Joseph Mieczkowski
Corporal
K CO, 3RD BN, 9TH MARINES, 3RD MARDIV, III MAF
United States Marine Corps
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
September 20, 1947 to April 30, 1967
JOSEPH MIECZKOWSKI is on the Wall at Panel 18E, Line 124

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Joseph Mieczkowski
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The picture I sent of CPL Joseph Mieczkowski was taken from a Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 9th Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division (Kilo 3/9/3) platoon photo that I have. I have all my brother marines' photos done the same way. I served in Kilo 3/9/3 with Joe. His name is on the Kilo 3/9 honor Roll and is one of my fallen brothers. I had that picture in my "Kilo folder". We, the brothers of kilo, have been sending them to several sites in memory of our brothers.

-- Robert Chiominto, LCPL, Kilo Co, March 1967 to April 1968, 09/24/2012

Local Pennsylvania Papers for Tuesday May 9, 1967 printed articles listing the Pennsylvanians who were killed in action in Vietnam.

Washington(AP) - The Defense Department announced Monday [May 8] that 13 Pennsylvania soldiers have been killed in action in Vietnam. The casualty report also lists one Pennsylvania soldier as killed instead of missing in action, and another dead of non-hostile causes.

Killed in action were:

Army - Spec. 4 John J. Thomas, son of Mrs. Helen L. Thomas, 2821 North 9th Street, Philadelphia;    Pfc. Robert Hardy Carr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Carr, Jr, 1523 South 24th Street, Philadelphia;    Pfc. Lewis R Nickerson, son of Mrs. Elizabeth B Nickerson, 56 Clifton Park Ave, Pittsburgh.

Navy reported Hospital Corpsman 3rd Class Larry E Yoder, son of Mrs. Ann M. McKic, Box 252, Bradenville, Schuylkill County.

Marines reported Staff Sgt Karol R. Bauer, Box 536, Wrightstown, Bucks County;    Staff Sgt. John V Chutis, husband of Mrs. John V Chutis, Route 1, Garrett, Somerset County;    Cpl Joseph Mieczkowski, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Miecczkowski, 546 East Indiana Avenue, Philadelphia,    Lance Cpl Robert J Kotik, son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kotik, 755 Mary Street, McKees Rocks, Allegheny County;    Lance Cpl Gorden E. Stoudt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Stoudt, 1735 Cedar Street, Allentown,LeHigh County;    Pfc Francis M Palma, husband of Mrs. Francis M Palms, 1339 Reed St, Philadelphia; and    Pfc David Verbilla, son of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Verbilla, 416 East Elm, Tamaqua, Schuylkill County.

The Department listed Pfc Richard B. Sedgwick , son of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Sedgwick, 4249 Terrace Street, Philadelphia as killed in action. He had been listed as missing as a result of hostile causes. Spec. 4 James W. Smith, husband of Mrs. Jeane M. Smith, 804 Lincoln Highway, Coatesville, Chester County, was reported dead from causes not related to the war. Both men were Army.

-- The Virtual Wall

Joseph attended Thomas Edison High School before enlisting in the Marine Corps in December 1964. The 19-year-old corporal was a rifleman with the 3rd Battalion of the 9th Marines, 3rd Marine Division, in Vietnam, dying near Khe Sanh, Quang Tri Province, on April 30, 1967. He was one of six Philadelphia veterans to die in Vietnam on that date, the most on any day in the war. Mieczkowski was survived by his parents and a brother. Joseph lived on East Indiana Avenue, in the Kensington section of Philadelphia.

-- Source: Philadelphia Daily News 10/26/1987, the day Philadelphia dedicated their Vietnam Memorial

Known as the "Hill Fights" or "The First Battle of Khe Sanh", these battles took place at the end of April and early May 1967. April 24 to May 11, 1967 to be exact. The battle between the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN or NVA) and United States Marines took place in the I Corps Tactical Zone, near the village of Khe Sanh. The fights were for Hill 881 North, Hill 881 South, and Hill 861.

