • SSG Paul G. Guimond, Chicago, IL
    • SSG James T. Hembree, Commerce, GA (Silver Star)
    • SSG William E. Jones, Millsboro, DE
    • SGT John L. Keister, New Lexington, OH
    • CPL Keith E. Utter, Eureka, MT (Silver Star)

  • 14/15 Nov 1970:
    • SSG Gary L. Schneider, Newport, KY

  • 17 Jul 1970:
    • SGT David R. Beyl, Sellersburg, IN (DoW 07/18/1970)
    • SGT Wilfred W. Warner, Mishawaka, IN (DoW 07/23/1970)
The men of Delta 2/501 lost another friend on 18 July, when CH-47C tail number 68-15810 from A Co, 159th Avn Bn, was shot down while resupplying FSB Ripcord. The CH-47 fell atop Ripcord's 105mm munitions dump, resulting in the deaths of two men - crewman Sgt Michael A. Walker and Sgt William D. Rollason of Echo 2/501. Sergeant Rollason previously had been assigned to Delta 2/501.

A day-by-day reconstruction of Delta 2/501's experiences between 01 and 25 July 1970 is available on the Delta Raiders site and elsewhere. An eleventh man, SP4 Jay Allen Muncey, is included in the list of Delta 2/501 men killed at Hill 805. However, SP4 Muncey was killed on 28 July 1970 in a separate action about 3 kilometers distant from Hill 805.


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