Lloyd Hans Rohde
Staff Sergeant
C CO, 3RD BN, 21ST INFANTRY, 196TH INFANTRY BDE, USARV
Army of the United States
Madras, Oregon
May 23, 1930 to November 30, 1966
LLOYD H ROHDE is on the Wall at Panel 12E, Line 131

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Lloyd H Rohde
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Please post the 1958 picture for my Uncle on his memorial page. He went into the service the year I was born and died the year I graduated from High School.

I only really knew him through his furloughs home and of course through my mom (his sister) and his brothers and sisters (my Aunts and Uncles). He was a hero to all his nephews and nieces.

After my mom passed away, I read all of her letters she kept that she had received from him over those 18 years that she kept and that's when I knew I had to put up a tribute to him on the family tree website.

-- Patti Richey, Niece, January 25, 2013

He was 17 when he enlisted and had not finished high school -- that was something that he did finish while in the Army by passing his GED.

Photo from 1948 - "Uncle Lloyd (18) and me (Patti) a few months old"

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He was assigned to many places over his almost 20 year career in the Army: in the United States and abroad to places like Germany, Korea, and lastly Viet Nam. SSG Rohde was awarded his first Combat Infantry Badge in Korea and his second in Vietnam. With the award of the second badge, it would look like:

CIB for Korea and Vietnam

Photograph of SSG Rohde taken in 1958.

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SSG Rohde, was only a few months from completing 20 years in the Army and planned on retiring but was wounded in action on 4 November 1966 while leading his squad in combat. His abdominal wounds were so serious he did not survive. He died in the hospital on 30 November 1966. He was awarded the Silver Star for his actions in combat on the 4th of November.

Silver Star

Headquarters 25th Infantry Division
APO San Francisco 96225

General Orders
Number   105                                                                        9 January 1967

Award of the Silver Star

1. TC 320.   The following AWARDS are announced.

ROHDE, LLOYD H. RA 19308063  SSG E-6
Co C, 3d Bn, 21st Inf, 196th Lt Inf Bde


Awarded:
Silver Star (Posthumously)
Date of action:
04 November 1966
Theater:
Republic of Vietnam
Reason:
For gallantry in action: Staff Sergeant Rohde distinguished himself By heroic actions on 4 November 1966, in Tay Ninh Province, Republic of Vietnam, while serving as a squad leader with Company C, 3d Battalion, 21st Infantry. His company was moving through thick jungle terrain when its advance was halted by intense small arms and automatic weapons fire from a Viet Cong assault force. Sergeant Rohde sustained an abdominal wound during the initial burst f fire but refused aid or evacuation because he did not want to be a hindrance to his men and their mission. With complete Disregard for his own physical well-being, he continued to lead his squad against the enemy force. His display of courage and determination inspired his men and resulted in the eventual over- running of the Viet Cong ambush site and the death of 15 Viet Cong. Sergeant Rohde's conspicuous bravery and personal sacrifice are in keeping with the highest traditions of the military service and reflect great credit upon himself, his unit, and the United States Army.
Authority:
By direction of the President under the provisions of the Act of Congress, approved 9 July 1918, and USARV message 16695, 1 July 1966.

     FOR THE COMMANDER:



OFFICIAL:                                      THOMAS W. MELLEN
                                                      Colonel, GS
(Signature)                                    Chief of Staff
HERBERT L. FORSYTHE
LTC AGC
Adjutant General

DISTRIBUTION: A: C (Modified)
20-Act Br
1-Mgt Br
2-CG, USARV ATTN: AVHAG-PD
5-CG, II FFV ATTN: AXV-AGP APO 96266

You can see other photos of Lloyd, read more about his years of service, and learn about his family at the family's website here.

Below is the Letter of Condolence from his Company Commander written to SSG Rohde's father shortly after SSG Rohde's death.

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Lloyd Rohde is buried Mount Jefferson Memorial Park, Madras, Oregon.

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What began as a small-scale, limited-objective combat training exercise for the 196th Light Infantry Brigade (LIB) on September 14, 1966, unexpectedly developed into a widespread, protracted, multi-organizational battle before it ended on November 24, 1966. The final troop list included elements of the U.S. 1st and 25th divisions, the 173rd Airborne Brigade, several Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) battalions, a Special Forces-trained "Mike Force" and U.S. air support--22,000 Allied troops in all. It was the largest U.S. operation of the war to that date. On November 6, 1966, the corps-level II Field Force Vietnam took control of the operation until the final action on November 25, 1966.