Khe Sanh was located near the Laotian border, south of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) between North and South Vietnam. As early as 1962, the U.S. Military Command, Vietnam (MACV) established an Army Special Forces camp near the village as the Americans wanted a military presence there to block the infiltration of enemy forces from Laos, to provide a base for launching patrols into Laos to monitor the Ho Chi Minh Trail, and to serve as a western anchor for defense along the DMZ.

In 1966 the Marines built Khe Sanh Combat Base (KSCB) adjacent to the Army Special Forces camp, and organized their combat activities around named operations. By early 1967, the Marine position was reinforced to regimental strength. On April 20, Operation Prairie IV began, with heavy fighting between the Marines and NVA forces. The next marine operations were named Crockett and Ardmore.

The Marines were monitoring the strategically vital Ho Chi Minh trail as it wound through the jungles in nearby Laos. Dominated by high hills on all sides, the combat base had to be screened on foot by the Marine infantrymen while crack, battle-hardened NVA units roamed at will through the high grass and set up heavy defenses on steep, sun-baked overlooks.

The sequence of events and participating units in the Hill Fights were:

April 24 - Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 9th Marine Regiment patrol engages large enemy force north of Hill 861 and prematurely triggers attack on Khe Sanh. The "Hill Fights" begin.

April 25 - 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marines (2/3) and 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marines (3/3) airlifted to KSCB to counter enemy drive. So was Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 9th Marines (Kilo 3/9).

April 28 - After heavy preparation fires, Lt. Col. DeLong's 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marines (2/3) assaults and seizes Hill 861. Losses were heavy.

April 29 - May 2 - Lt. Col. Wilder's 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marines (3/3) seizes Hill 881 South after 4 days of heavy fighting. That fighting included K Company, 3rd Battalion, 9th Marines. Kilo Company saw 14 men killed in action on April 30, 1967 as they tried to provide security and later relieve Mike Company, 3/3 Marines.

May 3 - 2/3 repulses strong enemy counterattack south of Hill 881N.

May 5 - 2/3 secures final objective, Hill 881N.

May 11 - The "Hill Fights" terminate 940 NVA but the 3rd Marines lost 155 men killed in action

May 13 - 3rd Marines shuttled to Dong Ha as the 26th Marines (Forward) and 1st Battalion, 26th Marines (1/26) move into Khe Sanh. Colonel Padley, Commanding Officer, 26th Marines (FWD), relieves Colonel Lanigan as the Senior officer present at Khe Sanh. Elements of 1/26 occupy combat base, Hills 881S, 861, and 950. Operation Prairie IV ends and Operation CROCKETT commences.

Full details of the entire battle for the 3/3 Marines can be found at Ray Stubbe's 3/3 Marines Khe Sanh Hill Fights of '67 web site.

The battle for Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 9th Marines began early on April 30. At 0615H, they moved from their night defensive position to link up with M/3/3. The lead elements of Kilo Company linked up with the rear elements of the formation while the lead elements of M/3/3 started their attack on Hill 881 at 0800H.

Hill 881-South consists of two high knolls with a saddle between, and several fingers sloping downward from the hill. Both peaks, strong-points of the NVA Battalion's defense, employed perimeter defenses with a line defense employed between the knolls (NVA estimated platoon size elements occupied these knolls). NVA Defensive positions also extended down the fingers to the northeast, north, and west. A very difficult task lay ahead for the Marines.

The attack plan was for First Platoon, (Mike 3/3) to get to the top of Hill 881, then go right along the ridgeline, while the 3d Platoon would follow but turn left at the top. Their 2nd Platoon would provide a base of fire and reserve reinforcement to the lead platoons.

