Lewis Albanese; Vietnam Veterans Memorial
Location: All Titles » Vietnam Veterans Memorial » Vietnam Wall » Lewis Albanese
What people have added on Lewis Albanese; Vietnam Veterans Memorial…
About this Document
Over 58,000 names of those who died or were listed as missing in the Vietnam War are carved in the black granite memorial, which begins with the inscription: "In honor of the men and women of the Armed Forces of the United States who served in the Vietnam War. The names of those who gave their lives and of those who remain missing are inscribed in the order they were taken from us."
Members have added
Source Information
- Publication Title:
- Vietnam Veterans Memorial
- Sheet Number:
- 1
- Full Name:
- Albanese, Lewis
- Rank:
- Private First Class
- Grade:
- E3
- Specialty:
- Light Weapons Infantry (ARMY)
- Posthumous Decoration:
- Medal of Honor
- Hometown:
- Seattle
- Home State:
- WA
- Race:
- Caucasian
- Religion:
- Roman Catholic
- Marital Status:
- Single
- Gender:
- Male
- Date Of Birth:
- 1946-04-27
- Tour Start Date:
- 1966-08-02
- Casualty Date:
- 1966-12-01
- Death Date:
- 1966-12-01
- Age:
- 20
- Casualty Type:
- Hostile, Died
- Died Of:
- Gun, Small Arms Fire
- Ground Air Sea:
- Ground Casualty
- Body Recovery:
- Recovered
- Country:
- South Vietnam
- Province:
- Not available
- Casualty Location:
- Phu Huu 2, Kim Son Valley
- Service:
- Army
- Enlistment Type:
- Selective Service
- Years Served:
- 1
- Major Command:
- 1st Cav Div
- Company:
- B Co
- Battalion:
- 5th Bn
- Regiment:
- 7th Cavalry
- Panel:
- 12E
- Line:
- 131
Embed this image
Copy the HTML below and paste into your website or blog.
You might also like…
Uploaded by nathan
Found by vbetts
Found by vbetts
Spotlight by tjmac80
Uploaded by Anyjazz
Spotlight by texrunner2003
Uploaded by Mnemosine
Spotlight by Pocahontas60
Uploaded by Oneilius
Image in News - The Chicago Tribune
Uploaded by mrg0114
Uploaded by glatzfam
Spotlight by cherylhartley
Spotlight by mfritz54
Spotlight by Pocahontas60
Uploaded by blake
History for the People —Discover. Discuss. Connect. Share.
1 comment on this document.
Medal of Honor Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action at the risk of his life and beyond the call of duty. Pfc. Albanese's platoon, while advancing through densely covered terrain to establish a blocking position, received intense automatic weapons fire from close range. As other members maneuvered to assault the enemy position, Pfc. Albanese was ordered to provide security for the left flank of the platoon. Suddenly, the left flank received fire from enemy located in a well-concealed ditch. Realizing the imminent danger to his comrades from this fire, Pfc. Albanese fixed his bayonet and moved aggressively into the ditch. His action silenced the sniper fire, enabling the platoon to resume movement toward the main enemy position. As the platoon continued to advance, the sound of heavy firing emanated from the left flank from a pitched battle that ensued in the ditch which Pfc. Albanese had entered. The ditch was actually a well-organized complex of enemy defenses designed to bring devastating flanking fire on the forces attacking the main position. Pfc. Albanese, disregarding the danger to himself, advanced 100 meters along the trench and killed 6 of the snipers, who were armed with automatic weapons. Having exhausted his ammunition, Pfc. Albanese was mortally wounded when he engaged and killed 2 more enemy soldiers in fierce hand-to-hand combat. His unparalleled actions saved the lives of many members of his platoon who otherwise would have fallen to the sniper fire from the ditch, and enabled his platoon to successfully advance against an enemy force of overwhelming numerical superiority. Pfc. Albanese's extraordinary heroism and supreme dedication to his comrades were commensurate with the finest traditions of the military service and remain a tribute to himself, his unit, and the U.S. Army.