This first combat operation of the 196th LIB--code-named "Attleboro" after the Massachusetts town. The plan called for a series of battalion-size, airmobile operations extending north, east and south of Tay Ninh from Trai Bi to Suoi Da to Dau Tieng (Tri Tam).

The 196th's combat operations during Attleboro fell into two distinct phases. The first, from September 14 to October 31, 1966, was a series of probing maneuvers resulting in only light and sporadic contact with the VC, but huge amounts of rice and other stores were uncovered and captured. The three infantry battalions assigned to the brigade included the 2d Battalion, 1st Infantry; the 3d Battalion, 21st Infantry; and the 4th Battalion, 31st Infantry. An artillery battalion, the 3d Battalion, 82nd Artillery, equipped with 105mm guns, was also assigned to the brigade. All three infantry battalions of the 196th participated in one way or another.

Phase II of Attleboro began November 1 and ended November 5, 1966. On the morning of 4 November, the brigade commander ordered Company C, 3d Battalion, 21st Infantry under Captain Russell DeVries to move his unit by helicopter from the base camp at Tay Ninh. C/3-21 Infantry made the move in two stages, first going to the air strip at Dau Tieng and then on an LZ in the vicinity of 1-27 Infantry. The lead element of the company linked up with the Wolfhounds about 1445, and the entire company was on the ground by 1515 hours, when Major Meloy ordered the unit to join the attack on the right flank of A/1-27 Infantry.

Meloy enveloped and captured the VC base camp with Captain Cole's A/1-27 Infantry and C/3-21 Infantry under Captain DeVries. This had been accomplished by the time the two companies from 2-1 Infantry arrived about 1800. Meloy incorporated the two new units into his night defensive position. His command, now grown to five rifle companies, spent a relatively quiet night, with a few minor enemy probes but no real attacks.

On the morning of November 4, the assistant brigade operations officer showed up at Major Meloy's command post with a map detailing the continuation of the operation. The two companies from 2-1 Infantry were to move overland about three kilometers and resume their original attack on Axis Red--due east of the area where C/1-27 Infantry had fought the previous day. Meloy was ordered to attack northeast toward an arbitrary location on LTL 19. There he would link up with his Company B, which would attack to the west from the blocking position it occupied. Meloy wanted to avoid any friendly-fire incidents in the thick, forbidding terrain. He gave Major Stevens and the two 2-1 Infantry companies a two-hour start before he set his two Wolfhound rifle companies in motion to the northeast.

"We ran into a VC concrete bunker complex. It was the only time I saw such fortifications in Vietnam, " said Meloy. "The positions were manned by the 273d VC Regiment, and they immediately tried to outflank us. The fire was so heavy that everyone in the battalion command group except one radio operator was wounded."

Meloy met the flanking maneuver by placing his units into a horseshoe-shaped defensive position, "With my A Company on the right from 12 o'clock to 3. A platoon from Company C covered from 3 to 4. On the left, C/3-21 Infantry was deployed from 12 to 9, and the other two platoons from Company C were positioned from 9 to 7."

Phase III of the Operation was from 6 Nov to 25 November under the control of II Field Force. The 21st continued operations in the area.

At the end of Operation Attleboro, the 25th Infantry Division stated they had lost 44 Killed in Action, 342 Wounded by Hostile Action (WHA), and 4 died from wounds days after they were wounded; the 196th LIB lost 53 KIA, 399 WHA, and none died from wounds during the operation period ending 25 November. Records today show that one soldier, SSG Lloyd Hans Rohde, a member of C Company, 3rd Battalion, 21st Infantry was severely wounded on the contact of 4 November 1966 when his company was moving to support the extraction of the companies from the two battalions of the 27th Infantry. He survived until November 30, 1966 when he succumbed to his abdominal wounds. As a result of his actions on 4 November, SSG Rohde was awarded the Silver Star.

Another soldier who was wounded in action on November 5, 1966 while being extracted from the area as part of C Company, 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry was PFC Thomas Joseph Conners, also known as "Ozzie". He passed away on May 27, 2000 as a result of complications attributed directly to his wounds received in Vietnam. His name was added to the Wall in Washington, D.C. in May of 2005. Read the story about "Ozzie" Conners' participation in Operation Attelboro here.

A total of 8 men were killed in action from C Company, 3rd Battalion, 21st Infantry, 196th Light Infantry Brigade during Operation Attleboro. They were:




- - The Virtual Wall, July 22, 2018

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