As the Marines of Mike Company moved up the hills, they began to receive sporadic fire, but nothing that they could not handle, or so they thought. The 1st Platoon worked it's way up to the top and proceded eastward into heavy opposition. 2nd Platoon was sent to reinforce them, and after joining them, started to close with the enemy when they were hit again with heavy fire from a well dug-in enemy in heavily camouflaged positions and by sniper fire from individual riflemen located in trees. They received 30 rounds of incoming 82mm mortar and at this point, the platoons were trapped, unable to advance or withdraw. When the 2 platoons tried to come down the hill the same way they went up, the North Vietnamese opened up on them and they could not move. They had been lured into a death trap by an NVA perfect ambush. The battle was to last some 6 hours.

Earlier that morning, KILO Company, 3/9, moved towards the base of Hill 881 South and formed a defensive 360. The squad leaders gathered and were told to stand-by to assist if there were any trouble. In about an hour, they began to realize the other platoons were in dire need of their help as they heard "all hell" break loose. About noon, K/3/9 proceeded up 881-South with the company 'on line', platoons in column. Their 2nd and 3rd Platoons went up the left side with the 1st Platoon moving up the right.

1st Platoon was soon pinned down, taking casualties from heavy fire and sniper fire. It was soon evident they had to withdraw from the bunker complex area they had entered.

2nd Platoon fought their way up the hill, taking devasting sniper fire on the way up and back down. On the way up, they began to receive heavy small arms and automatic rifle fire from 3 enemy bunkers located across a 50 meter wide clearing in a tree line. One of the squads silenced those 3 bunkers. Because they took so much fire coming up, the decision was made to gather their wounded and dead and go back down the hill, amid another barage of mortar fire.

Third Platoon, Kilo, 3/9, moved up Hill 881-South through a ravine. The vegetation was thick at the bottom but thined near the top. They could see that the other platoons were pinned down by enemy fire but they had not yet received fire of any kind. They thought they hadn't been spotted yet. The platoon had underestimated the enemy. The NVA force was prepared and had lulled the unsuspecting 3rd Platoon into another trap amid the heavily fortified bunker complex - almost in the center of a 360 degree circle of bunkers. Fighting against heavy odds, they tried to gather as many of their dead and wounded and get off the hill.

After taking more casualties, a laying down of sustained and heavy rocket and machine gun fire, and then a White Phosphorous smoke screen, they were able to extract themselves from the bunker complex and hill.

All told, the fighting units had to leave 37 dead marines on top of the hill; trying to retrieve them then would have meant more loss of life. It was something the marines did not want to do but they had no choice under the circumstances.

The Battalion (M/3/3, M/3/9, and K/3/9) finally disengaged from the heavy enemy contact and set up for the night. The evacuation of casualties was done by 2155 hours (almost 10 p.m.). Final casualty figures for the 881-South battle of 30 Apr were: 43 Marines killed, 109 wounded (90 were medevaced), 125 NVA confirmed killed (confirmed) and another probable 85. Most of the casualties were suffered by M/3/3, the initially engaged unit. The dead marines left on Hill 881 were recovered by 2100 hours (9 p.m.) on May 2 by the 3rd Battaion, 3rd Marine Regiment. The 16 Kilo Company marines killed on 30 April 1967 in their part of the "Hills Fight" are:

LCPL Edwin Aponte Newark NJ
LCPL John Burdette Appleton Louisville KY
PFC William Russell Beller Salina KS
LCPL Danny Ray Brotz Detroit MI
LCPL George Andrew Cervantes Redlands CA
CPL Thomas George Graff North Olmsted OH
2LT Stephen Thomas Hepner Glendale AZ
PFC Richard Hernandez San Antonio TX
CPL Timothy James Ives Colorado Springs CO
CPL Antonio Mendoza Biola CA
CPL Joseph Mieczkowski Philadelphia PA
LCPL Alexandro Nevarez Stockton CA
LCPL Freddie Richard Pitts Fort Walton Beach FL
LCPL James Edward Priebe Cleveland OH
LCPL Gordon Edward Stoudt Allentown PA
1LT John Braxton Woodall East Alton IL

-- The Virtual Wall


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