Michael Milton Medley

Private First Class
B CO, 1ST BN, 503RD INF RGT, 173 ABN BDE
Army of the United States
28 January 1947 - 08 November 1965
Jackson, Michigan
Panel 03E Line 034

173 ABN BDE

503RD INF RGT
Combat Infantry

Purple Heart, National Defense, Vietnam Service, Vietnam Campaign

Airborne!

The database page for Michael Milton Medley

23 May 2004

There is not a lot I can say about my uncle. He was killed before I was ever born. But in my eyes you were a hero and still are one. You died for something you believed in doing and that was putting everyone before you, even your country. You were the first one killed from your city. You are remembered every day as I look at my daughter - she was named after you. We tell her about you and what you and many others did for all of us - how you protected us and gave us a better place to live. I am sorry for the way others acted and treated the ones that got to come back home. At least you didn't have to feel ashamed for what you did like so many others had to feel. I know we all have to go some time but to me you died honorably and as a hero in my eyes and many others' eyes as well. To all of our armed forces men and women - you are heroes. May God bless you all and the families of loved ones lost or missing. May God bless us all.

Love from Terri, Michelle, and family

A Note from The Virtual Wall

On 05 Nov 1965 the 173rd Airborne Brigade initiated "Operation Hump", a reconnaissance in force in an area about 15 miles north of Bien Hoa. The 1st Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment, deployed south of the Dong Nai River while the 1st Battalion, 503rd Infantry, conducted a helicopter assault on a LZ northwest of the Dong Nai and Song Be Rivers. Little contact was made through 07 Nov, when B and C Companies settled into a night defensive position southeast of Hill 65, a triple-canopy jungled hill.

At about 0600 on the morning of 08 Nov, C Company began a move northwest toward Hill 65, while B Company moved northeast toward Hill 78. Shortly before 0800, C Company was engaged by a sizable enemy force well dug in to the southern face of Hill 65. At 0845, B Company was directed to wheel in place and proceed toward Hill 65 with the intention of relieving C Company.

B Company reached the foot of Hill 65 at about 0930 and moved up the hill. Three things soon became obvious:

  • There was a very large enemy force in place on the hill;
  • C Company was getting hammered; and
  • By chance, B Company was forcing the enemy's right flank.
Under pressure from B Company's flanking attack the enemy force - most of an NVA regiment - moved to the northwest, whereupon the B Company commander called in air and artillery fires on the retreating troops. B Company halted in place in an effort to locate and consolidate with C Company's platoons, managing to establish a coherent defensive line running around the hilltop from southeast to northwest, but with little cover on the southern side.

Meanwhile, the NVA commander realized that his best chance was to close with the US soldiers so that the 173rd's air and artillery fire could not be effectively employed. He attempted to out-flank the US position atop the hill from both the east and the southwest, moving his troops closer to the Americans. The result was shoulder-to-shoulder attacks up the hillside, hand-to-hand fighting, and isolation of parts of B and C Companies ... but the Americans held against two such attacks. Although the fighting continued after the second massed attack, it reduced in intensity as the NVA commander again attempted to disengage and withdraw. By late afternoon it seemed that contact had been broken off by the enemy, allowing the two companies to prepare a night defensive position, collecting their dead and wounded in the center of the position. Although a few of the most seriously wounded were extracted by a USAF helicopter using a Stokes litter winched down through the tree-tops, the triple-canopy jungle prevented the majority from being evacuated until the morning of 09 Nov.

The result of the battle was heavy losses on both sides - 50 Skytroopers dead, many more wounded, and 403 dead NVA troops.

PFC Michael M. Medley was one of the 50.





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With all respect
Jim Schueckler, former CW2, US Army
Ken Davis, Commander, United States Navy (Ret)
Channing Prothro, former CAP Marine
Last updated 08/10/2009