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GalegoTwink Berlin. William T. Fulmer — Ronald Meteiver — Theo Olson — Allen Steinbock — Lon Maggart, Jr. Shallie Bey, Jr. Kent D. Syverud — Thomas Costello — Joseph Karpinski — Jeffery E. Vinroot — C. Spangler, Jr. Asm Beers — Donald Walp — C. John Davis, Sr. David S. Harold Stalker — Daniel Chapa, Jr. Robert Douglas, Jr. Cayton — Thomas Tom Long, Sr.
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Scofield Hage — Constantine A. Karaberis — Ronald H. Williams, Jr. Hanna — Gerald Smith, Jr. Crawford, Jr. George Hanbury — Hardy Johnson, Jr. William M. Metcalf, Jr. Alfred Tisch — J. Robert Bob Hisey, Jr. Peter H. Edward Ed Benz, Jr. Nicholas T. Pinchuk — Donald Layden, Jr. Dan Morris, Jr. Dawson, Jr. Maxwell, Jr. Gary B. Doxey — Michael S. Lawrence Turner — Theodore Craver, Jr. James Cravens, Jr. Distinguished Eagle Scout Award. Honoring Eagle Scouts at the national level Eagle Scouts do amazing things … The Distinguished Eagle Scout Award DESA was established in to acknowledge Eagle Scouts who have received extraordinary national-level recognition, fame, or demonstrated eminence within their field, and have a strong record of voluntary service to their community.
Not all nominations acted upon by the award committee are approved. A substantial percentage of nominations are declined. How to get the award. The nominee must have earned the Eagle Scout rank through the Boy Scouts of America at least 25 years prior to submission of this nomination. The nomination must state the specific reasons or how the nominee has received extraordinary national-level recognition, fame, or eminence within the identified field.
Through the years, it has been established that a nominee should also have a strong record of voluntary service to his community. This is in addition to his achievement of a distinguished career, not in place of one. Service to Scouting is not required. Special considerations. Notification is accomplished only in written form. Presentation should be made within the council submitting the nomination and, whenever possible, by a previous recipient of the award.
It is appropriate that the award is presented as part of a fundraising activity. If a plaque is ordered, the citation will be written by the nominating council. Since some nominees maintain two residences upon retirement, the nominating council must secure the written concurrence of the related council. Supply item description and uniform placement. If you were a member of either ship at this time please contact the Nominal Rolls team, with your Service number and full name, at nominal.
The primary purpose in publishing this Nominal Roll is to recognise the Service of those members of Australia's armed force who served in Vietnam. The Roll was first released in book form in After that release, it was decided to include, in future versions, particular groups of Australian civilians. In deciding which groups to include, consideration was given to those that were either included in the Veterans Entitlement Act or eligible for campaign medals. To retain recognition of their contribution, this website includes the names of members of these groups listed by organisation in alphabetical order.
They are not included in the searchable listing. Of all those sent to Vietnam eleven members of the Australian Army carried out their allotted tasks without a word of complaint, which was all the more commendable considering they could not return home when their tour of duty ended. These veterans were, of course, the tracker dogs used by the Australian Task Force. The dogs were the core of Combat Tracker Teams that were used from until the last combat troops departed in Each dog would complete around a three year tour before they were 'retired'.
Generally, a Tracker Team consisted of the two dogs and their handlers, two visual trackers and two cover men a machine-gunner and a signaller. However, each Battalion had their own way of doing things and so you will find, for example, in 6RAR during their second tour from June to May there were 3 teams in use. The dogs were trained at the Infantry Centre, at Ingleburn in NSW, and came from a variety of sources, including the local pound. They were outstandingly successful in carrying out their tracking task and, although not trained to detect mines, the dogs were intelligent and sometimes able to do so.
The Australian Army policy was that the dogs would not be brought home at the end of their service. One reason, perhaps not adequately explained at the time, related to an Army veterinary report which noted that large numbers of American tracker dogs in Vietnam had died from a tropical disease, thought but not confirmed to be transmitted by ticks. The report recommended that no tracker dogs be allowed back into Australia "even under strict quarantine".
Homes were found with European or Australian families resident in Saigon for 10 of the 11 dogs. One dog, Cassius, died of heat exhaustion after a training run. If you have further information concerning the service details of these dogs, please contact the Nominal Rolls Team. If the individual served under an alias, that information will also be displayed where known. Nicknames will not be displayed, as they are not recorded on the service record. If a woman married while enlisted, and the military authority amended the service record to her married surname, then that surname is displayed.
This approach has been taken so that the displayed surname aligns with the surname recorded on the service record. In such cases, a maiden name may not have been collected. Service numbers are allocated by the relevant Service and, in some instances, changed during service. The Service number used in the Nominal Roll is the one held by the individual at the time of their departure from Vietnam or the date of death in Vietnam. The parent unit or units to which an individual was allotted for duty within the defined operational area of Vietnam. During the course of Australia's involvement in the conflict, there were changes in the criteria used by the Services, and by Army in particular, to determine dates in relation to Vietnam service.
This Nominal Roll uses the following criteria:. Service is taken to have begun on the day of the individual's departure from their last port of call prior to arrival in the Vietnam operational area. Service is taken to have ended on the day of the individual's arrival at their first port of call after departing the Vietnam operational area.
Where a veteran had multiple tours in Vietnam, a Certificate printed from the website will show in the 'Service Between' section the commencement date of the first tour and the completion date of the last tour. Ports of call used in the above criteria include those outside Australia e. As a result, the dates on this website may be different to the dates of service found in some other statements of service.
For those affected, the difference will be a few days, and actual time in Vietnam will not be affected. The dates on this website have no standing in any capacity whatsoever in relation to an individual's eligibility for service medals or veteran's entitlements.
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The date of death recorded with the Office of Australian War Graves, where the death has been attributed to war service and occurred before 29 April The location where those Australians who died during the Vietnam War are officially commemorated. Many Vietnam war dead have private commemorations and are officially commemorated in an official Garden of Remembrance. Although the Office of Australian War Graves ensures the names of those privately commemorated remain legible, the location of the private commemorations are not listed here.
The rank substantive, acting or temporary held by the individual on either their last day in the operational area or the date of death recorded with Office of Australian War Graves. Service or campaign medals are not recorded. Foreign honours and awards are also not recorded. The issuing of honours and awards and service and campaign medals is the responsibility of the Department of Defence.
Indicates National Service at the time of serving in Vietnam. The National Service Act , passed on 24 November, required year-old males to serve in the Army for a period of twenty-four months of continuous service reduced to eighteen months in followed by three years in the Reserve. The Defence Act was amended in May to provide that conscripts could be obliged to serve overseas, and in March the then Prime Minister announced that National Servicemen would be sent to Vietnam to join units of the Australian Regular Army.
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Toggle navigation. Close Continue to website. Nominal Roll of Vietnam Veterans.